He trudged around in a wide circle around Dra-Nelsa like a man possessed. Cantillion had at least had the good sense not to try and jog in full plate armor; her command was to "step lively". I'm certainly stepping, he thought through ragged breaths. Whenever his already-slow pace began to drop even slower, his patron would order him to sit down and rest. Though he only received a few chimes to do so, it felt like entire lifetimes were going by as he relieved his legs of their burden. After the sixth rest order he received, he began to realize that it wasn't so much a reprieve as a punishment. Each time he sat down, he would inevitably have to get back up again. This too, no doubt, was a part of his conditioning. An extra incentive for him to keep a steady pace.
"Sit down," she ordered him. Cantillion relented, sitting down once more. "Your tenacity is noted," she remarked. In his short time as Dra-Nelsa's Squire, he had begun to notice the subtle difference between a compliment and an observation: the difference being that Dra-Nelsa didn't give out compliments. "But by now, the question must be burning a hole in your head," she continued. "Which is, 'when does this training end?' Can you guess the answer, Squire?"
"When you say it ends, Sera," he answered with the first thing that came to mind. Dra-Nelsa smirked at his quick response.
"You're not wrong," she admitted. "But the training ends when you can prove to me that it's not necessary anymore. No need to wear such heavy armor if it's never going to get hit." The pouch that she had held in silence as he walked around in circles was finally opened, revealing a number of small metal spheres. She held a few in between her fingers for him to see; Cantillion knew that her weapon of choice was the sling, though he had yet to see her put it to use. "Stand up," she commanded, and Cantillion slowly rose back to his feet again. "If you can avoid a single bullet," she offered. "Just one bullet, then you'll be done with that breastplate and helmet." Cantillion furrowed his brow, obscured by his helmet's visor.
"What if you miss, even if I didn't do anything to avoid it?" he asked. Dra-Nelsa didn't bother answering such a pointless question, taking one of her bullets in hand and rolling it between her thumb and index finger eagerly. Cantillion stepped slowly to the left, eyes on his patron; all he would have to do is wait for her to throw the bullet, and then he could step to the right and avoid it.
The bullet bounced off the center of his breastplate with a loud PING!, leaving Cantillion standing still, trying to wrap his head around what just happened. As she took another bullet in her hand, he realized that she hadn't thrown the bullet in the way he had been expecting. Instead of rearing her arm back for power, she had simply flicked the bullet at him; a reasonable method considering she was only trying to hit him, and there was less than twenty feet between them. He quickly began stepping backwards, increasing the distance between them. "Good strategy," she confirmed. "More distance means I'll have to actually throw it at you." He had increased the distance between them by another twenty feet. The sound of some other Knight or Squire letting out some kind of battle cry behind him caused him to instinctively look over his shoulder. The moment his eyes were off Dra-Nelsa, another loud PING! bounced off his armor, instantly drawing his attention back to his patron, who was preparing another bullet. He resumed his first strategy, trying to lure her throw to the left, and then step back to the right.
It didn't take long before her arm began rearing back to the side, just slightly, but it was enough of a lead for Cantillion to recognize that she was about to throw. As her hand whipped back forward, he feinted to the right, only to hear a PING! near his left shoulder. Dra-Nelsa just shook her head in disapproval, taking another bullet from her pouch, still nearly full. "Instead of trying such an obvious feint," she shouted out to him. "Try hunching over, to make yourself a smaller target." As much as he wanted to ignore her taunts, he did as she advised, bending his knees and getting lower. This only served to put more of the armor's weight on his already-sore legs, but if it paid off, then it would be worth it. She had seen through his feint before, so this time, he would play into it. Cantillion would move slowly to the left again, but rather than just step right, he would turn sideways, making himself as small a target as he possibly could. Once more her hand moved back, ready to hurl the bullet. As her hand moved forward, he executed his plan flawlessly. Crouched there, turned sideways, and entirely uncomfortable, another PING! resounded. He stood up straight, meeting his patron's gaze from afar, another bullet already in her hand, ready to be thrown at him.
"Rrrrraaaah!" Cantillion cried out, fighting against his own exhaustion and breaking into what felt like a sprint, but was actually closer to a fast walk. He kept his eyes on Dra-Nelsa, who stayed at the ready as he did his clunky dance back and forth. Eventually, her arm prepared to throw, and as she moved to let loose, Cantillion dove to the side with all his might, landing face-down on the grass. For once, his efforts paid off; he was certain that he avoided the bullet with his wild maneuver. "I, I, I...did it!" he huffed through his visor, only to be startled by another PING! against the side of his helmet. He slowly turned his head sideways to dimly see Dra-Nelsa walking towards him calmly, throwing another PING! bullet against his armor, then PING! another.
"That," PING! "Was," PING! "Foolish." PING! "Running around like a headless animal," PING! "Panicking like a lost child," PING! She stopped in front of him, her Squire breathing heavily on the ground, and dropped the pouch, now only half-full of bullets, in front of his face. "Do you feel accomplished, Squire?" It took him nearly ten seconds to give her the response she was waiting for. Each agonizing second that it took just made the answer sink in even deeper.
"No, Sera."
An armored hand reached down for him to take, and he limply took it with his own, as Dra-Nelsa pulled Cantillion up to his feet, seemingly holding him in place with her own strength. She opened the visor to his helmet, staring into his eyes. While they might normally have been shining green in anxiety, his exhaustion left him with a dull mish-mash of yellow, green, and blue. "I doubt I need to tell you, but you won't be doing that, ever again," she told him to his face. "Second law?"
"Willpower," he answered automatically, and with that, she turned away from him, heading back the way they had come in. To his own surprise, he was still standing on his own legs, somehow.
"Pick up my bullets," Dra-Nelsa commanded him. "You're done with the armor, for today."
"Yes, Sera."
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