Baelin bristled at the jab to his wits, but before he could do something stupid like respond, the brawler launched into explaining what he was expecting from his test. He circled Baelin, continuing an appraisal that had the hairs on the back of his neck standing up. Holding still took all of his willpower, and the brawler’s assurance that he wasn’t going to slap Baelin willy nilly did nothing to allay him.
And then came the actual instruction: two hundred push-ups. Baelin blinked. That seemed…like a lot. He couldn’t remember ever having done so many push-ups. Fifty, maybe, when he was furious and really pushing himself. But two hundred?
Maybe that’s what professional fighters did. It could be a normal amount for them, Baelin wouldn’t know. He only worked out to keep himself in shape, not to pummel people to the ground. Slightly different priorities there.
Alright. Two hundred. He could do this. How hard could it be? Just…keep going. Baelin dropped down and dug the toes of his boots into hard-packed dirt. Easing himself into a high plank, he arranged his hands in a comfortable angle and began.
The first push-ups came easy. Holding his core tight, Baelin felt like his body was one giant, straight line and he could feel the familiar satisfaction of exercise push him on. Baelin kept his elbows close as he went down, seeking out strain in his arms from habit more than from any sort of properly thought out plan to reach two hundred. Once his chest brushed the ground, he burst back up. Then leveled back down, and up, and down, and up. Three.
Baelin settled into a rhythm. As he continued, his arms, core, and glutes all started to burn. He forced himself to breath more deeply and slowly, trying to counteract the impulse to both somehow simultaneously hold his breath and to breathe in fast, erratic gasps. No. Breath slowly. Inhale. Exhale. Just like that, keep going. Twenty.
Already, Baelin could feel exhaustion nip at him. As he continued to lower down and burst back up, that fatigue became a force to be reckoned with. His body trembled and urged him to stop. He’d done enough, it begged. It wasn’t prepared for any more. Thirty.
Baelin paused for a tick, steadying himself and getting his breathing back in order. He arched and eased back to try and give his body a moment to recover. It helped, but only until he leveled himself back down into a line. As soon as his core engaged, his body once again protested the exercise with tremors and the burn of exertion. No matter. He’d just push on. His body could deal. Baelin got another five in before he stopped trying to hold his elbows in tight. Another five until he stopped trying to explode upwards, and instead settled for hefting himself up more slowly. Forty.
He paused again. It felt like he was reaching a limit, but he wasn’t even a quarter of the way there. Baelin chanced a glance up to see the fighter still there. Watching. Probably thinking that Baelin was a wimp for struggling this early in. Well, petch him. Baelin would make him eat those doubts. With a snarl, Baelin repositioned his hands so that they were spread farther apart and dropped back down. He picked up speed as he went, pushing himself faster and faster in an effort to get more push-ups in before his body could register what he was doing. Baelin could feel his shoulders arch up a bit higher than they should, and his stomach dip a bit too low, but he was pretty sure his hips were still alright. So he pressed on. Fifty.
Just a hundred-fifty left, he tried to tell himself. His mind instantly recoiled at the idea. Impossible! it shouted back, Quit now! You’ll die!
Alright then. If his thoughts weren’t going to help, then he just wouldn’t think at all. Baelin took a moment to try and empty his mind, distracting himself from his current physical strain by drawing up an image of a bird flitting in and out of the mist overhead. In this mental happy place, Syna-warmed, black stone heated his back and the mist surrounding him was thinner than usual. Heat soaked him, and he watched the bird’s lazy spiral as it rode currents.
In reality, the heat soaking him had more to do with the anguishing burn of his muscles pushed beyond their limit. But Baelin did his best to keep his mind on the fantasy of a somewhat clear day in Black Rock, the bird a focal point for him to lock onto. The world around him disappeared. The dirt under his hands, the fighter’s presence and scrutiny, even the awareness of his body; he let it all fade. Just the bird in the mist. Baelin just had to follow the bird and the mist, and add to an incidental counter. Sixty.
This worked, right up until his body took matters into its own hands. Baelin’s knee dropped on him, striking the ground and breaking the line of tension going through his core. He blinked, crashing back to reality and the blaze of overexertion. Nausea took advantage of the break and swam up, almost making him gag with its sudden intensity.
No. He wasn’t done yet. Baelin jerked his knee back up, ignored the incessant throbbing in his arms and glues, and pushed on. C’mon, you giant sack of shyke, he goaded himself, Gonna be a petching baby about this? Gonna quit cause it hurts? Weak petching idiot. Go on. Quit. Prove how worthless you are. Petcher. Baelin grunted with each burst up, snarled when that wasn’t enough, and resorted to hissing through clenched teeth. He could do this. Petch limits. He had this. Seventy.