And so Lash watched as Beren went through the motions. Though older, bulkier and armored on top of all that, it didn't take skill to see that the man moved much more fluid through his stances and feints than the boy had. Lashander recognized it as well, cocking his head curiously, watching as Beren shifted from step to step in synchronicity with the drag of the glaive. It's like he's guiding a living being around rather than using a dead tool. Or so was the boy's impression of what he saw. Had this been a lighter weapon it might even have looked dainty. Like this, it still looked elegant. Like a bird of prey darting into Lake Ravok to seize a fish in its claws.
Beren paused, set the glaive down on its butt and looked over to the boy who remained curious and thoughtful. "You don't just step and slash." The instructor more or less repeated himself there. "Your whole body must move as one. Not all parts at a time, but each in their time and place. Sure, you can guide the glaive with just your arms, but you will only die in more pain than if you'd just given up. Hips, back, chest, shoulders, upper arms, lower arms, wrists... they each have their assigned role in every move you can make. You take the step forward..."
The grizzled veteran raised the glaive once more, then slowly stepped forth on his left foot. "You take the step and thrust out your hip. The momentum carries into your back which turns your entire torso into the swing. Like so..." For the boy's beneit, Beren overemphasized the motions he'd described, but that was hardly a bad thing. Lash could see Beren's hip just forward, saw the tension in his torso as he turned it in synch with the hip... he even thought he could feel the tension in his teacher's muscles as if it were a palpable thing.
"Chest and shoulders do the big movements, your wrist does the fine stuff, like turning the blade to smack someone over the head instead of killing them, or just aligning it to slip between armor plates instead of bouncing off." But that was the part Lash did have down, they both knew. But wait, wasn't there an entire arm missing in between shoulders and wrists? "What about..." the boy started to interject, but yet again the old man was ahead of him. "Right, your arms. If you fight the way I just showed you..."
"...and really, in essence that is true for almost any weapon. A sword, an axe, a maul... even punches work that way. No good fighter throws a punch using just his arms, unless he's playing with his opponent anyway. Where was I?" Nodding both to himself and Beren, Lash was all ears. It did make sense what his tutor explained. More muscles involved in the motion would offer him more strength to manipulate the weapon and more power left over which would translate to more speed and a higher likelihood of actually hitting someone with a swing. Why hadn't he thought of that before when he was hacking air for hours? Obviously because he simply was a foreigner to the whole thing, but the question he'd asked himself had been a rhetorical one anyhow. It didn't matter anymore.
"Ah right. So the arms. The arms are what kills people."
Lash didn't get that and it must have been written across his face in big letters. Because Beren laughed, yet again, probably the hundredth time today, it felt. And Lash was still confused. Did Beren mean to repeat what he'd just said about dying in more pain? Or did he mean... ah petch it, he'd answer soon enough without the boy even asking, wouldn't he? Of course he would.
"Stepping and turning into the swing gets you there. Hips to shoulders allow you to get the glaive where you need it. The arms allow you to bring home the full heft of the weapon. Think of it like this: The big muscles do the heavy lifting, the smaller muscles do the fine control. It's like placing furniture. First you lift it in place, then you shove it around until it's just right... You've never placed furniture before, have you?" Lash shook his head at the question, but, "I do get the picture, I think. In fact I think I get it better when you show me and just explain than try to find some ridiculous image. I am neither a child nor stupid."
Beren might have disagreed with either of that statement. But instead of doing so, he just walked over to Lashander and handed the boy the glaive back. "Is that so? Well, then show me! Hip, back, chest and shoulders, then the arms." The old soldier was in good spirits. Lash wasn't, and a groan seeping from his mouth attested to that. But he wasn't about to give his teacher the satisfaction of giving up. And with him trying to bring his whole body into the attack now, well, how much worse could it get for his arms?
"Come on! Left foot forward, high slash! Go!"
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