- Messages
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Palace district.
Sparing courtyard.
Creeping ivy broke the glare of alabaster walls at the far end of the courtyard. Gentle conversation drifted from the alcove of shade offered by the open sides. Mago stood beneath the afternoon sun watching the efforts of a young warrior-in-the-making as he drew what seemed like the 100th arrow for the day. Sweat beaded off the young man's forehead and down his bare chest. Brows affixed in concentration over impossibly pale blue eyes.
The bow creaked under the weight of the draw in tune to the breath he'd slowly drawn in.
A moment to aim, and then -
SSSFT - THUNK.
Another arrow sunk squarely into the inner circle of the target.
Mago allowed a faint smile to pull at his otherwise reserved features, arms folded at his back, stance straight and grounded. His son was proving to be a student worthy of praise, but he'd not yet truly been tested.
"Good," the Prince spoke finally, the tamber of his deep voice breaking the silence of the yard like a distant rumble of thunder, "you are still relying too much on your arms to draw the bow. You wait too long to inhale, bear the weight across your chest and shoulders and you will not tire so quickly."
Malkahn glanced back to his father, wiping the sweat from his face, and heaved a sharp sigh, "You make it sound so easy."
"You will, too, when you've done it as many times as I have. Take a break," Mago looked to a servant at the side waiting on standby with water and refreshments, "but hurry up." The man cast a small smile at his son and turned slowly on his heel to the welcome cool of shade. These days, he surmised, would be fewer over time. Talk of war was on everyone's tongue and he needed his son to be ready.
Sparing courtyard.
Creeping ivy broke the glare of alabaster walls at the far end of the courtyard. Gentle conversation drifted from the alcove of shade offered by the open sides. Mago stood beneath the afternoon sun watching the efforts of a young warrior-in-the-making as he drew what seemed like the 100th arrow for the day. Sweat beaded off the young man's forehead and down his bare chest. Brows affixed in concentration over impossibly pale blue eyes.
The bow creaked under the weight of the draw in tune to the breath he'd slowly drawn in.
A moment to aim, and then -
SSSFT - THUNK.
Another arrow sunk squarely into the inner circle of the target.
Mago allowed a faint smile to pull at his otherwise reserved features, arms folded at his back, stance straight and grounded. His son was proving to be a student worthy of praise, but he'd not yet truly been tested.
"Good," the Prince spoke finally, the tamber of his deep voice breaking the silence of the yard like a distant rumble of thunder, "you are still relying too much on your arms to draw the bow. You wait too long to inhale, bear the weight across your chest and shoulders and you will not tire so quickly."
Malkahn glanced back to his father, wiping the sweat from his face, and heaved a sharp sigh, "You make it sound so easy."
"You will, too, when you've done it as many times as I have. Take a break," Mago looked to a servant at the side waiting on standby with water and refreshments, "but hurry up." The man cast a small smile at his son and turned slowly on his heel to the welcome cool of shade. These days, he surmised, would be fewer over time. Talk of war was on everyone's tongue and he needed his son to be ready.
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