Spring 21st, 510 A.V.
He could remember the day as if were yesterday. A fresh boy of fifteen eagerly training under the guidance of his Steward Knight, Ser Tons who’d taught him that knights were not prided on their penchant for combat, nor their physical prowess. Sighard, less aware and more absorbent than anything, had gone throughout the entirety of Syliras spewing the proverbial word of god, claiming his mentor to be the wisest of all the knights. The claim was not necessarily unfounded considering the age of the veteran, but it had led to the squire’s fair share of shooing from those engaged in work and study. Although he’d been practicing furiously at his martial abilities as per the dictation of his father, he much preferred the honing of intellect at that age. The painlessness of such an experience was certainly an added benefit.
This of course, made the situation that Sighard had placed himself into rather compromising. Here he stood, a charming gentleman who stood staring at the being whose charming magnetism reflected his own. Each stood several paces across each other with blades gripped firmly in hand. The moment urged that any second could begin the conflict. A contest of skill was to be the game and the prize was the injured honor of the defeating. If the situation seemed contradictory of the boy’s usual, cheery demeanor, it’s because it was. The implications of this spar reached far beyond the comprehension of the boy who stood tenuously by and wondered how he’d gotten himself into this position.
The truth of the matter was that the details were rather hazy. Imagine Sighard smaller than he is now. Fill that vessel with considerable amounts of alcohol and allow the hubris of a young adolescent to shine brilliantly and create consequences in the aftermath. Reflecting on the situation, he seemed to recall a swelling of pride at one point in which he’d loudly proclaimed in a tavern that his family was the greatest swordsmen in the knights. It necessarily sparked hostile comments from a man who spoke calmly off to the side. The words were hazy, but it was to the likening of the man not seeing the translation of such abilities into the young boy.
Offense was taken, and now that same man stood across from him, a living, breathing test to the boy’s proclamation. To lose the fight would be to mark the Beleld name in a fashion his father could not honor. He knew victory was tantamount to erasing his mistakes but he was so young. . so doubtful. . and so lacking the alcohol that had previously given him confidence. His disadvantage was that he’d no prior knowledge of the man’s abilities and knew only of his own which were as shaky as the boy who stood and attempted to assert himself.