“You can’t be serious.” Nenera huffed in disapproval.
“Come on! It’ll be fun. Don’t you want to see if those stories Ilysa told us were true?”
Celica’s bright, amber eyes shimmered in the sparse light of the Pearl Lane, open and excited. Nenera groaned, vacillating with what to say next. Celica grinned wider at the chance.
“You’re the one who kept talking about how romantic it all was. The avenging blades, protecting the weak and punishing the wicked.”
“They’re fighting in a gladiator’s pit for blood and sport! There’s no romance in that,” Nenera retorted, exasperated.
“Listen. If it gets ugly, we’ll go. I just want to watch him fight. Please, Nene. I am begging you.” Celica clasped her gloved hands together at the palms, rubbing them together before pushing them against her lips and giving Nenera the most pleading look she could muster.
Nenera’s shoulders sagged, and her eyes rolled even as a chuckle finally escaped her. Celica’s eyebrows raised expectantly.
“Alright—fine. Fine! Let’s go see this so-called Endymion of the Fury.”
The crowd was roaring with excitement, the acrid smells of sweat and smoke filling the air.
“DE-SERT FANG! DE-SERT FANG!” came the cheers, adding to the cacophony
“And the crowd clearly is united in its appreciation for our tall, dashing Desert Fang! The man who has captured the eyes and imaginations of onlookers near and far over the past few moons, amazed by his tenacity and ability to overcome every challenger thus far!”
Celica and Nenera had elbowed, scurried and pushed their way through the tight crowd until they reached the front. Celica crouched low to join Nenera under the stone guard rail, letting Nenera nestle herself right in between her arms.
Her head tipped over Nenera’s left shoulder, they both looked down to the two fighters circling each other in the arena.
One was a massive Roegadyn man with sharp features. The announcer had called him dashing—rightfully so, if Nenera’s nod of approval and quirked brow upon seeing him was any indication. Lean and mean, wielding a hooked sword in one hand and a hatchet in the other, dressed in light, dark-brown leathers that clung tight to his body, with several straps and harnesses for other medium or small weapons.
The other was a tall, Elezen man. Compared to Desert Fang, he was lanky. He walked with a slouch; his upper body was turned to always face his opponent. The upper side of his face was concealed by a black, angular mask that hid his features and obscured his gaze from the world, and that made him seem all the more inscrutable. Blue leathers were his choice for armor on his upper body, but his gauntlets, as well as his chausses and boots, were heavy and plated, and as dark as pitch.
Desert Fang’s stride was confident, secure. It projected a level of self-assurance so profound that it quickly drained the doubt of all that lay eyes upon him.
“DE-SERT FANG! DE-SERT FANG! DE-SERT FANG!”
Desert Fang grinned widely and stretched his arms outward, beckoning to the Elezen man.
Celica thought of how unusual the Elezen’s movements felt. How it felt like he was coiled up, as if waiting for a moment to strike. Even in the face of Desert Fang’s taunting.
Desert Fang’s head tilted to the right, the grin on his face still wide. He spun his weapons in his hands and leaned forward just so, before he sprung forward.
“You’re too SLOW!” Desert Fang spat out, winding up with his blade, preparing a low swing that’d rake across his enemy’s front.
He did not count on the Elezen springing forward, faster than he could track, and closing the distance so soon.
Nenera’s breath caught in her throat.
The Elezen man’s shoulder neatly caught Desert Fang square in the chest, and the angle he took robbed his swing of any power. Pushed back, Desert Fang lifted his weapons in a guard as the Elezen man’s right arm lifted the sword onto his right shoulder.
The loud crack of plate against leather was drowned by the cheers.
The raised weapon had been a feint.
The Elezen had swung his leg out in a brutal leg kick, smashing Desert Fang’s leading leg aside and causing him to stumble, losing his footing. Desert Fang’s confidence wavered as searing pain coursed through his leg, and for the first time in his tenure at the Coliseum, he had taken a step back.
The Elezen man slowly circled him, blade resting on his shoulder, held in both hands. His empty, masked stare never wavered.
“Right?” Celica felt herself grin ear-to-ear.
“Never mind,” came the quick retort and Celica felt it was her turn to be exasperated.
The gladiators didn’t give her the time to be. Desert Fang leapt forward with a thrust of his hooked sword that the Elezen parried with a quick motion of his blade. Desert Fang promptly followed that a a step out and another stab at center mass this time, which the Elezen deftly avoided by stepping back. The crowd had begun to get behind Desert Fang again. He swung, thrust and hacked away, and the Elezen man stepped back and out a little more each time. It looked like he might run himself out of room, with Desert Fang’s strikes leading him off to the side.
The Elezen man stepped back one last time and dropped into a lower stance, choking up on the sword as it lay on his right shoulder, once again coiled to strike. When Desert Fang’s thrust came, the Elezen retorted with a short, tight swing, deflecting the blade to the side, and shoved him off once more with his shoulder.
