âGood morning,â Gregory greeted Rafiq and Basal when he came out of his room.
âMorning, sir,â Basal smiled brightly. âYouâre teaching the men the naginata today?â
âYes, youâll be working on unarmed with Rafiq⦠Wait, Rafiq did you want to learnâ?â
âI cannot fight with any weapon,â Rafiq cut Gregory off gently. âNot even in defense of my own life.â
âOhâ¦â Gregory said slowly. âI could change that, though, couldnât I?â
âTechnically, yes. If it was found out that you did, weâd both be in trouble. Iâm an academy slave, Gregory. I have even less leeway than a normal eurtik slave. Since you are the one to currently hold my rune, you would be held accountable for breaking the academy treaty.â
âI seeâ¦â
âYour disappointment is balm enough,â Rafiq told Gregory. âYou surprised everyone with the desserts last night,â he shifted the topic back to something more pleasant.
âTheyâll be earning the treat. Between weapon training and the obstacle course, theyâll be working hard today.â
âThank you for the meat pie, sir,â Basal added. âIt was tasty.â
Gregory chuckled. He held out his hand and another hand-sized meat pie appeared. âI got you two just like Hanz got two sweets. Maybe you want this instead of the frumenty for breakfast today?â
Basal blinked rapidly for a moment, then took the offered food. âThank you, sir. Iâll set it in my room for now and have it after training.â
âA valid option,â Gregory smiled. âSee you outside.â
âYes, sir,â Basal said, heading for his curtained alcove of a room.
Stepping outside, Rafiq grinned at Gregory. âIt is refreshing to see your care for the young. I heard of the orphanage that Lightshield started because of you. There was also the young maid you had at the tournament. She looked more like a friend to you all than a servant.â
âElsa is special. All the children at the orphanage were the kids she lived with on the streets. Every one of them, except for her, have eurtik heritage. Itâs what gave them trouble with the normal orphanages.â
âNow they have a home, people who care for them, andâ knowing your clanâ are being shown how to have a better future.â
âThatâs the hope.â
âMorning, sir,â Davis said as he approached. âThe buns went over well with the men last night. If you keep on as you have, they might take on your own clan for you.â
âMy clan will never turn against me,â Gregory said softly, âbut we do have enemies in other powerful clans. Hopefully, they donât push for open conflict anytime soon.â
âConsidering the disgrace they suffered at the tournament, they would be foolish to act now,â Rafiq said.
âThe Shun family hasnât shown a lot of reluctance to act out.â
âGrandmaster Shun is known for planning. He does not act as rashly as his grandson.â
âShun⦠as in the Eternal Flame clan leader?â Davis asked, clearly worried.
âNick Shun is the grandson of the clan head,â Gregory said. âWe were in the same academy year together. Things⦠werenât going well between us by the first tournament.â
âWould you be willing to tell me?â Davis asked. âKnowing oneâs enemies is a good thing, especially when they have the power that the Eternal Flame does.â
âJoin me at my table for breakfast,â Gregory said.
âSorry for the delay, sir,â Basal said, coming out of the tent.
âItâs fine. Can you eat with Hanz today and ask Willof to join me at my table?â
âYes, sir,â Basal said, then left to inform the captain.
The chime of breakfast being served sounded and Gregory went with Davis to get their food. Willof joined them at the cauldron, giving Gregory a nod.
âWhy the change?â Willof asked while Gregory was served.
âExplaining my entanglement with Shun to Davis. Thought youâd like to hear the full story.â
âMight be for the best. I remember how they acted when Dia was getting a carriage.â
~*~*~
Gregory wasnât sure how Davis and Willof took the story, but he was glad that none of the men had come to talkâ he chalked it up to both the captain and lieutenant being at the table with him.
With the Peaceful Fist concluded, the sergeants had the men go collect the practice naginatas theyâd been issued the night before. The only squad that did not was Miltonâs, who were going to be the first to go through the obstacle course. There was clearly a hint of disappointment on their faces, but they knew theyâd be rotated in tomorrow.
Once the men were back in formation, Gregory looked them over. They stood rigidly with their naginata at their sides, held in a firm grasp at chest height. Their other hand was flat against their sides, pressed to their leg.
