"… And then Naoki said that we should fight again, once he manages to score a hit on that tengu and gets to visit the city," Ken'ichi said, finishing his story.
"A jujutsu Master and his son out in the mountains, huh?" I mused aloud. Truth be told, I'd forgotten that ever happened, so I guess this "Yamamoto Naoki" kid and his father Taiki never really showed up again. But he sounded like someone who could be…
Nah. Kid's the same age as Honoka, it'd be messed up to involve him in the mess that comes later.
"Oh, he also said he really wanted to fight you, Ensei!" Ken'ichi continued, drawing me out of my thoughts.
"Me? When did
I come up in that conversation?" I asked.
"Well, he was making fun of me for losing even though I was older, so I told him age had nothing to do with it and kinda used you as an example," Ken'ichi admitted ruefully. "He seemed kind of excited to learn there was a kid his age learning martial arts, though."
"Huh." Not really knowing how to respond to that, I changed the subject. "So, with your special mountain training over, think you're ready for the next time Hermit knocks you off a bridge and fights you on top of a moving bus?"*
"I don't think anyone should need to be
ready to fight for their life on top of a speeding bus," Ken'ichi complained.
"Well, you gave up on a normal life when you joined this dojo," I pointed out, getting up from the floor. "You ready to pick back up on training?"
"Yeah, I… wait, what time is it?" Ken'ichi asked, suddenly looking serious as he noticed Master Ma sitting and reading a magazine.
When I told him the time, his eyes widened in shock. "That's the time Miu and Shigure take a bath! And Master Ma is… still here!
"Master Ma
always tries to peep on the girls and gets into a fight with Shigure!" Ken'ichi shouted, pointing a finger accusatorily at the Chinese master. "Are you… an imposter!?"
"Hey now, don't-!"
"No, really though, jokes aside, what's up, Master Ma?" Ken'ichi asked, suddenly calm again as he sat down beside his master. "Something must
really be putting you off."
"That's your idea of a joke?" Kensei complained. "And nothing's wrong at all. Just because I-"
"Your nudie mag is upside down," I pointed out.
"Ah. Uh, well, you know, this is an old one that I've read a lot, so it's a little boring if I don't find a new way of looking at it, you know?" Master Ma bluffed.
"Right…" Ken'ichi and I said simultaneously.
---
"Yeah, that is kinda weird coming from Kensei," Master Sakaki admitted. He was sitting on a couch, drinking beer and eating out of a bowl of mixed nuts that he was futilely trying to keep Apachai from digging into.
"He's been like that ever since I asked him about what Tanimoto said to me," Ken'ichi noted.
"Eh? What'd he say?" Sakaki asked.
"He asked me if I was taught by a man named Ma Sōgetsu." Ken'ichi replied.
"What!? Ma Sōgetsu!?" Sakaki yelled in shock. Collecting himself, his expression became unreadable, and he tipped the bowl of nuts straight into Apachai's mouth without a word.
"Listen, Ken'ichi, don't pry into this," Sakaki said with a sigh. "Kensei's got his own baggage with that name, and that's all I'm gonna tell you. It's his problem to deal with, not ours."
---
"I really don't know anything about the masters' pasts, do I?" Ken'ichi mused to himself as he lay down on his futon. "Actually, what do I really know about them at all? It's kind of weird that I know so little about the people I'm living with now…"
The sound of footsteps on the creaky floorboards drew Ken'ichi out of his thoughts and toward the door. Peaking out, he saw Kensei walk out, a bag slung over his shoulder.
'Where's Master Ma going with that luggage at this time of night?' Ken'ichi wondered.
---
"E-Ensei!?" Ken'ichi shouted in a whisper. "What are you doing here!?"
"Riding on the train, obviously," the younger boy said with a smile. "I'm following Master Ma because I wanted to see what he's up to, what do you think I'm doing here?"
Unable to just leave things the way Master Sakaki had told him, Ken'ichi had decided to try to follow Master Ma; it was a testimony to just how out-of-sorts the Chinese martial artist was that, as far as Ken'ichi could tell, he hadn't spotted him yet.
But as soon as Kensei and Ken'ichi had walked into the train, he'd noticed Kimura Ensei sitting on the train, making sure to stay out of Master Ma's line of sight just like he was.
"Do your parents even know you're out here?" Ken'ichi pressed.
"They didn't stop me, so I assume they're fine with it," Ensei said with a shrug.
