An instinct, yes. An instinct. It demanded his utmost attention, it called for him to pay attention to his backside, but to what extent? Was it a demand of his immediate attention, to turn and face the threat he felt coming from behind? Or was a better route to be taken? Instinct . . . it was a funny thing. It called for grown men to do crazy things. A man shoots his wife. A wife stabs her husband. A man rapes a woman. A mother shakes her newborn child. Everyone acted the madman on instinct. And indeed on instinct, Mairse reacted much differently than his opponent might have expected. He moved as if to turn around, but not entirely. He stopped at about mid-turn--a little less than that, in fact. He stopped there, and with a quick motion, jumped forward. Mairse was not as fast as his opponent, and however remarkable that was, it didn't quite work in his opponent's favor. It was just as Mairse jumped that the frontal attack came (or, rather, the attack at his right side), prompting Mairse to react accordingly. In mid leap, he slashed his blade out as quick as possible, |
Though, while his opponent was clearly faster than Mairse, the Champion of Dystopia had at least the adequate time required to evade the attack against him, and still manage to throw out an attack of his own in mid dodge.
Mairse would land ten feet from the Champion of the Undoer's last location, only to spin to face where he once stood again, perhaps expecting his opponent to still be there, or at least in the vicinity of it. The Champion of the Undoer was making his fair share of mistakes, perhaps--but so was Mairse. Then again, though, that was the problem for them. They who barely existed now, they never existed prior, right? They who barely existed now, who truly had no names to account for (Mairse's only being a means of creating ease), didn't have lives to back up their talents. They were bound to make mistakes. Several mistakes, in fact.