The Andes Dream-Chapter 225: A Grandfather Lesson

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Chapter 225: A Grandfather Lesson

Krugger watched Isabella prepare her sword and felt a flicker of surprise.

He had expected the clumsy hesitation of a sheltered noble girl. Instead, he saw calm efficiency. She inspected the edge carefully, adjusted her grip with deliberate precision, and settled into her stance with the confidence of someone who had trained for years — even if in secret.

"That looks fine... for a child," he said evenly. "But that swordsmanship..."

His blade moved before he finished the sentence.

There was no elegance in his motion — only ruthless economy. The kind born in mud, smoke, and European battlefields. With a sharp twist of his wrist and a burst of raw force, he struck her blade aside.

Isabella’s rapier spun through the air and clattered against the stone, the sound echoing like a cracked bell.

Krugger’s voice was flat.

"That looks fine for a little girl. But that swordsmanship is made for display, not for survival. Whoever taught you forgot that a duel is not a dance."

Isabella did not flinch.

Her eyes burned — not with humiliation, but with excitement.

She had long known her father’s style — especially the Spanish tradition — was theatrical. Beautiful. Structured. A discipline of nobility.

It had been acceptable when she trained as a lady of elite society.

But the world was changing.

And she intended to survive it.

"My father taught me," she said calmly. "He taught me La Verdadera Destreza. He said the blade is an extension of the mind — a geometry of angles and circles."

Krugger laughed harshly, making no effort to spare her pride — or her father’s.

"Geometry? Mathematics will not stop a bayonet in your stomach, girl."

His eyes hardened.

"Your father understands politics, trade, diplomacy — even basic self-defense. But he is not a warrior. He has never fought a real war. A few skirmishes with muskets mean nothing."

He stepped closer.

"In real battle, ammunition runs out. Formations break. Then you fight in mud, shoulder to shoulder. That elegant swordplay becomes useless. Those farmers out there with machetes have a better chance of surviving than you nobles with your polished geometry."

He pointed at her fallen rapier.

"Pick it up. We continue."

Isabella retrieved her cup-hilt rapier.

This time, she lunged first.

Her blade traced a precise arc as she moved within the círculo imaginario, posture upright, footwork disciplined and refined. To the recruits watching, she looked untouchable — a living embodiment of Spanish nobility.

Krugger did not even shift his stance.

He parried with a short, violent jerk of his saber. Steel shrieked on impact.

"Look at her!" Krugger roared to the recruits, never breaking eye contact with Isabella. "Look at that posture! She stands tall like a parade target. In a trench, that makes you a corpse!"

Isabella spun into a tajo, a clean horizontal cut — technically flawless.

Krugger stepped inside her guard without hesitation and slammed his shoulder into her chest. There was no concern for elegance. Only advantage.

She stumbled backward, breath knocked from her lungs.

"Her weakness is pride!" Krugger shouted. "She waits for the perfect angle — the perfect calculation!"

He advanced.

"But in real combat, there is no rhythm! No measured circle! There is mud, blood, smoke — and the man who strikes first!"

Isabella recovered quickly, her face flushed with anger.

This time, she did not return to the upright posture of the Destreza. She lowered her center of gravity and advanced without ceremony. The elegance was gone. What replaced it was speed.

She unleashed a rapid series of thrusts — not graceful, but precise and relentless. The point of her rapier hissed past Krugger’s ear.

His eyes widened slightly.

For the first time, he had to move his feet.

"Better!" he barked, deflecting a thrust that nearly found his ribs. "Forget elegance! Stop trying to look like a painting! Your weapon is a needle of Toledo steel — use its velocity! Don’t dance for me; kill me! Speed is the only mathematics that matters when the gunpowder runs dry!"

He answered with a massive downward cut of his heavy saber.

Isabella did not attempt to meet it directly. Instead of blocking force with force — which would have shattered her wrist — she executed a sharp desvío, letting his blade slide off hers, and lunged toward his bicep.

Krugger barely withdrew in time.

A grim smile touched his scarred face.

