No Warrior
52nd of Fall, 514 A.V.
52nd of Fall, 514 A.V.
Arlana thought about how defenseless she had felt every time she was cornered.
She thought about how confused she got every time she was threatened.
How useless she felt when the fists start to fly.
Recently, she came with the realization that having no idea how to fight was an awful idea. Fleeing had always been the option for her. That was what she was skilled in. It was a whole less fuss than jumping head on into a quarrel. Less danger. Less injury. But then, with the hunger flowing in, Arlana had less and less strength to facilitate all the running and climbing she needed to escape.
The young thief then decided that she needed at least a little knowledge on how to throw a punch. On rare occasions, she had decided hitting someone would buy her precious time to escape. It was getting more and more obvious that she should know at least a bit about self-defense when things went wrong. And things went wrong a lot in her life.
But honestly, Arlana was not sure where to start. No one had time to spare to teach her and even if they would, it would certainly come with a price, something she could no afford. It would seem like she just had to practice from what little she knew. An idea of throwing herself in a midst of fighting had surfaced for a brief, but obviously it was set aside. The thief had always been a practical kind of student - she learned best by execution. However, it was too dangerous and Arlana wasn’t stupid enough to try.
She went through the streets early in the morning, carrying her lumpy pillow tucked under her arm - it hadn’t fit her bag. People stared at her, probably assuming that she had something precious stashed inside. Maybe because she brought virtually nothing else but the worn pillow.
She felt slightly foolish, but she was not about to go punching about a stone wall.
Just before she made her final turn, a boy appeared in her path. He looked young, seventeen at most. Like most children in Sunberth, he was skinny and his eyes carried a certain dread. They were close enough to the Orphanage that Arlana assumed this was one of Jillene’s kids. She wondered how the Orphanage was doing during the food shortage. Not to mention the fact that they had just experienced kidnapping. Things must still be bad.
“What do you have there?” The thief could tell that the boy was trying to act tough by the mild shakiness of his last word. Probably his first time trying to rob someone.
“You cannot be serious,” she softly cursed in her father’s tongue. Though she had imagined this happening, Arlana never contemplated that there was someone actually foolish enough to go around and think she was hiding something her pillow.
Arlana had little to no energy for a physical scuffle, not to mention she didn’t want to ruin her only pillow. Instead, she called on her djed. Once the food supplies were restored, she had finally dared to access her magic. The magic flowed into her mouth, to her lips as it shaped the words. “This is just an old pillow.”
The young man wavered, warily eyeing the woman. Common sense deemed that the comely woman’s words were true, but the desperation hoped otherwise.
Sensing the reluctance, Arlana spoke once again, “You are wasting your time, you know I got nothing to help you.” She trued implementing trust to her words and some doubt to feed the boy’s hesitance. “It is not worth it.”
The boy straightened his stance and looked away. Knowing that her magic had worked, Arlana walked pass the boy slowly. She could see the bones of his collarbone showing prominently and she pitied him for a moment. There was nothing she could do to help, though. The thief was barely hanging on when the hunger had struck. The boy should learn how to survive soon or he would end up dead in an alley somewhere no doubt.
So she went on her way, not sparing a glance back.
Arlana was not sure why she picked the same alley as the one Nov had used for the interrogation - it was just the first place that came into her mind. She could still remember clearly the sounds she heard, the things she saw. It was not the most pleasant experience - especially watching Nov do it. Arlana had always known the cook as a friend, even though they were not too close. Learning that he had the skills in torturing people for information was mildly disturbing.
Looking around, she found a place to prop her pillow against the wall, placing it at about chest height. This shouldn’t be too complicated, right? Just make a fist and punch. Did she even have to practice?
The thief heard some said that venting out your anger was useful in a fight. That should not be too hard. There was a lot to be furious about.
“Common.” “Benshiran.” “Hypnotism.”