Fifth Dispatch. Practice Makes Perfect, And Perfect is Me. Action.
[It's a hot afternoon, and Effie Trinket has sneaked into the Barracks -- first checking to make sure no one else is in there.
No one is.
It's far too hot and dusty and anyone in her right mind would choose the techy comforts of the Battle Dome over this place.
This is a good thing. Effie doesn't WANT to meet anyone today. For one thing, she feels very awkwardly dressed: running shorts and a bright yellow T-shirt (yellow is a Power Color); white athletic socks with that 1970s-era striping at the top; sneakers. No heels, no shoulder pads, no wig, no makeup.
She is here -- VERY GRUDGINGLY, MIND -- to train for warfare. Her last announcement to the village brought on plenty of warnings, and even a subtle death threat or two, and at least a few people giving well-meaning advice. She can hardly believe any of the doubters who'd said the Malnosso would sacrifice her in a battle, but better safe than sorry. One never knows when the higher-ups might make a clerical error or shifting error and accidentally send a valued subject into dire straits.
The second reason she doesn't particularly want to meet anyone is because she knows none of the Luceti peons like her very much. That's fine with Effie. Eventually the Malnosso will take her into the inner workings of the organization and place her right where she belongs. Until then? Well. She can and has been staying indoors a great deal, being a bored journal stalker.
Unfortunately, this lonesome round in the Barracks confirms that Ms. Trinket is not cut out for warfare at all. It turns into hesitant prods at practice dummies with wooden swords, a lot of staring out the windows, and a frustrating turn at a punching bag.
Fighting is horrible and she's horrible at it and consequently is in a horrible mood.]
No one is.
It's far too hot and dusty and anyone in her right mind would choose the techy comforts of the Battle Dome over this place.
This is a good thing. Effie doesn't WANT to meet anyone today. For one thing, she feels very awkwardly dressed: running shorts and a bright yellow T-shirt (yellow is a Power Color); white athletic socks with that 1970s-era striping at the top; sneakers. No heels, no shoulder pads, no wig, no makeup.
She is here -- VERY GRUDGINGLY, MIND -- to train for warfare. Her last announcement to the village brought on plenty of warnings, and even a subtle death threat or two, and at least a few people giving well-meaning advice. She can hardly believe any of the doubters who'd said the Malnosso would sacrifice her in a battle, but better safe than sorry. One never knows when the higher-ups might make a clerical error or shifting error and accidentally send a valued subject into dire straits.
The second reason she doesn't particularly want to meet anyone is because she knows none of the Luceti peons like her very much. That's fine with Effie. Eventually the Malnosso will take her into the inner workings of the organization and place her right where she belongs. Until then? Well. She can and has been staying indoors a great deal, being a bored journal stalker.
Unfortunately, this lonesome round in the Barracks confirms that Ms. Trinket is not cut out for warfare at all. It turns into hesitant prods at practice dummies with wooden swords, a lot of staring out the windows, and a frustrating turn at a punching bag.
Fighting is horrible and she's horrible at it and consequently is in a horrible mood.]
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"Better," he delivered his verdict in a gruff tone. Certainly, her attacks would do little against a trained swordsman...but they showed more promise than those feeble first jabs. "Keep in mind your sword's edge. I know that piece of junk is some poor tree's limb but...a real one'll have a point. And it'll be good for slicing or it'll be good for stabbing. Be lucky and it might be good for both. Do it again," he ordered in the kind of voice that brooked no protest, though Effie was welcome to protest all the same, "but slice instead of smack. Think of it...think of like when you're cuttin' vegetables for dinner. You don't bloody well just chop down, eh?"
He made a slicing motion with the hand that wasn't still resting on his sword's hilt.
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It was the most absurd insult ever, but Effie was pissed that he was still even bothering.
She tried to slice. Broad pieces of wood don't really do that, so she succeeded in skittering the flat edge in a two-handed swipe across the strawman's belly. Several dry stalks bled to the floor.
She flushed that he should be here watching. Maybe it was time to move on to the punching bag.
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"In that case--" Sharpe relinquished the hold on his hilt and held his arms up. Open. "Give us a chop, then?"
What harm could she do to him? None, he suspected, that he didn't invite on a daily basis back in the army. Certainly not with a wooden sword. It would be no worse than the birch switch back at the foundling home, that was certain. And it would do to show her that a moving -- living -- target would not sit so compliantly and wait for the blows to fall.
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More importantly, he brought himself beyond her sword's length and as the wood bounced against his left, he lifted his right arm. The edge of a flat palm reached out and touched her shoulder -- right were it joined her neck. A touch -- just a touch. But it made his point.
"It ain't only your own reach you must worry about, Miss Trinket," he said through grit teeth.
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It had been almost as troubling as Zevran, that thought. As good as dead if they mistakenly
Instead of answering, she tried to drive the pointy part of her wooden stick into his belly. Surprise attack. Effie the rifleman slayer.
