Font Size:  

“It’s part of the cover. You’ll be attending embassy parties, posing as the daughter of old friends of the ambassador.”

She would be playing dress-up, Niema thought with amusement. She looked forward to that part of the job. Like most women, she liked good clothes and the thrill of knowing she looked good.

“Try everything on,” he continued. “The clothes have to fit perfectly. What doesn’t will be replaced or altered.”

“They can’t be returned if they’re altered.”

“Don’t worry about it, you can keep them.” He looked around. “This is where I leave you. See you in five minutes.” He peeled off to the right, his stride lengthening as if he hadn’t already been running for over an hour. He cut between two houses, jumped a fence, and disappeared from view.

Niema turned on the afterburners. Her thighs ached from the effort, but she pushed harder, her feet pounding. It was silly to compete with him when they weren’t racing; all she had to do was leisurely jog back to her house and let the surveillance team see her, so they knew she was all right. She knew it was silly, she did it anyway. She fought to suck air deep into her lungs as she raced down the sidewalk. Anyone seeing her would think she was running for her life, she thought, except there was no one behind her.

Up ahead she saw the surveillance car, or at least she thought it was. She hadn’t gotten a good look at it in the dark, but the tail lights looked the same, and there were two men in it. The car was parked at the curb; she blew by it in a dead run, without giving the men so much as a glance. When she was twenty yards past them, she heard the car engine start.

She was two blocks from home. She ignored the messages her thigh muscles were screaming at her and forced herself to maintain her speed. When she reached her house she pounded across the small front yard and to the front door. Out of the corner of her eye she saw the car cruise past. She unlocked the door and practically fell inside, gulping in huge breaths.

She leaned against the wall beside the door, wondering if the goal had been worth the effort. Her heart was pounding so hard there was a roaring in her ears.

Or was there? She forced herself to breathe regularly, her head tilted as she listened.

The shower in the second bath was running.

Muttering to herself, she stomped off to take her own shower.

Niema faced Medina across the blue foam mat. “Today I’m going to show you some strike points,” he said. “Done properly—and it takes a lot of practice to do them properly—these are death blows.”

She drew back and put her hands on her hips, eyeing him suspiciously. “Why would I need to know anything like that? Am I going to be in hand-to-hand combat?”

“If I thought you were, I wouldn’t take you. This is partly just in case and partly because I have time on my hands.” He motioned her forward. “Come on.”

“You want to turn me into a trained killer because you’re bored?”

That drew a flashing smile. “You won’t be a trained killer. At most, you’ll be able to stun someone so you can get away. I told you it takes years of practice to do this properly. The only way you’ll kill someone is if you accidentally get it right.” Again he motioned for her.

Warily she approached, but still remained out of his reach.

“Relax, there’s no hitting in this session. I’m just going to show you some of the points and the striking motions.” He took a quick step forward, grabbed her wrist, and dragged her to the middle of the mat before she could retreat.

“This is part of t’ai chi. Actually, it’s the basis. Dim-Mak is death-point striking, and it involves acupuncture points. Never, never use it unless it’s a life and death situation, because like I said, you might accidentally get it right.” He brought her hand up and caught her fingers, then held them against the outside corner of his eye.

“Here. This exact spot. Feel it.”

“I’m feeling.”

“Even a slight blow here can do major damage—nausea, memory loss, sometimes death.” He showed her how to do the strike, using her fingertips. Positioning was important, to get the right angle. He made her go through the motion over and over, using himself as a dummy for her to aim at; she actually hit him once, nothing more than a touch. He whirled away from her, bent over from the waist, gagging.

“Oh God, I’m sorry!” She rushed over to him and put her arms around his waist as if she could hold him up. Panic surged in her as she remembered what he’d said about a slight blow. “Should I call 911?”

He shook his head and waved off that suggestion. He pressed under his nose, and rubbed from the corner of his eye back toward his ear. His eyes were watering a little. “I’m okay,” he said, straightening.

“Are you sure? Maybe you should sit down.”

“I’m fine. Things like this happen all the time in training.”

“Let’s do something else,” she suggested uneasily.

“Okay, let’s move on to the temple—”

“I meant like judo.”

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
Articles you may like