(Photo by Christopher Ginnaven)
TONER LOWE: Washington Square Park -- brief moments of some early mornings and late afternoons -- somehow transforms to a Renoir. Sunlight transposes trees, lampposts, landscape and people with a rainbow brilliance stunning the psyche. This was one of those afternoons, and I was ambling the winding walk, mesmerized by it.
Then I heard a loud yelp of pain from behind me, and Renoir
suddenly morphed to frames from “Sin City”. Some casually dressed guy was
hitting a woman half his size. With his fist. I’m no gentleman, but I seem to
have the human’s innate sense of justice. I moved quickly the some 10 yards to
them.
I heard a voice, my voice, commanding, “Stop.” Not a yell. A
firm order like I used to hear from Yip Man, my Wing Chun teacher in LA. The
guy turned toward me. He was a hulk, a la NFL defensive end, actually a
handsome Nordic type. And he was angry. I was two feet away from him now, and
he telegraphed a punch. He shouldn’t have.
My right hand, open thumb and fingers, cuffed his throat.
Not enough to kill him. Limited to my old Special Forces days, it would have.
But my later learning Wing Chun had instilled me with a clarity and peace in
motion that’s hard to explain to a non-practitioner. I had been able to combine
that with my raw, lethal techniques, adjust my strength and impact to the
occasion.
This only took a second. The blow’s strength lifted him to
his toes, almost off the ground. The impact didn’t crush his windpipe, but shut
off his air, making his eyes bulge like a crawdad that just bit into a hook. He
made a sound like the first breath of a commode flushing. Then he collapsed at
my feet.
I bent down, studying him, making sure I’d done nothing
lethal. He was gasping, limp as jelly.
“You fucking brute! You killed him!” It was the woman he had
been beating. She pushed at me. I stepped away and she bent down, taking the
hulk in her arms.
“No, m’am,” I replied. “He’ll recover. Are you alright?”
Her head raised. Her left eye was cut and closing, and her
jaw was swelling. Her right eye glared at me.
“You fucking brute!” she repeated.
“Have a peaceful day, m’am,” I said softly. Then I turned
and walked away, looking for Renoir.

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