Kit's last stop was The Defiled Blade, a name that reflected Ravok's sardonic humor in a breath. Fortunately enough, Kit found no screaming children or sacrifices in the forge; the veneer of Ravok's civilization was too thick to allow for anything else. Still, the industry of the place startled her. She heard the sound of metal falling and fire roaring from outside, a near-constant drone of noise while black smoke rose from the tops. Weaponry forged long and hard well. All the better, Kit thought, chewing on her lip, to feed the machinations of the god of chaos.
Some shops divided workspace from storefront. No one had told the proprietors of the Defiled Blade what a storefront
was. Kit walked into a wall of hot air, raising an arm over her eyes to protect them from the wash as she walked through onto the edge of the floor. Workbenches were scattered all about her, men hammering and banging away at all their various projects, still glowing red from their stay in the forge. Kit wandered through into the edge of the workshop, reaching across and rubbing her forearm, feeling lost.
A young man veered away from his work as she stepped in. His fast was flush with heat, his arms glistening with the sweat of a long day's work. When he was near a stride and a half from her Kit felt her teeth tighten into a snarl, felt her body step back away from him remembering a night and an alley and
—ill him—get away—corpse!— "Easy there," a voice said, and Kit realized her fingers were splayed in a way that made her sweat go cold. A moment more, and she would have emitted res right here, in front of . . . "Don't mean you any harm, miss." The apprentice said, holding his hands into the air. His eyes looked . . . amused. Kit felt a flare of anger, her lips curling back . . .
Find your center, Kit. She thought.
Don't think, just feel. Let everything fall out. Kit closed her eyes, breathed, and the rage drained away from her as ticks tocked by, leaving only dredges that clung to the edges of her like food burnt to the bottom of a pot. "I've had," she said, neutral as she could manage. "A rough couple of days." And that was as close to an apology as the bastard was getting!
. . . Okay. Maybe there was still some anger.
"Fixing to defend yourself, then?" He asked, giving Kit an encouraging smile. "Something to give you a little peace of mind? What'd you like? We got swords of all kinds. You name it, we probably got it."
"Daggers." Kit rubbed her hands over her eyes, tried to scratch the tension from her shoulders. "Something I can slip in my belt and not get too many looks. Some throwing knives too, if you have them."
"Good choice," he said, turning, walking toward a rack of weapons in the corner. Well, barely even a rack, really. They weren't large enough to warrant a term like that. "Balanced or unbalanced?"
Frowning Kit stepped sideways, tried to peer at what he was grabbing. "Balanced." He pulled something from the rack and held it out for her to take. It not like other daggers might have been made; it was entirely steel, from grip to blade, sharp and double-edged on one end and blunt on the other, for someone to hold. In spite of herself, she smiled. These men seemed to know their business.
She wandered closed, inch by desperately slow inch
—your head is screwy—this doesn't matter—shouldn't matter—why does it matter?—grabbed it. He let go, allowing her to hold it back and handle it. She weighed its handle in her hand,
hmmed. Its weight was mainly in the center. Which meant she could throw it from the handle, and expect it to turn predictably in the air. The edge was sharp. All good, but . . . "It's a bit heavy."
"A heavier knife isn't a bad one," he reassured her. "It might take a little more strength to throw, but it will pierce further, and do more. It won't pierce armor, but basic leather, like your jacket, won't stop
these knives. You'll be able to use them to protect yourself. That's what you needed, right?"
"Right." She turned the knife over in her hand. Nodded. It would do. "Daggers?" He had one waiting for her to take in his hand. She accepted it, raised the blade so she could see it. The steel was dark, the handle firm and easy to grip. She took a step back, gave a clumsy, experimental swipe, stab. The weight . . . well, at least there was nothing obvious about it
wrong. "I'll take it. Nine more of the throwing knives too."
"And you'll take this sheathe," he held up a basic leather one, a stupid grin on his face. "So you don't cut yourself up holding it." Kit scowled, muttered about robbers as she swiped it from his hand and jammed the dagger into it, hooked it on her belt. No one seemed overly concerned; if she tried to steal, there was an entire room full of big, powerful smiths to get in her way.
"I don't suppose you'd be interested in any plate?" The apprentice said, sorting through the rack, pulling out her knives, sorting everything into its proper place.
"No!"
"Mail?"
"No."
"Leather?"
" . . . No?"
He turned around at that, smiled, pointed a finger in her direction. "Now
that doesn't sound certain. The world's a dangerous place. Sometimes, a little extra leather is all you need to save your life. Are you
sure you don't want to have a look?"
" . . . Sure."
OOCDagger - 2gm
10 Throwing Knives - 10gm
5 Scabbard, Dagger - 10gm