The Arma'Drex Smithy10th BellA few hours before Razkar walked into High Spirits, he was walking into somewhere very different. Though, he mused as he heaved open the door to the smithy, if the armorsmiths were to be believed, what they did with hammer and flame and ice in places such as this was very close to magic. They took lumps of iron, often still with dirt clinging to them, and by brute force and hard-won precision, crafted weapons that could carve a Dhani in two and armor that would with stand an Jamoura's strongest punch.
What is that if not a breed of magic?Stepping in and out of the cold, he immediately saw that Arma/Drex was much larger than it looked from the outside. Two caverns split the hall in two, one lined with weapons, the other with armor. Razkar knew what he needed today, and started walking left. Soon he was strolling past a huge glass counter packed with daggers and knives and small maces of every conceivable kind. To his shock, he even saw Myrian and Dhani weapons for sale.
Behind the counter was yet more weapons, warhammers with heads as big as his torso, pikes and spears twice as long as his body, swords and glaives and axes of every description... and a hulking, smiling Akalak at the end of it.
"Enjoying the view?"
As a professional user of his wares, Razkar nodded slowly to Haiduk, Weaponsmith of Arma/Drex.
"You have many kinds. I am impressed."
"You're Myrian, aren't you?"
Razkar, with his dark skin and filed teeth and tattoos and cloak of scalps and topknot above it all, cocked a satirical eyebrow: "What tell you that?"
"Just a wild guess. How can I help you?"
Razkar got straight to the subject and pulled a shattered ax head from his belt. Haiduk's personality seemed to shift in an instant, eyes losing their cheerful mirth and becoming cold and clinical. He shook the head, with the shorn shaft still attached, and turned it over in his hands.
"Hmm... clean cut... must have been a sharp blade that did it. So, I take it you want a new shaft?"
"Yes, but not wood." The Myrian's hand vanished again, and come up with something else. "Want new shaft... to be
this."
A long, gleaming white bone was held in his dark hand. It was well over a foot long, easily capable of being what he wanted it to. Haiduk took it in his other hand, frown deepening bit by bit... until they flickered darkly to his "customer".
"Where did you get this?"
"In battle."
"It's from an
Akalak, isn't it?"
The two men stared at each other and if you looked close, you could see the tension crackle between them. Razkar weighed up the pros and cons of lying. It might work, it might not. But lies did not come easily to his tongue, and they always tasted so bitter and wrong. He tilted his chin a little higher, and chose his words carefully.
"Yes. We fought. He lose. But before he die, he broke my ax. So now he can make better."
Now it was Haiduk's turn to consider his options. He couldn't avoid the fact that he was holding the bleached bone of one of his own race in his hand. He knew enough of Myrians to take an educated guess at what had happened to the meat. But... business was business. And battle was battle. His jaw clenched and he decided that the former would take precedence over the latter.
And that would be his partial, impersonal revenge.
"Forge rental is usually twenty gold a bell." He said, words low and just begging to be argued with. "But for this job... thirty. Shouldn't take more than an hour."
Razkar nodded slowly and kept his face neutral. He knew that he was being bent over a barrel, but he also knew that this place was revered as the finest smithy in Riverfall and, therefore, the entire Cyphrus region. They would repair his weapon better than any others in a hundred leagues. The price was worth it.
Besides, he thought with an inner smirk,
it will be the gold I got for killing that petching Akalak that will pay for this, anyway."Deal."
They shook on it as a formality, and Haiduk walked to the tunnel leading to the rear of the smity. He turned in the doorway almost as an afterthought.
"You can watch if you want."
"Thank you."
He did, and he was duly impressed. Though the heat of the forge the Haiduk sweated over made his own skin weep and shine, Razkar stayed and did not take his eyes from the Akalak's labor. He removed the broken shaft from the head of his hand ax, carefully filing away the errand splinters until it was sholly iron again. Then h went to work with the bone... and decided on something a little different.
"The hole for the shaft is too narrow for the end of the bone." He pointed to both and Razkar could see he was right. The top of the high, where the ball was, was too wide to fit through the narrow hole in the ax head. "But I can form the head to the top of it. Does that suit you?"
Razkar thought it over and nodded once he saw the look in the Akalak's eyes. The challenge had grabbed him, and he could use that. Like all master's of their craft, Hiaduk had been seduced by a problem that only he could fix. An invisible, metallurgic opponent that he could pit his wit and skill against.
