It was an instinctive response that had been drummed into the children since they were infants. Deyhan were for eating. Deyhan were outsiders, and until they were formally accepted into Myrian society somehow, they were the enemy. Deyhan were rarely seen living in Taloba - much less with someone like Oni of the Jagged Blade. The circumstances, as far as they knew, were very convoluted - no one seemed to know why she was staying with Oni, since Myrians did not keep slaves and the story hadn’t yet had time to travel about what Satu had done to her companion.
It was a being-eat-being world. The Myrians respected that. Just like they now respected the painful asskicking that Oni was dishing down on her. They may have been children, but their own teachers had taught them the exact same way. If you wanted to avoid being hurt, learn to avoid the blades. Sound, solid advice. There would always be someone better than you with their weapons. They had to be even better with their bodies.
“Lesson three,” Oni told Satu as she circled the Konti, wanting to make her lose her step, lose her balance, lose track of the muddy pit she was on. The more she made her move, the more the mud would get churned up under Satu’s feet. There was a strategy to everything Oni did - it was instinctive, it was natural, it was what she had been taught by her sisters and her mother and her aunts and great aunts and grandmothers, all the way to Myri herself. “When you see an advantage, use it. Because you never know how long a fight will last, kitten, and a small thing like you will have problems wearing down a bigger opponent in the right conditions,” she grinned mirthlessly in the rain, the rain plastered to her skin. Satu was outsized and outmuscled by the Myrian warrior she was fighting with - with just about any of them she might pick an argument with. If they managed to avoid those whalebone blades, their superior size would soon tire her from fighting against them. She knew how it went. She knew, too, that with the right steps, her weight was balanced. She jabbed at Satu, the harsh bone blade coming swiftly to bear on Satu’s left side, her other blade coming up for defense and in preparation to skewer the Konti if she didn’t move fast in the mud that was now making her sink from the way she had churned it while moving.