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Hello, it's late, but I wanted to get you guys a new WS chapter today. Gonna be padding the story more now.

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Fire crackles noisily in the furnace, casting long, mischievously dancing shadows around the forge. They wave and sway across Hineni’s face as he holds his hands out, bathed in an orange glow.

 

 

(Hineni) used: [Blacksmithing: {Steel Ingot}]

 

 

A glow leaves his fingers, the lumps of metal on the anvil rising into the air for a moment, coming together as the magic condenses around them.


An instant later, they fall down with a loud clamber, having come together as a single steel ingot.

 

- [Steel Bar] -

- Quality -

Normal

- Composition -

  • Nickel: 44%
  • Chromium: 24%
  • Iron: 21.61%
  • Molybdenum: 2.5%
  • Cobalt: 2.5%
  • Tungsten: 2.5%
  • Manganese, 2%
  • Silicon: 0.75%
  • Carbon: 0.08%
  • Sulfur: 0.03%
  • Phosphorous: 0.03%

Grade: 333

Steel is a metal with an excellent tensile and yield strength. This blend of steel is extremely resistant to weathering, wear and rust. It has a poor channeling of magical energies, but is well suited for tools and weapons.

Steel: Item Durability +20%

Steel: Item Damage +5%

Weight: 5.0kg

Value: 50 Obols

 

 

“Woah,” mutters Rhine. “That’s really useful.”


“Yeah…” notes Hineni. “Boy. Go tell Sockel to stop all orders for ingots right now,” he says.


Rhine tilts his head. “Huh? How come?”


Hineni picks up the ingot and looks at it. “We’re making them ourselves now,” he explains. “This is going to save us a fortune. Raw ore is cheaper than ready-made bars.”


Rhine nods and jogs at a half-run towards the door. “Be right back!” he calls.


Hineni watches him leave and then turns back to the ingot, to the fire.


It sounds odd, but he feels like he hasn’t spent much time with the fire lately.


Sure, he and Rhine have been working here for days, for weeks with little respite.


But that’s all been business. When’s the last time he made something that captivated his heart?


- The metal owl.


That was a while ago.


…Something that captivates his heart, huh?


Hineni stares around the room.


He’s a weaponsmith.


He’s always loved making weapons.


But all of the weapons that he ‘needs’ to make are orders for someone else.


“Done!” says Rhine, coming back into the forge.


“Boy.”


“Yeah?”


Hineni turns to look at him. “Do you want a weapon?”


“Uh… I mean, yeah?” asks Rhine. “I already got this cool knife though!” he says, showing Hineni his curved dagger.


“Yeah, yeah,” replies the man, waving him off. “But you’re a caster. A wizard needs a staff, right?”


“Really?!” asks Rhine, clenching his fists in excitement. “How come a staff and not a wand?” he asks.


Hineni turns to him, setting the steel bar down. The man kneels down, planting a hand on Rhine’s shoulder. “Rhine.”


“Yes?”


Hineni looks into the boy’s eyes. This is a serious matter. “We’re men. As casters, men don’t use wands,” explains Hineni. “We use staves, if anything at all.”


Rhine tilts his head. “I’ve seen lots of guys using wands though?” he asks. “At the academy, all of the teachers had wands.”


“Your teachers, do you want to be like them?” asks Hineni.


Rhine stares for a moment and then shakes his head. “I mean… they’re smart, but I don’t think they could work the forge for even half an hour,” explains Rhine.


“You’re going to be alright, Rhine,” affirms Hineni. “Pick your favorite material. Whatever you want. We’ll make it together,” he says.


Rhine’s face glows with excitement and he nods, running off to the materials. Hineni decides to leave the boy this choice, after all, it is his staff. He wanders around the different collections of bars and ingots, drifting over towards the wood.


After staying there for a moment, Rhine walks past the piles of exotic hardwoods and grabs a bar of steel and a bar of cobalt-chromium. “Can we use th-” Rhine stops. “Are you crying?”


“No,” replies Hineni, turning away. “Cinder got in my eyes.”


“Oh. Should I get Sockel?”


“I’m fine,” replies Hineni, looking at the bars he’s chosen, noticing that he holds both of them with little effort. “Steel and cobalt-chromium?” he asks. “Interesting.” He takes them from Rhine and thinks for a moment. “I’ve never mixed these, but I think we can make it work.”


He looks at Rhine for a moment. “Come on. You’re going to melt these yourself.”


