GAME: TERA
CHARACTER: ARAWN
Arawn looked over the top edge of his cards, trying to hide the grin on
his face as he had a rather nice hand. The Aman he was playing with, who
towered above his 16 year old form, threw his cards down on the table
to call the boy. With a flick of his wrist, the boy laid down his hand
to show a full house, which beat the Aman's two pair. Reaching out
collecting his winnings, he pulled them all into a small leather bag
before standing up from the table. This was a much better way of paying
off the Master's debts, prior he would be scrubbing toilets, dishes or
any other dirty work to gain coin to keep his Master with wine and
women. Stepping out of the tavern, the brightness of the day almost
blinded him before he broke out in a run. He was late yet again for his
daily training.
Arawn's days were spent either training or honing his skills at the card
table. His Master was an old gruff Warrior Sword-master who took only
one apprentice. His mornings were spent sleeping off the hang over from
the prior night's activities, his days with his apprentice and his
evenings racking up a tab which Arawn had to find some way to pay for.
Arawn often thought of his twin brother, how he was doing and if his
training was similar to his own.
He spotted his Master next to a small field of posts as he reached the
edge of town. Running to meet him, he was curious as to what this
training would detail. He stood then behind his Master, bowing in
apology.
"My apologies Master, I was winning again and didn't wish to leave until the hand was over."
The Human ignored his excuse and instead ordered his student to jump up
onto one of the posts. Not wanting to displease him further Arawn did so
without a word. When standing on one post, he noticed that there was
only enough room for one foot, so he stood on his left while his right
hung free.
"Now, jump to the other."
Arawn bent down on his left leg to leap to the post next to him, his
right foot this time on the post while his left was free. He held his
arms out from his body as he balanced himself from the leap.
"Good, now use your hands on the posts behind you and land on your left foot on the post three rows back."
Arawn looked behind him at the post his Master wanted him to land on, raising an eyebrow as he looked back at him.
"But Master..."
He was cut off quickly.
"You do this sort of move on the ground, it should make no difference."
With a nod of his head, Arawn did what his Master told him, this time
however he lost his balance and fell off to the side, landing ribs first
against another post. The blow reddened and bruised, immediately the
edges of the scrape bled slightly. Standing to his feet, he held his
side as he looked to his master.
"What are you looking at, try again, this time don't fail."
Taking a deep breath, Arawn got back up on the posts and tried again.
This training day was spent doing all sorts of acrobatical flips and
leaps from post to post. By the end of the day, Arawn learned to retain
his balance no matter his position and flew through the air with
precision, landing exactly how he was instructed.
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