Mia Hayashi
The first time I held a Kendo sword, I wasn’t thinking about victory.
I was thinking about revenge.
The shinai felt unfamiliar in my hands. Too light to carry the weight of my family’s name. Too simple to represent years of pain.
People always said swords revealed who you truly were.
If that was true…
Then maybe everyone would finally see me.
Not the quiet girl who stayed behind others.
Not the daughter of a man who disappeared.
Not the girl everyone whispered about.
Mia Hayashi.
The girl whose father had once been a Kendo legend.
The girl whose father lost everything.
The girl who was never supposed to step into the dojo.
I tightened my grip.
“Relax your hands.”
I looked up.
My instructor stood in front of me.
“If you hold the sword like you’re trying to break it, you’ll lose control.”
I swallowed.
“I’m not afraid.”
He studied me.
“Everyone says that when they are.”
I hated that.
Because he was right.
The entire dojo watched me.
Experienced fighters.
Champions.
People who had trained since childhood.
And me.
A beginner.
The daughter of a fallen name.
A boy near the equipment area whispered:
“Isn’t she Hayashi?”
Another replied:
“The one whose father lost to Nakamura?”
My stomach tightened.
There it was.
The reason I came here.
Not because I loved Kendo.
Not because I wanted friends.
Because I was tired of carrying someone else’s failure.
───
My first match lasted less than a minute.
One strike.
One mistake.
One reminder that everyone was right.
“Point!”
The sound echoed.
I froze.
My opponent lowered his shinai.
“You hesitated.”
I looked at him.
Everyone kept saying that.
“You think too much before you move.”
I looked down.
Maybe that was my problem.
I thought too much.
About my father.
About expectations.
About everyone waiting for me to fail.
I walked away.
Trying not to show how much it hurt.
───
“Running away already?”
I stopped.
A voice.
Calm.
Confident.
I turned.
And saw him.
Ren Takahashi.
Everyone knew him.
The captain of the school Kendo team.
The perfect fighter.
The person everyone wanted to become.
He leaned against the wall, watching me.
“I’m not running away.”
His eyes moved to my sword.
“Then why are you leaving?”
I had no answer.
He stepped closer.
“Your stance is wrong.”
I frowned.
“Excuse me?”
“You’re fighting like you’re angry.”
I laughed bitterly.
“Maybe I am.”
For the first time, his expression changed.
Not pity.
Not judgment.
Understanding.
“Good.”
I blinked.
“Good?”
“Yes.”
He picked up another shinai.
“Anger is better than fear.”
He held it out.
“Again.”
I stared.
“You want to train me?”
“Maybe.”
“Why?”
Ren looked at me.
And for some reason, his answer felt personal.
“Because I don’t think you’re as weak as everyone believes.”
My heart skipped.
Nobody had ever said that.
Not about me.
───
I trained until sunset.
For the first time, I didn’t feel like someone’s daughter.
I felt like myself.
But I didn’t notice the person standing outside the dojo.
Watching.
Judging.
A boy wearing black Kendo armour.
A boy whose name everyone feared.
Kai Nakamura.
He watched Ren teach me.
And his expression darkened.
Because he knew something I didn’t.
The moment I stepped into Kendo…
I had stepped into a war that started long before me.
End of Chapter 1