http://maskofhearts.livejournal.com/ (
maskofhearts.livejournal.com) wrote in
houseofcards_rp2012-12-25 12:00 pm
![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
[ota] shake me, break me....
There was always a chance of injury when sparring. Particularly when sparring with someone that you were particularly competitive with (like ones brother). Hadyn didn't even remember how it happened, other than a series of complicated moves, and progressively annoyed Jordan. He'd lost his knife, but thanks to Elisha's training over the past year, losing his knife was no longer the most worrisome thing in a match.
He'd blocked a slashing motion from Jordan, and had moved to step in and disarm his brother when Jordan suddenly (and unexpectedly) changed tactics. He let go have his knife and latched on to Hadyn's arm before he was able to adjust and scramble back- and then, between his own twisting, and Jordan's- he felt the searing, hot pain rip through is shoulder as he came crashing down on it, Jordan having flipped him, almost without his notice, onto the training mat.
Surely people would forgive him for looking pained as he gets his shoulder iced and wrapped before heading to the theatre to work.
He'd blocked a slashing motion from Jordan, and had moved to step in and disarm his brother when Jordan suddenly (and unexpectedly) changed tactics. He let go have his knife and latched on to Hadyn's arm before he was able to adjust and scramble back- and then, between his own twisting, and Jordan's- he felt the searing, hot pain rip through is shoulder as he came crashing down on it, Jordan having flipped him, almost without his notice, onto the training mat.
Surely people would forgive him for looking pained as he gets his shoulder iced and wrapped before heading to the theatre to work.
no subject
"No," he said, though, giving Hadyn a long look. "We tend to demand it from ourselves the most. Unless we're completely lazy brats like, say, Riley."
no subject
"I don't think Riley's completely lazy." But, well...there were moments he wondered.
no subject
And he supposed most people would say he was better off not wasting his time writing plays that owed more to Eugene O'Neill, considering his own strengths. But he still hadn't entirely accepted that success as a writer of potboilers was the most success he'd ever get.
"Not completely, no," he said with a shrug. "But she did have to get threatened with termination to write final exams this year. I heard the dean muttering about teenagers, and for once he wasn't talking about the student body."
no subject
Ever.
no subject
All the things that got drilled into their heads during faculty meetings.
"They're not as complicated as, say, the essays I just graded on the prevailing themes of Transcendentalist poetry in the nineteenth century, but it still has to be done."
no subject
"But sometimes the test isn't telling you anything. Some people are not going to be fast runners, or skilled...anything. Like Mitchell. Mitchell is just..." Well, Mitchell. There wasn't anything else he could say about that.
no subject
Still, he'd hope that Mitchell Moore had less of a cynical awakening.
"Tests are flawed, though," he said. "But sometimes there isn't a good way of measuring otherwise. And if we don't have any way of measuring performance, and how students are doing, then I can't change my curriculum to try to actually manage to teach them." He shrugged. It was different than one on one, which he'd also done. "Exams are only part of the grade, anyway," he added, raising a brow. "You can't just show up, pass the test, and skip the rest of the year. Participation is the majority of my rubric."
no subject
no subject
Well, that and making sure they actually remembered the rules of volleyball.
no subject
"I have to get back." It was just not as exciting as it might otherwise seem.
no subject
"Have fun," he said as he stretched to his feet and picked up his box again and headed for the door. Freddy was probably waiting by now, anyway. "Maybe take more ibuprofen for the preemptive headache," he called over his shoulder.
He was just always going to hate Henry.