Chapter 19: The Blacksmith
The Ethersmith [Rewrite - Book 2 Completed in Backlog]
âIs this really worth our time?â Lucius asked. âSmithing weapons for that guy?â
Vivi ignored him. In her opinion, smithing was always worth it, if only for the peace of mind of creating a weapon. The rhythm of her hammer made her forget the cruelty around her. Each swing came with force, shaping the piece of metal ever closer to the shape of a sword.
Grandpa had always said Viviâs swings held far more strength than any little girl was supposed to carry. Vivi still wasnât certain whether that was a compliment or not. The demons around her certainly seemed to be interested in her work. Did they pay attention to her work because she was a girl and a human, or did they truly think her swings were respectable?
She didnât know. But she never let othersâ opinions hold her back. She swung with practiced effort. Hard, but not too hard to exhaust herself before her weapon was done.
Axbackâs forge was nothing like the one at home. The forgeâs temperature was controlled with emberstoneâa rare coal found only on the lower levels. Emberstone was said to be the future of blacksmithing. When imbued with ether, it heated to ridiculous levels and with insane precision, all without generating smoke.
Grandpa had bought a batch of emberstones once after hearing about their durability and reusability. He spent a great deal of ether, expecting to spend the same stones for months. Quickly, however, he found out that emberstones were far more expensive to operate, as heating them up required ether in itself. Ever since then, Grandpa had called the stones a scam, and his smithy returned to their old bloomer furnace.
When freely available, however, the emberstones sped up the process considerably. Lucius merely had to spend a fraction of an ether to light up a forge: a price which he complained about, but agreed to spend after persuasion.
Iâm rusty, Vivi thought. She was growing out of breath. This is why you shouldnât take breaks. Take a day off, and youâll need three to recover.
âDo you want me to help?â Lucius asked. âI can strengthen your muscles.â
No, Vivi thought. A boost in strength will throw off my rhythm.
She continued smithing despite the weakness within her. She was exhausted. That much was obvious. Blacksmithing was far more tiring than runesmithing. Vivi had practiced both since birth.
Runesmithing had very little in common with blacksmithing. Most historical runesmiths hadnât touched a forge at all, letting a blacksmith perform the physical aspects of the job. The same was true today. Grandpa, however, liked to complete his pieces on his own. He claimed that blacksmiths were too incompetent at their jobs to work on runeswords. And thus, he made Vivi practice both.
Just as Vivi had practiced runesmithing for fifteen years, she had also hit metal with a hammer for the first time at the age of two.
* * *
Some hours later, Vivi wiped sweat off of her forehead. Her sword was done, grip firmly attached. Sheâd smithed a basic longsword. Those always sold well. Ordinary steel wasnât the most impressive of metals, but a good sword was a good sword.
Vivi took the sword to an empty spot within the smithy, where she couldnât accidentally hurt anyone. Then, she went into stance, and performed a test swing.
âAnd she knows how to swing as well,â a voice said. Vivi turned to see Axback approaching. He looked slightly more amused than before, though he wasnât smiling. âHuman, who are you?â
âJust a smith from the surface,â Vivi said.
âSure, girl,â Axback said. âLet me see the sword.â
Vivi handed it over. The dwarf examined it closely, nodding to himself. âPhenomenal,â he said. âYour work is art. It has been a while since Iâve seen someone hit with such passion.â
âPassion is cheap,â Vivi said. âWhat matters is whether the sword will sell or not.â
Axback laughed. âOh, your sword will please the shops. It will indeed.â He handed the sword over to one of his apprentices, who quickly took it out of Viviâs sight.
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The shops? Vivi thought. Did I just smith a sword for the vendors?
âWho else,â Lucius asked. âWeapons are the number one commerce down here. Did you not see how many weapon shops there were?â
Right⦠Vivi thought.
âThen,â Axback said. âMy side of the promise. Although, I donât recall promising much. I will allow you to work in my smithy. That I can promise. And Iâll tell you what you want to know. For all the good a blacksmithâs knowledge will lead you. I canât do much more than that. Ah, and food. Wait a moment.â
Axback disappeared into the back before arriving with a large bowl of soup. The soup had bits of meat, but it mostly consisted of water weight. Vivi sniffed it discreetly. It smelled off, but it wasnât vile. She began eating.
