Iron Wind Rebellion: The Northern Dojo’s Last Stand
The night stretches long in Shiraoka—the snow city known for its silent mornings and fight clubs echoing in alleyways. Ryo Sakamoto leans out his window. “Another winter. Another loss,” he mutters, voice colder than the glass. Maple leaves drift by the entrance of Iron Wind Dojo. Ryo can’t see them from his loft, but he dreams about them. He wants to win the Winter Martial Circuit, not just for himself, but for the only home that’s left for him. Does your own passion drive you forward through hard seasons?
Shun and Tama wait at the old gym’s doors, tying shoelaces. Shun stares down, then up, fussing, “Don’t forget your lesson plan. We’re dead if coach hears we missed soft drills again.” Tama just grins, punching his gloves together. Every day, it’s a grind of sweat and technique amidst battered wood floors. “Why so tense, Shun? It’s only old-man Yanagisawa’s style check.” Bruised laughter trails after her.
Coach Yanagisawa stands by the scrolls, frowning deeper than any old monk statue. He counts students every morning; his whistle snaps. “Discipline is spirit. Your spirit bleeds in these forms.” His fingers thrum the air. “Preparation, not pride. Respect your enemy, children.”
This morning, he isn’t alone. Akemi Yakushiji—the daughter of the national champion, high sleeves and sharp voice—watches the class from far, checking Ryo out. Rumor says she’s scouting for her father’s new project. Ryo spits after a jab: “Why’s she keep staring at me? Is she here to poach?” Tama shrugs, eyeing Akemi’s white sneakers. Shun looks pale. “If she makes the squad, we’re toast.” A girl like her in their group feels like thunder in a clear sky.
The training heats up. Ryo can outpace most juniors, but his mind’s rough. He slips in kata, swears when a punch misses, feels heat on his skin where bruises form. Tama’s playful, but Shun aims for every weak spot; he wants to win too. “It’s dumber than you think, y’know?” Tama grins mid-fight. But outside, fierce flyers stack at the locals’ doors. The North Blades, legends from the capital, plot a takeover this weekend. “It’s real! Get it together,” someone yells near the mizuchi fountain.
Iron Wind Dojo’s future isn’t gold-tipped trophies. It’s everyday faces practicing with bandaged feet, fighting to keep their gym. Ryo boils inside—he hates to lose. Does anxiety before a big event hit and linger for you too? Ryo snarls in the locker room, almost missing Coach’s call to Zen only for senior belts.
Days blend. The team gets ready for the challenge exhibition—the match that draws a crowd each winter, vans of fans pulling up to school gates. Shun worries aloud, “We break or we show them how it’s done here, right?” Even Tama’s steady hands shake juuuust a bit. Old boards rattle in early morning drafts as the squad bans together.
Akemi’s turn arrives; she faces Tama first and swipes her foot, a flash counter not in the handbook. The sensei winces. Tama recovers—but there it is. She adapted, knows every quirk and cheat. Matches fly by. She beats three before turning to Ryo. “You’re not bad,” she says, eyes almost soft, “but not fast enough.” 
His turn’s up. Court hoop squeaks under welt sneakers. Yanagisawa even pauses mid-sand grooming. Ryo drags his left and right—thinks fast, remembering Dad’s ghost fist move. Shun calls out, “Shift left already.” Akemi reads it; she counters, they circle again and again. Time draws out.
Audience holds its breath. Hush falls. Only fists and footfalls sound—plus quick gasps. Ryo fakes then spins, bumps Akemi’s shoulder; he almost scores, but stops short, staring hard at her guard. There’s something odd—her stance breaks under pressure. The match ends unresolved by referee’s shrill beep.
Tama slaps Ryo on the back, disbelief in her brown eyes. They want to ask what happened. The North Blades’ captain steps forward from the bleachers—he grins. “We’ll face all of you in two days. Winner keeps their house. Loser, gone.” That settles it.
Later that night, rain taps on makeshift banners outside the dojo. Ryo stands in the dark hoofprint near the gate, alone, thoughts wrestling with failure and proof. How do victories slip through our fingers? There must be something hidden in Akemi’s fighting. Coach approaches, voice barely above a hush. “Don’t repeat her mistake. Watch the tape.” Cliffhanger: Ryo hits play—and sees her eye flick just before contact in every match, some hint of fear masked by pride.