"That's not something you should just assume!" Ken'ichi chided.
"It is if you don't want him to hear you," the boy said, pointing to the man they were shadowing.
"Ugh, fine, but we're not done with this conversation."
---X---
"Why the heck are we in Yokohama?" Ken'ichi blurted out, staring awestruck at the large entrysign to the Yokohama Chinatown.
"Well, this
is the biggest Chinatown in Japan," Ensei pointed out. "He might know someone here.
"Wait, we can't lose sight of him!" Ken'ichi realized, rapidly looking around for Ma Kensei, only to realize the man himself was standing not five feet away and mimicking his movements.
"Ah! We've been spotted!" Ken'ichi yelled.
"You know, you could have tried talking to me before you started shadowing me," the Master replied as he pulled out a banknote. "Here, eat some noodles or something and go home."
"After coming all this way? Not a chance," Ken'ichi said.
"Just to be clear, I'm not saying 'No' to getting some noodles," Ensei cut in.
"It might be a little dangerous for you to follow me on this trip, you two," Kensei said, unusually serious. "I'll ask you again: Go home."
"Master Ma, I'm sharing bed and board with you, training under you… It's not right to do all that and not share your worries, too!" Ken'ichi answered, just as serious.
"Uh… I'll hang around and eat Chinese food, I guess," Ensei said with a shrug.
"I really don't know what will happen. You're sure?" Kensei asked a third time.
"Yes!"
The short Chinese man let out a sigh and turned around, the two following close behind. "Oh, very well, I guess I've got not choice. My little pupil's telling me to throw him into a bottomless pit. Even if he dies, he says!"
"Please don't talk like that," Ken'ichi said with a shudder.
---
"We're seriously getting Chinese first?" Ken'ichi asked as the three stepped into the "Emperor's Wrath Chinese Restaurant."
A balding old man only slightly taller than the diminutive Kensei greeted them just inside. "I see you've finally come to visit, Nephew," he said with a bow of greeting.
"I'm sorry for taking so long to see you again, Uncle," Kensei said respectfully, bowing in turn. "Ken'ichi, Ensei, this is my uncle, Ma Ryō, though many people call him Hakubi. Uncle, these are Shirahama Ken'ichi, my disciple, and Kimura Ensei, who, uh…"**
"I'm just here for the dim sum," Ensei said with a smile and a bow. "Though it's an honor to meet you, Master."
---
"Hey Ken'ichi, you should ask Master Hakubi for some
fung zaau," Ensei said in-between bites of
lo mai gai. "It's a great way to expand your horizons."
"As much as
I appreciate the taste of marinated chicken feet, I don't think young Ken'ichi is quite ready to go on that particular culinary adventure," the elder Ma said with a laugh as he refilled their tea.
"Chicken feet!?" Ken'ichi exclaimed, almost choking on a spring roll.
"It really isn't that bad," Ensei shrugged. "Once you get over the way they look they taste alright. Really chewy and gelatin-y, though."
"Geez, have you actually eaten stuff like that?"
"Ken'ichi, I'm part-Filipino. My people decided the best way to improve chocolate rice pudding was to add dried herring to it."***
"Ugh, sorry I asked…" Ken'ichi replied.
"So, Nephew, I can think of two reasons you might have decided to pay me a visit at this time," Master Hakubi said, stroking his beard thoughtfully. "Is it, perhaps, my
other nephew?"
"So, he really is in Japan?" Kensei asked gravely.
"Indeed."
"… Then I must meet him."
"Are you sure? My sources say that the Triads have hired him as a bodyguard," Hakubi explained.
"Sōgetsu is my brother; he is my responsibility," Kensei explained.
"Your brother is your responsibility!? How about the rest of your family!?" yelled a voice from above.
"As I said, there were two reasons I thought you might've come here," Hakubi chuckled, as a girl about Ken'ichi's age leapt down from the balcony and shattered the thick wooden table with a single kick, sending their food flying.
"Hey, I wasn't finished with that!" Ensei yelled angrily, trying to catch as many dishes as possible before they hit the ground.
Kensei, who had been right in the path of the girl's flying kick, was now standing just to the side of where she'd flown through the air to hit the table. "Whoever you are, you've got nice muscles, but you're a hundred years too early to try to get the jump on me," he explained airily. But as he actually looked at the girl he was lecturing, he blanched.
"Ahh!" he gasped.