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So the last blow caught him by surprise -- it jammed into his gut and, although he didn't fall, he did at least double over. Winded. One arm clutched his belly and he growled some very blue words, ending with: "Buggeritchristyousackofsh--" She's a woman, Sharpe. He huffed a wordless finale and stood up straight once again.
Although he wasn't smiling, he was at least vaguely impressed. He never looked down on a person for fighting dirty; most days, it was the only way you could reliably get ahead.
XD
A very gloaty look crossed her features and she reached out to bop him on the head with the flat of her blade. The greatest indignity, probably.
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"Shite, Miss Trinket. A goddamned preened and painted sack of shite. Shite in a silk stocking."
But she wasn't painted. Not right now. And so the insult rang false as the sounds of laboured breathing still lingered.
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She had to let go of the sword. She certainly did not want splinters in her fine, soft hands.
"If there's any accidents."
She'd always had herself to rely on for her entire life. The drafts didn't have to be any different in the event that the Malnosso DID suffer an oversight.
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They couldn't possibly. They'd chosen her because she WAS such an asset, assuredly. Placed her here.
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Idly, he spun the wooden sword -- marvelling at how light it felt. How different it was from leather and steel.
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Sharpe tossed aside the wooden sword; clearly it had been found wanting. Instead, he at along last dragged the heavy cavalry sabre from its scabbard's throat. The scrape of steel was harsh and unmistakeable. So, too, was his intention. He did not brandish the weapon, but allowed its point to fall against the floor. The sword itself was terribly plain, and it showed its scars from where Harper had reshaped the guard himself. Its original guard had been made for a man who would wear the sword while in saddle -- but it had been doomed to stick an infantryman in the ribs if he wore it while walking. So the sword was repurposed, and here it stood -- its back-blade ground down to a wicked edge that mirrored the front. It wasn't the point the sword was meant to have, but it was the point that Sharpe lied: a blade with two edges and a point that was symmetrical. The better to drive home and slice up and out of a Frechman's belly.
"If you're lookin' to learn anything, you ought to learn with the real thing. Not some child's toy."
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Katniss had been unable to sing; while that had been tragic, it held no candle to the mischief Sokka's penalty had caused. Sharpe barely understood it, but he could at long last gleam that it had been something lost in death that had turned the lad into such an utter bastard. The hows and whys were unimportant. All he needed to know was that dying had been at the root of the problem, and that he did not want to invite more of those problems down on his household. His mismatched unit. He didn't dare think of the word family.
"And I don't care much for problems under m--our roof."
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Well, wouldn't they just feel terrible when the Malnosso finally exalted her and she had all the friends and influence in the world? Maybe then she would remember Major Richard Sharpe. Possibly.
She reached for his sword.
"So this will prevent me dying, then?"
Clearly she didn't believe it.
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Hell, it was almost too big for Sharpe. The scabbard slings had been shortened so the guard's handle sat at the bottom of his left rib-cage, rather than at his waist. Sharpe remembered the first day he'd held the sword -- still healing near Salamanca -- and he'd barely been able to lift it, he was still so weak from his wounds.
He stepped back, happily giving her a wide berth so that give the blade a try. It was poorly balanced to begin with -- no luxury steel to be seen. But it had been made with devotion and friendship and maybe just a little Celtic magic. And in homage to the perfectionist in Harper, Sharpe kept the top seven inches razor sharp. It was a butcher's sword and it was clumsy, but it had never failed him.
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Effie would have to reach further down to get the leverage necessary to actually lift the sword to a useful stabby slashy height.
She grabbed hold of the nearest bit of blade, to lift, and dropped the whole thing unceremoniously in the sawdust.
"OH!"
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"You'd be better served by a light sabre, if it's truly a sword you're after--" Because now he didn't half wonder if the woman might be served by some better fail-safe, if all she wanted to do was not die.
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A thin red line welled up on her palm; alarmed, she shoved her hand into her pocket.
"The wooden sword was just here. Hanging on the wall." There were spears, too, but Effie had found them too big and clumsy. The things that looked like axes she hadn't even wanted to look at.
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And he stooped to retrieve his sword, pretending as though he didn't see the way she hid her hand.
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"Everyone can aim!" she retorted as she backed away toward the punching bag hanging in the corner. She'd show Richard Sharpe what she was capable of.
"You just point."
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"With a gun, Miss Trinket. Can you aim a gun?" But his tone dropped, because now he was curiously watching what on Earth it was she was doing.
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1/3
2/3 i know numbers.
3/3
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I like this icon better. : |
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OH HO WHAT CONVERSATION IS THIS? I NEED TO STALK.
http://greenjacketed.dreamwidth.org/4523.html?thread=884907#cmt884907
OMG.
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