The Shadow of Csilla
The training room was silent in the way only after-hours facilities could be—lights dimmed to a cool wash across the composite flooring, air systems humming a soft and steady backdrop, the world muted beyond the sealed doors. Shade crossed the mat with slow, deliberate steps, each movement controlled enough to make no more sound than the subtle whisper of fabric shifting around her. In her hands, two training knives gleamed in the muted light—dull-edged, yes, but weighted properly, balanced precisely the way real blades demanded. She stopped in front of him and extended one handle-first, her wrist steady, posture straight, the gesture as much a command as an offering.
"Take it."
When he curled his fingers around the grip, she circled him—not with predatory intent, but with the calm, analytical precision of someone who had lived her entire life reading bodies for weakness and threat. His stance was good in the ways a soldier should be: grounded, capable, and prepared for firearms or unarmed combat. But a knife changed the entire geometry of a fight. Shade stepped in close enough that her shadow overlapped his and nudged his elbow down with a flick of two fingers—brief contact, clinical, but exact. She moved behind him in the same breath, tapping once at the center of his back, correcting the distribution of his weight without needing to say more.
"Lower your center of gravity. Knives punish imbalance the way gravity punishes arrogance."
As she stepped around him again, the overhead lighting shifted across the room—and across him. It cast a faint green shimmer into his eyes whenever he lifted them toward her, a color deepened by the dark strands of hair that fell just slightly out of regulation neatness. She did not pause, did not let her expression change. Still, she noticed it the way she saw everything: quietly, precisely, storing the detail without letting it hinder the lesson or the control she maintained over the space between them.
Without warning, she moved—not a strike, not an attack, just a sudden glide into his peripheral blind spot, letting the flat of her blade slip toward the space near his fingers. His adjustment came fast, reflexive, and Shade marked it with the faintest incline of her head. Improvement already. She stepped back two paces, feet settling lightly, blade held low and quiet in her hand, her posture composed as if she were merely resting rather than preparing to dismantle him piece by piece.
"Knife fighting is not strength. It is angles, timing, and intent."
Her free hand lifted, curling in a quiet beckoning motion.
"Come."
He shifted forward, shoulders rolling with disciplined readiness, the dim light catching again on the green of his eyes—and Shade, composed as ever, adjusted her stance to receive him. Emotion neatly folded away. Focus absolute. And yet, she noted him all the same.
Cassian Abrantes
"Take it."
When he curled his fingers around the grip, she circled him—not with predatory intent, but with the calm, analytical precision of someone who had lived her entire life reading bodies for weakness and threat. His stance was good in the ways a soldier should be: grounded, capable, and prepared for firearms or unarmed combat. But a knife changed the entire geometry of a fight. Shade stepped in close enough that her shadow overlapped his and nudged his elbow down with a flick of two fingers—brief contact, clinical, but exact. She moved behind him in the same breath, tapping once at the center of his back, correcting the distribution of his weight without needing to say more.
"Lower your center of gravity. Knives punish imbalance the way gravity punishes arrogance."
As she stepped around him again, the overhead lighting shifted across the room—and across him. It cast a faint green shimmer into his eyes whenever he lifted them toward her, a color deepened by the dark strands of hair that fell just slightly out of regulation neatness. She did not pause, did not let her expression change. Still, she noticed it the way she saw everything: quietly, precisely, storing the detail without letting it hinder the lesson or the control she maintained over the space between them.
Without warning, she moved—not a strike, not an attack, just a sudden glide into his peripheral blind spot, letting the flat of her blade slip toward the space near his fingers. His adjustment came fast, reflexive, and Shade marked it with the faintest incline of her head. Improvement already. She stepped back two paces, feet settling lightly, blade held low and quiet in her hand, her posture composed as if she were merely resting rather than preparing to dismantle him piece by piece.
"Knife fighting is not strength. It is angles, timing, and intent."
Her free hand lifted, curling in a quiet beckoning motion.
"Come."
He shifted forward, shoulders rolling with disciplined readiness, the dim light catching again on the green of his eyes—and Shade, composed as ever, adjusted her stance to receive him. Emotion neatly folded away. Focus absolute. And yet, she noted him all the same.