Half the World

“Reckon I need a new sword.”

 

 

Thorn sighed as she laid her father’s blade gently on the table, the light of the forge catching the many scratches, glinting on the deep nicks. It was worn almost crooked from years of polishing, the binding scuffed to greasy shreds, the cheap iron pommel rattling loose.

 

The apprentice gave Thorn’s sword one quick glance and Thorn herself not even that many. “Reckon you’re right.” She wore a leather vest scattered with burns, gloves to her elbow, arms and shoulders bare and beaded with sweat from the heat, hard muscles twitching as she turned a length of metal in the glowing coals.

 

“It’s a good sword.” Thorn ran her fingers down the scarred steel. “It was my father’s. Seen a lot of work. In his day and in mine.”

 

The apprentice didn’t so much as nod. Somewhat of a gritty manner she had, but Thorn had one of those herself, so she tried not to hold it too much against her.

 

“Your master about?” she asked.

 

“No.”

 

Thorn waited for more, but there wasn’t any. “When will he be back?”

 

The girl just snorted, slid the metal from the coals, looked it over, and rammed it hissing back in a shower of sparks.

 

Thorn decided to try starting over. “I’m looking for the blade-maker on Sixth Street.”

 

“And here I am,” said the girl, still frowning down at her work.

 

“You?”

 

“I’m the one making blades on Sixth Street, aren’t I?”

 

“Thought you’d be … older.”

 

“Seems thinking ain’t your strength.”

 

Thorn spent a moment wondering whether to be annoyed by that, but decided to let it go. She was trying to let things go more often. “You’re not the first to say so. Just not common, a girl making swords.”

 

The girl looked up then. Fierce eyes, gleaming with the forge-light through the hair stuck across her strong-boned face, and something damned familiar about her but Thorn couldn’t think what. “Almost as uncommon as one swinging ’em.”

 

“Fair point,” said Thorn, holding out her hand. “I’m—”

 

The swordmaker slid the half-made blade from the forge, glowing metal passing so close Thorn had to snatch her hand back. “I know who y’are, Thorn Bathu.”

 

“Oh. Course.” Thorn guessed her fame was running off ahead of her. She was only now starting to see that wasn’t always a good thing.

 

The girl took up a hammer and Thorn watched her knock a fuller into the blade, watched her strike the anvil-music, as the smiths say, and quite a lesson it was. Short, quick blows, no wasted effort, all authority, all control, each one perfect as a master’s sword thrust, glowing dust scattering from the die. Thorn knew a lot more about using swords than making them, but an idiot could’ve seen this girl knew her business.

 

“They say you make the best swords in Thorlby,” said Thorn.

 

“I make the best swords in the Shattered Sea,” said the girl, holding up the steel so the glow from it fell across her sweat-shining face.

 

“My father always told me never get proud.”

 

“Ain’t a question of pride. It’s just a fact.”

 

“Would you make me one?”

 

“No. Don’t think I will.”

 

Folk who are the best at what they do sometimes forego the niceties, but this was getting strange. “I’ve got money.”

 

“I don’t want your money.”

 

“Why?”

 

“I don’t like you.”

 

Thorn wasn’t usually slow to rise to an insult but this was so unexpected she was caught off-guard. “Well … I guess there are other swords to be found.”

 

“No doubt there are.”

 

“I’ll go and find one, then.”

 

“I hope you find a long one.” The swordmaker on Sixth Street leaned down to blow ash from the metal with a gentle puff from her pursed lips. “Then you can stick it up your arse.”

 

Thorn snatched her old sword up, gave serious thought to clubbing the girl across the head with the flat, decided against and turned for the door. Before she quite made it to the handle, though, the girl spoke again.

 

“Why’d you treat my brother that way?”

 

She was mad. Had to be. “Who’s your damn brother?”

 

The girl frowned over at her. “Brand.”

 

The name rocked Thorn surely as a kick in the head. “Not Brand who was with me on—”

 

“What other Brand?” She jabbed at her chest with her thumb. “I’m Rin.”

 

Thorn surely saw the resemblance, now, and it rocked her even more, so it came out a guilty squeak when she spoke. “Didn’t know Brand had a sister …”

 

Rin gave a scornful chuckle. “Why would you? Only spent a year on the same boat as him.”

 

“He never told me!”

 

“Did you ask?”

 

“Of course! Sort of.” Thorn swallowed. “No.”

 

“A year away.” Rin rammed the blade angrily back into the coals. “And the moment he sees me, do you know what he sets to talking about?”

 

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