Back in her high school days, Mum was the most beautiful girl in school, to the point where there was a gentleman’s agreement among the boys that Mum was for everyone to equally enjoy from afar — off-limits to confessions and everything.
Me: “Then how did Dad get you?”
Mum: “He punched me in the face.”
Me: “What?”
Mum does kendo and karate. That I already knew. But apparently, their high school didn’t have a kendo club. It did, however, have a fencing club. Mum decided to challenge a few of the fencers to an informal swordfight.
Mum trounced three fencing club members, including the captain, before Dad, a new transfer student, stepped up.
Dad: “All right, so we agree. First to fifteen points. Anything goes.”
Mum: “Sure.”
Dad actually put on quite a good showing. He was in the lead for most of the fight. Mum was stronger than him — still is stronger, actually — but Dad was and still is faster than her. His sword had a longer reach, and he scored by stabbing, not by slashing, compounding that advantage. Dad leveraged his speed to keep himself out of range of Mum, slowly but surely racking up the points.
But eventually, Dad tired out. He started making mistakes, and Mum, who had been conserving her stamina for the whole match, stopped holding back.
13-11 in Dad’s favour slowly tipped to 13-13, and then 13-14. Getting rather desperate, after Mum parried his sword, Dad used his free hand to slug her straight in the face, and then he stabbed her with his sword before she could react.
14-14 now. Anything goes. They had both agreed to that. The punch didn’t count, but the sword stab did.
Mum reared back from the left hook and angrily retaliated by removing a hand from her sword and throwing a right straight right into Dad’s face. She hit him so hard he was thrown off his feet and onto the ground.
Despite being stunned — and half-blind as his glasses had been bent quite out of shape from how hard his mask was hit — Dad still managed to leap to his feet and somehow not just parry Mum’s shinai but actually score the fifteenth point at the same time.
He had blocked the slash with his sword’s guard, and the tip had carried on to stab Mum’s breastplate.
Me: “What, really?”
Dad: “Yeah, I’ve still got the scar to prove it.”
He shows me his right hand where there’s a keloid scar over the knuckle of his thumb.
Dad: “I got that because I parried [Mum]’s last blow with the guard of my epee. She hit it so hard that the guard slammed into my hand and cut me through my glove.”
The guard of an epee is essentially a metal bowl that covers the top of the wielder’s hand to prevent the opponent from stabbing them in the fingers. The rim of the bowl is pretty sharp, as my Dad clearly found out firsthand. Literally.
Me: *To Mum* “So, you fell in love with Dad because he beat you.”
Mum: “No, I fell in love with [Dad] because he apologised for punching me and baked me cupcakes. It was pretty sweet.”
Me: “The cupcakes or the gesture?”
Mum: “Both.”
Me: “Okay. Okay. I know Dad’s baking is awesome, but seriously? That’s all it took?”
Mum: “No, he was also the only boy in school that treated me as an actual human being and respected me for my thoughts and opinions instead of just my looks or athletic talent.”
Me: “Really? Over a hundred boys in school, and only Dad wasn’t charmed by your looks?”
Mum: “Oh, he was charmed. Couldn’t look straight at me without blushing and stammering. But unlike the rest, he actually listened when I talked and tried his best to treat me like everyone else.”
Dad: *Shrugs* “To be fair, I was a transfer student. I didn’t know about the whole ‘gentleman’s agreement’ thing until after we’d became boyfriend and girlfriend.”
Mum: “You nearly got lynched by the boys.”
Dad: “Thrice. That I know of. And [Teacher] tried to get me suspended for confessing. I think he was jealous.”
Mum: “Oh, he was.”
Me: “So, was it worth it in the end?”
Both Of Them: “Absolutely.”
They never married each other, even after a decade and two children, but are both still very much madly in love. And to think it all started with a punch in the face.