Ninja Girl: The Nine Wiles

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Ninja Girl: The Nine Wiles Page 1

by Steven W. White




  NINJA GIRL: The Nine Wiles

  Published by Steven W. White at Smashwords

  Copyright 2015 Steven W. White

  Author's note:

  The Safe School Initiative and the Bureau of Intelligence and Research are actual government programs in the United States.

  The Mutus Liber is an actual book.

  Ninjas were first reported in Japan in the fifteenth century.

  They are presumed to have been men.

  1

  In the final evening of the ordinary portion of Ashley Prue's life, she danced.

  The ballet studio was filled with hopefuls, all sixteen, all waiting their turn for their final test. Sixteen was when you were tested, if you had the moxy to try. If you passed, the studio would take you on as an apprentice and you had a shot at becoming a true ballerina. If you failed, then ballet became your hobby, something you messed with on Tuesday and Thursday nights and gave up before you graduated high school, like piano lessons.

  Ash knew she was strong, and she knew she was fast. She was light, poised and sylphlike. She went en pointe again and again, showing off how comfortable she was on the tips of her toes. Her black leotard and pink tights blurred under the studio lights as she locked her eyes on the instructor, Miss Claudine, and whirled through all thirty-two fouettés en tournant that were required at the end of Swan Lake.

  "You are drifting, Miss Ashley."

  Ash winced for a split second. She had to keep her place during fouettés and not float around the room.

  "Thank you, Miss Ashley, that's enough."

  Ash stopped, and with a set of petit jetés, approached Miss Claudine at the barre. Miss Claudine smiled down at her, and in her smile there was something sad. "You have studied ballet since?"

  Ash grounded herself, feeling the floor pressing her heels, and with a breath, lifted her carriage. "Since I was three."

  Miss Claudine sighed. "You are my strongest student. And when you try, quite graceful. And yet..."

  Ash waited, setting her restless feet in the third position, heel of one touching the inside arch of the other. Her carriage slipped a bit, but she was too anxious to care.

  "How tall are you?" Miss Claudine asked.

  The words were a knife in Ash's heart. "Miss Claudine, I'm still growing."

  "How tall?"

  A hard lump appeared in Ash's throat. "Five feet."

  Miss Claudine's sad smile vanished and her face became hard. "You are perhaps four eleven. Now I admit, you are wonderfully proportioned. Quite beautiful. Your weight is?"

  Ash swallowed. "Ninety pounds."

  "Yes, perfect. But perfect miniature. Look at the girls out there."

  Ash turned, but she didn't look. Her eyes traced the sheen of the studio lights reflected in the floor. She knew what the other girls looked like. The reflected lights slowly blurred, and she blinked to clear tears from her eyes.

  "Five foot six," Miss Claudine said. "Some of them, five eight. A ballerina must be slim, but also tall."

  "Miss Claudine–"

  "You are welcome to attend class, of course. But you are not our ballerina." Miss Claudine lifted her head to the line of girls. "Next!"

  #

  It was well past dark and the air outside the studio was cold. Ash flipped up the collar of her coat and waited for her friend, Mule Danneker, to walk her home.

  His real name was Samuel, but his folks started calling him Mule when he was a baby. He weighed ten pounds when he was born, and his parents figured, at the rate he was growing, that he'd be a linebacker by the time he was six. Ash knew the story, because Mule loved telling it. All but the linebacker part. Mule had tried out for the high school football team last year, and he made it. Then quarter grades had come out, and the coach cut him.

  He was big enough to tackle a mail truck. But his GPA was too low.

  Maybe that was why Ash liked having Mule around. She felt safe around him on late nights like this, because he was so big that no one would dare mess with him. But also, like her, he couldn't have what he really wanted.

  Ash checked her watch. She had left the auditions early, and he wouldn't be here for another twenty minutes. She stood outside the studio doors, with nothing to do but look in at the other girls, the ones who still had a chance.

