Authors: John Donohue
for a strike.
As his arms came up, I shot beside him in what the
aikido
people call an
irimi,
or “entering” movement. Now we were
both facing in the same direction. I used my left hand to grab
his neck from behind. I squeezed hard. It’s not that I was going
to make much headway against those muscles; it’s that people
hate to have their head or neck held in any threatening way.
He jerked his head to his left as if trying to look over his
shoulder—it’s a reflexive action—but he also moved to try to
break my hold at the same time. As movements go, it was OK,
and perfectly understandable. But for that one split second he
had lost focus on his sword. I was still beside him and his right
arm was stretched out, gripping the haft of the wooden sword.
I lifted my
bokken
, the point straight toward heaven, and
then brought it down vertically, slamming the butt into the
cluster of nerves on the inner edge of his right forearm.
It’s a funny feeling. Sort of. I heard him gasp and then the
bokken
fell out of his hands. I dumped him on the ground and
put the tip of my own sword about an inch from his nose. He
wasn’t stunned by the fall and his eyes crossed slightly as he
focused on the tip of my weapon.
I moved away carefully, taking three steps backward to bring
me out of range, and bowed formally to him.
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John Donohue
Yamashita strode forward. He picked up my opponent’s
sword and looked around the room. “So…” he commented to
the watchful trainees. “Application is always more interesting
than rehearsal,
neh?
” I saw some heads nod ruefully. In more
than one face, I saw a dawning gratitude that someone else had
been selected to serve as a training partner. Yamashita moved
toward the man I had put on the floor. He got up, but I knew
that he wasn’t going to be able to use his right arm for a while.
His eyes bore into mine. For the first time that day, I let my
own eyes bore back into a trainee’s eyes.
Shoulda used the kote,
bud.
Yamashita watched the silent exchange. “What we have
seen here is a lesson with two aspects. Like a sword blade, there
are two sides,
omote
and
ura,
the front and the back, the obvi-
ous and the hidden.” He canted the wooden sword in his hand
to show one side of the blade, now the other. I saw some frowns
from the group as they failed to follow his logic.
Yamashita saw it, too. He sighed. “
Omote.
Burke Sensei has
clearly demonstrated how the technique you began to train this
morning can be finished in a match. It is not the only applica-
tion, perhaps,” he said and paused to give me a subtly arch look,
“perhaps not even the most elegant. But certainly effective.”
Heads nodded, and Yamashita stood there for a minute,
saying nothing. The lights of the
dojo
made the wooden floor
gleam and, if they seemed to make his eyes deeper and darker,
they also made his shaven head shine in imitation of the hard
surfaces of his world.
Finally, someone raised a hand. “Yamashita Sensei,” the
question came. “What was the second lesson?”
My teacher looked up and regarded the expectant circle
of trainees. He smiled slightly. “Ah. The hidden lesson?” He
30
Kage
looked around. “You spent all your time waiting for me. Doing
what Burke Sensei said, but waiting for me. The wise warrior
keeps himself hidden, in the shadows.
Kage.
You know the
word?” Heads nodded.
“Just so,” my master finished. “My pupil keeps himself in
shadow. Like most people, there is more to him than meets the
eye.”
The lesson was over.
31
3
Tales
I was talking to a bunch of mystery writers about the reali-
ties of fighting: how it works and the toll it takes. And how
long it takes to recover. The overfed guy was incredulous.
“A week!” he protested, his eyes blinking in outrage. The
conference room was a soothing beige and the hotel’s mam-
moth air conditioning units kept the desert heat from seeping
into the building, but I felt a bit warm anyway. The fluores-
cent ceiling lights played on the lenses of the man’s round steel-
rimmed glasses. He had a big mustache that helped balance out
his jowls and he held a hardcover book to his breast, front cover
out, so everyone could see.
Look. This is mine. I wrote it.
I nodded and held my hands up to calm him. “A week to
ten days,” I repeated. The rest of the audience murmured in
displeasure as well.
“But I can’t have my main character laid up for that long,”
the writer continued. “It would destroy the pacing of the novel!”
I nodded in sympathy. “Sure.” But it seemed that they
wanted something more from me. I looked around the con-
ference room at the fifty or so people whose eyes were sharp-
ened in concern. I began again. “I’m not telling you how to
write your books,” I pointed out. “But the fact is, when you a
take a good beating, you can figure that you’re going to be like
the walking wounded for at least a week. Trust me, in the real
world, people don’t take punishment like that and bounce back
right away.”
32
Kage
They were all deeply disturbed. They had been raised on
Hollywood’s version of combat. Most had never been in a real
fight. You could probably stun three quarters of the people in
the room into immobility with nothing more lethal than a
good hard slap to the face. These folks were mystery writers.
Their fictional activity dragged them over just a little into my
world but its rules didn’t mesh well with theirs.
I could see that the other panelists for this little talk were
eyeing me uncomfortably. When the conference organizers
invited me to come to Arizona’s premier mystery and thriller
writers’ conference to speak about the reality of unarmed fight-
ing, I think they had something else in mind. Tales of derring
do. Nifty tricks. Lethal uses of toothpaste.
Actually, they had someone else in mind as well, but my
brother refused to go.
Micky had snickered when he showed me the invitation.
