treadswater: (trident at the ready)
Annie Cresta | Victor of the 70th Hunger Games ([personal profile] treadswater) wrote in [community profile] ten_fwd2015-07-05 09:58 pm

Gym - OTA

There was a time when Annie was in a gym at least six days out of seven. Ages eleven to sixteen, during her time at the Career Academy (a slightly grandiose name for quite a glorified school club, but it wasn't until Annie was a victor herself that she recognized the self-depreciating humour in the name). Before school and after school, training and training and training. After that, when she was washed out, no gyms, but she kept up the physical activity - and exceeded it, fishing being what it is. As a victor, she ran most mornings, or swum. Worked out. Sparred with Finnick. She'd noticed if she didn't, her mind got worse, her fits of hysteria (anxiety attacks, Beverly had called them) more frequent.

But it's been six months since she's done anything properly physical regularly. When her mood's been stable, she's turned the holodeck into a running track, but that hasn't been nearly anything like five or six days out of seven.

She's twitchy, which goes a way to explain how she winds up in the gymnasium, trailing her fingers over the bo staffs in their rack. She'd been good at spears in the Academy, and although the idea of stabbing now makes her uneasy, she's still good at wielding a staff. She can get her fiancé (tall, built, twice her size and lethal) on his back.

Annie picks up one of the staffs and hefts it, giving it an experimental twirl. It's well-balanced, and she smiles, quiet and shy and delighted.

But despite that delight, and how practically she's already dressed (boots, trousers, simple blouse under her loose jacket, hair braided), she doesn't make any further movements towards any of the practice mats.
ikissdhimbck: (Cowboy Kate smirk)

[personal profile] ikissdhimbck 2016-02-11 11:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Kate grins, as bright as the sun, and points to a bench at one side of the gymnasium.

"If y'can spare a moment to chew the fat, I'll tell you all about it."

It's, honestly, a dangerous prospect coming from Kate. As she grew she devoured dime novels and penny rags and any adventure story she could get her hands on. She always fancied the journals of Lewis and Clark, reading the two-volume epic Paul Allen published in 1814, and every Jules Verne novel published to date by her age—not to mention the whole catalog once she had the future's resources at her fingertips.

In other words, she could go on all day about the wilds of the world. Annie best have time to sit.