Sell you a Bridge chapter 57
Added 2022-01-08 02:34:26 +0000 UTCThe Clock Tower July 22nd 2010 12:00 PM EDT
When Jim had talked about preparation I'd expected him to be talking about more lessons like the ones we'd had before. He'd been working us pretty hard the last month and now that we had an emergency inbound there was no reason to expect that to stop now. That, it turned out, had been wishful thinking on my part. Our lessons weren't as strenuous as they had been before, they were more so. My particular lessons were in something I'd considered using my points for in any case, namely my sword work.
I had an extremely solid grasp on the use of a sword in very specific circumstances. I was a master assassin, and my skills with my tanto led themselves to quick brutal strikes from hiding. With my enhanced reflexes I could take advantage of openings to use those skills to deal damage, but against anyone with actual combat experience anything but an attack from stealth or a first blow that was faster than expected would be useless.
Despite the fact that he mainly used a long sword, Blood was apparently a master swordsman so he would be taking charge of my training. I wasn't sure who the others were training with, but I had enough on my plate with just learning from Blood. Training in the sword under an actual Arthurian knight sounded awesome, but in practice it was more painful than interesting.
Blood, as one might expect from a man possessed by an actual demon who learned to fight when child labor laws didn't exist was a little vague on the concept of holding back. I expected to be able to lean on my reflexes for this but sadly that was wishful thinking. Which was how I found myself here undergoing literal hell training. The flat of a dull but still definitely metal sword smashed into my fucking ribs from my blind spot and I went sprawling onto the ground in pain.
Blood clicked his tongue, staring imperiously down at me "Too passive boy. I told you, you can't win every fight by reacting. You have to take the initiative. And seasoned swordmaster has means of dealing with a faster opponent. You can not keep counting on your instincts to save you." He had told me that. Multiple times. Each one on the tail end of a fairly vicious beating he seemed to enjoy giving me a bit too much.
I saw his point. Obviously. I would have to be an idiot to miss it after he spent two hours beating it into me. Through a combination of feints, experience, and what I could only describe as manipulating my perception, he kept getting through my guard. If he couldn't find an opening, he made one, and even when I saw what he was doing he managed to avoid my counter. I'd thought Lady Shiva was scary, but Blood was a fucking nightmare even in human form.
The problem was I didn't have any follow ups for my attacks. My assassination techniques weren't designed with contingencies. If you missed or got blocked you were pretty much either supposed to vanish into the dark never to be seen again or die trying. I climbed to my feet, scowling "I keep telling you I'll attack when you teach me how. I don't know any actual swordplay, I'm just really good at shivving people when they aren't paying attention." I kept telling him this and he kept hitting me anyway and it was really starting to piss me off.
He didn't swing again, waiting for me to reset. "And I told you, I won't be teaching you techniques. They would be useless with that short blade of yours in any case. You aren't listening to what I'm saying. I've given you all the tools you need to progress, you just need to evaluate the things you've learned and put them to use. If I have to coddle you and spoon feed you every technique it won't matter how strong or fast you are. Regurgitated stances and forms are how you make a meat shield, not a warrior."
I growled in frustration and lunged at him, doing my utmost to stab the smug prick in the shoulder. Not lethally, though he told me not to worry about that anyway. But enough to fucking hurt. But as usual he deflected it with ease and shifted the momentum back to him switching from his deflection to a backhand chop aimed at my collar bone. I considered everything he'd said so far, and going with my gut I dodged his blow by moving closer instead of retreating.
Naturally he reacted instantly, changing his attack seemingly before I even finished my movement and aiming for the side of my skull with the flat of his blade. I decided to take his advice about proactivity and mix it with the experience he'd been using against me. Instead of blocking or evading I tucked my head down low and shoulder checked him in the chest. He stepped back to keep balance and I finally caught an opening.
I drove my tanto down at his thigh, which was exposed by his off kilter stance. His blade flicked down to deflect it almost like magic (though he swore it wasn't) but this time he backed off afterward. He nodded approvingly. "Good. You couldn't find an opening so you made one. And you used your entire body and not just your blade. It takes most men decades to learn that lesson, if they ever do. Being willing to take a blow to give one is also a necessary skill for any warrior." For the first time in these lessons he sounded genuinely pleased with me. It was a nice change.
