68th day of Winter, 509 AV
Late morning, outside the Sanctuary
Akela glared at the clouds of steam she was puffing out of her mouth. There was no way in the Ukalas that three laps around the Sanctuary would have had the old Akela so out of breath. Even though the physical exhaustion of the first days in Riverfall was a thing of past, and her body was getting over the privations she had suffered, two years of slacking on her training regimen had taken a heavy toll on her. She had been the joy of the Pavilion as a swordswoman, if only as that; but even that one source of pride was lost now.
Standing outside the gates of the Sanctuary, it did not occur to Akela that visitors may mistake her for her sister Kavala; the similarity was almost uncanny, until they saw the katana dangling at her side, anyways. That particular item was as un-Kavala as it could get. Akela did some stretching and began working on her daily pushups and crunches, cursing her body for disappointing her. It was all her fault and she knew it, in truth, but she was an impatient woman. Her sword almost mentioned it to her when Akela had the impression it was talking to her. Too impatient, Akela, you want too much too fast.
In truth, Akela thought she wasn't asking for too much. Not like she'd ever had too much, or too fast. Right now she found herself in Riverfall, a place she did not know at all, with almost no possessions other than what she had stolen from the Zith colony, a shadow of her former self and back to square one with her life. Even among the Akalak she would be known simply as "Kavala's sister" and perhaps they might even try to have her submit to the same brooding mare deal as they had with her sister. Sometimes Akela felt that Kavala had a hard time saying no, which was ironic since Akela also a hard time saying no when her Gnosis was involved. The experience with the Zith had made Akela very selective, though. It also had taught her that Nikali's mark did not dislike her sword at all, and the other way around.
She got back on her feet, wiped the sweat off her hands and gripped the hilt of her katana. "Ha!" she yelled, motivating herself with her voice. She took a half step forward and drew her sword, slashing at an imaginary opponent with the same movement. She sheathed it once more and shook her head. No good. She felt like everything she did was in slow motion. This wasn't the Akela she remembered.
"Ha!" she called out again, going through the form several times. She did not sheathe after the last attempt, instead taking on several fighting stances, with the sword both in front and over her head. She started practicing her slashes starting from the easiest. It wasn't just her body; it was her mind, as well. The past two years had changed her in a way that would also require her swordsmanship to change. What the way of the sword may have been to her back then, was no more. Akela was at a crossroads. She knew that the next few months would decide whether she was destined to truly shine with the blade or she should just hang it to the wall as a memento of brighter years.