Combination salad: Form, technique and movement
Talaban Morenae, Written by Song
Posted on Wed, Jun 9, 2010 09:51 am
A steady cloud of dust billowed behind, wafting to the drumbeat of hooves as the black stallion thundered down the dirt track, a second rider following close behind. Leading, the shadowy rider bent low, urging speed out of the large horse. Wind pulled at his hadori, sending the wisps of blond hair flicking across his face. Small particles slapped against his face as Talaban rode, guiding Shadow at a breakneck pace along the highways west of Tar Valon. The arms-man paid little attention to the road. He had ridden it so many times before that instinct alone would suffice, even after his exile.
His mind raced through all that he had learnt of the girl. Rael was a veritable font of information. Elaryl M’Kasa. By all accounts, she was a good student, a quick study and able fighter. Kelindia Sedai had been keeping tabs on her recently. Was the girl destined to be one of her Warders? Thought strayed for a moment as the former thief wondered, idly, what it would be like to be bonded to a Sister, to hold her very life in his hands. A part of him longed for it… it was what they all trained for, their main purpose in forging themselves as the foremost weapons in the land.
Yet, by nature, there were always more Gaidin then there were Sisters and those of suspect temperament, like him, were often those that were left behind to run the training yards and watch the younglings. There were times when he privately admitted to jealousy. Still, Talaban would wait and serve as he had sworn.
A gentle push of his knee guided the Shadow off the track and into the woods. The stallion complied, slowing into a settled canter as it picked its way along the forest trail on a route that it had traversed hundreds of time before. The arms-man slid back into quiet thought, composing himself for the task ahead. It was no easy feat to take apart years of training and replace it with a style that was both unconventional and undocumented. Fighting with two independently functioning weapons was unlike any other discipline. The few who had tried it and given up halfway often found themselves worse off then they had been originally.
The stallion slowed, the sudden change motion bringing Talaban out of his reverie. Rounding a corner, trees opened up, revealing a silent, watching mausoleum. Talaban dismounted, paying little heed to Elaryl’s bewilderment at finding such a structure in the middle of a forest. Weathered marble stared back at them, its white façade showed signs of age, more cracks than he remembered. The brass doors stood partially open, gleaming in the warm glow of lamplight from within. Rivvy was as reliable as clockwork. Dried leaves crunched underfoot as Talaban mounted the steps to the doors.
Entering the open brass portal, the arms-man strode across the marble hallway, creating another trail in the thick dust. Behind him, Elaryl followed, wide eyed, marvelling at the splendid architecture, the intricately carved balustrades and the frescoes which adorned the roof. The structure had three halls, the first being designed as a receiving area. Talaban paid no attention to the first hall, passing through without pause. He smiled as he heard Elaryl rushing to catch up. Once upon a time, he too had stared wide eyed.
Talaban stopped short as they entered the second. This one had the opulence of a lord’s main hall. Old tapestries hung from roof to floor all along the walls, depicting victories of men against the Shadow. Twin curved stairways led to an upper level, shrouded in darkness. Talaban stopped in front of Rahien’s dark plate and the marble coffin behind it, waiting for Elaryl to catch up. He remembered that he had once thought Erevan’s coffin to be a well carved dais. Already he could feel the familiar, eerie air of watchfulness, as if his teacher and the master before him judged.
He bowed slightly, before turning to face the trainee. “Elaryl, this is where I was trained. It is where I will teach you. What you will learn is rather different from anything the Tower teaches. Make no mistake, I teach with live blades. If you fight with one ounce less skill then you are able to muster, you will bleed.”
The last hall was vast and empty, yet majestic in its lofty silence. There was no adornment, no furniture, not even pillars within, just a solitary, weathered wooden weapons rack along one wall. Walking up to it, the arms-man picked out a slim bamboo pole for himself, glanced at the trainee’s weapon and tossed her a matching piece from the available assortment.
Talaban turned to face Elaryl, looking straight into the trainee’s eyes as he told her, “You will come each morning, four hours before dawn unless told otherwise. Now draw,” he told Elaryl as he motioned her into the middle of the hall. “What I will teach you, Elaryl, is rather different from what the Arafellin practice when they wield two swords. Their weapons function as one organism. Yours, Creator willing, will function as two.”
Once Elaryl nodded, Talaban continued, “The first thing to correct is your stance. You are no longer fighting with a single weapon, but two long blades. Open your feet or your footwork will let you down. No more nonsense about defending with minimal movement. ” He tapped at the Trainee’s right foot impatiently, until she shifted it to where he wanted. It was the first of many corrections as Talaban refined her basic steps and stances. The first week would be one of an almighty lecture.