âYouâve all expressed interest in learning the naginata,â Gregory announced. âI will teach you, but I will be as harsh as my sensei was when I was learning. Youâve chosen this extra training, so let me see your dedication. Sergeants, spread your men out. They need room.â
It didnât take long, but they needed more space than just the Peaceful Fist required. Once they were ready, the men were once again in formal posture, waiting.
âWe start with the basic stances. Everything builds off these, so we will keep repeating them until everyone manages it. If even one of you messes up, we start from the beginning. We will not progress training until that is met.â Gregory shifted to the standard waiting posture. âThis is rest; almost all kata flow back to this position. Take your stance.â
The men copied him; their left foot was closer to Gregory, and they looked to their left to see him. Gregory paused here to walk among the assembled unit, repositioning the hands of those who were too far off from the correct grip. Making his way back to the front, he had to correct a couple of the menâs stances to the proper width, as well.
âThe hands are positioned so the forearm, and a single fist will be behind your trailing hand,â Gregory said, showing them with his own weapon. âYou will take this grip out of reflex in time. Now, back to parade.â
The men went back to formal position for formation, still spread out.
âFirst stance.â
They shifted to take the correct posture.
Gregory eyed them all for a long moment. âSergeants, check your men.â
A few had to be corrected, leading them back to starting over.
âSergeants, space your squads a little farther apart and face them. This will make it easier for you to see them all. It will make your task harder to learn, but you can do it.â
They repeated the first stance a few more times until no one was wrong.
âGood,â Gregory said. âNow, the second stance.â
~*~*~
The men were discouraged when Gregory called a halt to the dayâs training; they hadnât once made it through all the stances cleanly. âTomorrow, weâll try again. There will be new people learning it from the start, and Sergeant Townsonâs squad will be going to the course. Before you think you did terribly⦠you did, but,â he went for the truth, softening it immediately afterward, âmy training class in the academy didnât manage it, either. We had less than a dozen people and we couldnât do it for a few days. With the number of you there are, it wonât be surprising if we take a week doing just this. That isnât bad. These stances are going to be with you every time you pick up the naginata. The best way to learn is to drill it until it becomes second nature. Lieutenant, the men are yours.â
âYes, sir,â Davis saluted.
Gregory headed for his tent to get Basal, as he was ready to work on horse care and riding.
~*~*~
Easing himself onto the stool at his table for dinner, Gregory knew heâd be putting more salve on his thighs tonight. Heâd done his best, but he realized he had a long way to go.
âYou did better, sir,â Basal said, a hint of concern in the young manâs voice.
âI did terribly, but thank you, Basal. You should get in line.â
âI will, but I wanted to ensure you were okay, sir.â
âIâm fine. Go ahead.â
Gregory started in on the soup. He could see the men sneaking glances his way, having muted conversations. No doubt wondering if the horse will kill me before the year ends, Gregory snorted to himself.
âSir, might I have a moment?â Milton asked, both his bowl and mug in hand.
âHave a seat.â
âThank you. I heard about how the introduction went and worry that my men will get grief for holding the others back,â Milton said as he took a seat, then began to eat.
âThey wonât. You just had the unfortunate luck to be the one picked by the cards last night. Canât believe you drew a two. Bunson was sure his four was going to be the low card.â
âItâs normal for me. Youâve seen it when we play.â
âYou really do have abysmal luck. If any of the men act up, the others will step in as they should. Iâd use it to push your men a little. Make a point that, if they can copy the others, we might move on tomorrow, and theyâll have pulled off what the others didnât today.â
Milton chuckled. âYes, sir. Have a good meal. I should join my men.â
âHave a good meal, Sergeant.â
Rafiq took a seat just after Milton left. âBusy day?â
âA bit,â Gregory chuckled. âI didnât use my aether, so nothing to record, at least.â
âThere is that,â Rafiq nodded. âAre we on for Shogi tonight?â
âAnd Magi Squares. Got to stay in practice.â
âI have a new one made up for you. I havenât made any notes about you doing those, by the way. Just notes about the Peaceful Fist.â
âThank you. One of these days, I will repay that.â
âNothing to repay. As far as IÂ know, you are following Lighthandâs path of the Peaceful Fist only.â
Gregory heard the stress on the word âknowâ and let it go. It was obvious that Rafiq was following his orders by the letter, not the spirit of them. That was only to Gregoryâs benefit, so he wasnât going to call him out on it.