Be it luck or skill, Aurelia did not know, but her long sword landed heavily atop the inside of her mentor’s arm, the same arm that controlled his meddling shield. She heard him groan within his closed helmet as his armor absorbed the brunt of the dull-edged blade. The ensuing plummet of his arm revealed that her contact had inflicted some measure of pain upon him. Her Patron Knight responded with a lumbering slash of his great sword, but Aurelia nimbly circled to his left to avoid the blade’s wild arc. She could feel her heart palpitating furiously in her chest, in part because of her physical exertion, but mostly because of the exhilaration she experienced at striking her stubborn teacher. Those instances were rare.
“Do you yield?” she lightheartedly asked, jerking her head slightly to throw her loose blonde hair to the side of her face. A playful grin blossomed along her lips, a manifestation of her overflowing pride. She remembered the first time that her Patron Knight had sparred against her to gauge her abilities. After knocking Aurelia to her bottom more than five times in less than five minutes, he had called her “pathetic” with his condescending stare and literally informed her that she would never hit him at her then-current rate of learning. The defeat had been a devastating blow to her pride and had been responsible for an exceptionally long night of tears, but she had used it to fuel her resolve and improve – to become the Knight that she had always aspired to be.
It had taken her years before she had finally scored a solid hit against her Patron Knight, but that day had marked a momentous one in her life, a sort of rite of passage. It had completely transformed her relationship with the stern man, who had seemingly opened up to her and started to confer upon her a level of respect that he had once completely denied her. Unfortunately, his sense of humor had remained as dry as a clump of salted beef, but their conversations, at least, had become increasingly less formal thereafter.
“Don’t get cocky. It will take more than a lucky blow to beat me, girl,” her mentor sharply said, reverting to his condescending name for her. Aurelia shot him a glare. Ever since the young woman had become his squire at thirteen, he had known how to grate on her nerves. It was an ability that he alone could tap into on a whim, and it was one that she had come to frequently loathe about the man who was also one of the closest people to her in her life. To some extent, she valued his hardened demeanor because it kept her humble and grounded in reality, but that did not mean that it was not infuriating to deal with at times.
I’ll show you lucky, you old man, Aurelia grumbled in her mind. She stabbed her sword high at her mentor’s neck in a feint, which had the desired effect of drawing his shield upward in a parry. Before her weapon connected, though, she retracted her arm and redirected the blade in a diagonal stroke from his left shoulder to his right knee. Her long sword suddenly screeched in the night as it ran across the knight’s interceding bastard sword. “I guess I’ll have to show you that it’s not luck then,” she resolvedly said through gritted teeth, wincing as she struggled to contend against his strength.
Knowing that he would overpower her if she continued to lock blades with him, Aurelia quickly disengaged, but not before swinging her left hand outward in a wide, sweeping cut from right to left. Because she had executed the attack while she had backed away, her slash lacked the ordinary power generated by the use of her rotating hips, which she had been taught to utilize whenever she swung her sword; however, the purpose of the halfhearted strike had not been to score another hit, but rather, to fend her opponent away long enough for her to return to a neutral position.