Day 55, Spring of 511 A.V.
Beads of crystalline sweat meandered down the girl’s soft cheeks, gathering at her sharply-angled chin before splashing into the moonlight-colored sand beneath her. The young woman could see her breath materialize in front of her, a plume of ghostly steam repeatedly refreshed by her panting chest. Every breath was labored; every gasp for air only reminded her that she was severely outmatched and sorely inferior. The revelation was sobering, but her years as a squire had been, if nothing else, a true and poignant lesson in humility. There would always be someone better; there would always be something more to learn. Fortunately, there was no one in Syliras more determined to intake from her predecessors’ wisdom and experience than Aurelia Whitethorn.
Thrusting her head forcefully to the right to swing several blonde locks away from her blue eyes, Aurelia steadied the dented, kite-shaped shield in front of her. She could feel her right arm sagging beneath its weight, the bittersweet result of continuous maneuvering and successful blocking. Her opponent’s torrent of heavy blows had practically numbed her hand into submission, but she had held on to the battered shield with every ounce of vigor and resolve that flowed through her veins. She was the proud daughter of a Syliran Knight, and her adversary would learn – as he had many times over the years of their mentor-mentee relationship – that hers was a stubborn constitution.
As her opponent’s sword rolled off the convex surface of her shield, Aurelia lowered the guard and surged out from behind it like a cornered lioness protecting her cubs. Her long sword flashed wildly in the peering moonlight, its gleaming edge cutting a swath of silver through the black fabric that was the night sky. For the millionth time that evening, her blade eviscerated thin air. In that regard, at least, she was quite accurate. She seemed to have no difficultly spilling the bowels of her imaginary opponents. Unfortunately, they neither counterattacked nor attempted to dodge.
“Patience, patience, patience!” Her adversary angrily rebuked. His silhouette was faintly visible against the backdrop of the glittering Suvan Sea. “You’re being too hasty. Don’t waste your energy on petty things. Every attack should have some purpose!”
A curtain of sand exploded in front of her as her mentor charged across the cold beach in a violent rush. The tiny particles rained down upon her shield and molested her flowing golden hair, but they were the least of the young girl’s worries. She spotted her mentor’s enormous bastard sword as it descended from its apex in a furious swipe that could have cleaved a wild boar in two equal parts – the young squire’s victimized shield could attest to that. Squinting through the makeshift sandstorm and fearing that another parry would break her hand and fracture the bones in her forearm, Aurelia sidled to the right a split second before the foreign blade slammed several inches into the grainy battlefield and sprayed another swarm of sand into the air.
Reeling for breath, the young squire intuitively knew that she had no time to waste against her superior opponent. She noticed the rare opportunity before her and punched the face of her shield upon the middle of the overly extended bastard sword, effectively pinning the weapon in place and preventing her mentor from heaving it upward for another strike. Grinding her jaws together determinedly, she drew her long sword back and shot its tip over the tangled mess of steel at her adversary’s enameled breastplate.