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The Ninja's Blade

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by Tori Eldridge




  THE

  NINJA’s

  BLADE

  THE

  NINJA’S BLADE

  Tori Eldridge

  The following is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or used in an entirely fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2020 by Tori Eldridge

  Cover and jacket design by 2Faced Design

  ISBN 978-1-951709-09-9

  eISBN: 978-1-951709-21-1

  First trade paperback edition September 2020 by Agora Books

  An imprint of Polis Books, LLC

  44 Brookview Lane

  Aberdeen, NJ

  PolisBooks.com

  For Tony and Austin,

  my nurturing and motivating champions

  Chapter One

  I swerved around the car and pedaled, faster and faster, away from my blood-soaked memories. A car honked, and the Prius in front of me slammed to a stop. I skidded between the metal bollards protecting the open Metro tracks, and braked in front of two startled commuters exiting the station.

  “Get off the walk!” the man said, raising a protective arm around the woman.

  “Sorry. The car.” I glanced over my shoulder to indicate the traffic jam, but the Prius was gone and the road was clear.

  What the hell had just happened?

  I had no idea, but it wasn’t the first time. The last month had been filled with close calls, angry people, and lost gaps of time. I needed to get my act together. But how could I when my sleep was stolen by images of blood-stained mattresses and gaping bullet wounds?

  I darted across the boulevard to Exposition Park and coasted down Victory Walk. The air smelled like trees. Fresh and clean. Alive. I dropped my arms and let the bike glide on its own. No memories here, just one-hundred-sixty acres of verdant government-owned land and some of LA’s most interesting museums: Natural History on the right, California African-American to the left, and my favorite, the Science Center, up ahead—home of the Space Shuttle Endeavor.

  I grabbed the handles of my racing bike and skidded to a stop as a boy ran across my path and sprinted toward the rose garden. A teenage girl followed, chased by three stocky men whose strides were shortened by the low crotches of their baggy shorts. Crew socks, fancy kicks, striped tees—they reminded me of some members of a Mexican street gang known as the Varrio Norwalk 66.

  I jerked my bike in front of them causing them to stumble into each other to keep from crashing into me. “Sorry, fellas. Didn’t see you coming.”

  They grunted but didn’t respond and resumed their chase. Two ran up Victory Walk. The biggest of the three charged into the sunken rose garden. He zigzagged through the grass around the rosebush grid, following the same route as the kids. I headed straight for the stone fountain in the center and made a hard right up the widest grassy path.

  The kids cut in front of me and bolted toward the Science Center. They were running for their lives, desperate and terrified. I couldn’t let those men catch them. I just couldn’t.

  One thug burst into my path and pivoted after the kids, powerful legs pumping in spite of his baggy shorts. He was bigger than both of them put together. If he caught them, they wouldn’t stand a chance. I pedaled up beside him and kicked the side of his leg. He crumpled like a bag of chips.

  I swerved and chased after the kids as the other men charged down State Drive to intercept. When the kids darted into an outdoor dining area, I followed, riding low on my handlebars to avoid the arms of the patio umbrellas. The haphazard arrangement of tables slowed me down, but at least there weren’t any people to dodge—why endure the August heat when you could sit in an airconditioned café?

  The gangbangers closed in on the fleeing kids.

  “Get away from them,” I shouted, jamming the brakes and leaping from my bike.

  The men had trapped the kids in a dead end against the building. The shorter man shoved his buddy in my direction. “I got this. Deal with her.”

  As the baggy-shorts-wearing punk stumbled in for a tackle, I stepped aside, parried his arms out of the way, and smacked his groin. He howled. When the other guy turned to help, I rammed the heel of my palm up his nose. Blood spurted through his fingers as he tried to stop the bleeding. I slipped around him and headed for the kids.

  The girl shoved the boy out of the corner. “Run,” she yelled, and together they bolted to freedom.

  “Wait,” I yelled. “Are you okay?”

  As I turned, a fist slammed into my face.