“Grip the hilt lightly with your thumb and forefinger, with the middle finger neither tight nor slack, and with the last two fingers tight. It’s bad to leave slack in your hands. That’s good. Now, when you take up a blade, you must do it with the intent of cutting the enemy. As you cut an enemy you must not change your grip, and your hands must not flinch. When you dash the enemy’s sword aside, or ward it off, or force it down, you may only shift your thumb and forefinger a little. Above all, you must grip the blade with the intent of cutting the enemy,” Talaban lectured as he watched Elaryl go through the forms, guiding her with the bamboo and demonstrating what she did not understand.
“With the tips of your toes somewhat floating, tread firmly with your heels, stay still on the balls of your feet. Whether you move fast or slow, with large or small steps, your feet should always move naturally as in normal walking. Avoid jumping steps and stomping, you are wielding neither greatsword nor rapier. Always move your feet in complementary steps, left-right and right-left when cutting, withdrawing, or warding off a cut. You should never move on one foot alone. Perfect,” Talaban utilized the staff, parrying Elaryl’s forms as she practiced the unfamiliar movements, correcting her each time she lapsed back into old habits. “You must fight with passion, feelings. There must be no design, no conception, only instinct. Trust your sub-conscious. Reaction is faster than thought.”
Back and forth they went like this for well nigh the whole day, slow but continuous sparring, Elaryl refining her movements and the subtleties of her technique, familiarising herself with the changes while Talaban lectured and filled the trainee’s head to bursting with various movements and philosophies while demonstrating them.
“The art of swordplay calls for fluency, like floating clouds and flowing water – natural and smooth, coming and going freely,” there were more than three hundred philosophies and concepts that Rahien had taught Talaban in this hall and each once had shaped the arms-man’s eventual technique, in one way or another.
Finally, Talaban stopped studied the staggering trainee. He knew it was nearly High outside. “Enough, any more and you will collapse here on the floor of this mausoleum. You may leave for today. I shall expect you on the morrow.” Talaban walked Elaryl into the second hall where he sat before the coffin and meditated. He heard the curse of the exhausted Trainee as she struggled with her horse and the rustle as the animal moved off.
The Gaidin waited awhile before unfolding from the lotus position. Stepping outside, he mounted Shadow and followed behind Elaryl. For the first day at least, he would see her back safely. Once her horse knew the route it would be unnecessary but it was better to be safe for the first time. Talaban followed silently behind, watching the figure slumped over the horse. He felt a little guilty at pushing the girl so hard. Perhaps he ought not to use the way Rahien had trained him as a gauge?
OOC: I know, very narrative .Apologies. Brain doesn’t want to function as required.
In reply to Apéritif: Into Darkness[show]/[hide]
The next morning Elaryl was up before the bell for First Light was rung and dressed in her usual brown leggings and green tunic. Equipped with bow, quiver, Anarië, knife, and throwing knives in boot sheaths, she began her run around the Tower grounds. It was the first time she had been out of her room before First Light in months. Everything she did had an extra energy—she had slept into the afternoon yesterday, after spending the entire night in the city, and she was looking forward to her first lesson with Talaban tonight. And her head felt so light—literally, the foot of hair she had chopped off felt like a manacle that had been taken off. She found herself shaking her head just to feel the newly shortened strands bounce, the freedom of the shorter hair tucked behind her new leather headband. A lucky purchase, that. Before lunch, she had target practice, both archery and knives, and found an empty yard tucked away behind the barracks in which to run through the forms. As she flowed from Tower of Morning into Courtier Taps His Fan, she was reminded that she only had, in fact, one sword—and for her lesson today, Talaban had instructed her to bring live blades. She frowned. She certainly couldn’t afford two new swords, but she wanted the blades to match rather than trying to find one that matched Anarië’s length and weight as best as it could. She knew where she could find exactly what she needed, and without paying a copper—she just didn’t particularly want to go there. It meant remembering the night her father died. The wagon lay, splintered and broken, in the middle of the road, its wares laying scattered around it, the moonlight reflecting off the numerous daggers and swords flung on the ground. Elaryl pushed a tree branch aside and looked around carefully. Seeing no one, she stepped out onto the road and around the wagon, swallowing her fears of what she would see. The ground beneath her feet told a tale in its ruts and scuffles, the churned mud and broken footprints—and the four bodies dressed in black. There—a heap lying by the rear wheel. Light, no! She ran towards what had once been her father. His deep brown hair—the same brown as hers—threaded with grey, was matted, thick with blood. His blue eyes, which had once shone with kindness and merriment, were now lifeless, glazed