  After a few minutes of that, she could feel her insides ripping themselves up. She decided to walk home alone. She would have called Mule's latest cell phone, but he'd lost it yesterday. It had lasted four days – a record.

  The walk wasn't far. She could cut across the high school campus and be at her house in a half hour. Mule would figure it out and meet her there, or she'd bump into him on the way, so he could still get his tutoring in English from her. Mule was awful at English – Huckleberry Finn was killing him – and she'd been tutoring him a lot this semester. Last semester, it was math.

  Ash crossed the parking lot and continued down the street. The air was biting cold and heavy with mist – spring in Seattle – and as she walked under each streetlight she could hear its sad yellow hum. She turned up the steps of Magnolia High School, dark and quiet at this hour.

  There were no lights here, and the noise of street traffic was dulled by the buildings. Ash stopped among the lunch tables in the quad, her hands in her coat pockets, imagining how bright and noisy this place would be tomorrow morning.

  She liked it better this way. It was peaceful.

  There was a noise behind her.

  She didn't turn. She just listened. It was probably a squirrel or a crow or something. All the animals they saw during the day had to still be around at night, right?

  The noise stopped, and all was silence.

  That unnerved her. She started walking.

  At the far end of the quad she had the overwhelming feeling that someone was behind her. She turned, listening.

  Nothing. Not a sound, and nothing to see but gray concrete and black shadows. Could it be Mule sneaking up on her, trying to scare her?

  No. Mule might try something like that, but he wasn't this good at being sneaky.

  Ash kept walking, faster now. She reached the other side of campus, where two rows of portable classrooms sat on concrete blocks. She disappeared into the shadows between them. Past them, all she had to do was cross the field to the street, then two more blocks and home.

  Her ears were freezing, and she could feel her pulse rapid-fire in her earlobes.

  She heard the sound of three quick steps, shoes on concrete, and it occurred to her that the apparent safety of being out-of-sight between the portables suddenly seemed confined, a trap.

  "Mule?" she called, out of hope and nothing else.

  Someone stepped from behind a portable and rushed at her. Ash saw a lot in a split second, even in these shadows: he wore a knit cap on his head and a bandanna tied across the lower part of his face, like an Old West bandit. The shadows ate all colors, and he seemed dressed in black and gray, dull and featureless except for the sharpness of his outline and the gleam of the switchblade he held low in his right hand.

  2

  He slashed at her stomach. She hopped back and the blade cut the air in front of her.

  Terror welled inside her like a flood. Her body tried to scream and run at the same time and the signals seemed to get confused – she just stumbled backward and shrieked a little, not very loud.

  He slashed at her again, and missed her by an inch.

  A tremendous dark shape appeared behind him, coming around the corner of a portable. "Ash?" asked Mule in his monstrous baritone.

  Something let go inside her, and now Ash screamed.

  The attacker turned and saw Mule. Rather than run away or go after him, he turned back to Ash and jabbed a
t her heart. She sidestepped and felt the blade scrape her coat at her shoulder.

  Mule came up behind him in a few large steps. He grabbed the attacker by the throat and flung him sprawling against a portable wall. He was up and slashing at Mule's face a second later, and the blade caught Mule's chin.

  "Ow!" Mule roared. "Dude, seriously?"

  Ash wanted to run but she couldn't leave Mule. "Get out of here!" she screamed at the attacker.

  Then something odd happened. For an instant, a shadow appeared on the roof of the portable behind Mule. It fell into the space between them, an inky blur, and disappeared. Ash saw a black flicker on the roof of the next portable, then nothing. Mule and the attacker didn't seem to notice anything.

  Except now, the attacker's switchblade was gone. He stared at his own empty hand, his five fingers silhouetted against the dim gray of a portable wall.

  Mule wound up and hit him, and the sound was the sickening impact of knuckles against yielding flesh and bone. The attacker fell flat out. He rolled over and belly-crawled away from Mule, then got up and ran behind a portable.

  Mule lumbered after him.

  "Hey," Ash said. "Let's just get away, huh?"

