72nd of Spring, 514 AV
11th Bell, 31st Chime
"Begin."
After the first match, his ego was wounded.
"Cease."
After the second match, his knuckles ached painfully.
"Begin."
After the third match, Hirem was beginning to despair of ever taking down an Akalak trainee in single combat.
"Cease."
The fourth match left him feeling a little bit better, as he had finally managed to subdue one of his opponents.
"Begin."
After the fifth match, however, Hirem was confronted with the truth: whatever skill he thought he had acquired in combat, whatever prowess he imagined that he had, was insufficient compared to even the most basic of Akalak disciplines. He was no stranger to the art of combat, but he kept making rookie mistakes that his rivals found easy to exploit. They flipped around him, they ducked and weaved under his careless attacks, they lashed out at his unprotected sides and left him crippled on the floor. His fifth opponent didn't even bother with a guard; lunging under his wild swing, the young Akalak wrapped an arm around his shoulder, hauled him off the ground, and slammed him onto the floor, pinning him in one effective manuever. "Cease!" The master cried, and just like that, the bout was done, the Akalak warrior already pushing himself to his feet.
His body sore and groaning with pain, Hirem nonetheless struggled to get up alongside his opponent. "Good match," he wheezed, gripping his knees tightly. "I don't think I've ever been so quickly defeated before." He struck his hand out, as a sign of respect.
Grinning, the blue-skinned boy took the hand, shook it vigorously, and clapped the rising Benshiran twice on the shoulder. "You are strong and big, and hard to knock down... but you have the grace of a cow, and you expect your enemy to move just as slowly." The criticism was frank and harsh, but Hirem did not feel its sting. If anyone can beat me as soundly as this young man, I, frankly, deserve it. As the two trainees walked towards the edge of the practice mat, the master already signalling for another pair to take their place, the Akalak boy turned and frowned at the Benshiran. "Did you ever get taught how to fight with your fists?"
Some, back in Yahebah, but my attention was focused more towards study of history and Yahal. What I have learned, I learned in the desert... and the streets of Ahnatep. He remembered his last night in the Eypharian city, his desperate attempts to escape being stalled by a gang of three rugged men from the Pillars of Dust. He remembered how harried and tense that fight had been, Hirem's own lack of skill nearly bringing about his downfall. In previous battles, I won thanks to blind luck, my own rage, and Yahal's graceful hand. Without all three precious gifts, I would have long ago died. Since he had been soundly beaten of air, however, the Benshiran only offered a quiet shake of the head to answer the Akalak.
Frowning, the boy once again pat him on the back. "You've come to the right place, then. You just need to work on your instincts. Learn how to move with the enemy, and how to stop them from moving in circles around you."
He is very young, but speaks with the wisdom of a master. I should consider myself blessed for receiving such an opponent. Thanking the boy again for their bout, Hirem retrieved his clothes, excused himself from the hall, and found himself an empty practice room in another corner of the school. Dumping his coat, tunic, and backpack onto the ground, the Benshiran took a few moments to steady himself before he leaped back into his training, draining his waterskin and wiping sweat off his bare skin. The school's custom held that tunics were to be doffed when practising unarmed combat, a tradition Hirem embraced thoroughly - allowing himself to be bare-chested was a luxury scarcely afforded in the desert. He was only slightly self-conscious of the faint Gnosis mark upon his back, as few Akalak students had managed to recognize it thus far. The less attention drawn upon me, the better.
When he felt that he was ready, Hirem set himself before one of the practice dummies, closed his eyes, and took a deep breath. The master had earlier given him a series of basic drills to run, simple attacks that nevertheless improved his form, and it was these that Hirem now rehearsed in his head. Strike to left shoulder, return, kick to right ankle, return, kick to right shoulder... Gritting his teeth, the Benshiran then began to practice the blows in earnest, his fists and feet lashing out against his fake opponent. Though he felt weak and tired, the man's sheer determination helped sustain the exercise as he thoroughly pounded the dummy into submission.
I'll have to get a lot better than this in order to take down my Akalak friend.