He watched... even as the Akalak warped and twisted the razor-sharp ax head into something else completely. But soon he understood what he was doing. He was re-forming the blade, widening it along its edge, shortening its rear to it would attach to the ball of the thigh. The forge flared and gouts of smoke whooshed into the vent. Smoke and steam sizzled and roared, but Hiaduk did not tire or yield.
Finally he held the new ax head up to the light... and a smile of pure satisfaction crossed his lips.
"It's good," he said, but he wasn't talking to Razkar anymore. His hands moved swiftly over the hot metal and the gleaming bone. "Now... to make them one..."
There was a flare amid the smoke and Razkar stepped forward to see the amalgamation of metal and bone. With hammer and ice, Hiaduk crafted and combined the two materials together inch by inch. He submerged them both in water and the liquid nearly boiled just by having it under its surface. But when he withdrew it... a new ax was born.
"We'll put some straps around it."
Razkar wasn't arguing; he was barely speaking. He was entranced at this new thing that Hiaduk had created. He watched like a child before his teacher as the Akalak twisted a long length of leather around the bone shaft, thickly at the base to cushion the hand of its wielder, a wisp or two around the top... and finally tied if off where metal and bone were joined.
"And now... to sharpen it..."
The whetstone was a massive contraption operated by the Akalak's bobbing head. Razkar hadn't seen it often, and watched with interest as his pumping leg turned the stone around so fast that when he put the dull head to it-
Sparks. And they flew like fire across the floor in a red arc.
"Ahhhhhh..."
Hiaduk looked up from his work and allowed himself a quiet smile. Then he returned to his work. Chimes and chimes went by until he was satisfied, blunt edge now honed to a razor sharpness. He ran a thumb over the edge... and blood stained it. But, to be sure, he went over to the corner and planted a wooden manikin in front of Razkar.
"Time for the test." He said with just a trace, the barest ember of uncertainty, and proffered the ax. "Have a crack at it."
Almost mirroring him, Razkar reached forward slowly and grasped his new weapon. It was... heavier, that was for sure, but mostly at the top, which would only make the strikes stronger. The head was much wider, too. He swung it experimentally... and the balance was as good as before.
Hiaduk was silent and still, arms crossed, like a mother watching her child take its first steps.
"When you're ready..."
Razkar turned to the manikin, cocked back his arm and
swung-
Tok... tok... tok-tok-tok-tok-tok...Both men watched the wooden head bounce and then roll across the stone floor. Razkar had felt the blade hit the wood, and then continue as if nothing was there. He leaned close, mouth open, and examined the cut.
He could balance a bottle on it.
"By the Goddess..."Hiaduk seemed to swell another foot, beaming, the side of his personality that had greeted Razkar rising from the depths to take credit.
"Worth the money, Myrian?"
"All penny, Akalak..."
----------
"Not finished."
Hiaduk turned with his eyebrow raised when Razkar spoke next. He crossed arms like tree limbs and leaned back against the counter, now they were back in his part of the smithy and not sweating like strumpets in temple.
"What's left to do, Myrian? By the way, I never asked your name."
Razkar gave a short bow. "Razkar of the Shorn Skulls."
"Well, Razkar of the Shorn Skulls, you're honored to meet Hiaduk of the Sweaty Forge, I'm sure, but I think service has been rendered and now it's time for payment, don't you think?"
A cocky grin was spread across his face and Razkar didn't think it was all due to the masterpiece he had just forged by skill and application. Now the work was done and the challenge bested, that disapproving tone was back in his voice, as if he was remembering that he'd used the bone of one of his own kind as a tool.
Razkar did not rise to it. He still had things to do, and goods to purchase. Not just
purchase, in fact.
"And I pay for ax. But need something else."
"What's that?"
"Need... ah... word for leather... leather that holds blades on body?"
The Myrian stared almost pleadingly at Hiaduk and with upraised eyes he sighed.
"Weapon harness, you mean?
"Yes!" Razkar said, pointing triumphantly. "Weapon harness! But need it made, ah... special?"
"Custom?"
"Is same?"
"Kind of. But I get your point. However, that is not my preserve. It is, however, the domain of my partner." He pointed across the way into the part of the store lined with armor from across Mizahar. "He'll do it for you."
