Season of Summer, Day 88, 513 AV
Jorin grinned as he accepted Kirsi's invitation to sit. It was interesting, learing about Avanthal. He'd never been there, but he heard it was a winter wonderland, a place of beauty among ice and snow. He'd certainly have to visit someday, if he could.
"But what about you? Where did you pick up your interest in the quarterstaff?"Jorin shrugged lightly.
"Honestly? I don't even like fighting," Jorin admitted.
"But, well, Mizahar is a dangerous place. And not being able to protect yourself is foolhardy. Now, that doesn't guarantee anything, of course. But I'd rather say I'd tried."Jorin sighed.
"Besides, there's someone I want to protect now. She was hurt recently ..." Jorin's jaw tightened.
"If I can prevent that from happening again, even once, then it'll have all been worth it."He shrugged, and grinned once more.
"Actually, when I first started out it was before I'd even met Rinya. I had been fairly recently kicked from my troupe - did I ever tell you about that? - and I had just been kicked out of yet another tavern." Jorin threw Kirsi a conspiratorial smirk.
"Don't try poetry in Akalak taverns," he warned her with a smile.
"They don't appreciate it. Anyway, I figured maybe I should learn a weapon, so that next time, maybe they couldn't just bodily throw me out. Or at least I could make it less easy for them. But blades don't interest me. So ... brutal. Bloody. I wanted something that had no edge, no point. That meant a staff."Jorin sprang up, grabbing his branch, and glanced at Kirsi.
"So there I was, on the beach, and I see a branch!"Jorin sprang back, dramatically waving the branch at an invisible foe.
"So I picked it up and started swinging it!" Jorin swung the branch a few times to emphasize. Then he laughed.
"Actually, my swinging was a lot more wild than that. I had no training whatsoever, I didn't know what I was doing. A Drykas woman showed up, but she wasn't interested in teaching me, but then I met a most fascinating person!"Jorin leaned against his branch as he described her.
"She was an Otani I later found out. She was a daughter of Laviku, apparently, which is amazing! I'd never even heard of the Otani before. Her name was Uleru, and after the Drykas woman left, she helped me 'train'. Well, if you could really even call it training."Jorin laughed. He seized his makeshift staff, getting into the forward stance.
"I ... borrowed this stance from that Drykas woman I mentioned earlier, but I didn't know a thing about the staff beyond that. So Uleru kept using her magic to upend me," Jorin explained, and here he took a dramatic swan dive, landing on his stomach, with a soft
"Oof!".
Gonna have to work on falling, Jorin thought to himself as he was momentarily stunned. While he was physically fit, technically, Jorin knew that acrobatics was a weakness of his. It was why combat scenes were rarely given to him. He mentally shrugged. Something to work on, he supposed.
Picking himself back up, Jorin dusted himself off and continued.
"Well, that dive I took was pretty much what it was like," he said, picking the stick back up.
"I got a lot of bruises that day," Jorin chuckled,
"but I still think it was well worth it. I learned about a people I'd never even heard of before, I met a new friend, and I realized I needed real training if I was ever to use the staff in any real way. So I signed up at the Kendoka Sasaran."Jorin plopped down again next to Kirsi. Despite his exertions he did not appear out of breath. Once again he thanked the long bells of being onstage; you dealt with exhaustion or it dealt with you.
"You seemed ... angry earlier," Jorin observed, almost carefully. He didn't know if this was a subject Kirsi wanted to bring up. With Rinya, their bond meant he'd know if she didn't want to continue a subject, and Jorin supposed he had become a little spoiled by that. Still, he
was curious.
"Did something happen?" he asked at last.