  I relaxed my body and went with the motion of the hit, absorbing the impact and lessening the pain. A patio table stopped my momentum. I grabbed the edge and rocked back onto its surface, tucking my legs for a powerful double stomp to my assailant’s chest—the shorter one with the busted nose. He stumbled back into his friend, who was still clutching his injured testicles. I rolled off to the side and landed in a Kosei no Kamae floating-hand fighting stance.

  “What the hell, lady?” Busted Nose asked, rubbing the spot on his chest where I had kicked.

  Smashed Testicles pushed his friend away. “Forget this shit.” He bent to reach under a chair and came up with a conservative vinyl handbag, the kind my Norwegian grandmother might have owned. “At least we got it back.”

  Busted Nose spat at my feet. “With no help from you.”

  I dropped my hands. I had a bad feeling about this.

  “What are you talking about? Whose purse is that?”

  “It belongs to an abuela back at the museum. What? Did you think we were purse thieves?”

  A grandmother?

  “I thought…”

  He wiped the blood from his nose. “I know exactly what you thought, you racist shit. You saw a bunch of Mexicans chasing down some white kids and assumed the worst. Did it ever occur to you we might be trying to stop a crime?”

  I shook my head in bewilderment. “You reminded me of someone else. So did those kids. I’m… I’m really sorry.”

  Smashed Testicles looked around. “Hey, where’s Johnny?”

  While they were distracted, I ran to my bike, whipped it around, and raced out the narrow patio.

  Busted Nose yelled after me: “That’s right, bitch. You better run.”

  I didn’t wait to hear the rest of his comments. I needed to check on their friend, the one whose knee I had stomped. He might need medical attention or, at the very least, an apology.

  Chapter Two

  Bells chimed as I opened the screen door to Paco’s Tacos, home of the sweetest tamales on Earth. Although I hadn’t been here for a month, the scent of frying lard and corn made my mouth water.

  “Dumpling! Mi amiga. You’ve come back. What can I make for you today?”

  Paco smiled as exuberantly as he had on my first visit, when I’d saved his weekly earnings and zip-tied his would-be robbers. I had just discovered an important link on a case I was working—a link that had led to dubious alliances and death.

  I blinked hard and forced a smile. “Hola, Paco. How’ve you been?”

  He wiped his hands on the towel hanging from his apron. “Bien, bien. And you? It’s been a long time. I was beginning to think you didn’t like my tamales.”

  “Are you kidding? I dream about them.”

  “Is that what you want, tamales? Maybe carne asada on the side?”

  “Sounds great. And horchata.” I laughed. No one ever accused me of dainty eating.

  He waved away my money. “Food for life. Remember?”

  “Thank you. Your friendship means more than I can say.”

  I meant it. After getting called a
racist for attacking the wrong people, Paco’s kindness was a comfort. But even that couldn’t remove the sting of the accusation. I was half Asian with strong ties in many ethnic communities, not just my own. I knew better than to project the horror of the Varrio Norwalk 66 onto other men in the same community, even if they were chasing frightened kids and shouting profanities. I should have followed and waited to see what they’d do. I should have gathered more information before I smashed noses and crumpled knees. Instead, I made assumptions and attacked.

  Just because an accusation stung didn’t mean it was wrong.

  I took a seat and waited for my food, wishing the brightly-colored furniture was dark like my mood. Even the high school girls at the orange table in front of me couldn’t compete with their cheerfully-painted red and aqua chairs.

  Well, one of them could.

  The other shrank in on herself as if she didn’t deserve to be seen.

  The oddness of their pairing went beyond the obvious differences of age, ethnicity, and presentation—the older black girl wore a slinky top and sexy capri pants while the younger Latina girl could have been dressed for church. It was in their body language. The older girl leaned back in her chair, with her head cocked at an imperious angle, while the younger girl slouched, occasionally glancing up from her folded hands to flash an appreciative smile. The tableau suggested a disturbing imbalance of power.

  The older girl wiped her hands with a napkin and dropped it on the remnants of beans, rice, and sauce. “You been here before?”

