74th Searing, 121 Steel
The previous day's adventure was shoved into the back of his mind for now. He had a great deal to think about, but he couldn't afford to spend time just thinking about it. He had to keep moving, keep training, keep doing his job for the glory of Zaichaer. His own glory and worth were relative to its renown and safety, and so those were his goals. As such, he hadn't trained with Albrecht the day previous, citing Order business and the Lysanrin had asked no questions, which was wise.
But here they were again in the same training salle between the barracks at Fort Cathevelle and Onneifer Airfield. Their sabers were crossed as he forced Albrecht to go through the detailed choreographed pattern of martial arts movements made to be practiced alone. But Angevin was responding to the attacks and attacking such that the blocks and parries in the sequence made sense. He wanted Albrecht to be able to visualize an opponent when he practiced so it wasn't just some abstract dance with a sword in hand.
"Good," he said tersely. "Mind your feet."
Angevin could stand to practice, as well. He had never fallen behind in anything, but once the Order got a hold of him and etched Negation into his being, there had been other skills to practice and things to learn and so he didn't excel with the blade or the firearm as much as he might have otherwise. And that was why he continued to train with a passion, and that was why he pulled Albrecht into it. That, and he enjoyed the Lysanrin's company. Perhaps it was because Albrecht had no pull in high society, the Corps, or the Order, the places where Eitan Angevin could be targetted. It might not have been the best foundation for a friendship, but if they were friends, it had to grow out of the soil of their shared missions.
"One more time," he said when it looked like Albrecht was going to take a break. "This time, keep your eyes trained on mine. You know where your feet should be. You know where your hands should be. You know where your sword should be. Now you need to get used to keeping your eyes on your opponent's eyes because that will tell you what they are going to do next. This will help get the motions into your muscles so they remember, but in a fight, you'll be dancing with someone and you are going to have to anticipate their next move."