Seeker of Thrones 10-144
Once, the great king Aurochs was gifted a prize gladiator. This warrior was a three-sexed Ya-at slave monk. It was mute, and the impurities of its flesh had been seared away as part of its training. The Ya-at were incredible fighters, and this one was no exception. Over the next few turns it won nearly every bout and won the king an enormous amount of fame and glory. The king ordered a private garden built for his prize fighter, and attendants to oil its sore flesh, and it was given every luxury afforded to it, most of which it refused, for it craved only challenge.
Word got out that the king had an invincible fighter, and soon three infamous wandering mercenaries arrived at his door to test their mettle. The first was Five Mountains Gale, who wore a beautifully embroidered jera, a fine silk vela, and a legendary sword at her waist. Her face had been burned hideously by a duel with a sorcerer. It appeared puckered and shiny under the best light, though she was said to be quite beautiful before, and nobody dared comment on her disfigured visage. The second was Yerrid, who was a western dragon. His mouthblades were pitted with the scars of battle, and his hide was thicker than any armor forged by man. He was a member of the Red Dogs Legion, who were infamous rogues and despoilers. They mummified the hands of their enemies and took them as tokens.
The third and last was an unusual fellow, a minor nobleman from the countryside said to have taken up the sword after starving himself and meditating under a plum tree for a week and a day. His finery was disheveled, his sword was rather poorly made, and his long dark hair was held up in crooked and bent pins. He had no reputation, nobody thought very much of him, and it was obvious that he would quickly lose.
Gale squared off against the slave monk first. Her beautiful robe accentuated her lithe form and powerful step. Her sword was called Circle the Moon Thrice. When drawn, it gave off a sound like shivering glass. It had hacked five hundred bandits into pieces just the week before and was thirsty for blood. Gale’s technique was called Flying Snow. She could step on air as well as land, and cut a fly in twain with a flick of her wrist.
For all her arts, however, she could not break the defense of the slave monk. For every movement she made, the monk was faster to react. For every shivering blow she laid upon the monk, it could take it and deal more. She threw her blade aside and submitted before thirty blows had been struck.
Next, Yerrid strode into the arena. It was clear to observers that he would not submit as easily. His scarred, bestial form was corded with thick muscle, and his mandibles were shaved down in the manner of vagabonds and mercenaries of terrible repute. He tore into the monk with incredible violence. His technique was Red Dog Boxing. Every blow he took upon his stony hide, he turned into a counterattack, redoubling his attacker’s strength. He fought like a wild animal, throwing caution to the wind, and absorbing tremendous amounts of violence.
Where Gale had folded after thirty blows, he took a hundred. But it still was not enough. The defense of the Ya-at was too strong, and it tired too slowly. Eventually, Yerrid collapsed of exhaustion, and was dragged out of the fighting pit stone cold unconscious.
Finally, the last man strode into the arena. The crowd leaned in, eager to see him dismembered or worse by the Ya-at warrior, who scarcely had suffered a scratch and was oiled and offered refreshments by its house slaves.
The two warriors squared off, the young nobleman dwarfed by his opponent, and the bell was rung. The nobleman then did a very strange thing. He threw out a single sword stroke that was so artless, so completely lacking in skill, that a child might have made it. It was like a village idiot absentmindedly hurling a stick into a muddy pond. The Ya-at warrior was so shocked and offended by the young nobleman’s complete and utter lack of skill and technique that the hulking warrior was caught by surprise and decapitated in one blow.
The crowd was taken aback and instantly sprung up in confusion, disarray, and rage, for surely the young man must have cheated. The king descended from his gilded palanquin and quieted the crowd, addressing the young man directly.
“What trickery did you use to defeat my warrior?” demanded the king, at this point sputtering with disbelief himself. “No trickery,” said the young man, who was absentmindedly toeing the ya-at’s corpse.
“Then what technique? What sword art did you learn to make such a blow?” said the king.
“My technique is no technique,” said the young man. “My art is no art. It was an idiot’s blow.”
