68th Day of Summer, 511 A.V. Locked in the fist fight, Keating focused only on the man that had offended him and not upon the few people that had stopped to watch. It was not a pretty match, or a showcase of grace and skill. It was ugly, base and violent. It showed men at their worst, dirty and unforgiving. And it was apparent that the small brawl had been going on far too long. Dusk was past gone, and the shadows grew longer on the small side street. Both men moved slowly, as their lungs labored for air, and their breath came heavily. The red haired man glared at Keating in kind, and bloodied fists flew once more as each man tried to land a solid, decisive blow. But Keating was the luckier this round, and he punched the man’s face twice in rapid succession. With the force in his muscled arm behind the blow, the nose broke against his fist and blood splattered. Keating looked pleased as he pulled his arm back for a third punch, but the man blocked it. With his free hand, the man swung wildly and connected squarely with Keating’s temple. Staggering back, the dark man’s own blood streamed from the cut at his brow, and his eye squinted painfully. Keating managed to get in a partial undercut to the man’s jaw, and the man reeled from it. Growling angrily, Keating lunged to try to knock the man off his feet, but the other man moved more quickly, and grabbed onto an old splintered board, grey from the elements. With a grunt of effort, he cracked it across Keating’s stomach. The dark eyed farmer doubled over immediately gasping, the air knocked out of him. Slowly he rose and staggered back. It was difficult to straighten himself. The two men circled one another, hatred palpable between them. One of the spectators called out nervously, “The Guard comes!” As if by magic, spectators scattered, silently and swiftly. Keating and the man exchanged wary glances, before both looked down the street. No guard could yet be seen, but they each backed away slowly, unwilling to continue their brawl under the watchful eye of Ravok’s supposed peacekeepers. The red headed man wiped his dripping, blood covered nose with the back of his hand, while Keating’s forearm hugged his stomach tightly, but they both stepped away as best they could. As Keating’s heavy boots fell, slowly and painfully he swore under his breath, “Ignorant farmer… my ass!” |