My Words | Your Words | My Thoughts
The Akalak was so absorbed in his own ranting, he didn't even notice the other knight slipping between the other fighters to take a place beside the other competitor. "Strength is what gives us the power to lead, and separates those that should follow. When faced with the strife of our adversaries, and those that would challenge peace and civilization, it is the strength of the knights, individual and as a whole, that will keep them united." Even at a distance, it wasn't hard to discern that there were some that agreed with the knights words, and others that most certainly did not. "Strength is what I teach, even if strength is not what you have learned, Squire Archailist."
The squirrel was about to make a furious retort, but stopped at the rapping of a stick against the floor. Seemed like the argument was about to take a twist, because just when it seemed like the Akalak was going to lie the matter to rest, the new knight interjected and the man ran off into another string of rants. "Oh, really? Well, you may teach that to your squire as you please. I'm sure you've had a good 150 years to come to that conclusion." That was probably pushing the limit a little far, but the Akalak was seriously troubled by all of this, and it was really showing. Crimson veins were popping up over his neck, tracing just over the rim of the thick plate-mail armour he often wore like it was nothing but thin cloth. "I'm also damn sure this isn't the Sunken Scars of Taloba. We don't measure strength by the scars we wear on our back. We wear it in our pride and our determination. I'm giving the girl a chance to use this damn 'power' and all I've seen so far is a severe lack in effort."
He was suddenly aware that there was a squirrel next to him, and another squire next to the other knight. "Now, I've given you a very simple task, Arch. Not even a painful one, for either of you. Go over there, and touch her on the forehead so that we can continue. I want to see some real fighting going on!" There was a hidden growl in his voice as he used the side of his foot to nudge the squirrel forwards a few steps. Arch, conversely, was on the edge of his damn sanity from the words already spoken so far today, and the arguments he'd repeatedly put up with from his own patron. The man had no grasp of anything other than strength - not that it was really very hard to understand why. In battle, arrows and swords may as well have bounced off the man like they'd struck a stone wall.
Still, even after all they'd gone through together - including countless training sessions, most of which had ended up the Akalaks defeat, despite his immense strength - he'd refused to budge on the matter. Perhaps the squirrel was just as stubborn as the Akalak, to believe that one day the crimson man would understand that there was more to life than just body-building.