TOOLS FOR MURDER
[THEME]
“You'll use it, boy, and as long as you hate using it, you would use it more wisely than most men would.
Wait. If ever you don't hate it any longer, then will be the time to throw it as far as you can and run the other way.”
It finally had come to it. Weapons, tools for murder, had been commissioned. Thoroduin stood before the anvil, hammer in hand and stared at the wrought steel with a drifting look in his eyes. The pale white cray sketches, that crumbled off of his workplace’s countertop, depicted two simple weapons. He bit onto his pipe and blew a long bloom through his nose. Wolves have fangs, bears had claws, mortals had knives. Thorwen didn’t like it, but it was a reality he had to come to grips with. Through another cloud of billowing smoke, he summoned from the depths of boxes and crates, three long bars of steel, one hard two soft, kept together like a sandwich.
Thorwen kept a ruler on hand, in the pockets of his apron. With a sniff, he emptied his pipe and realised he was procrastinating his craft. It drew a growl from his lips, and he got himself to work. Two hammers, one pair of tongs, and a rounding implement for the socket was to be done. He took with him a placebo for the Ahlspiess’ shaft. Noting down the measurements, he checked through the compendium of various crafts, slipped on some gloves and went to sandwich the hard steel between two softs, before plunging it into the flames.
The bellows roared, and took away part of his worry. The first craft was basically a long nail, with a socket and a disk for a guard. It wasn’t anything complex, or difficult, but it was as deadly as an eagle’s talon. When a flaming orange star glimmered between the black embers, he gripped it with the tongs, by the tang, and brought it to the anvil. The rest was just muscle memory. Focus, clarity, vision… Thorwen let the tool’s weight do the rest. What he started with was a long spike, much akin to a nail. He twisted his wrist between each hit to give the hot steel a rectangular silhouette.
Eventually, the spike grew in length, and in correct shape. He had been afraid he might have undershot, though Thorodhuin soon realised this particular craft would have an ellongated socket. Longer than he anticipated, which wasn’t a bad thing. He led the spike cool down, and held the piece by that spike, before plunging what the tang would be into the flames. Half an hour afterwards, he rose the piece from the anvil, a faint red glower still ran like veins across the langlets. The socket had been done by flattening, and then applying the steel against the anvil’s horn to curve it into shape.
A final delve into the flames returned it burning like a devil, and he plunged it from the furnace into the fine quenching oïl that rested in a vat by his side. Tongues of fire licked his gloves, and forced the spike into shape, treating it until it held and showed promise of integrity. Next came the indentations at the ahlspeiss’ base, four marks for the rondel guard to be hammered down into. Which he did, a piece of hot iron he went to grind into a circular shape, with a four pronged star chisel punctured through.
After a few moments, success came within reach, he made sure the guard wouldn’t fall off at the slighest nudge and went to give it an edge to catch other stabs on. It didn’t seem the most useful weapon, mostly a long nail – too long to retrieve properly – on a stick. After a few other moments later, it had been cleaned, the edges slightly sharpened, and the guard properly affixed in place.
Thorodhuin let that be wrapped up in linen, in his tent. He’ll have to turn a pole for later. For the next craft, all he had to use was an old scythe head. A fine thing, turned into a weapon of war. He snarled – more than he was already – and brushed it clean of rust and impurities. When that was done, it was time to reshape it into something more appropriate. You won’t be seeing any rest yet. The red hot blade was straightened and brought out of the flaming embers. He progressively rectified it back into place, and wrought it until it was the proper length.
Now came the bevel, using the edge of the anvil to place it at a slant. The socket for the blade was going to prove a greater problem than he anticipated. Thorodhuin wiped some sweat off his brow. The tang he had used for the smithing of the long axe would thus become the socket. In a similar manner to the ahlspeiss, Thorodhuin went to heat it and curve it in such a manner it could hold onto a long wooden shaft. The Elven blacksmith went to brush the blade of residue. With the axe’s head done, he submitted it to the flame once more.
With the final plunge into the quenching oïl, he retrieved it and sharpened it against his grinding wheel. Two poles had been spun in the meantime, then handed over to him. He paid the poleturner, and went to affix both heads on their accompanied foundation. Each was nailed into place, and were done so well. For a ‘first attempt’ it didn’t seem so bad. Nothing fancy, no need for filligrees, or ornamentations. Claws didn’t have any such things anyway. He had begun at dawn, and a new dawn had begun to rise again. Thank Ceridwen, some peace.