in death. She stepped away and backed up, shaking. There was movement to her right, and she ducked behind the bushes lining the road, the leaves whispering eerily as two men came out of the trees on the opposite side. One was tall, and solid; the other was just as tall, but willowy. They had killed her father, and would do that and worse if they found her. She could feel rage and the pain welling up inside her, but she directed it as her father had taught her. Moving silently, she reached out with her arm and grasped the sword laying in the road a few feet away from her. She hefted it silently. It was too heavy for her, but it was something. It would do. She kept control on her anger, not allowing it to consume her and let her make a fatal mistake. She closed off every part of her body to it except for her swordarm, and crept up behind the two men. The sword became an extension of her arm, and the two thieves, arms laden with weapons that were now no use, never expected her. Her father had died that night, and her life had been torn apart; but that night had also led her to the Tower, eventually. Her father had been a weapons smith, and though her mother and she had sold most of his wares for income after his death, she had kept a few. While her mother had been alive, she looked after them for Elaryl; after her mother’s death, Elaryl did not want to bring them to the Tower for fear they would be confiscated, and anyway, she had nowhere to store them. Her mother’s brother, Jakam, lived not far out of the city, and she had taken her treasures there and asked him to keep them for her. She had never particularly liked the man; Elaryl never thought he had treated her mother well enough, and had not cared for her well when she had taken ill. She hesitated in bringing the weapons to him, afraid that he wouldn’t care for those either, but she had had no other choice. She knew that there was a set of matching swords in the pieces she had kept, each a pace long, straight-bladed and double-edged, and beautiful, like all of her father’s work. She had not returned to Jakam's home since asking him to take the weapons, over four years ago, although she would have been able to bring them back into the Tower now. She was too afraid that he no longer had them, had sold them—probably for half of what they were worth. If she didn’t return for them, then there was at least half a chance they were still there. She did not want to give up that half a chance. It would break her heart to find them sold; all she would have left from her father then was the longsword currently at her hip, Anarië, the sword with which she had killed her father’s murderers. It was no longer too heavy for her. And on the practical side, it would take the better part of a day to reach his home, retrieve the weapons, suffer through the small talk and pretended care, and return to the Tower, and she no longer had the better part of a day. She decided that she would meet Talaban at dusk, as he had requested, with one blade and see what happened. If he was angry, she would apologize and leave at First Light tomorrow for Jakam’s home, praying that he still held the weapons for her.
Dusk approached. Greyish-purple clouds hung over the eastern half of the sky as Elaryl walked to the western stables, her single longsword buckled around her waist, a saddlebag, also single, slung over her shoulder. She made sure she was early, by at least a few minutes; Talaban certainly had no reason to help her, but he had chosen to at least teach her something, and she wanted to stay on his good side for as long as he was to remain at the Tower. Rounding the corner, she could see that he was already in the appointed meeting spot, readying for their lesson as she had done in her room before meeting him here. He was doing something different though, movements and stretches she had not seen before. She assumed it was something he had learned in the Borderlands, and watched with interest from the shadows of the stable. She saw no reason to interrupt him. He was fully trained, and missing only a bondmate to keep him from full rank as a Warder; she had no doubt that he already knew she was there. Whatever he was doing, it was a lengthy combination, but eventually he finished and turned to where she was waiting without a hint of surprise, just as she had thought. He walked to her and his eyes flickered over her newly shortened hair, pieces falling out from the leather tie that held it back but restrained by the headband. Again, without betraying any emotion, he saddled his horse, a rather large black stallion which seemed unhappy with the proposition at first but eventually settled down. Elaryl retrieved and saddled her own chestnut mare, Nari, her curiosity growing stronger by the minute, and led her out of the stable as Talaban leapt up to his saddle like a cat. Elaryl swung up to the saddle herself and followed him silently into the darkening Grounds. It was all very mysterious and silent, and she wondered where they could possibly be going on horseback, in the dark. It was enough to give her goosebumps.
OOC: Whee!
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Replies to Combination salad: Form, technique and movement
- Chilled Soup: Practice Unending Talaban Morenae, Mon, Jun 14, 2010 10:55 am
- The Meat: Well Done? Elaryl M'Kasa, Tue, Mar 22, 2011 15:23 pm
- Sorbet and salad: Settling In Talaban Morenae, Sun, Mar 27, 2011 01:12 am
- To Be Continued Becky, Sat, Apr 2, 2011 11:02 am