  They ran together across the field to the street, and kept going until they reached Ash's house.

  #

  Ash knew that when her father, Henry Prue, heard the story, he would call the cops. When she saw the blood seeping down Mule's shirt from the cut on his chin as they stood under the porch light, she was ready to call them herself.

  While they waited for the Seattle PD to show up, Dad broke out the first aid kit and bandaged Mule's chin as he sat at the kitchen table. "This could need stitches," Dad said. "I could run you to the ER."

  "No, it's cool."

  "It will probably scar."

  "Nice." Mule smiled, and winced. "I'll take a scar."

  Ash put a hand on his shoulder as Dad tried to press tape to Mule's neck. "You don't need to be any scarier, Mule."

  "Heh, heh – ow. It's all good."

  The cops were there in six minutes, a man and a woman in blue and black. They all sat in the living room, and Ash and Mule told the story as best they could. Ash wasn't sure what to say about the attacker's disappearing knife, but it turned out not to matter, since Mule jumped to the part where he hit the guy.

  Dad stood and paced as he listened. Ash could see him sweating. He stopped to wipe his glasses every few minutes. She wished he would leave – she knew the story must be tearing him up. He had always protected Ash, always tried to do his best as a single dad, ever since mom left when Ash was eleven and never came back.

  The memories were still sharp. Mom and Dad were never a good fit. Dad was an actuary for an insurance company, and he acted like it. Always computing the odds and playing it safe. Mom was reckless, a free spirit and an outdoor nut, who disappeared into the Olympic Mountains for days at a time, and came back muddy and sunburned and giddy. Mom had been fun sometimes, and Dad was always so serious – how they had fought! – but if Ash had been forced to choose between them, she would have chosen Dad.

  It had broken Dad's heart, though. He had never gotten over it.

  The police talked to Dad after that, while Ash and Mule sipped orange juice in the kitchen and Ash tried to steady her nerves. She was still shaky, and had to hold the glass with both hands.

  The police left, and Dad joined them in the kitchen. He threw his arms around his daughter. Then he pushed her away to look at her, holding her shoulders. "You're sure you're all right?"

  She was home safe, and he was still trying to protect her. She couldn't help but smile. "Fine, Dad. Mule saved me."

  Dad turned to him. "Samuel, thank you. Thank you for protecting my daughter."

  Mule blinked. "Um... sure." He shrugged, smiled, and winced.

  Dad whipped back to face Ash, tightening his grip on her. "What were you thinking, exactly?"

  Ash's breath stopped in her throat. "What?"

  "Walking home, alone, at night, in the dark?" Dad shook her, and she wobbled. "Look at him! He was bleeding! You could have been killed!"

  "Dad, I'm okay–"

  "I don't want you walking home after dark alone ever again. You wait for Samuel or you call me. Is that clear?"

  "That's not fair." Ash pulled free of her dad's grip. "Dad, I'm not a child."

  "Doesn't matter," Dad snapped.

  Mule stood by the refrigerator, trying to look invisible. Ash pointed her thumb at him. "What about him? He's going to walk out our front door, all the way home tonight, alone, in the dark."

  Dad sighed. "Ashley, please."

  She felt a little silly saying it. Mule weighed two hundred thirty pounds and was taller than Dad.

  Mule chimed in. "Ash, yeah. It's not the same."

  "You need to be more careful," Dad said, in his reasonable voice. "There are certain things that girls – women – shouldn't do. Walking home alone late at night is one of them."

  Ash glared at her dad, unable to find words.

  "Don't go all psycho on us," Mule said. "It's just that, look at you, a breeze would blow you over, you're so tiny. Just be careful."

  Coming from anyone else, it would have just made her angry, but these were her favorite two people in the world. It wasn't her fault that she was small. It wasn't her fault that she was a girl. It wasn't her fault... she could feel her body trembling.

  Dad's face changed, as if she was melting in front of him. "Listen... its been a hell of a night. We can talk about it more tomorrow."

  Mule nodded. "You're still going to tutor me, right? Because, you know. Test Friday."

