The Tenth Strike
by Norman Grey, Esq.
The stick, and the hilltop. The stick brings the stick-bearer back to the
hill. Renny, like the others, came and comes and will come, and she always
bears her stick. Her best friend Amador bears his own, and tonight is their
bonfire. They start the dance, the battle-dance, swinging their sticks with
every spark of power and speed in their bodies, cracking their sticks
together as the warm stars kindle overhead. The others clap in time, and
dance around them, and the hard rattan wood rings and clatters till the
friction makes visible smoke. Then Master Cresas calls, “Break!”
When she touched her first Harrowing stick, she knew. The folk of Urd Thlol
were long accustomed to wielding machetes for clearing jungle and
harvesting bamboo; so when the strange-clad men of Trellem Vay came sailing
in their ships of war, the natives lost no time in adapting their
techniques to the harvesting of limbs. The old grim art of Harrowing was in
Renny’s blood, and the only life-path she cared for was that of a warrior.
She worked at the inn, enough to feed herself, and she slept on a battered
mattress with the ants. Her life was only this: training with Master Cresas.
“Renny!” shouts the master, and she snaps to attention. “Amador!” Her burly
friend does likewise. “For three years you’ve trained with us.” The
Harrowers and student Harrowers form a circle around them. Behind Cresas,
the bonfire strains exultantly toward the windy skies. “Tonight, you become
Harrowers. Tonight, you become members of the body of our people.”
Renny will bear a child one day, long hence. She’ll come to this hilltop
with her precious love, her Miriel. They will plant their feet beneath the
same majestic moon and raise their Harrowing sticks. Master Cresas will be
fast asleep in the bosom of the earth, but remembered with honor whenever
two Harrowers bow to one another—just as his master will be remembered, and
all masters, back to the beginning.
“Renny, why do you fight?”
She bows. “Sir, I fight for my homeland.”
“Burn your stick.”
She steps toward the fire. It’s as tall as a man, a million flickering
shades of orange. For three years, adream or awake, she has never not held
a stick in her hand, for that is how the Harrower learns the blade. But the
stick itself is nothing, she’s broken a hundred sticks. Her hand makes the
stick a Harrowing stick.
“Amador, why do you fight?”
“Sir, I fight for my homeland!”
“Burn your stick.”
She met Amador and Manes in her first week with Master Cresas. The
broad-shouldered farmboy and the whip-quick twist of sinew from the North.
There were nine strikes in Harrowing, and the three of them used to
practice those strikes over and over, for hours, marching up and down the
cobbled courtyard side by side, forever slashing at the airy target of the
almost-attainable.
“We—will—be—masters!” panted Renny.
They hit nine with the last word, and all three paused for breath. “You
know,” Amador said, stretching his arms out wide, “my old dad was a
Harrower. Now we raise beef cows. There’s not much money in being a
master.”
Manes grinned. “Plenty of women and power, though.”
Renny jostled him. “None of that’s the point. We’ll all have to work when
we get out of here, but we’ll go through the day being Harrowers. Even if
we’re just shoveling manure for a living. It’ll make everything—I don’t
know. Different. Better.” Luminous, she wanted to say.
“I suppose,” Amador said. “But it will be nice to know I could protect my
family if a raiding party came around.”
Manes shook his head, and sweat drops sleeted from his hair. “You’re both
daft. You can’t learn something like this and then go back to being
ordinary.”
“It’s not like that,” she insisted. “We can take this place with us. Life
won’t be ordinary, because we won’t be. It doesn’t matter if we
go out and conquer the world or stay home and raise children.”
“The world? A good punch doesn’t stop till it’s beyond the target. I’m
going to conquer the cosmos.”
In the dewy grass, Amador and Renny take a knee. One of the others comes
forward and hands Master Cresas a long thin bamboo box. He paces toward his
students, grave and slow. In the firelight, in the corner of his eye, Renny
can almost discern the crinkle of a tiny smile. The old master pulls two
machetes from the box.
One of those machetes will return. On this hill they will make a fire of
their own, Miriel and her mother. They will dance the battle-dance. And
after, when the sun is gone, the child will ask, “Is this where you fought
him, Mama?”
And Renny will slowly nod. She’ll reach into the pack and draw forth her
old machete. The burning logs will glimmer on the steel. The memory will
come flowing like the summer wind, redolent of woodsmoke, redolent of
subtlety and strength. She’ll rub her left shoulder thoughtfully. The fight
will be complete when it’s looked back on.
And as Renny rises to accept the hilt of her machete, the weapon of a
Harrower, she feels a familiar presence drawing near with the inevitability
of sundown. A stir in the ranks: the circle parts. Amador exclaims, “Manes!
I thought—”
“When? When did you ever think, Amador?”
Suddenly weary, suddenly old, Master Cresas lifts a hand for silence. “What
do you seek here, Manes?”
“Only to say that I was right. There is a tenth strike.”
He seemed obsessed. For months he tinkered with the angles of attack.
“Listen,” Renny said one day, “you’re already faster than me and stronger
than Amador. Why is it so important to out-fight Harrowing itself?”