  The younger girl gave a slight shake of her head and nibbled on the edge of a soft taco. “I don’t eat out much. When I do, it’s mostly Guatemalan food. You know, with my parents?”

  The older girl tossed back her sleek hair, highlighted with hints of red and gold. “I come here all the time. I’m surprised your friends don’t bring you.”

  “Friends?” The girl slumped lower in her seat. “Mexican girls at school don’t welcome Guatemalans into their circles, especially ones whose parents…” She shook her head and left it at that.

  “That sucks.”

  The younger girl shrugged. “I’m surprised you invited me.”

  “Why? Because I’m black?”

  She nodded.

  “Well, we got reason, right? Jefferson High used to be all black, or close enough. A lot of famous people came out of our school—Alvin Ailey, Barry White, Etta James—a bunch of jazz singers and musicians, athletes, even judges and politicians. We had a proud community back then, or so Granny tells me. Mama tells a different story. She says the Latinos came in and turned Jeff into little Mexico. The black kids revolted. Brown kids pushed back. You heard about that?”

  The girl nodded again.

  “That shit doesn’t happen now that so many of us moved away. You guys took over the whole neighborhood.”

  “I’m not Mexican.”

  “Close enough.”

  The girl steeled herself with a deep breath. “Why am I here?” she asked, timidly. “You hate me.”

  The older girl swiped the air with blue-polished nails. “Not me. Dolla gets along with everyone. Life’s too short to be hating. Besides, a person can always use more friends. Am I right?”

  As if to make a point, Dolla leaned forward, braced her weight on beautifully sculpted arms, and held out an open palm. “Are you my friend, Ana Lucía?”

  The young girl looked so happy and grateful, I wanted to cry. It broke my heart to think such a sweet, beautiful girl could be that lonely.

  She took Dolla’s hand and gave it a squeeze. “Of course I’m your friend. You are the nicest person I’ve ever met.”

  Dolla chuckled. “Yeah? Wait till you meet my friends. You’ll never be lonely again.

  I sat back in my chair. Why would a girl like Dolla befriend a meek nobody like Ana Lucía? It didn’t make sense.

  When the girls packed up their bags—a sling purse for Dolla and a Jefferson High backpack for Ana Lucía—I asked Paco to wrap my food to go.

  “I’ll be back to pick it up. There’s something I need to check.”

  Chapter Three

  The girls were standing at the curb. I grabbed the bells before I opened the screen door and snuck out as quietly as I could. They had been sitting in profile to me in the restaurant, and I doubted either had made note of my appearance. I wanted to keep it that way.

  I vaulted over the porch railing onto the walkway that ran along the side of the building, ducked behind the recycling bin, and unlocked my bike. Since this was a high-risk neighborhood, I had secured it with both a U-lock and a cable. It had taken two years of red-envelope money to buy the high-performance Merida. I wasn’t taking any chances.

  In the fifteen seconds it took, a gunmetal-gray Camaro coupe had pulled up to the curb. Rap music pounded from the car’s speakers in a throbbing, sultry rhythm. Then the volume dropped. Dolla leaned on passenger side door and poked her head through the open window. Ana Lucía hung a few feet back, clutching her backpack to her chest.

  Dolla stood up and beckoned to Ana Lucía. “Come meet my friend. He’s as sweet as his ride.”

  Ana Lucía paused, giving me hope that she might head back into Paco’s Tacos.

  Dolla opened the front door wide. “Come on, girl. He won’t bite.”

  After glancing up and down the street, Ana Lucía walked to the car.

  I crept forward to get my own look at Dolla’s sweet, harmless friend, but Ana Lucía blocked my view.

  Words were exchanged. From the way Ana Lucía’s knee turned in and her shoulder raised coquettishly to her ear, I could tell she was both embarrassed and pleased. Whoever this friend was, he was turning on the charm.

  “You girls want a ride?” he asked, at a volume loud enough to hear but not to identify any characteristics beyond a smooth tone and a baritone pitch.