âUhm, first question, are you staff?â Vivi asked.
Axback blinked. âAh. Youâre this clueless.â
âPlease just answer honestly.â
âWeâre all nimrods here,â Axback said. âIâm renting this place for a thousand ether a month. One hell of a price, but itâs better than working in the dungeons. Most nimrods you see are not fighters. Theyâd rather work on anything else. But theyâre forced to fight.â
Vivi looked down, biting her lip.
âYou must have arrived recently,â Axback said. âYouâre still uncomfortable discussing life.â
âIâm not happy about being here,â Vivi said.
âNobody is,â Axback said. âBut thatâs life.â
âIs there anything a newcomer should know?â Vivi asked. âThere are a lot of rules and tricks Iâm missing.â
âThere is always more to learn,â Axback said. âInformation is currency in Zand. However, if you plan on staying in the smithy, you can largely ignore the games outside, as long as you stay neutral and sell to everyone. How knowledgeable are you about gangs here?â
âNot at all,â Vivi admitted.
âPeople are divided into three major factions,â Axback said. âYouâve got Bwernâs bunch. His goons are usually hanging out in the dungeons, causing trouble, fighting people for ether. If someone is being an asshole for no reason, theyâre probably Bwernâs people. His people are bullies, essentially. Youâll deal with them best by bullying them back. Bwern doesnât support his people much, from what I hear. Selling swords to them is always a pain.
âThen thereâs Aangâs union. This is the group where most regular folk fall into, if regular folk still exist here. The union is not necessarily a gang. More so, itâs an insurance of protection. After paying the fee to join the union, youâre free to trot the streets with his pledge, knowing that if someone messes with you, Aang will avenge those who are wronged. Although, I hear the union has fallen lately. Aang is active, but he has too much on his hands. He doesnât protect lesser members from beatings like he used to.
âZand has a dozen or so lesser gangs, but the third largest group of people are the neutrals. People like me, who donât belong to any gang. This bunch is the most diverse. Most beggars are neutrals, since no gang wants them, but some of us simply donât want to get involved. Not with the main gangs, not with the lesser gangs.â
âI see,â Vivi said. âDo you know anything about a blue-cloaked gang?â
Axbackâs expression immediately dropped. âBlack eyes?â
âYes,â Vivi said.
âWhy do you ask?â Axback asked. âAre you involved with them?â
âNo,â Vivi lied.
âGood.â Axback looked uncomfortable. âThatâs Andreâs bunch. That fucking humanâs gang. They sent him here not one year ago, when his mining operation was discovered. Heâs been causing havoc ever since.â
Viviâs heart dropped. The blue-cloaks, the demons that tried to abuse her, were led by a human?
No. That was not possible. How?
âCalm down, Vivi,â Lucius said. âNo need to get worked up. Weâll discover their secrets on our own time.â
Right⦠Vivi thought. She pushed her anger out with a breath. She was in a smithy. This wasnât a place to act up.
âOne more question,â Vivi said. âIs runesmithing allowed in Zand?â
Axback raised his eyebrows. âRunesmithing isnât banned officially. But nobody who knows the craft would be sent to Zand. Runesmiths are far too valuable to waste away in a facility. One time, a nimrod tried to steal a guardâs runesword. He was executed on the spot. Damn powerful, those weapons.â
Vivi blinked in surprise. She took a moment to register what sheâd heard. If what Axback said was right, Vivi wasnât laughed at during examinations because runesmithing was a laughable profession. She was laughed at because the examiner thought she was lying.
Could runesmithing truly be so special down here?
âThank you,â Vivi said. âI think thatâs all I needed to hear for now.â
Axback nodded. âI do hope youâll stay to work with me. I feed and pay my smiths. Exactly a hundred ether a week. You can stay so long as you make me a profit. Your swords definitely will.â
Vivi considered the offer. She seriously did. A life in a smithy wouldnât be too bad. Hitting a hammer endlessly would certainly beat meeting any more blue-cloaks.
But Vivi was in debt. If she stayed here, she would die. âI need a sword,â Vivi said. âCan I make a proposal?â
Axback frowned, but waited for her to speak.
âIâll craft you three swords,â she said. âIn exchange for labor, Iâll take the fourth with me.â
Axbackâs frown only deepened. âFive. Forge me five blades, and Iâll let you take one.â