Game of thrones: The blind warrior

Chapter 2: Lessons in the Arena



The arena was always alive, even when no one fought. It seemed to breathe, its massive walls exhaling a dull hum that echoed through the stone corridors, where slaves and gladiators alike shuffled about. The sand of the pit, permanently stained by countless battles, absorbed blood like the world above drank in the rain. The gladiators whispered that the ground itself had a thirst that would never be quenched, that it called for more, always more.

For "The Boy," the arena was not only a battleground; it was home.

At five years old, he had already begun to understand his place in this savage world. He was not coddled, not cared for—only maintained. The men who watched over him, who trained him, saw him as an investment. He was to be molded, forged into something sharp and deadly. They had no use for weakness or softness. His value was in his potential to fight and to bleed, and if he survived long enough, to kill.

Today was a day like any other, but the smell in the air was different. Blood, sweat, and fear all mixed together into a familiar brew, but there was something else, too—anticipation.

The Boy stood in a corner of the training yard, watching the older gladiators as they sparred in the center. Their bodies were scarred, muscles honed to lethal perfection from years of brutal fights. Some wielded wooden training swords, others practiced with fists and feet, each movement precise, deliberate. The overseers barked commands, reminding them that any misstep, any hesitation, could mean death in the real arena.

He had learned early that these men were not to be admired, only feared. They had already been broken by this world. They fought because they had no other choice. One wrong move, one loss, and their blood would join the countless others in the sands.

As he watched, the familiar crack of a whip snapped through the air, drawing his attention. The overseer—a hulking brute of a man with a jagged scar running down his face—strode into the center of the yard. His eyes, cold and calculating, scanned the group before landing on The Boy.

“You. Time to learn.” The overseer’s voice was like gravel, rough and unyielding.

The Boy stepped forward without hesitation. He had been waiting for this. For years, they had trained him with drills, making him run laps around the pit until his legs burned, forcing him to hold stones in each hand for hours until his arms shook from the strain. But this was different. Today, they would make him fight.

The overseer tossed a wooden practice sword at his feet. It was crude, more a club than a sword, but to The Boy, it was a weapon. He bent down, his small fingers curling around the rough wood, feeling its weight. It was heavier than he expected, but not unwieldy. It would do.

The overseer pointed to another child, one slightly older, who had already been trained for a few more years. His name was Kord, a boy with hard eyes and a mouth twisted in permanent sneers. He was stronger, faster, and more experienced than The Boy.

“Fight,” the overseer barked.

Kord grinned as he grabbed his own practice sword, clearly relishing the opportunity to assert his dominance. He stepped forward confidently, swinging the wooden blade in a wide arc, testing its balance. The Boy, however, made no movement. He stood still, his dark eyes locked on Kord, studying him, waiting.

The other slaves and gladiators in the training yard had stopped to watch. Fights between the children were common, and they often ended in bruises, broken bones, or worse. No one intervened. No one cared who won or lost. The Boy knew this. He had seen it happen many times before, and now it was his turn.

Kord lunged first, his practice sword coming down in a heavy, reckless swing. The Boy sidestepped, just barely avoiding the blow. Sand kicked up beneath his feet as he moved, and for a moment, he felt the familiar grit beneath his toes. He could hear the cheers of the gladiators, a low murmur of approval as they watched, eager to see blood spilled—even if it was only the blood of children.

Kord pressed the attack, swinging again and again with all the strength he could muster. But The Boy was quicker, lighter. He dodged each strike, his eyes never leaving Kord’s. There was no fear in him, only focus.

“Stop running, coward!” Kord spat, his face red with exertion.

But The Boy didn’t react to the insult. He could see Kord’s movements slowing, his swings becoming sloppier with each miss. The boy was tiring himself out. The overseers always said that a fight wasn’t just about strength—it was about patience, about waiting for the right moment. The Boy had learned this lesson well.

And then it came. Kord, frustrated by his inability to land a hit, overcommitted on a heavy downward strike. His wooden sword slammed into the ground with a dull thud, and for a brief moment, he was off balance, his defenses open.

The Boy didn’t hesitate.

He stepped in, bringing his own practice sword up in a sharp arc that connected with Kord’s side. The impact sent a shockwave up his arms, but he didn’t stop. He swung again, this time aiming for Kord’s legs. The older boy collapsed to the ground with a grunt, his sword clattering uselessly beside him.

The yard was silent, the only sound the heavy breathing of Kord as he lay in the sand, clutching his side in pain. The Boy stood over him, his wooden sword still raised, but he made no move to strike again. The fight was over. Kord had lost.

The overseer walked over, his heavy boots crunching through the sand. He looked down at Kord with disdain before turning his gaze to The Boy. There was no praise in his eyes, only a cold, calculating assessment.

“Good,” he said simply. “Again.”

Another child was brought forward—a younger one this time, smaller and less experienced. The Boy was tired, his arms aching from the effort of the first fight, but he didn’t hesitate. He couldn’t afford to. The overseer’s word was law in this place, and disobedience was met with pain.

The second fight was quicker. The younger child, trembling with fear, barely managed to lift his sword before The Boy disarmed him with a swift strike to the wrist. The wooden blade clattered to the ground, and the child stumbled backward, his eyes wide with terror.

The overseer grunted in approval. “Enough.”

But the ritual wasn’t over. Not yet.

A group of gladiators entered the training yard, dragging something behind them. The Boy recognized the sounds before he even saw it—the scraping of metal against stone, the heavy thud of dead weight. It was a body. Another gladiator, fresh from the arena floor, his body torn and broken by whatever fight had taken his life.

The gladiators dumped the corpse in the center of the yard, its lifeless form sprawled out on the blood-soaked sand. The Boy felt the familiar tightening in his chest, the same feeling he had experienced so many times before when he had watched this ritual performed on others. But this time, it was his turn.

The overseer stepped forward, holding a large bronze bowl in his hands. He knelt beside the body, his blade flashing in the dim light as he drew it across the gladiator’s throat. Blood poured from the wound, thick and dark, filling the bowl as the overseer chanted something in the old tongue—words that none of the children understood, but all of them feared.

The bowl was passed to The Boy.

He stared at it, the metallic scent of blood filling his nose, the weight of the moment pressing down on him. This was his baptism, his induction into the world of blood and death that would define his life. He had seen other children go through the ritual before, their small bodies trembling as they were doused in the blood of the fallen. Some had cried, some had screamed, but none had refused. To refuse was to die.

The Boy didn’t flinch as he took the bowl in his hands. The overseer stepped back, watching, waiting for him to complete the ritual.

Slowly, deliberately, The Boy raised the bowl above his head. The blood sloshed inside, thick and heavy, as he tilted it forward. The warm liquid cascaded over his head, soaking his hair, his face, his skin. It dripped down his small body, mixing with the dirt and sweat that already clung to him. He could feel it seeping into his clothes, sticking to his skin like a second layer.

The yard was silent as he stood there, drenched in blood, the bowl empty in his hands. The overseer nodded once, satisfied.

“Good,” he said, his voice rough but approving. “You’re ready.”

The Boy lowered the bowl, his eyes still fixed on the ground. He could feel the blood cooling on his skin, drying in the heat of the midday sun. He had expected to feel something—fear, disgust, maybe even pride. But there was nothing. Just the same cold emptiness that had been with him since the day he was born.

The overseer turned and left without another word, the other gladiators following him. The Boy remained in the yard for a few moments longer, his body still stained red. The other children, who had been watching the ritual in silence, now looked at him with a mixture of fear and awe. He was no longer just "The Boy."

 

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