“Huh? Me?” asks Rhine.


“Who else?” asks Hineni. “It’s your staff.” He nods his head towards the furnace. “Get the crucible set up, feed in some charcoal. We need it hot.”


Rhine nods with feverish excitement and does as instructed and Hineni notices that, while he himself isn’t exactly making something, per se, that he finds the same enjoyment in the process of guiding Rhine to do so.


The fire crackles and dances joyfully, its long, mysterious shadows, painting the cracks of Hineni’s smile.


_____________________________________________________

 

- [Cobalt-Chrome Steel Bar] -

- Quality -

Normal

- Composition -

  • Nickel: 22%
  • Chromium: 26,5%
  • Iron: 10%
  • Molybdenum: 4,25%
  • Cobalt: 31,25%
  • Tungsten: 2.5%
  • Manganese, 1,5%
  • Silicon: 1.75%
  • Carbon: 0.08%
  • Sulfur: 0.03%
  • Phosphorous: 0.03%
  • Nickel: 0.05%
  • Impurities: 0,03%

Grade: 132

- Quality Effects -

An extremely unusual blend of cobalt-chromium and grade 333 steel. Cobalt-Chrome Steel is an excellent metal for cutting tools as well as for metal implements meant for bodily contact, given its bioinert properties.

Cobalt-Chromium Steel: +15% Melee Damage on all slicing, cutting and stabbing weapons

Cobalt-Chromium Steel: BIO Affinity (Water, Nature, Poison)

Weight: 5.0kg

Value: 367 Obols

 

 

“Huh…” says Hineni, looking over the metal ingot. It’s taken on an odd hue. The cobalt-chromium, darkly prismatic as it was, has blended with the more matte, fine graded steel, resulting in the metal having a shade of greenish luster. Like the waters of a swamp on a sunny day. “This is an interesting material, Rhine,” says Hineni, looking at the window. “Global bonuses to three different attributes? That’s rare.”


“I read about some stuff like this once,” says Rhine. “Apparently, if you start embedding gems and stuff into the materials, it can get really crazy.”


“Gems?” asks Hineni. “Boy. You should be glad we can afford dinner every night,” he says, thinking for a moment. “What did you ever buy with that early pay you wanted anyway?” he asks.


“Uh…” Rhine fiddles with some leather from the workbench. “Do I have to talk about it?” he asks.


Hineni blinks. “No. Sorry,” he says. “It’s rude to ask what other people do with their money,” concedes Hineni, waving him off. “Was just curious.” He nods to the workbench. “Next, you need to make a sketch for your staff,” says Hineni. “So we know what our goal is.”


“Sure thing!” exclaims Rhine, dropping the leather and grabbing some paper and a pen, hunching over as he begins to scribble.


_____________________________________________________

“It’s just a rod?” asks Hineni, looking at the drawing.


Rhine stares at him for a moment, rubbing his lip with his thumb. “It’s a staff,” remarks the boy, dryly.


Hineni turns the paper sideways, continuing to look at it. “You sure that you don’t want any… uh… I don’t know wobbly-woo things?” he asks. “Like ornaments and detailing?”


“No. Just a staff is fine,” says Rhine, puffing his chest out and flicking a strand of sweaty hair to his side. “After all, people should be looking at me and not my staff.”


“A problem all men with interesting staves face,” replies Hineni.


Rhine snorts.


Hineni nods in approval.


Rhine has grown a lot.


_____________________________________________________

“We’re rolling the metal out,” explains Hineni. “Well. You are,” he adds on. “It’s your staff.”


“So, what does that mean?” asks Rhine, looking around. “What do I do?”


Hineni points at the long, metal table next to the forge. “You know how they roll dough out over a flat surface, to make long loafs of bread?” he asks. “We’re gonna do that, just with the metal.


“Oh, wow,” notes Rhine. “Won’t it get crooked?”


“They say that the ladies like that,” notes Hineni.


Rhine purses his lips, holding down a laugh.


“Who~” The owl-god pops her head in through the door to the forge. “They are working hard, yes?” she asks.


“You bet,” replies Hineni, turning to look at her. “All good outside?”


Obscura nods. “Tonight, talented Obscura will make their meal,” she explains. “She has come to bring them this truth!”


“Looking forward to it,” replies Hineni and she leaves again, leaving the two of them alone with their work.


The forge is quiet, except for the singing of the hissing fire.


