50th Day of Spring, 490 A.V. 6 Years Old: Baby Steps The sun was just slowly inching it’s way over the horizon as wildlife spoke in whispers that spring morning. Subtle calls of the birds echoed lightly in all directions as they began their hunt for nesting material and mates. The wind pushed past leaves and shook branches as the smell of rain in the distance lingered in the air. Jaeden laid restlessly along his blanket, visions of his parents and sister being killed still pushing their way into his dreams. He was soon woken when he felt a nudging at his shoulder. His eyes slowly opened as darkness gave way to blurred vision. A slow rub to his eyes eventually cleared his sight as he looked up to see the large man who had taken him under his guidance. Gin Olevar was a large human, standing nearly six feet, eight inches tall. His leathered skin and large build lent truth to the harshness of his life out in the wild. His green eyes gazed down at Jaeden, as he held out a plate in front of him. “Here, eat this,” Olevar said in a plain and simple tone. Jaeden grasped the plate as he slowly sat up. Looking down into it, the plate was full of food as four eggs sat cooked and steaming to one side. Another area had a medium loaf of bread while steak and fish were layered over another side. Finally a healthy serving of carrots and slices of apples lined what little space along the plate was left. Jaeden slowly looked up to Olevar as he sat down to his right, picking up his own plate. Shoulder length brown hair with hints of grey in it dangled over the strong features, a short rounded nose taking a moment to smell his food. Olevar raised his gaze from his plate to meet Jaeden’s. “What are you waiting for?” Olevar said, “Eat.” “I’m full.” Jaeden said. “You made me eat a rune sack full of dried jerky meat yesterday, as well as three apples and four oranges. There was also those three fish you caught and the squirrel meat.” “Trust me, Pup,” Olevar said as he began eating from his own plate. “You’ll want to eat some more. It’ll give you energy for your training and you may even keep some of it down by the end of the day.” “What do you mean?” Jaeden asked, frowning in suspicion. “I mean, you’re going to work so hard today, that you’ll likely be sick from being so tired,” Olevar answered, smirking at Jaeden. “It is most likely that you’ll be vomiting as a result. So eat.” “You want me to eat, just so I can puke it up?” Jaeden then question, a slight confusion appearing in his face. “Better than having nothing to vomit, and any that stays down will help build you up,” Olevar said before shooting a glare to Jaeden. “Why are you questioning it anyways? You want to stay with me, you’re going to have to keep up and eventually pull your own weight. So, just eat.” Jaeden fell silent before looking down to his plate. He didn’t feel hungry at all, which was a total reversal of the feeling of starvation he felt not more than two days ago. Recollecting that feeling had drove him to pick up the fork and knife and begin eating when even his own body told him he didn’t need to. By the time he had finished everything on his plate, his stomach felt soar, as if it were ready to burst. He slowly looked over to Olevar who stood there, patting his own stomach as burp escaped his lips. “All finished then?” Olevar said, looking down to Jaeden while grabbing his water skin. “Good, let’s go for a run then.” “I’m so full I feel like I can barely move.” Jaeden commented as he resisted the urge to yawn, feeling sleepy after a big meal. “That’s the perfect time to drive yourself.” Olevar replied, the corners of his mouth spreading wide into a smile. “Now come on, boy. Time to get you fit enough to survive out here.” That was how his training began. A large meal and an activity as simple as running. It wasn’t realized, at first, just how difficult running over the uneven forest ground as fast as your legs could push you actually was. Jaeden, however, learned such first hand, tiring himself enough to drop to his hands and knees just after an hour. His legs felt like jelly, his lungs burned, and his heart felt like it pumped fire. Jaeden realized, as well, that this was the fist time he actually sweated to the point that it dripped from his brow. Hid gaze slowly floated up towards Olevar, who was barely winded, almost giving him a pleading look. “It’s been three miles, you want to quit now Pup?” Olevar said, a challenging look cast down into Jaeden’s own gaze. Jaeden suddenly found that gaze gave him resolve that he never even imagined he had. With it, he pushed himself back to his feet and continued to move forward, even if his own feet merely dragged along the ground at that point. He would do this for two more miles, throwing up at least half of the contents of his breakfast before finally making it back to camp. “Alright, take a rest,” Olevar said, tossing the water skin down in front of Jaeden to drink from. Jaeden took a long pull from the water skin, laying flat along the ground as he sucked in deep breaths. His arms and legs practically shook from exhaustion as flashes of light danced in his vision. He felt he could have just fell asleep right then and there. Two ticks of the chime had passed before he heard Olevar’s voice slowly call out, “Okay pup, rest time is over.” The passing week would involve Jaeden’s simple conditioning. Running in the morning, lightly working his muscles in the afternoon as he would, in repetitious motions, push his body from the ground, pull himself up along tree limbs and roll his body into a fetal position as he hung from his legs from the tree. He would go to bed tired, and wake up soar, and just as things began to feel like they were getting easier, Olevar would make them more difficult. He would extend the distance and repetitions of his work out, and add weight along his back when he worked out his body. Every time he felt like quitting, like giving up, both Olevar’s gaze and his own memory of starving alone in the wilds drove him that much more. Still, Jaeden worried slightly when he remembered that everything he went through, was only the beginning. |