Razkar bowed again and made to turn-
-but a purple blur shot out and rested a hand almost gently on his shoulder. Sheer instinct had his hand at his gladius before he'd even realized... but he stayed it.
"You can pay him after, Myrian. What's his is his... and what's mine is mine."
Razkar counted out the thirty gold mizas and that was that. He examined the new ax with bone shaft and wider head once again under the light streaming from the top window. Hiaduk couldn't help admiring it, too, even as he jingled the pile of coins in his hand.
"You do good work."
"That's the best word you can give me?"
"... very,
very good?"
"I suppose that will have to do."
----------
Razkar's first impression was that Loriim did not look like an Akalak. Well, that's not fair. His first impression was that he would not likely be around so much armor in his life unless he joined the Sylirian Knights in the middle of a battle.
Manikins surrounded him like a silent regiment, and none of them wore the same armor twice. Chainmail, leather, plate, half-plate... and things Razkar did not even have words for. He circled the small stage in the middle of the room, lit by the skylight, and marveled at every display.
If he's as good with leather as he is steel, I should-"Can I help you?"
Razkar nearly jumped a foot in the air and his gladius was half-drawn before he realized it was a... significantly shorter Akalak. Loriim backed up a step, frown on his face, looking the Myrian up and down.
"Er... are you OK?"
"Sorry, sorry. Was surprise. You own store?"
"Yes, I own store."
"Man over there-" Razkar pointed to the other side, where Hiaduk was... yes doubled over laughing "-said you can help me." He bowed shortly again, remembering his manners. "I am Razkar of the Shorn Skulls."
"Oh. I'm Loriim of... Riverfall, I guess."
"Not Sweaty Forge?"
"What?"
"Nothing, er, need weapon harness. Need special make."
The Akalak (
Goddess, Razkar thought with some shock,
he's barely taller than me!) rested his weight on his right foot, crossed his arms and gestures with one hand.
"Show me."
Razkar licked his lips and prepared to pantomime, because his Common certainly wasn't up to it.
"Need, ah... need place for gladius here-" he patted his pelvis, in between his navel and his right hip, at the waistline, "-and place for ax, here."
He patted his right hip and pretended to draw the short sword with his left hand and the ax with his right. He supposed he could make it more... symmetrical and have one on either hip, but crossing his arms to get to each weapon was more complex than simply reaching down for each at the same time.
"With me so far?"
A piercing and decidedly academic glare shifted minutely as the Akalak nodded. He didn't carry himself like an Akalak, either, Razkar noted. More like a scholar than the swaggering warriors he'd seen before.
"Continue."
Razkar gestured to the his left pectoral, handing grasping the handle of an insivible dagger pointing upwards.
"Need place for kukri, here. He patted the curved blade currently shoved down the back of his breeches. "For... fast pull." His hand jerked down, pulling the blade from its vertical sheath, handle down, and righting it horizontally in the same movement. Then he turned around and placed both hands at his back. "And need two places on back for..."
He paused, knowing that the Akalak would think he was searching for the right word. He was, but for an entirely different reason. Having an Akalak make an ax shaft from a bone was one thing, but he knew the multicolored male race held an almost religious respect for
lakans. If he was to tell one, even a bookish one, that he was going to have them festooning his chest, thing might... go badly.
"... long daggers. Point up, handles down." He made a gesture of pulling the weapons down and free from their imaginary sheaths, whipping his hands from his back and straightening them quickly. That one he would like most of all: hidden by his cloak, no-one would know he had the two
lakans until he drew them. "So... you have idea now?"
"Oh, I have several, Razkar of the Shorn Skulls." Loriim was caressing his jaw now, ideas flashing and forming and collapsing and replaced in rapid succession before his eyes. "Some of which have promise. But a custom job like this will be more than usual. Say... ten mizas? Gold?"
Razkar nodded just like he did with Hiaduk. Twice the price it would cost him in the Warren, but the best cost the most; that was simply the way of it. And he needed something better: Goddess knew his belt couldn't take much more steel jammed inside it!
"Deal."
"Follow me."
Razkar did, trailing the Akalak behind his counter and into the rear room of the store. It was... well, "chaotic" would be the mother of understatement. Metal and leather of all shapes and sizes were strewn and slung in every corner. Tools were neatly lining the wall but for the life of him, Razkar couldn't make out any order to them. But Loriim moved smoothly amid the anarchy, picking out tools here and there. Shears, a small hammer, a jar of thick, pungent paste.