“…Can I ask you something weird?” asks Rhine.


Hineni feels like his question, after seeing the half-human Obscura, is going to be an obvious one, given the tone of their conversations today.


“Boy. Get to work,” says the man.


_____________________________________________________

 

 

 

- [Cobalt-Chrome Steel Staff]{Gift of the owl-god} -

 -Quality -

Normal

- Components -

  • [Cobalt-Chrome Steel  Rod](Normal)
  • [Leather Wrap](Normal)
  • [Black Cloth Wrap](Normal)
  • [Black Cord](Normal)

- Quality Effects -


- Title Effect -

“Gift of the owl-god”

  • +3 OBSCURANTISM
  • +3 WIS
  • +3 LUK

A long, somewhat, spiraled staff made up out of cobalt-chrome steel. It carries a soft, green tinge, muted by repeated scorches. Its surface is somewhat knobbled from uneven working.

 ‘Made by Rhine, the river-wizard - Chosen of the owl god’

+3 NATURE DMG to all spells.

Attribute: [BIO]

  • All water-based SPELL-DMG deals an traditional 33% POISON
  • All water-based magic heals the followers of the owl-god instead of damaging them.
  • During weather: Rain, restores SOUL passively at a rate of 3/Minute.

Weight: 1.93kg

Durability: 33/33

Value: 639 Obols

 

 

 

“Not bad, Rhine,” praises Hineni, holding his hand on the boy’s shoulder. “This is really great, actually,” he says, looking over the menu. “A little heavy, but that just means it hurts more when you hit something with it.”


Rhine picks up the staff, still hot, with a pair of heavy tongs and looks at it with pride in his eyes. “Wow…” he whispers beneath his breath, staring for a moment. “That’s wild.”


Hineni stares back up at the staff, thinking about it for a moment. Actually, it is wild. Rhine’s river-magic is chaotic as is, but what happens when the entire cascade of water that the boy can summon turns out to be poisonous?


“Rhine. Promise me you’ll never use this near anyone who doesn’t deserve it,” says Hineni. “Only in the dungeon or if there’s a threat.”


“Don’t worry, I’ll be careful,” promises Rhine.


Hineni nods, thrilled that Rhine is excited, thrilled that Rhine has come so far over these few months. The boy, with his guidance, made this weapon.


He looks at the menu for a while.


A flood of poison water.


What general wouldn’t love to have someone like Rhine on the front lines? Drowning the enemy, drowning the landscape in tepid, deadly water.


“Hey. Nice staff, twerp.” Sockel.


Rhine beams holding his weapon out for her to look at.


“It is,” says Hineni. “Rhine worked very hard for this.” He stares for a moment. “What’s up, Sockel?”


The elf shrugs. “We’re closed for the day?” she replies. “It’s late.”


“Already?” asks Hineni. Time really flew by today. He sighs. “Okay. Rhine, let’s put out the fire for the day.”


Rhine nods and they do just that, before going to have a relatively nice dinner.


Hineni realizes that they only made two crude jokes today, instead of three and it ends up bugging him for the rest of the evening. But he doesn’t ever find a set-up to make it work.


_________________________________________________________

The man lays awake in bed that night, staring at the ceiling, wondering when he will get his opportunity.


“Can her Hineni not find sleep-quiet?” asks Obscura, opening her eyes to look at him.


“No, I’ve got something stuck in my head and it’s been bugging me.”


“He has dream-troubles?” asks the owl.


“No, it’s just something dumb,” says Hineni.


She hoots.


Damn it.


He should have made a joke about the knobbled staff. There was something there. He can feel it.


- But it’s too late now.


With haunted eyes, the man stares towards the ceiling, the curse of the owl-god, of three, having consumed him.

Comments

Jonas

Thanks for the great chapter

Anonymous

Two, it is half of four. The Great Frog sees you, it is pleased.

Anonymous

It's called drawing out not rolling out, the method where they alternate hammering different sides of the billet to get a longer and thinner piece. ^-^ I recently started blacksmithing so I would know lol

Anonymous

Also, thanks for the chapter!

Anonymous

Just some jewelry and a knife so far

Anonymous

https://www.facebook.com/114095957959963/posts/114098807959678/?sfnsn=mo

Anonymous

I sure am lol. My lady says I need to stop getting new hobbies. Any how, blacksmithing is a lot of fun. If you ever want something created, I'd be willing to discuss it.