Blade Aid
Urien scowled at the bustle in the Cavern as he passed through on his way to his self-assigned errand.. He much preferred wilderness, now, to his former haunts. Out where he was recognized as Druid, not where he didn’t measure up, was where he’d rather be. But this was important; however much he chafed under Anaph’s staff, however much he sought his own path, he knew the Celts needed this king – and that meant this prince needed to become king, which he wouldn’t if a certain stiff-necked and unhappy clan chief had his way.
The challenge had to happen; Urien understood that as well as Anaph would when it came. But Urien knew things Anaph didn’t, or at least knew them in reality, not in misty words imparted by a cold dead rock. Anaph would try diplomacy or something, but that wouldn’t work – the Celts respected strength, and the challenge had to be met on those terms; no restrictions or agreements, just force against force.
So here he was, skipping greeting the sun in order to catch the prince on his way to daily early-morning tree-chopping. A wry smile came to him; Ryan had come near to riding down the young swordsman the first morning; peace was made when Ryan chose a stand that needed thinning anyway, and sent a forester to mark which to topple by splintering. Urien had come to appreciate the forester; the pattern of fallen trees, many turned to lumber, other let lie, fit so naturally into the forest the disturbance faded in mere days. Though Urien preferred other arts than those having to do with the forest, he still appreciated the flow and balance, the flux and play of life energies in the great woods, with all the plants and animals. He’d finally learned what Anaph meant when the High Druid called that flux “thin”, and what Wizard Ryan meant when he said the ‘ecosystem’ was fragile, but it didn’t concern him; other Druids could deal with that, and plainly it must be strong enough – it lived and worked, after all!
And here came the prince. Anaph’s choice had what a king of the Celts needed, in depth; Urien had sensed sparks in him – Elder, perhaps? Scout, maybe? and was there a such a thing as a King spark? Not that it mattered; the object of Urien’s focus wasn’t the prince, but his sword. Urien touched the one at his own side, one he’d fashioned when he learned of the chief’s intent. It held the skills of over a score of good swordsmen, enough, he hoped, on that side of it. But that was the lesser of his purposes: the greater was in his staff, with earth-knowledge, fire-knowledge. The lad’s sword was good, but it had to be better than good, and that was the morning’s main task.
Druid-to-be stepped out to meet king-to-be. Purposely he drew his sword badly, to make it plain he was no threat. The better sword met the lesser; eyes met eyes as metal met metal. Urien held the contact and sent energies surging. “Don’t move”, he commanded.
“What are you doing?” The prince didn’t flinch back, but his gaze left Urien’s eyes and went to where the blades touched.
Urien swallowed his shock: he wouldn’t have thought the lad able to free his gaze at all, let alone so easily! Discipline kept any reaction from showing. “Imparting knowledge and skill. What is in this sword will be in yours.”
The prince chuckled. “A Druid who knows swordcraft?”
Urien shook his head. “A Druid who collects swordcraft. The skill and knowledge of more than a score of good bladesmen is here. Now it will be yours.”
The response was a nod. “Why would you do this?”
“You will be challenged. The challenger is better. With this – the challenger was better.” Urien hoped that was the case; he made himself sound confident, anyway.
“So you magic my sword, so I can win?”
“Would you rather lose?”
The prince laughed. “No – I am no fool. So I don’t think it can be so easy.”
“It isn’t. You’ll have to practice. You have three days. And there is more.” Urien paused while the final energies flowed, copying to the sword of the prince the last of what Urien had collected. He lowered his weapon. “I shall change your blade.” At the frown that came in response, he added, “Not in form, but in nature. Bring it.”
The prince scowled at the Druid’s back; he didn’t like the imperious nature. But if the man could do something to make his sword stronger, or swifter, he could put up with it – for now, anyway. Once he was king, he would have a choice of Druids to call on.
They departed from the path toward the hills and woods, to cross frozen turf chewed by horses as they roamed the valley freely. Down toward the river, to a long-shore bar Urien had chosen carefully for the minerals, for the metals, deposited in the fine silt and sand brought down from the mountains above. The small side channel was iced over; he’d checked it the day before and found it strong enough for walking, so he led on across to the sand.
“Hand me your blade”, Urien ordered curtly. The prince didn’t like the tone, but he complied.