  Dolla clapped her hands. “That’d be great. We were just heading home. Isn’t that right, Ana Lucía?” Dolla tipped the front seat forward and gestured for the girl to get in the back. When she didn’t move, Dolla bumped her hip playfully. “Go on, girl. We get to ride in style.”

  Don’t do it, I thought. Don’t get in that car.

  But she did. And when Dolla flipped back the seat, sat, and closed the door, she trapped Ana Lucía as securely as if she had locked her in a cell.

  Nothing criminal had taken place, and yet, every nerve in my body screamed danger.

  I hopped on my bike and pedaled hard to catch up to the Camaro. On a straightaway, I wouldn’t have stood a chance, but in traffic, a bike was often faster than a car, especially when the driver of that car wanted to turn left. I dodged through oncoming traffic and crossed the street before reaching the Camaro. With luck, I could zip up the next road and catch him on the new street. Sure enough, the Camaro crossed in front of me. I leaned into the turn and raced to follow, but it was too late. He made another turn and vanished.

  I circled back to check the side streets, in case he had let out the girls. No such luck. I checked the cars parked on either side of a dead end. No Camaro. But as I turned my bike to leave, a matte-black Dodge Charger sped in and screeched to a stop. Doors opened, blocking my exit—the three baggy-shorts good Samaritans from Exposition Park.

  I should have checked my horoscope and stayed at home: Clearly, this was an inauspicious day for Water Roosters.

  Busted Nose and Smashed Testicles came out the front, while the linebacker, whose knee I had kicked, hobbled out of the back.

  “I told you that was her,” Smashed Testicles said, as he pushed up the sleeves of a plaid shirt-jacket. It was close to ninety degrees, but I guess fashion outweighed comfort. “You looking for more trouble?”

  “Nope,” I said, riding in a tight circle. “Just looking for a friend of mine.”

  “Around here? What you think, Jorge? This girl got friends in our hood?”

  Jorge wiped the blood from beneath his nose. “I doubt it.”

 
“How ‘bout you, Johnny? Maybe she’ll give you some Asian-style loving. Make you feel better. Make you forget how she messed up your knee.”

  Johnny limped forward to complete the defensive line. He glared at me and spread his hands in challenge. “I already told you, I don’t want your help. Unless you came to finish the job. If so, bring it on.”

  I braked and stood on my pedals, balancing the Merida, as I considered my options. The cars parked on either side of the Charger made a bottleneck too narrow to escape. A discarded scooter and toys littered the sidewalk on the right, a Ram truck extended into the sidewalk on the left, and three angry men waited to teach me a lesson in the center. Bad options all around.

  “Look, I’m sorry about what happened, okay? It was an honest mistake—three big dudes chasing a couple of scrawny kids? What was I supposed to do?”

  “Mind your own business,” Johnny said, and grabbed for my handlebars.

  I jerked them away, pedaled a few feet, and slid my bike to safety between parked cars. If these guys were determined to fight, I didn’t want it harmed.

  I returned to the street and held out my empty palms in a casual yet calculated stance. “We don’t need to do this.”

  Jorge dropped his hand from his nose and swaggered forward. I stepped to the side and positioned myself so his buddies formed a line behind him—better to pick them off one by one. I would have preferred taking out the biggest threat first, but since the smallest guy had taken the lead, he’d have to do.

  See, Ma? I can be accommodating.

  The thought made me smile, which irritated Jorge.

  “You think I’m funny?” He asked, cocking a fist as he grabbed for my shirt.

  With my hands already up in front of my shoulders, I barely had to move to deflect his attack. A slight rotation to knock his hand off course. A tiny step forward. A subtle extension of my arm. His head twisted and his body spiraled to the asphalt. On his way down, I captured his arm, wedged my knee into his back, and stepped in front of his thighs to trap his legs. I had him arched on his side with his cheek planted on the road, and still he fought. So I cranked his elbow just shy of dislocation.

 

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