allez! wipe that blood off your lip [Shrimp | WE]
Jan 7, 2019 0:09:43 GMT -5
Post by WT on Jan 7, 2019 0:09:43 GMT -5
Not everyone understands why you came back when lesser incidents have ended longer careers. It's not about adrenaline; any fool can find that, for less effort and less risk. It's about satisfaction: a part well played, an end you stretched and sweated for. Lit by fluorescents and backed by the announcer's voice, reaching you in snippets over the roaring crowd and the roar of your blood, you're in your element in a way many may never be fortunate enough to know.
You took the job knowing it could be dangerous, anyway. What's a little proof?
" – but can she parry – "
A question for the bystanders' benefit only. Of course you can. Truer questions: will you, should you? A give-and-take burns brighter than a clear path. The audience will gasp for a counterattack, boo your victories as your role decrees—but they'll lean forward from the edge of their seats when you slide under your opponent's blade on the way to reclaim your own, knocking them off their feet only for them to recover and resurge on your blind side. This isn't about winning, it's about the show, and you pride yourself on a good one.
Everyone who steps into this ring has practiced these moments a hundred ways, a thousand times. Metal clashes. You smirk, spit something clever, scoff at the rejoinder. Your eye meets theirs, and you loosen your grip just a little as they twist, circling blade around blade with a loud scrape. When the Collector Stoneheart goes flying, it's because you meant it to.
You don't mean for it to shoot into the audience. Judging by their wide eyes, a sudden crack in their persona likely invisible from any further than your privileged vantage point, neither did your opponent. A new mood erupts in the crowd, screams of a different timber over the announcer fighting for control.
You'd better get that sword back.
White Elephant 2018; Armada Triage is Shrimp's (as is this table!).