Urien felt it, judged it – not with ordinary senses, for he was no bladesman. Druid senses sharpened by many hours of practice felt the metal, Druid talent sent waves of energy washing across the blade. He nodded, just barely; it was a good piece to begin with, and so easier to work with. The balance didn’t feel right to him, but then what did he know? – he’d ruined a few blades learning about them. This would need the prince’s guidance to get right, lest he ruin the feel.
“Grasp it”, he ordered, doing that himself, holding it point down. Hands landed by his – strong hands, used to labor, on arms used to this weapon. “Downward”, he ordered curtly. Without waiting, he thrust with all his might, putting all his weight on the grip. His companion’s reflexes were incredible – or maybe the prince had anticipated. Either way, the blade sank to its crosspiece into the sand. Urien hadn’t thought ahead to the two of them, facing each other, getting in each other’s way; fortunately for him, the prince was quite practiced at dodging: not only didn’t they bump awkwardly, but the prince supported Urien with a shoulder, saving the druid from falling on his face.
The sands grew warm. Vapor rose, but the two didn’t get wet; Urien wouldn’t have minded, but instinct told him not to soak the prince. Vapor fountained; if anyone were watching, it would be a strange picture along a frozen shore on a frozen morning. Beneath, molecules danced, minerals flaking from their parent rock, metals separating from their mineral matrices, ions flowing along unaccustomed energy lines. As the charged flow reached the blade, Urien realized with a shock that the prince was aware of the whole play of energies, touching but not interfering – and he wondered just what Anaph had chosen, why a Druid to be king? But other sparks were there – Elder, a touch of Scout, and something he couldn’t name...
was there a spark for King? He didn’t have the concentration to spare for a further look; there was a task to finish.
The Prince watched, fascinated, as the layers of metal in his sword realigned, then again, and again, as though undergoing the folding the smiths used in making a superior blade. Then metal particles from the sands began to flow in, joining the layers, changing the attributes. It occurred to him that would make his sword heavier, a thought he didn’t like. But there were bits there, some of those tiny, flowing particles, that didn’t belong anyway, impurities. Without asking permission, he reached into the process with his own senses, tugging those bits away as new bits joined.
Urien held in his shock: how could an untrained boy (he no longer recognized himself as a boy) do such a thing?! and how dare he?! Urien was the Druid here – but what the prince was doing was helpful, something he hadn’t thought of, so he stored his fury for the future and accepted the cooperation.
Finally it was over. Ions ceased streaming to the blade, layers stopped re-folding, the ejection of impurities came to an end. Without letting go his grip, Urien got his feet under him; the prince copied his actions, and they stood. The druid drew the blade out, then flipped it, spinning on one grip rather than letting go. The blade’s owner matched him, one hand of each of them never losing contact. “Prick your finger”, Urien rasped, throat dehydrated from exertion.
The prince’s eyes narrowed. Suspicion lurked there, and doubt. But Anaph’s choice did as asked, though his eyes never left Urien’s. That will was strong, the druid realized, stronger than he’d expected. This one would be no toy or tool; he could forge the Celts into a power. Briefly Urien entertained temptation, then set it, too, aside; the act of the moment was sufficient for the moment.
A drop of blood left the finger of the warrior – this prince really was a warrior, however untested – and touched the metal. Anger flashed in those eyes; this was more than just a drop of blood! Urien wondered if he’d made a mistake, but decided not: without this aid, the prince would never stand against the challenger, so there was no other course: blood flashed across the surface, energies binding, adding alien properties to the metal – and tying prince to sword, sword to prince.
When it was done, the weapon was ripped from his grasp. Glass-sharp edge met druid throat: “What have you done?” hissed the prince. “Or did you think I wouldn’t notice?”
“I gave your sword power. When it hits other metal, it will weaken it.”
The prince considered this. “I do not believe a druid could do such a thing. What did you do with my blood?!”
Urien sighed. This prince was trouble, he felt. “I bound you to it. You will feel it as a part of yourself. You must practice with it. It will remember what your opponents do, and you can learn from that. Seek good teachers; what they show you, your muscles will learn. You must learn enough before the challenge.”
Steel departed his throat as the blade lowered. “That is not the way Anaph would have used, not the way the old Druids did.” The prince felt utterly certain of that.
Urien shrugged. “There is more than one way to do most any thing. I learned this one.”
The prince hefted his sword. “I don’t like it. But if it helps me stay alive, I won’t reject it.” Turning on the ball of his left foot, the prince took his sword and left.
Urien gazed after him, hoping the boy would never sense the other reason for the blood.