"What's the matter, Papa? So shocked to see your daughter again?" the girl asked, her voice dangerously low.
"Wait, Papa? Daughter? Is she… a student escort?" Ken'ichi asked.
"Well, she's definitely dressed for the part!" Ensei said angrily, laying out the dishes he'd saved onto a neighboring table.
"You idiot! She's my
actual daughter, Renka!" Kensei exclaimed. "Honestly, what do you think of me!?"
"You have a kid!?" Ken'ichi yelled, sounding almost horrified.
"He has
three," Hakubi corrected. "All from his wife, too. Surprising? We all thought so, too. No bastards, even… so far as we know."
"Nice to see my family has such a high opinion of me…" Kensei muttered irritably.
"And why do you think that might've happened!?" Renka yelled as she threw a weighted rope, catching him by the wrist.
"You're coming home with me
right now, Papa!" she yelled. "I had to become a foreign exchange student just to look for you, and I knew you'd visit Uncle Hakubi for something eventually!"
"Ooh, my nephew's in trouble," Hakubi said with a chuckle.
"Accept it and come with me, you dirty old man!" Renka exclaimed, pulling hard on the rope.
"Give up," Kensei said simply, slicing the rope with a swipe of his hand. The sudden loss of tension sent the girl tumbling backward into the ruined table.
"Not yet!" she replied, throwing a second rope as she fell. Before anyone but Hakubi could see, Kensei had shoved his student in the way, the rope wrapping around his throat.
"Erk!"
"Thank you for your sacrifice, my beloved student," Kensei said loftily as he shoved his "beloved student" into his daughter, the two getting tangled up in the rope somehow as he made his escape.
"Agh! Damn it, he's getting away!" the girl yelled, struggling futilely to escape the ropes.
"Ah, stop, you're making them tighter!" Ken'ichi exclaimed.
"Father
and Master of the Year right there," Ensei said sarcastically as he pulled out a butterfly knife and started cutting the ropes.
"Now now, let's not talk about him like that when he isn't around," Hakubi chided gently, though he didn't seem willing to dispute it much further than that.
---
"Why are you so intent on bringing him back to China, anyway?" Ken'ichi asked. Master Ma's daughter had just run out as soon as Ensei'd cut them loose, and without really thinking, he had followed.
"You don't know anything, do you!?" Renka snapped irritably. "Papa's the grandmaster of the Phoenix Alliance, the biggest martial arts organization in China. Papa led 100,000 dedicated followers, but one day he just turned it all over to Mama, with nothing but a note saying, 'This is getting to be too much bother' and disappeared! Do you have any idea how hard Mama's had to work to keep things from falling apart!?"
"… Yeah, that sounds like him," Ken'ichi admitted sheepishly.
"Now where's he going?" she asked him.
"Huh? I don't know," Ken'ichi answered, coming to a stop. "I just followed you because you started running. I figured you'd know where he'd be going."
"If I knew where he'd be going, I wouldn't have had to wait at Uncle Hakubi's!" she yelled. "Speaking of which, who are you, anyway? Why were you with Papa?"
"Uh, I'm Shirahama Ken'ichi. I'm a first year at Kōryō High School and Master Ma's student."
Renka looked at Ken'ichi for a long moment, her expression unreadable. Then she punched him in the gut, sending him crashing to the ground.
"Why…?" Ken'ichi groaned.
"What was
that?" Renka demanded. "
You're Papa's student, when you can't even dodge that? This is just too sad!"
"Geez, sorry for being talentless," Ken'ichi grumbled as he stood up, rubbing his stomach. Renka blinked in surprise.
"You're already up?"
"Haha, Master Ma's told me I have a talent for taking hits," Ken'ichi said ruefully.
"Ugh, has being in Japan addled Papa's brain? What's he thinking, abandoning the Phoenix Alliance for a dope like
you?" Renka said bitterly.
"Gyah!" a man yelled as he was thrown bodily out of a store window, crying out in pain as he cut himself on the shattered glass. Two men who looked like gangsters walked casually out the door, one of them easily more than six feet tall and built like a wrestler.
The smaller one, smoking a cigarette and dressed in a gaudy suit, looked down at the bleeding man without pity. "So, mind explaining exactly why you thought you could get away without paying your dues?"
"Go to hell!" the man yelled defiantly despite his injuries. "Mr. Hakubi won't let you Traid punks get away with throwing your weight around for much longer!"
