Sharabi Fighter
On the day of the martial arts hall, the wind was still, and no one spoke.
I knelt on the bluestone slab, my back straight as a rod. The blue-robed instructor stepped on my shoulder, sneering, "Sharabi Fighter? Sounds like a drunkard's rant." Laughter erupted around me—so loud it seemed even the wooden posts trembled.
I said nothing. Just slowly lifted my head and stared at him.
"You say I'm unworthy to learn martial arts?" My voice was soft. "Then do you dare let me stand?"
He laughed and lifted his foot.
With a push from my hands, I flipped into a handstand, legs splitting open—into a perfect straddle midair, toes touching the ground, waist arched like a drawn bow. Silence fell for three seconds. Someone dropped their teacup.
"Street trick?" His mockery hadn't finished when I somersaulted down, dashed toward the row of pine training posts, leapt, spun, kicked—*crack!* Five shattered in one sweep, splinters flying into his face.
His expression darkened. He threw a punch.
Fast. Brutal. No mercy. But I sidestepped, slid past his arm, used his momentum—flipped him clean over. *Thud.* He landed flat in the sandpit, covered in dust.
The hall fell utterly silent.
The old master sat in the shadows atop the high platform, unmoving. Only now did he slowly open his eyes, tapping once with his cane.
Atop the mountain peak, I walked barefoot up steps littered with broken glass—one step, one trail of blood. On my shoulders: a boulder weighing three hundred jin. In my mouth: a nursery rhyme my mother used to sing. The wind brushed past my ears, counting with me: seven steps left… six… five…
I reached the end.
She stood there in the morning mist, watching me, silent. Her gaze had changed—from initial scorn, pity, to shock, then quiet pain.
That night, she brought medicine ointment in secret. I asked, "Are you afraid? That I’m a madman?"
She shook her head. "What I fear is that everyone else is wrong—and only you are right."
On the eve of the duel, the notice went up: Victory grants access to the sect’s sacred archives. Defeat means banishment—never to set foot here again.
Before dawn, at the center of the arena, wind swept the last fallen leaves.
The blue-robed instructor ascended, robe billowing, eyes sharp as blades. I stood in faded cotton clothes, barehanded, barefoot.
The crowd held its breath.
The bell had not yet rung. No winner declared. But I knew—this fight was no longer about proving how strong I was.
It was about making the world admit: some people are born outside the rules—but still deserve respect.
He threw his first punch.
I smiled.
And moved.