And a measuring tape.
"If you please?"
Razkar unfastened his Cloak and gently hung it by the door, then assumed the position: feet together, arms spread. The Akalak measured his waist, his sides, his chest, his back, every conceivable angle that the harness might encompass. Loriim was silent save for the occasional grunt or sigh of contemplative "hmmm", and a chime later, he was finished.
"OK. If you'll be so patient as to wait, I think I can get started."
Once again, Razkar watched in silence as a master plied his craft in front of him. The saw the same shine in the Akalak's eyes, the same swiftness of his hands that was made more amazing by economy and sureness. He cut strips of leather, each the width of a belt, and arranged them experimentally.
"Hmm..."
That was when he noticed the difference between Hiaduk and Loriim. The forge was the perfect place for the former; fiery and eager to best himself against steel and its limitations. But Loriim was more... cerebral. Each adjustment he made was an intellectual challenge, not merely physical. Aesthetics mattered to him, too, but it was... functionality that guided him. Razkar had given him a fair guide; he wanted to stick to it was much as possible.
Finally the Akalak turned, strips pinned roughly together for the moment. Razkar frowned minutely and tried the prototype on. It fit over his head neatly enough, and around his waist: a thick, belt like harness with white chalk marks where the sheaths would be, and two strips that crisscrossed his chest and back. He looked down and saw a chalk mark on his left pectoral, where the kukri sheath would go. He knew there would be two more on his back.
He jiggled, jumped, turned and stretched, moved quickly and slowly... and the harness barely moved.
"You measure good. Fits perfect."
"You are satisfied?"
"Very."
"Good." Loriim's voice had but a note of satisfaction in it; he knew there was much work left to do. Razkar unbuckled and shuffled himself out of the harness and returned it. "Then I can
really get started..."
"In earnest", he should have added. Razkar was by no means an armorer, but he knew he was watching a professional... even if he couldn't name any of the tools and substances he used. Face fixed and squinting in concentration, Loriim removed one pin after another and fixed the leather in place with a pungent, steaming adhesive that he heated over a candle first. Then, when leather was fastened to leather, he added the five sheaths he would need. One for a gladius, one for an ax, one for a kukri and two for the
lak...
Razkar corrected himself.
Long daggers. That was what they were for.
After a slow and silent bell of work, Loriim turned to him again and presented a very different harness. The sheaths were in place, and when Razkar fitted it over his head a second time...
"Try it with your weapons."
Razkar did, slipping his gladius and ax into the sheaths. They fit perfectly, and when he drew them, they were smooth and unleashed in a moment. And though he jumped around some, they did not come loose. But they were regular sheaths, not the one for his chest. He examined it a little closer and saw the clasp there that would hold the curved dagger in place while it was upside down on his chest.
"The clasp is a little innovation of mine," Loriim said simply, but there was surprisingly little pride in his voice. He was simply stating facts, pointing to the clasp. "Try it. It will hold the weapon in place, but with a good enough jerk, it will give, releasing the weapon."
Razkar tried it out. He sheathed his kukri, handle facing down, blade pointed to the roof, and did the clasp. It held. But when he grasped the handle and pulled-
-the kukri was freed and ready for blood. A slow, pleasured grin spread over his face.
"The two on your back are the same." Loriim crossed his arms, a quiet look of satisfaction on his face, along with a professional smile. "I had fulfilled my part, I believe."
Razkar caught the unspoken request in the words, and handed over a mess of gold coins. Even at a glance, Loriim knew it was too much, and he said so. Razkar shook his head, hand up, palm forward, refusing any return.
"You did fine job. Worth more than ten. So get fifteen. I wish you good day."
He bowed, and Loriim returned it. By the time Razkar had exited his store, the odd "little" Akalak was bustling to and fro amongst his manikin army, adjusting and removing and adding gleaming plates or lengths of mail. A chime later, Razkar was back out in the bright sun and the freezing wind, Cloak of Fallen back across his shoulders, and weapons resting snugly in his new harness.
The Myrian smiled in satisfaction, but there was a grimness to it as well. That was the easy part of his day. What would follow would be more than a chore.
It would be a test.
RecieptHandaxe Repair: 30gm.0sm.0cm
Weapon Harness: 15gm0sm.0cm
Total: 45gm.0sm.0cm