Fortunately, Hilda's weapon was not chosen purely for its offensive output, but also its defensive utility; indeed, as Shin took the very air as his weapon, Hilda brought her blade back up, turned it until it shielded the most vulnerable places of her body, where armor did not offer protection, and, as the pressure pressed down atop her, she smiled a hidden smile; she took a step forwards, her body moved in perfect form, and every muscle groaned in protest, burned and moaned at the woman’s demands.
“Oi,” Hilda’s eyes ignited with a fiery passion, “make ‘em remember who you were, Sieglinde.”
On queue, the large, bone-like sword appeared to roar in defiance as the wind pressed in and out of various holes, knots, and grooves in the blade; it was brought down and back up into a powerful attack, a powerful attack that spat in the face of Shin’s effort and even seemed to grow stronger because of it. The wind begin to disperse . . .
Shin Shiden’s sixth sense would definitely be tingling now. Sieglinde was not the average sword, it was incomparable to every other weapon that Hilda had used before, and as it sing and chimed, it became clear that the weapon was alive with power.
If the samurai was intent on using air pressure from above then Hilda simply needed to repulse it, did she not? And Sieglinde, in all his glory, performed very well in that regard; it was, after all, the only sword in Hilda's arsenal that excelled against missile attacks; granted, this was a fair bit different than usual, but Shin had been so kind as to demonstrate his kenkaze for Hilda that she couldn’t help but take advantage of the idea behind it.
With the wind pressure taken care of, Hilda leapt backwards, giving Shin a reasonable spot to land, but did nothing to stop her falling blades; after all, they were still an intended attack - Shin would have to move immediately after contact with the ground or risk being impaled.
Regardless, Sieglinde was held before Hilda in a two-handed grip as the large sword’s song started to grow silent; however, Hilda did not press an attack on Shin just yet. Like the samurai, Hilda didn’t want to kill anyone, and a long fight was definitely more fun than a short one, wasn't it?