Instead of having me reset again my new teacher began to lecture, placing the tip of his dull blade against the ground as he spoke. "Now I can see in your movements that you know how to track the center of gravity in combat, that's good, but it's only the beginning of what you need to know. Your major issue is that you think of your attacks as contained events rather than a select portion of a larger whole." I'd been using Artemis's training in our matches so that part I got but I was confused about what the rest of that meant.
That confusion was clearly evident on my face because Blood interrupted my question before I could even ask it. " Think of your battle as a game of chess. When you attack me, don't think of the result if you make contact. Think instead of my response, then consider how you might respond to that response in turn. The further ahead you can predict, the more effective you can be. You noticed my tendency to create openings when needed, but creating them at the drop of a hat isn't always possible. Where you might not find a gap in a single exchange, finding a flaw in the overall situation may save your life."
That made sense. It also kind of highlighted the major flaw I'd already noticed in my combat style. One and done attacks and back stabs didn't really fit well into the flow of battle. Aside from not knowing what to do next and leaving me open and off balance mid fight, even worse was that assassination stressed doing maximum damage with maximum speed and ferocity. Putting everything into you attacks and springing from ambush was great, but then you ended up with nothing left energy wise if you missed.
Blood had me reset again and we gave it another shot. I tried to do what he said. In concept it was pretty simple honestly, the kind of thing anyone would consider. But in the heat of battle when you're focused on making every move count focusing on the present seems like the only way to survive. All the thought I put toward the next exchange was thought I wasn't giving to my current self and that went against every instinct in my body. Fighting was a visceral immediate thing, getting to the point where you could think while doing it wasn't as simple as it sounded.
Every time I tried to game out my next move and his next move I ended up slipping up and leaving him an opening, and despite what some would have thought he did not let em skate on them. He punished me severely every time I slipped up, stopping just short of breaking bones with every blow. My entire body was a giant bruise but I kept going. The main problem I was having was that I was trying to chain the assassination sword strikes together into a usable style, which took active concentration.
All my muscle memory was for the singular attacks I was trying to move past so I couldn't rely on reflex to make up for the gaps. I tried fixing a sequence of moves in my mind and focusing entirely on that while reacting to his attacks on reflex, but Blood kept finding the seams in my moves and interrupting them. I pulled back, and he let me go, listening to my frustrated voice as I ranted. "I don't have the experience to know what you're going to do. I can't plan for your next attack because I have no clue what you're going to do!"
He smiled "That isn't as much of an impediment as you think it is. You say you don't know what my next blow will be, but you know it'll be a sword blow. You can anticipate the approximate direction it might come from. You aren't at a level where you can perfectly map every movement a person will make like precognition, but you don't have to be. You can come up with more general counters to certain broad sets of moves. That should be enough for your mind to use as a template when you act on instinct. It doesn't have to be one or the other boy."
I blinked. He was right. He said to predict what he would do but he didn't tell me how specific to be. I was the one who took his chess metaphor and decided he was talking about becoming basically precognitive. I tried it, coming up with a few broad variables to help manage my reactions and then attacking. He blocked, like I figured, I countered and he dodged. I'd been expecting a deflection and got caught in the ribs but he was right, this was much less complicated. We went again, and I did better, and again, and I improved more.
Of course it was hard to map my improvement considering Blood was increasing the difficulty as I went, but perfect memory comes in handy and I knew where I was doing better. The exchanges got faster, not much faster, but faster. It was good my muscles had stamina because this was more a marathon than a sprint but even so, I eventually got worn down and had to call it. I expected Blood to force me to keep going but he didn't seem upset. He seemed to trust my understanding of my limits.
He nodded to me as I put my tanto away. "Well done boy. You've learned quite a bit. I must say i find myself in the rather unfortunate position of agreeing with Craddock about something. You really are an extraordinary talent. Mind you, we're far from finished, you have much more to learn. But this was as good a start as any I suppose."
With that he sheathed his blade and walked out of the room, leaving me to crawl over to the water bottle I brought for a drink. I smiled slightly to myself as I dumped the cold liquid in my head and slipped my phone out of my pocket. Since I had some downtime I might as well call my girlfriend. Talking to her sounded like the best way to cool down after a hard training session.