Kelski really paid attention to what Kreig said. Tilting her head to one side, which was more and more looking like her ‘thinking it over’ tell, Kelski watched him with an intensity, her pupils in her silvery eyes widening and narrowing as she focused on the details about him that he spoke of in others.
She wondered what he meant by flexible, exactly. Flexible of the mind? Or flexible of the body. Kelski would ask him before the session was up, but she didn’t want to interrupt him before he got all his thoughts out or he might not tell her what he was wanting her to know.
When he said she was an animal and that she could be trained, the Kelvic thinned her lips in irritation. She was prepared for him to make some derogatory remarks about her Kelvic state of being and tensed for it, overly sensitive because of how often Darvin and even her owner Jaren had shaken their heads and commented about the fact their jeweler was a filthy beast. She wanted to correct him and tell him that wild animals had brains too, but it wasn’t the time or the place.
The Kelvic reached up and tugged absently at her collar, not for the first time wishing it was gone.
Kreig always placed himself in front of her, facing her, and resting his hands on his hips. It was clear from his stance he wasn’t worried about her at all nor was he in a hurry for any of what was to come. He spoke volumes with his eyes, making up for what he didn’t fill in with needless noise from his lips as he reminded her about the pausing and how much it could hurt her.
She didn’t like that he watched her so closely. She felt like her guts were on the outside exposed and she kept waiting for him to find them lacking. It made her angry, thinking of someone assessing her when she’d had no time to prepare or learn on her own. But that anger had clouded her judgement when she’d been trying to learn dagger, so she tried pushing it away, not realizing she was judging Krieg as harshly as she suspected he was judging her. Irony was still lost on the Kelvic though she was slowly learning those sorts of human concepts.
Kelski froze when he made a come-at-me motion and asked her to attack. Normally she’d have a dagger tucked neatly out of sight in one hand and would have launched herself at him and stabbed him as she latched on, trying to get as many stabs in as possible to open him up and take him out before he could shake her clinging body off. Her hands felt empty without the daggers. So she opened and closed her fists, not believing the sheer strength of them alone would be enough, and raised her arms as if she were going to run at him and punch him.
The memory was recent and very very clear...
The Kelvic came at Kreig, fists raised, waving them menacingly. She kept her eyes on his face, wanting to track his head, as she made to seemingly punch him. But she didn’t punch at all. When she got within range, even though he was huge, Kelski threw her weight on her leading leg, leaned forward, and brought her trailing leg up as fast as she could, swinging it over her head and trying to bring her heel down on him in an axe kick. It was a move she’d learned briefly from Captain Eleuia who wanted her to be able to take enemies down and then repeatedly use the kick on them to disable them, especially opponents that were bigger of frame than Kelski was.
Kreig fit the ticket on the size range, and Kelski was flexible enough to high kick. She just hoped the fists diverted his attention enough. In her mind, the mantra Darvin had taught her was playing over and over as she waited for the pain to come.
Distract.
Latch on.
Kill.
Retreat.
Somehow she didn't think she'd get to retreat putting herself in Krieg's range.
She wondered what he meant by flexible, exactly. Flexible of the mind? Or flexible of the body. Kelski would ask him before the session was up, but she didn’t want to interrupt him before he got all his thoughts out or he might not tell her what he was wanting her to know.
When he said she was an animal and that she could be trained, the Kelvic thinned her lips in irritation. She was prepared for him to make some derogatory remarks about her Kelvic state of being and tensed for it, overly sensitive because of how often Darvin and even her owner Jaren had shaken their heads and commented about the fact their jeweler was a filthy beast. She wanted to correct him and tell him that wild animals had brains too, but it wasn’t the time or the place.
The Kelvic reached up and tugged absently at her collar, not for the first time wishing it was gone.
Kreig always placed himself in front of her, facing her, and resting his hands on his hips. It was clear from his stance he wasn’t worried about her at all nor was he in a hurry for any of what was to come. He spoke volumes with his eyes, making up for what he didn’t fill in with needless noise from his lips as he reminded her about the pausing and how much it could hurt her.
She didn’t like that he watched her so closely. She felt like her guts were on the outside exposed and she kept waiting for him to find them lacking. It made her angry, thinking of someone assessing her when she’d had no time to prepare or learn on her own. But that anger had clouded her judgement when she’d been trying to learn dagger, so she tried pushing it away, not realizing she was judging Krieg as harshly as she suspected he was judging her. Irony was still lost on the Kelvic though she was slowly learning those sorts of human concepts.
Kelski froze when he made a come-at-me motion and asked her to attack. Normally she’d have a dagger tucked neatly out of sight in one hand and would have launched herself at him and stabbed him as she latched on, trying to get as many stabs in as possible to open him up and take him out before he could shake her clinging body off. Her hands felt empty without the daggers. So she opened and closed her fists, not believing the sheer strength of them alone would be enough, and raised her arms as if she were going to run at him and punch him.
The memory was recent and very very clear...
“Girl… raise your rear leg vertically as high as you can then bring it down against your target. This is an Axe kick. It comes up, in, and around… girl. It confuses an enemy and they don’t know what you are doing. Its like an overhand right hook that breaks a guard and still hits the guy. Come up… in, and once you get to your highest point bring your heel down right in his face. Start from the rear you get more power… but you can start from the leading leg too. Rear starting… you have more balance. It’s a powerful kick… up around chop down with your heel. Put your enemy off balance. If you fight clean in this city, you won’t go far… you’ll die.”
The Kelvic came at Kreig, fists raised, waving them menacingly. She kept her eyes on his face, wanting to track his head, as she made to seemingly punch him. But she didn’t punch at all. When she got within range, even though he was huge, Kelski threw her weight on her leading leg, leaned forward, and brought her trailing leg up as fast as she could, swinging it over her head and trying to bring her heel down on him in an axe kick. It was a move she’d learned briefly from Captain Eleuia who wanted her to be able to take enemies down and then repeatedly use the kick on them to disable them, especially opponents that were bigger of frame than Kelski was.
Kreig fit the ticket on the size range, and Kelski was flexible enough to high kick. She just hoped the fists diverted his attention enough. In her mind, the mantra Darvin had taught her was playing over and over as she waited for the pain to come.
Distract.
Latch on.
Kill.
Retreat.
Somehow she didn't think she'd get to retreat putting herself in Krieg's range.