88th of Spring, 503 AV
It was seriously becoming her favorite stomping ground already, the Arena of Ancients. Now that her father had taught her to use her body as a weapon, each spar with her companions proved far more rewarding than ever before. There was something so sadistically satisfying she felt when she struck her opponent, something promising every time she hit the dirt with every intention of getting up again. Each fall was becoming a lesson, failures a stronger motivation toward success. May the Goddess Queen damn her if she ever thought for a moment about submitting. Defeat was not ever an option. Only victory. To lose was to die, and when one lived in the thick, merciless jungles of Falyndar, survival was an ever fleeting luxury. Some lived and some died. There was never any middle ground.
"Finish him, Kaie! Finish him!" A small crowd of children began to yell like a troop of monkeys hooting in the trees that surrounded the training grounds. Their voices were excited, some crouching to become almost level with the combatants, souls growing more eager with each and every moment of action. She was learning to feed off them, to absorb their encouragement and bask in it like a reward for her growing progress toward prowess. Their cheers this day were of unbridled admiration, and she loved them for it.
Her opponent that day was a boy a year her senior. His attitude had been cocky, arrogant in a way that was almost uncharacteristic of Myrian males. He treated everyone as his subordinate, bragging about his mother taking over as a clan matriarch and his father bonding with a Myrian Tiger. A few had challenged him to a brawl in an attempt to knock him down a few notches, but unfortunately he kept rising as champion. Keikyo was familiar with the youth, and he had smirked the moment they had come for another day of sparring only to find the male present. He was big and bulky in build and Kaie was smaller and therefore quicker, her cousin had reminded her. The swell of confidence was enough to convince her to have a go at him. And now there he was laying under her, face all bruised and blood running down from his nostrils. Barbarians would've cringed at the very sight.
"Do it, Kaie! Finish him already! Come on!" They chanted at her as she straddled him, her hands balled into tight fists. The bronzed child stared down into his dark eyes hesitantly, only to find disbelief and hatred glaring right back. It was just when he began to spit some sort of vulgar insult at her that Kaie hammered his knuckles right into his jaw. It was enough to keep him from readily opening his mouth again, and certainly enough to merit the end of the spar for pride. After all the Arena of Ancients was a place for sparring and weapon skill building, not for violently settling grudges that always looked more like a blood bath had taken place afterward.
"You were right, Keikyo. I am faster," She said with a jokingly arrogant smirk, shoving herself off the hurting boy and dancing over to her cousin.
"Of course I'm right. I'm always right," He shot back with a crooked smile, one hand messing up her curly brown hair to make her giggle. The humiliated male pushed himself up to his feet while pressing the heel of his palm against his blackening left eye. Kaie could feel the heat of his gaze upon the back of her head. "I think I should pick your fights more often." Keikyo continued smugly as if intending to take credit for her win.
"I think you should pick some for yourself sometime soon."
"Well as your cousin and fellow clan member I have to believe you're the best fighter here besides me. If you were the best, which you're not, I'd just have to start kicking your ass all day, everyday. I wouldn't want to embarrass you when clan mother interrupts to start asking me to go easier, you know, just so you think you could ever have a chance."
Goddess, he's such a jerk.
"You just don't want to fight me because you know I'll win. It would be embarrassing to be beaten by your little cousin, wouldn't it?" She shot right back playfully, her voice feigning sympathy in her conjured truth. He merely laughed out loud at her.
"Try again in your next life, Kaie. You don't have a shot."
"Yeah?"
"Mhm."
"How about I pick someone for you to ask to spar then?"
"This'll be good," He scoffed in amusement, arms folding across his thickening chest. "Go for it, Tigress." Kaie couldn't help but roll her eyes at him. For a moment she was silent, amber eyes narrowing as she carefully scanned the promising crowd of loinclothed Children of Myri in their company. Quickly a satisfied smile burst across her features.
"That one.
"Which one?"
"That one. Her." She extended her little index finger toward one of the fiercer looking females in their midst. A gritty looking adolescent already marked with scars yet lacking the blessing of their Mother. Still she was a predatory looking warrior and a worthy one at that. Keikyo's pupils dilated and Kaie swore for a moment his face turned pale. Then returned that always smooth, knowing expression.
"Only if you challenge that one."
"What one?"
"Right there. How about her?"
Shyke...