  "I guess," Ash said.

  "Hey," Mule perked up. "I forgot! The audition. How did it go?"

  #

  School changed for Ash after that night. By lunch the next day, she was "the girl who got attacked" to all the other students, and the teachers' eyes seemed to linger on her, as if looking her over to be sure she was all right.

  The school paper ran a blitz of articles about the attack, about student safety, about campus security, and on and on. Everyone seemed to relish it, in a way – it was something exciting to talk about. Everyone but Ash, who just wanted to be left alone. The only big news at Magnolia High before the attack was the start of the school's new principal, Mr. Alexander, two weeks ago, and he was turning out to be professional, evenhanded, and bland.

  The old principal, Mr. Graham, now he was a character. He would dress up in Magnolia High's mascot costume and run up and down the basketball court, yelling "Go Falcons!" and flapping his wings. That was, until a month ago, when the school nurse found heroin in her office and the cops traced it back to him. He had been hiding his stash in her medicine cabinet. After that, Mr. Graham went away.

  On the Thursday of the week following Ash's attack, as the last minutes of lunch ticked down and Ash pulled her history book from her locker so she'd be ready for class, someone approached the locker beside hers. That locker had been empty since its owner, a cheerleader named Kat Purnell, had transferred out.

  Whoever it was had slipped up quietly, and Ash was too little to see over her locker door. They must have given Kat's locker to a new student. Ash fit her book into her backpack and slammed her locker shut.

  A blond boy scowled at the locker's little black wheel, trying to get the combination right. He was tall – but not really, more like average height but slender, in black jeans and a leather jacket that fit so perfectly it seemed to cling to him. He stopped turning the wheel and looked at her.

  His eyes were blue. And there was something familiar about him. He didn't say anything – he just looked at her, taking her in.

  "It's me," Ash said, "the girl who got attacked." Maybe she was getting used to it.

  "Ashley Prue," he said. His voice was light and delicate, and she wondered if he could sing.

  "You can call me Ash," she said. "Everyone does."

  He was still staring at her – grimly, she thought. The scowl was stil
l there, as if he was deciding she was bad news. Why would he look at her like that?

  Then she recognized him. She'd seen his picture in the school paper, a low-resolution, stretched image, in an article about the new principal. "You're him," she said. "The principal's son."

  He didn't seem happy to be recognized. Maybe being the principal's son was sort of like being the girl who got attacked. "Drake," he finally said, as if he didn't want to give up his name.

  "Right," Ash remembered. "Drake Alexander. Hey, is that short for something?"

  He sighed. "Just Drake."

  What was his problem, she wondered. "Hey, I'm just asking. Right-left-right, by the way."

  "What?"

  "The locker."

  "Oh." His fingers touched the wheel as if he was going to give it a try, but his hand stopped. His scowl deepened, and he seemed to spend a long angry moment working something out.

  "Whatever," he snapped. He slapped his palm on the locker door and walked away.

  Ash stared at him, shocked, until he turned a corner and disappeared.

  3

  After school, Ash met Mule in the campus library. It was a broad, split-level room with central tables and a long half-circle of about thirty bookshelves. Nothing special. Old-fashioned, actually, with musty carpet and rusty spots on the shelf brackets. It was all due to be renovated, and a sign over the door read, "Closing Soon – Return Your Books Now."

  Mule's Huckleberry Finn test was tomorrow, thus the crash course. She had him reviewing chapter five – silently, and she took the moment to think.

  Maybe there was something wrong with her. She was cursed, perhaps. That was why she was doomed never to be an apprentice ballerina, why the new boy at school looked at her as if she was a virus, and why masked lunatics came at her with knives.

  She didn't deserve any of it.

  There was ballet practice tonight with Miss Claudine, and Ash couldn't decide if she wanted to go. What was ballet to her, now that she had failed? How badly did she love it?

  Well, she loved it a lot. Maybe it wasn't all about fame and glory, maybe it was just about the dance. She could still–

 

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