"Master Ma's uncle? What are they talking about?" Ken'ichi asked.
"Those guys are Triads; Chinese mafia," Renka said, looking disgusted. "Lately, they've been coming from the mainland and trying to take control of overseas Chinese communities like this one."
"That's some brave talk, but I don't see Old Man Hakubi or any of his students around here, do you?" the thug asked. The bigger thug picked up the defiant storeowner and threw him again, sending him flying. Before he could land head-first on the ground, Ken'ichi grabbed him out of the air and righted him.
"You okay?" Ken'ichi asked.
"What the? Who the hell are you?" the thug asked.
"Thugs like you don't get to call him 'old man,'" Renka said. "You have 5 seconds to get out of here before I teach you a lesson."
"Shove off, little girl!" the beefy thug yelled.
"And what are you, his child bride? I knew he was just another dirty old man," the smaller thug joked.
"Four," Renka counted off. "Three."
"A countdown? Cute," the bigger man scoffed, winding up his fist as Renka continued counting. He threw a punch as Renka counted "One".
"Zero," Renka said as she easily batted his arm to the side and drove her fist into his stomach. Though it looked like one punch to the other bystanders, Ken'ichi could tell that he struck him three times in that one instant. He collapsed to the ground, groaning in pain.
'Wow. I guess I shouldn't expect any less from Master Ma's daughter,' Ken'ichi thought.
---
I had finished my food and was sipping lightly at the last of my tea as Master Hakubi had a whispered conversation with someone who came running into the restaurant. He sat down across the table from me.
"Little Renka and Kensei's student have just had a run-in with the Triads who've been causing trouble recently," he explained to me, pouring a cup of tea for himself. "They interrogated one of them and are going to their hideout right now… Renka is seeking Sōgetsu, no doubt because Kensei intends to confront him as well."
"Well,
that's reckless as hell," I replied. "Ma Sōgetsu's a brutal murderer who cut his ties to the Ma clan to pursue the path of the 'Killing Fist,' right? What makes her think he won't just punch her head off?"
The old man sighed. "It's surely our own fault. She's always had the protection of the Phoenix Alliance and the Ma clan. In China, that made her virtually untouchable, but here in Japan, and with Sōgetsu involved…" he trailed off, his gaze dropping into his teacup.
"No offense, Master, but why aren't you going out to stop her or keep Sōtetsu away from her, if you're worried?" I asked.
He rubbed his eyes underneath his glasses. "I led the Phoenix Alliance before passing it to my younger brother, Kensei and Sōgetsu's father," he explained. "During that time, I expanded the organization's influence, but made many powerful enemies who were willing to stoop to any means. I lost… many loved ones, in the fighting that ensued.
"There was no way for me to prevail, and even if I did, I had already lost too much," he said, his eyes misty and distant. "I ceded leadership to my brother and washed my hands in the golden basin****. Were I to reenter the power struggles of the martial arts world…"
"When you say 'enemies,' you mean YAMI, don't you?" I asked. His flinch at that name confirmed it.
"They were powerful even in my time, but now, their expanse grows by the day, and I am very far from my prime," he lamented. "I have not told even Kensei yet, but Sōgetsu… I believe he has joined them. Were I to engage him in combat and reenter the world of the martial arts, even if it saved Renka at that moment, I believe that neither she nor any of those close to me now would be safe again. They may mouth compliance with the rules of the martial arts, but in truth they worship only strength, and if he is powerful enough then even a monster who follows the Demon Way is allowed within their highest eschelons…"
"Jenazad," I whispered. In Ensei's memories of growing up, the man was an honest-to-God horror story Masters told their Disciples about how far a martial artist could fall. That YAMI had made him one of their top leaders said a lot about them.
His expression darkened even further at the mention of that name. "I had a wife once. Children of my own… Perhaps Ryōzanpaku may be willing to challenge them, but they are only six, and I… I cannot take that risk again."
"For God's sake," I sighed as I stood up. "Tell me where they're going, and I'll see if I can't pull their asses out of the fire. But if your nephew punches my head off my shoulders, I'm haunting you for the rest of your damn life."
---
'Yeah, this looks like the place,' I thought as I ran through the smashed-in door and past a bunch of unconscious gangsters. I followed the screams of gangsters getting their asses kicked and skidded to a halt as I turned the corner and heard Renka cry out in pain.
