*
*
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10th of Fall, 509 A.V
Location
“Pass the ball! Pass the ball!”
Red faced and sweating, Kiva ran down the court beside a member of the opposite team, frustrated at their current loss. As the girl beside her jogged, Kiva slammed her body into her opponent, and she was returned the favor. Her body ached from the tackles and heavy ball being hit by various parts of her body (or at least the ones allowed in the rules), but she kept her eyes on her teammate who struggled to keep the handball away from the enemy. Kiva jumped in front of the girl she had been squabbling with, and weaved her way around the others, waving her hands.
“Stay focused!” Kiva ordered, still trying to get close enough to give her assistance and grunted when the ball pass failed miserably. The rubber ball bounced off another girl’s hip and was intercepted before it could reach her. Kiva changed her course, but it didn’t matter. She watched helplessly as the other team tackled and bruised her teammates, shooting another confident goal.
Kiva cursed under her breath, kicking dirt in frustration, but stopped when she saw the girl who had made the failed run a hand over her face and clearly blame herself. Calling a time out, Kiva ran over to her shamed teammate and slapped her on the back lightly to catch her attention.
“Keep your head up. They’re playing hard, we just have to play harder,” Kiva wiped her brow with the back of her hand and retightened her hair tie, “You play good defense, but you’re not paying attention when you have the ball. Look at your team.”
“I do,” the girl insisted, “I’m second guessing myself,” she shook her head, heaving a sigh and going to take a drink of water. Kiva followed after her, trying to think of something that would boost her spirits.
“You get the ball, I’ll be there,” It was a bold promise, one that made the other girl laugh softly.
“Are you serious?”
“Like the dead.” Kiva’s expression was straight, a gambler’s design. She nodded reassuringly, “If you can get the ball to me, I’ll do what I can. I’ll defend you if you don’t. I’ll be your partner until you can get comfortable. You’ll always know you’ll have someone watching your back. Just relax.”
This made the girl laugh, “I don’t need your focus,” Despite her words, she sighed and nodded to herself, “Why are you doing this?”
The question caught her off guard. What was her conviction? A flash of memory flickered in her mind, “I… I had someone encourage me once.” ‘Nika…’ A pang of sadness and a longing of nostalgia. It took her back the first day she had ever played handball. How fun everyone had… How nice she was treated… How Nika instructed her, blocked her, allowed her to try and fail. His sweet, boyish smile made Kiva smile softly at the thought. “Well? Are you interested?”
For a long moment the other female didn’t answer, finally agreeing when the time out was coming to a close, “Yes. I will try it. Thank you.”
*
*
10th of Fall, 509 A.V
Location
“Pass the ball! Pass the ball!”
Red faced and sweating, Kiva ran down the court beside a member of the opposite team, frustrated at their current loss. As the girl beside her jogged, Kiva slammed her body into her opponent, and she was returned the favor. Her body ached from the tackles and heavy ball being hit by various parts of her body (or at least the ones allowed in the rules), but she kept her eyes on her teammate who struggled to keep the handball away from the enemy. Kiva jumped in front of the girl she had been squabbling with, and weaved her way around the others, waving her hands.
“Stay focused!” Kiva ordered, still trying to get close enough to give her assistance and grunted when the ball pass failed miserably. The rubber ball bounced off another girl’s hip and was intercepted before it could reach her. Kiva changed her course, but it didn’t matter. She watched helplessly as the other team tackled and bruised her teammates, shooting another confident goal.
Kiva cursed under her breath, kicking dirt in frustration, but stopped when she saw the girl who had made the failed run a hand over her face and clearly blame herself. Calling a time out, Kiva ran over to her shamed teammate and slapped her on the back lightly to catch her attention.
“Keep your head up. They’re playing hard, we just have to play harder,” Kiva wiped her brow with the back of her hand and retightened her hair tie, “You play good defense, but you’re not paying attention when you have the ball. Look at your team.”
“I do,” the girl insisted, “I’m second guessing myself,” she shook her head, heaving a sigh and going to take a drink of water. Kiva followed after her, trying to think of something that would boost her spirits.
“You get the ball, I’ll be there,” It was a bold promise, one that made the other girl laugh softly.
“Are you serious?”
“Like the dead.” Kiva’s expression was straight, a gambler’s design. She nodded reassuringly, “If you can get the ball to me, I’ll do what I can. I’ll defend you if you don’t. I’ll be your partner until you can get comfortable. You’ll always know you’ll have someone watching your back. Just relax.”
This made the girl laugh, “I don’t need your focus,” Despite her words, she sighed and nodded to herself, “Why are you doing this?”
The question caught her off guard. What was her conviction? A flash of memory flickered in her mind, “I… I had someone encourage me once.” ‘Nika…’ A pang of sadness and a longing of nostalgia. It took her back the first day she had ever played handball. How fun everyone had… How nice she was treated… How Nika instructed her, blocked her, allowed her to try and fail. His sweet, boyish smile made Kiva smile softly at the thought. “Well? Are you interested?”
For a long moment the other female didn’t answer, finally agreeing when the time out was coming to a close, “Yes. I will try it. Thank you.”