“Ten thousand warriors have failed to defeat my gladiator,” said the king, gaping. “Trained in ten thousand fighting arts from across the Wheel. How could an artless fool have defeated my prize slave?” The young man scratched his chin. “Well, not anyone can use my lack of technique. No ordinary fool could make that blow,” he replied “only one extremely dedicated to foolishness.”
It was immediately apparent to the king that this young man was extraordinarily powerful.
He mentioned as much.
“Powerful men, my lord, must by nature be exceptionally good fools,” said the young man.
“What do you want?” said the king, breaking out in a sweat.
“A drink will suffice,” said the young man.
“What is your name?” said the High King Aurochs, of the Southern Realms.
“My name is Intra,” said Intra, “I am the king of swords.”
Beyond the suns that guard this roost. Beyond your flowers of flaming truths. Beyond your latest ad campaigns… An old man sits collecting stamps in a room all filled with Chinese lamps. He saves what others throw away. He says that he’ll be rich some day.
As a highly accomplished swordsman and sword instructor, I have been bested in sparring by a blow so ridiculous that it caught me by surprise. I told the person, “Nicely struck, but that is only going to work once. Be aware of that.” The story captures a real truth about sword fighting.
I sure hope he’s insured.
You fool, Mammon IS insurance
> Indeed, one of the of the problems that come with a banking monopoly <
What insurance company could possibly have the capital to reimburse THAT loss?
never meddle in the affairs of dragons cause you are crunchy and taste good with Ketchup
A friendly reminder that kindly Grandpa Dragon is, in fact, a god.
Pierce the Dragon’s hide with a sword and he will not shake with anger.
Cut his heart into pieces and he will thank you.
Bind him with ropes and chains and steel and it will not bother him in the slightest.
But steal his gold.
The gold that is his children.
You will not survive.
A Dragon’s fury is slow built but it burns with fire that never goes out.
Oh heck, he really is a dragon!
I wonder if the dragon will find clarity now. The tower is lost, both in mind and form. Perhaps now he can build one anew. Or shall he be as Glory and rail against his newfound freedom?
Alas, I hold no answers as I am a humble observer.
Fool Mottom committing to a child’s error.
Inside a Dragon is not gold. There is not gems.
Inside a Dragon.
Is FIRE eternal!
Another Star begins its Brilliant Burn to Annhilation
And still more will follow
Venerate the Dragon
Pity the Count
IÄ!
I both pity and fear the dragon.
Were Mottom a wise woman, she would know better than to wake a sleeping dragon.
There are three things all wise men fear: the sea in storm, a night with no moon, and the anger of a gentle lizard horse thing.
I thank you for the shot story underneath. I semi-regularly read it, somehow I think it keeps me grounded in the fight against depression; that someone with no skill or technique can be the best at something, or that impossible odd can be overcome with simple acts. however anyone would interpret the story.
Err wait, what is that white circle by Mammon’s head? There’s no moon in thrones sky anymore…
It’s always such a pleasure to read articles made by real professionals.
I’m fed up with that no-name, ghostwritten articles. That’s why it was so nice to look at a persuasive piece.
I see the author has ground knowledge it the topic in addition to some practical
experience. Such sort of info is more favorable than copypasted blog articles
thoughts.
Am I the only one who sees the gold tidal wave and thinks, “Yeah, at a certain scale, coins behave as a liquid. At a certain scale, everything behaves as a liquid. Or maybe it’s rather that liquid is a certain thing’s behavior depending on scale?”
This really helps me a lot. Thanks for sharing this!
I really thank you for the valuable info on this great subject and look forward to more great posts. Thanks a lot for enjoying this beauty article with me. I am appreciating it very much! Looking forward to another great article. Good luck to the author! All the best!
I have read a few of the articles on your website now, and I really like your style of blogging. I added it to my favorites blog site list and will be checking back soon. Please check out my site as well and let me know what you think.
Nice post mate, keep up the great work, just shared this with my friends
What a fantabulous post this has been. Never seen this kind of useful post. I am grateful to you and expect more number of posts like these. Thank you very much.
Wonderful blog! I found it while surfing around on Yahoo News. Do you have any suggestions on how to get listed in Yahoo News? I’ve been trying for a while but I never seem to get there.
Well, there’s a reason they call him dragon…