The crowd’s cheers waned for a moment.
Staggering, Desert Fang turned and swung his hatchet.
The Elezen's grip on his sword shifted, his feet dug into the ground and with a twist of his hips, his greatsword lashed out with full force, crashing into the hatchet and smashing it, the head flying away into the wall of the arena. The man brought his blade forward into a new stance, the overhand grip leaving the blade to jut forward at an angle, covering most of his body.
Celica gaze was fixed on his form.
His movements, his decisions. How he weaved a guard into a strike, a parry into repositioning. How he punished mistakes. How he led and conditioned Desert Fang into committing to them.
“It’s over,” she caught herself whispering.
The crack of the Elezen’s pommel across Desert Fang’s skull echoed through the arena as he dropped to the ground, unconscious.
Celica held onto Nenera tight as her blood boiled with excitement.
“Come on. What is it. Do you want me to pay for the privilege? I’ll do it.”
The Elezen man shook his head and took another swig of his mug of mead. He didn’t even look her way.
“…Please. Listen, okay. I—”
“—I’m begging you. I’ll just come for lessons, and I’ll get out of your hair, if that’s what you’d prefer.”
“I’d prefer you not bother me.”
Celica felt her blood run hot, and before she gave into any worse impulses, she threw her hands into the air, groaned in frustration and walked away.
The Elezen man let his gaze follow her as Celica shoved the back door of the Quicksand open and stormed off into the Pearl Lane.
“A hundred-and-thirty. A hundred-and-thirty-one. A hundred-and-thirty-two.”
The blade wasn’t precisely like his. First, the ricasso was a bit flatter, which didn’t make much of a difference when she tried to choke up on the blade. Second, it was a broader blade altogether, tapering out after the unsharpened ricasso.
She didn’t seem to care. She kept swinging.
Ilysa kept watching from the side on her bench, having completely lost interest in the book she was writing in and just watching Celica repeat swing after swing after swing.
“Yer gonna fuckin’ melt yer arms off.” Ren shook his head before wiping his forehead with a rag. “Why so fuckin’ obsessed? Why in th’ swelterin’ fuckin’ heat, for cryin’ out loud?”
“A hundred-and-forty-one. A hundred-and-forty-two.” She continued to swing, concentrating.
“...There's no way ya suddenly started fancyin' men for a bell, right?” He looked over at Ilysa with a bit of a shrug. Ilysa laughed, shook her head, and went back to watching Celica swing away.
“A hundred-and-forty-nine. A hundred-and-fifty. A hundred-and-fifty-one…”
Ilysa watched. And wondered.
Another evening in the Quicksand.
The Elezen man had just sat on one of the stools, arms folding onto the counter as he leaned forward. In the next stool over, Ilysa turned to look in his direction.
The Elezen man turned and looked at her. He studied her features for a long moment, then nodded. “You look well, miss Ilysa.”
“It hasn’t been that long.”
“Maybe not.” He nodded and leaned back onto the counter, staying quiet.
“I heard you’ve met my friend.”
“…Mm.” He shook his head.
“Oh, no? I suppose that red-headed firecracker’s made it all up, then?” A quirk of the brow was joined by an incredulous smirk that crept upon her face.
Hector winced in his seat and lifted his left hand, leaning against it to cracking his neck to the left, then to the right. “Her. Yes.”
“Ah! So you have, then. Good.” She clapped her hands together, grinning.
“She's been after me every single day this past sennight."
"She's very persistent, isn't she?"
Ilysa reached over and put her hand on his arm. Her grin softened to a smile.
“Please, Hector. She’s aimless right now. She has tried in so many other ways. She has no star to guide her." Her grip tightened. "But you…”
Hector let out a long sigh and turned his head. “I’m no Paladin. You realize this, yes?”
Ilysa’s smile remained. She nodded. “Neither is she.”
Hector’s eyebrows raised for a moment. A woman on the other side of the counter set a frothy tankard in front of him and slid it over to him. He reached out to it and pulled it close, nodding quietly as he gripped it with both of his hands.
She ran as she always did each morning, along the outer rung of the Goblet, quickly dashing up stairs and maintaining a decent pace.
She was not expecting to see the Elezen man from a distance, sat in the open space that she normally used to practice. She couldn’t see any of her friends. She hadn’t seem him in the Quicksand in days. Was she in trouble?
Wait. Were any of them in trouble?
She pulled up a distance away, her jog slowing to a walk as she did, the sword Ilysa had let her borrow strapped to her back. She gave him a serious look, and she felt a knot in her chest catch in her throat as she spoke.
“…Mornin’, Ser... what was it. Endymion of the Fury, yeah?" Her brow furrowed deeper. "Anything I can help you with?”
Hector chuckled and slowly rose to his feet, not bothering to dust himself. “No.”
“Your friend is as stubborn as you.”
Celica’s eyebrows both rose.
“I expect you here every sun at the crack of dawn.” He folded his arms across his chest.
“Let us see what we can make of you.”