"You see?" he called to the stunned recruits. "She stopped being a lady and started being a predator. A rapier used like a feather is a toy. Used like a snake — it is a nightmare. Mathematics did not almost cut me just now. Ruthless speed did."

He saw it then — the shift in her eyes. Not anger anymore. Awareness.

The dangerous spark of someone who had just discovered her own lethality.

And he understood something else: if he allowed her to land another clean strike, he would lose authority in the eyes of the men.

In a soldier’s world, respect is paid in blood.

As Isabella lunged again with blistering speed, Krugger stopped holding back.

He did not parry.

He attacked.

His saber did not aim for her blade — it aimed for the space she was about to occupy.

It was a movement of calculated violence. Heavy steel crashed against the side of her rapier with brutal force, sending a shock through her arm and numbing her fingers. Before she could regain her footing, his boot swept her legs from under her.

She hit the ground hard.

The flat of his saber stopped an inch from her chest, trembling with restrained power.

The recruits held their breath. The silence was absolute.

"Speed is your ally, Isabella," Krugger said calmly. "But never mistake a needle for a hammer."

He lowered the blade and extended his hand. She accepted it, and he pulled her up with iron strength.

Then he turned to the recruits.

"Listen carefully. The rapier is a weapon of precision. Perhaps the finest tool for a smaller fighter — man or woman — because it relies on reach, timing, and dexterity rather than brute strength."

He looked at Isabella briefly before continuing.

"It is a snake. It strikes the heart before the lion can roar."

Krugger pointed toward the heavy, worn machetes carried by the local recruits.

"But you," he said, his voice rising, "you are not duelists in a plaza. You are sons of this soil. With those New Granadian machetes, you do not dance. You do not wait for geometry."

He stepped forward and picked one up, testing its balance.

"The machete is a tool of the jungle turned into a weapon of war. When you close distance, you do not ’spar’ — you strike to kill. You use your weight, your fury, the force of your whole body. Isabella uses the sting. You use the axe."

He looked back at Isabella. Deep within his hardened gaze, there was a flicker of genuine respect.

"You have speed, little girl. Now learn to hide it behind your father’s elegance until the moment you need to open a man from throat to gut. That is how you survive the camp of war."

Then he turned sharply toward the officers, whose mouths were still slightly open.

"What are you waiting for?" he roared. "Resume training! Do not waste time!"

Like wolves hearing their alpha snap, the officers immediately barked orders and the drills resumed.

This time, Isabella did not provoke anyone. She stood quietly — though she stubbornly refused to see a doctor.

When Krugger heard this, he frowned and approached her.

"As your grandfather," he said firmly, "I will tell you something. Small wounds in youth have taken more veterans than enemy blades ever did. If you wish to protect your family, you must first protect your body. If you fall because of negligence, all your experience becomes nothing more than the last whisper of a dead soldier."

Isabella hesitated, then finally nodded.

Losing to him had shifted something in her. She saw now another side of the man — not like Catalina’s iron discipline, nor Francisco’s hunger for knowledge — but the quiet strength of someone who had survived long enough to protect what he loved.

With reluctant acceptance, she went to the physician’s tent.

Krugger watched her go, then turned toward a separate command tent. A group of senior officers followed him, still visibly impressed. Though some tried to dismiss it, the fact that Isabella had nearly landed a decisive strike unsettled them.

More surprising than her skill was her ability to adapt.

Inside the tent, Krugger exhaled deeply and sat down.

"It seems I am getting old," he muttered dryly. "A twelve-year-old girl nearly defeated me."

The officers smiled, assuming it had been a controlled lesson — a grandfather preserving dignity.

One of them murmured quietly, almost reverently, "She fought like a Valkyrie from the old northern sagas."

Krugger’s eyes brightened at the comparison. He cleared his throat.

"It is acceptable to say such things here," he said carefully. "But do not tell her that. She still has much to learn before she earns such a title."

His tone shifted, becoming heavier.

He picked up a musket resting beside the table and weighed it in his hands.

"That kind of talent has come too late," he said quietly. "The age when a noble title could be won by the sword alone has long passed. Today, a single musket ball can kill the finest swordsman before he even draws steel."

The tent fell silent.

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