Pastor Ionesco brought Yang a drink of water; Kim did as much for her husband, and kissed him for inspiration, whispering, "Don't beat him too badly." Lorraine, and many other onlookers, were silently praying; they all felt confident that Yang himself bore no ill-will toward Alipang, but there was no telling what villainy the Overseers might come up with after a display of Alipang's prowess which would have to be alarming to them.
Nine-year-old Esperanza clung to her mother and hid her face, afraid to see her Daddy get hurt. Her brothers, and Ransom, fixed their eyes unwaveringly on their champion, as if their eyes could shoot out rays that would help him win.
Yang offered his opponent a fist-into-palm salute, so Alipang imitated it. The two men were separated by as much distance as either could cross in seven running strides. They wore no protective gear; there was only their agreed level of sportsmanship, and their precision in control, to limit the damage they might inflict on each other.
Phosphorus Andrews, chosen as timekeeper, shouted, "Fight!" Yang did not at first move from where he stood. Alipang charged--but not all the way to close quarters. Just over a meter short of Yang, his right foot came down in a step; and betting that Yang would expect him to push off from the right foot and break left, he instead spun on his right foot to shift to the right--and in the spin, shot first a left-foot instep kick, then as he came around added a right-foot crescent kick. Escrimadors did not rely heavily on kicking, not wanting to compromise their mobility on their feet; but Alipang was using this opening gambit as his own test of Yang's defenses, and to leave the kung-fu man unsure for the rest of the bout whether more kicks might be forthcoming.
Yang had indeed expected, for a split second, that the Filipino was going to break left; but even the successful deception did not translate into success for Alipang at hitting his target. Yang leaned away only just enough so that the kicks missed him, then went for a leg-sweep as Alipang was regaining his stance. Now it was Alipang's turn to foil an attack; turning with the sweep like one gear wheel turned by another, he was able to hop into a steady stance again without losing his footing. Nor did he lose momentum; a machinegun-flurry of punches from both his fists forced Yang to make a dive and roll to get clear.
Then Yang was up again. Less than ten seconds of the bout had passed.
Alipang rushed in...blocked a rising knee-jab with one hand, parried a punch with his other hand...shifted laterally, and barraged Yang with punches at close range. The blows were landing, but at only half strength as agreed. Still, that was half strength by their standards; the amount of impact Alipang was delivering would have flattened most men, just as Yang's knee-jab and high punch would have broken through the best defenses most men could have offered. Now Yang's right arm lunged in a Snake-style movement, hooking and entrapping Alipang's right arm in such a way that Alipang's left fist could not easily come across to do anything worthwhile. Alipang startled Yang with a head-butt and broke free, but Yang came right back at him with a leg-trip followed by a forearm across the back of Alipang's neck. Alipang scrambled back to his feet, putting a little distance between them, and calmly told Yang, "At full force, that would have put me out of action if not killed me."
"Freeze the time!" Yang shouted to Overseer Andrews; then, to Alipang: "But by the same token, I might not have been able to make that last attack if your own blows had hit me full force. I call it even so far. Do you feel all right about finishing the two minutes?"
"Thank you, yes, I do." He had not even thought of stopping and restarting the two minutes till now, but he went along with it by being the one himself to tell the timekeeper: "Resume counting!"
With considerably more than a minute remaining, Yang once more waited for Alipang to attack. From this point, the fight grew more like a boxing match. Alipang faked lunges twice, drawing a near-miss kick the second time, then waded in again to close range with fists and elbows. Yang slowly retreated, and Alipang noticed that he was using open-and-close steps which kept his left hand and left foot always closer to Alipang. He guessed that Yang was looking to surprise him with a sudden change of lead; and that was what the Chinese finally did, coming back at him with right fist and right foot at the same time.
Alipang got outside both of those attacks and landed a punch to Yang's head; but Yang's left arm, seeming suddenly to have no bones or joints limiting its motion range, impossibly found its way to strike Alipang's head in return. Staggering back from that, Alipang made a rather ordinary side kick to hold Yang back while he tried to clear his head; but Yang caught his foot and threw him. Dropping into a crouch, Yang went for a simulated finishing throat strike; this would not contact at all, but would show what he could do. Alipang, however, was not finished. He caught the extended-knuckle fist before it could come close enough to his throat to count as simulating the deadly blow, and with a twisting roll he brought one knee over and down onto the captured arm, throwing Yang off balance and face down.
But Yang's astonishing flexibility saved him again. With only his knees to propel him into it, he made a flip over Alipang there on the ground, relieving the pressure on his trapped arm and jerking it free again. He had not even finished this low-level somersault before his other fist darted back behind his head and struck Alipang hard on the left shoulder. And he was a hair quicker than Alipang in rising, which enabled him to deliver a controlled kick to Alipang's head.
Most men, with neither hatred nor duty nor money nor fear to motivate them, would have called that enough; but most men were not descended from the Moros. There still was time for Alipang to improve the showing he was making, and he would make the most of it.
So it was right back in, fierce and hard with punches again--but only for a moment. Remembering Bert's advice about not being predictable, he suddenly eased back and began using Tai Chi evasions (remembered from the old days at Doverwood Community College) to elude a series of counterattacks by his adversary. This, only long enough to get the benefit of changing tactics without the new style itself becoming predictable. Then it was back on offense. For the final sixteen seconds of the bout, he kept Yang constantly on the retreat, landing several good punches while not even feeling Yang's own blows. And he could tell that the kung-fu man was not merely letting him advance, but really was on the defensive. Though "on the defensive" is not at all the same as "defeated."
"Stop!" cried Phosphorus Andrews. Both men immediately stepped back from each other and exchanged salutes again. Neither fighter appeared exhausted, though Alipang's breath was coming a little hard. He felt no pain at all; the Moro legacy was doing that much for him.
Captain Butello drew near. "No formal arrangement was made for judging the bouts, but it seems to me that Mr. Yang came out ahead on technique."
"It is only fair to mention," Yang remarked modestly, "that Dr. Havens in the last two years has not had anything like the opportunities that have been available to me to keep in top shape. Dr. Havens, you have nothing at all to be ashamed of; you fought magnificently."
"Thank you, Mr. Yang. Does fifteen minutes' rest before the second bout sound reasonable to you?"