Ma Sōgetsu had used his palm to smash his own niece into the wall, leaving a crater where he'd driven her into the wall. She was both alive and conscious, but spitting up blood.
"Stop that!" Ken'ichi yelled. "She's Ma Kensei's daughter! She's your niece!"
Sōgetsu barely spared Ken'ichi a glance. "And? A child is still a martial artist, and she raised her hand to me. Besides…"
"Besides, what do honor or family mean to a murderous goon?" I supplied, stepping up beside Ken'ichi.
"Another one?" Sōgetsu mused, seeming utterly disinterested. "Get out of here, brat."
"Let the girl go and we'll do just that," I countered.
In response, he applied a bit more pressure, deepening the crater and drawing a breathless scream from Renka. Ken'ichi cried out in protest, but I stared Sōgetsu down.
"So, this is it? This is the 'truth' of the martial arts you left the Ma family and abandoned your brother for?" I spat. "You're a grown man beating up a child who's no threat to you, and you have the
balls to call yourself a martial artist? To call other people weak? What a disgrace."
Before Sōgetsu could reply, if he truly intended to, a crash through the window took his attention, and he jumped away from Renka as Kensei sent a flying kick where his arm had been, then grabbed his wounded daughter from the air.
"As sad as it is, I must agree with this boy," Kensei said darkly, passing the barely-conscious Renka over to Ken'ichi and facing down his brother. "Is this truly where the path you chose to take has led you, Brother?"
Sōgetsu didn't bother replying. "Kensei. It's time to settle matters."
"Ken'ichi, Ensei, take Renka and leave," Kensei said.
"Hmph. That older boy… I take it he's a student of yours?" Sōgetsu said, his eyes only briefly flickering over to the three of us. "I still don't understand you. Wasting your time on a talentless kid… how unfortunate."
"It
is unfortunate, that you're so lost on this misguided path that you can't even understand this much," Kensei said sadly. "Do you even remember how things used to be, Brother? When we trained and laughed together?"
"What does it matter? Those days are gone now," Sōgetsu replied.
"Whatever I must do, I will not let you continue to disgrace the martial arts with this senseless violence!" Kensei declared. He gave the salute of a martial artist, a hand wrapped over a fist in front of his heart. But he wrapped the right fist over the left, rather than the other way around.
To do this was a sign that this was a duel to the death. Ken'ichi gasped in realization as he saw Sōgetsu do the same.
"No! Master Ma, don't do it! Brothers shouldn't fight like this!" Ken'ichi yelled.
Neither gave any sign they heard him, as the two brothers, both acknowledged as some of the greatest masters of Chinese martial arts in the world, began their duel…
---X---
AN: No joke, in China chicken feet sell for more pound-for-pound than chicken
breast. Lo mai gai is chicken, mushrooms, etc. wrapped up in a ball of rice that is itself wrapped up in a lotus leaf and then steamed. Both are served in dim sum restaurants, and chicken feet are actually cooked in a variety of ways. Most Chinese grocery stores and supermarkets sell them ready-to-eat as snacks, in fact. Since the chicken's feet are almost entirely skin and tendons, they have a very gelatinous texture, and there usually isn't much flavor on their own, hence why they're usually served with some kind of sauce or other flavoring.
Chicken feet are eaten in a lot of other places, too, but China is by far the biggest consumer of chicken feet globally. Funny enough, Korea also has them, as do many other countries close to China, but Japan doesn't. In the Philippines, they're often sold as street food and called "adidas" after the brand of shoes.
*Since it's come to my attention that not everyone reading this Jumpchain is actually familiar with the source material, the story so far is that Hermit's "civilian" identity is a perfect student named Tanimoto Natsu, who is a member of the drama club. For reasons of his own, he got close to Ken'ichi and Miu by recruiting Miu for a performance of
Romeo & Juliet. This got Ken'ichi jealous, but he put that aside and made friends with Natsu anyway because he seemed nice, and even defended the production from some thugs because of that and because Miu was excited to perform. This actually started getting him labeled as a violent thug himself, though, because Tanimoto brutalized said thugs himself once he was out of his "secret identity" and Ken'ichi got blamed for their hospitalization.