“Because there’s no other way to be the best. If I don’t go beyond what I’m
given, then I’m nothing.”
“Well. . .”
“And Cresas knows it, Renny. He’s hiding it from us, all the masters are.
It’s their trump card in case their students should ever betray them.”
“Manes,” she said.
“Manes,” she says.
“I told you, Renny. He wasn’t teaching us. He was holding us back.”
The leatherbound hilt of the master’s machete creaks in his grip. “You must
not challenge me, boy. Do not do this.”
“It’s done, old man. What, frightened of facing someone who knows your
secret?”
“He’s trying to spare your life, you idiot!” Amador shouts. “If you
challenge him, he won’t have—”
The rasp of a scabbard: Manes has brought a machete of his own. Master
Cresas sighs.
“No,” says Renny. “No! You can’t fight him, sir, I. . . I challenge him!”
She turns. “Manes, I challenge you.”
She will turn the blade, tenderly, and offer the hilt to her beautiful
daughter. Miriel, somber in the starlight, will raise her small hands and
take the Harrower’s weapon from her mother. The same glade, the same blade.
Same wind, same earth. Same fire.
Crickets and flame. Silence. The ring of fighters widens to give them
space. Cresas’s face is somber, Amador’s rent between anger and anguish.
Renny raises her brand-new machete, and the keenness of its edge is nearly
audible. When Manes bows, when he swings at her neck, the crash of metal is
the crashing-together of all the times of battle and of dance. All that she
is, all she has chosen to be, connects in the sweet spot two fingers down
from the tip of the blade. In the healing art of Bone-touch, the students
learn that every nerve point in the body reacts uniquely to pressure on any
other point; and so it is with the body of their people. All the fathers
and mothers of Renny and Manes have come careening to this moment of
impact, and all their descendants will feel the shock when one of them
ceases to be. The resonating clang ripples out through every Harrower,
every Urd Thlolian—through every woman, every man, through time and space
and all the burning stars.
“I will find the hidden strike!” Manes roared at Cresas. “The old ones
cannot keep it to themselves forever.”
“No one wise enough to find it would be fool enough to share it with you!”
the master bellowed back. It was terrible to see him lose control.
“Then I’ll find someone who will. I’ll walk among the people of Trellem
Vay. They’ve made a study of our ways for generations, and I’m sure they’ve
spied out your little trick by now.”
He’s faster than Renny, and stronger. And if he’s telling the truth, he’s
got the tenth strike. She has no time for thought: she acts directly from
will, from the uttermost profundity of self, forged in a lifetime of
choices. Diving, rolling, parrying, she eludes him through the grass,
around and around the bonfire, and their weapons sing and smash together,
breaking patterns, making patterns, influencing the movements of the
galaxies. Her breath is rasping in her throat. Her body is supremely
conditioned, but she can’t keep this up much longer.
“I give you my strength, Mama,” Miriel will say. “I send my strength to
you, back then, when you needed it.”
Renny will smile and touch her little face. “Thank you, my love. Thank
you.”
She stumbles, and her enemy hacks. A ragged chunk of muscle and flesh goes
spinning into the darkness; her shoulder sprays. All things merge and fade.
She sees his coming victory as if already present. He has earned it: he was
right. Not content with what he was given, he has pushed beyond. She’ll
never learn the tenth strike.
The blade of Manes is rising, rising. Floating in the universe, poised
above her spine. All of eternity is focused into now. And here at last, in
this place of all-time-no-time, she understands. The secret is a movement,
not of body, but of soul. The strike aims beyond the enemy, into a cosmos
free of space and time. The tenth strike is death.
As the machete descends, she accepts it and offers her own. She will not
dodge, nor block. She will thrust into Manes and he into her, and they will
die together. The circle is closed.
When she touched her first Harrowing stick, she knew. It brought her to the
hilltop, and Cresas taught her the dance. This is who I am, she thought. I
choose the stick, and the stick chooses me. And our choice shines backward
to my mother’s womb and shapes me there. It will shine forward to my
daughter, and through her to all who come after us. The stick in her hand
was the World-Tree; every warrior held it with her. Through the stick, and
the hilltop, her story became one with all.
The machetes stop. Both warriors freeze, their glittering bladepoints half
a millimeter from each other’s throats. The wind stops to listen. Even the
crickets fall quiet. And finally, slowly, Manes begins to smile. Amador
lifts his head and crows with victory, and Master Cresas simply nods with
ultimate approval. And through the dawning pain in her arm, Renny smiles as
well—and then she laughs, and laughs, and weeps for joy.
My training is complete. I am a warrior, then and now and evermore. I am a
Harrower.
THE END
© 2025 Norman Grey
Bio: "Hello! My name is Norman Grey, and this is “The
Tenth Strike,” a tale of Urd Thlol. I am a member of the mysterious
writing group called the Triptych, and I’ve previously contributed
poetry, fiction, and nonfiction to Bewildering Stories, Horror Tree,
and Swords & Sorcery. The other members of the Triptych are Rivka
Crowbourne and Howard Blaise (we’re not really all that mysterious),
both of whom have been fortunate enough to place their work in Aphelion
as well..."
E-mail: Norman Grey
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