“Hey, check this out. You know that guy from the
News
who
wrote the book about that Ronin guy?” I nodded. A columnist
from the
Daily News
had churned out a breathless true-crime
paperback about a case we had been involved in. It had al the
elements of a best sel er: a tale of revenge featuring serial mur-
ders and the exotic world of the martial arts. And, as far as I was
concerned, the ending was great because Micky, Yamashita, and
I got to walk away from the scene of the crime. Actual y, they
took me away in an ambulance, but that’s beside the point. The
guy from the
News
did a halfway decent job, but for some reason
the book never did catch on—that season the reading public was
interested in other things. But the author did his best to plug the
book whenever possible, and was asking my brother to join him
on a panel in an upcoming mystery writer’s conference.
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John Donohue
I had handed the letter back to my brother. “Why not?” I
asked. “You were the cop who was featured in his book. You
could tell those people stories that would curl their hair.”
Micky had been a policeman for twenty years. He and
his partner Art had just retired and started their own security
consulting firm. They had spent the last decade as homicide
detectives in New York City. That and a recent brush with Phil-
ippine terrorists had provided them with a wealth of contacts
and tremendous street cred. As a result, business was booming.
But although my brother no longer carried his gold detective’s
shield, not much else had changed. Growing up, Micky was
always a handful. As he’s aged (I’m not sure whether matured
is the right term) he’s gotten quieter. But it’s not a comforting
type of quiet.
We’ve got a big family and we get together often: a dense
crowd of Burkes washing across various rooms and backyards.
My brothers and sisters follow the old ways. As a result, there
is a small army of Burke children that regularly alights on my
mother’s house like a swarm of Mayo locust. The adults settle
on chairs and sofas or cluster in the kitchen to rib each other
with the ease of long familiarity. The kids pound up and down
stairs, on fire to eavesdrop on the adults, yet torn by the equally
powerful desire to consume the salty snacks strategically placed
like lures in the family room and basement, far away from their
parents.
It’s a benevolent type of chaos, a restless celebration of
connection. But in the midst of it all, you’ll often spot Micky
sidling off to a window or the backyard and staring into the
distance.
They say that cops either care too much and burn out, or
grow callous out of self-preservation. Micky’s opted for a third
34
Kage
way. My brother seems to have mastered the art of keeping his
inner filament intact, of stoking a fire that burns but doesn’t
consume him. It makes him a great cop, but it also creates an
outlook that’s pretty cut and dried: just the facts, ma’am.
“Connor,” my brother had told me, as I emerged from my
reverie, “the world is full of bullshit. Why should I contribute
to it?” I nodded in silent agreement. Micky eyed me slyly and
pointed at the invitation. “You, however, would be natural for
this sort of thing.”
Which is how I ended up in Arizona, in a room full of
writers, annoying the Walrus Man. The conference people had
offered to pay my expenses, and Sarah had a consulting job
lined up in Phoenix that she’d been putting off, so we flew
in together. I dropped her off in Scottsdale and headed south
toward Tucson. We planned to meet up in a few days and
drive north. The Grand Canyon. Cliff dwellings. The wide-
open spaces. It was going to be great if I could just avoid being
assaulted by the people at this writer’s conference.
The audience was still waiting for something from me. A
retraction? I wasn’t sure. During my brief speech, I had gotten
up to talk and had moved away from the table where three
other speakers sat. Now I looked over to my fellow panelists
in a mute appeal for help. They were silent for an awkward
moment. I got the feeling they were happy just to be out of the
blast zone. Then one cleared his throat and stood up.
He was a lean, youngish guy with a full head of dark hair,
wearing jeans, a dark turtleneck shirt, and a sport jacket. He
looked every inch the best selling writer that he was. He had
a self-confident, easy manner that probably came with being
on the “A” list. All day people had been nodding and smiling
35
John Donohue
at him, pointing him out surreptitiously and gazing in rapt
admiration. So far no one had fallen to their knees and tried to
touch the hem of his garment, but the day was young.
“What Dr. Burke has done for us,” he said smoothly, “is to
remind us of the real challenge of the writer’s craft.” He smiled
at me and I smiled back. I couldn’t help it. The guy was good.
And besides, the crowd seemed to buy it. I slipped into my
chair and listened while he distracted the mob.
“What we do as writers,” he continued, “is combine the
world in our imagination with just enough reality to engage
people’s attention; to gain their trust. And then we spin a web
with language that makes them suspend something of their
critical faculties.” He paused and the crowd seemed to hold its
breath. “Then,” he concluded, “we pull them into
our
world.”
His fellow panelists nodded in agreement and there was a gen-
eral bobbing of heads all over the room.
No one asked me questions after that. I had, I suppose,
been officially noted as someone who would never enter
their
world. Fair enough. The session broke up and people milled
around chatting and hoping for a private audience with the
other luminaries on the panel. I was left pretty much to my
own devices. I cut across the room and started to move down
a side aisle, putting the rows of metal banquet chairs between
me and the writers lingering for a last word. Some of them
still looked annoyed with me. A vigilant defense is a successful
defense.
I escaped without incident into the foyer, which was located
at the center of a series of conference rooms. People milled
about display tables with colorful flyers and paperback books
on racks, or sat along the walls at small café tables, chatting
and drinking coffee. Everyone in this section of the hotel had
36
Kage