Kisara, though forbidden from crushing the Shinpaku Alliance by Hermit, chose to attack the play (because Miu isn't a member), which Ken'ichi defended by simply refusing to move from his spot and let them past, refusing to attack Kisara
or let her past him. Kisara normally despises the "I don't hit girls" talk because in her experience from when she was in a dojo it was always just ass-covering excuses from guys who didn't want to admit they couldn't beat a girl, but Ken'ichi willfully let himself get beat up and refused to go down, and his conviction convinced Kisara that he was different from the meatheads at her old dojo and she left, impressed and kind of put off by the strength of his conviction.
The play was a success, though Koetsuji (insightful man that he is) laments to Tanimoto that the performance would have been much better if he didn't hate acting so much, shocking him. Pissed off that he was seen through, Hermit says "F*ck it" and attacks Ken'ichi, knocking him off a bridge and fighting him on a moving bus, showing off his Piguaquan skills in the process and claiming that everything Ken'ichi saw of "Tanimoto Natsu" was just an act and that it's human nature to lie and deceive others. He also asks Ken'ichi directly if they were taught by the same man, but Ken'ichi affirms that he was taught by Ma
Kensei, a name Tanimoto nonetheless seems to recognize. They fight a little more but end up getting knocked off the bus, and Hermit tells Ken'ichi they'll settle the score later. Ken'ichi, though, has recognized a melancholy in Tanimoto's eyes similar to his own before meeting Miu, calling them the eyes of someone desperate for a friend, and is determined to get through to him.
Recognizing that Ken'ichi needs some special training, he takes him to the mountain where a fellow Master and jujutsu practitioner named Yamamoto Taiki lives with his son and disciple, Naoki, to teach Ken'ichi about the use of tactics. Ken'ichi doesn't really grasp the concept of deceit in combat, though, instead just putting himself through even more special training in secret to overcome Naoki's superior tactics. Koetsuji makes fun of him for his straightforwardness but admits that his hard work is a talent in its own. Also, Naoki is super-sheltered and has never gotten to see the city; his father won't let him go see the world outside the mountains until he gets a hit in on a "tengu" living in a nearby cave, which is actually Taiki himself in disguise. At the end, Koetsuji subtly chides Taiki for this and convinces him to ease up on Naoki at some point, which he sheepishly agrees to.
**Okay, here's a note on the names of the Ma family: the Japanese do this thing with Chinese characters where they pronounce them in a certain way; basically, they change Chinese words to fit the Japanese syllabary, and this is a distinct way of reading Chinese characters separate from the Japanese language's own use of Chinese characters, i.e.
kanji. This is why anime has so many Chinese characters with obviously Japanese-sounding names. For whatever reason in localization the "Ma" is preserved (in the Japanese way of pronouncing it, it would be "Ba" instead, which is why you'll see some scanslations spell his name that way), but everything else is read in the Japanese way. To wit:
"Ma Kensei" would be read in Mandarin as "Ma Jianxing." His brother "Sōgetsu" would be "Ma Qiangyue," his daughter "Renka" would be "Ma Lianhua," and his uncle…
Okay, his name in Mandarin is "Ma Liang," and his nickname "Hakubi" is the Japanese rendering of the Chinese "Bai Mei," which means "white eyebrows." In addition to both the name and nickname being that of a historical personage from the Three Kingdoms Period of China, "Bai Mei," rendered in Cantonese as "Bak Mei," is the nickname of one of the "Five Elders," legendary warriors who supposedly survived the destruction of the Southern Shaolin Temple when it was destroyed by the Qing government (neither the destruction or the temple itself have been proven to have ever happened/existed, BTW). In most versions of the story, Bak Mei was the one (or one of the ones) who sold out the temple to the Qing.
Apropos of nothing, the two brothers share a name scheme: "Jianxing" is made up of the characters for "sword" and "star," while "Qiangyue" is made up of the characters for "spear" and "moon."
*** A lot of Filipino food is absolutely delicious, but some of it is, well, chocolate rice pudding with dried, salted herring in it. That kind of contrast is a big thing in Filipino cuisine, but it's an acquired taste at best, at least in my experience.
… Man, I could really go for some chicken adobo. It's been so long.
**** In classical wuxia, the world of martial arts, separate from the ordinary world of farmers and kings, is known as the "jianghu." To leave the jianghu and the endless rivalries, feuds, blood oaths and power struggles that define it, one undertakes a ceremony in which they wash their hands in a golden basin, symbolically washing their hands of all involvement in affairs of the jianghu. To "wash one's hands in the golden basin" or just "to leave the jianghu" is sometimes used as slang for retirement in China.