Forger chapter 1-3 by Jude Alquinto (easy novels to read txt) đ
- Author: Jude Alquinto
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âThis is twice youâve saved me.â Arza believed she would have been attacked had she been alone. âI will repay this debt.â
âYes, yes, sure you will. Now get in so I can leave. Canât have a filthy lad scattering shit all over your house now, can we?â
âYouâre really going out in this dark?â
âAye.â he said sharply. âWhatâs to take from me?â he held out his arms and smiled, ânot a dab of wealth on my person.â
âYouâre scared.â she said as her eyes scouted the nearby corners where something may skulk.
âNo, I certainly am not.â The thumping inside his chest begged to differ.
âI can tell,â she said. Trust is a complicated thing and she would not let him in for safety. Two hours is too short a time to know a man.
After a quick exchange of farewells, Arza went in and Axev made to leave.
A clatter in the silent darkness leaves a mess for the imagination to arrange. Restlessness is a toothless rat that likes to nibble on oneâs navel. No harm is done but itâs better to do something to make it stop. Feed it bread, dash it against a wall, tear it apart, slap it away, cut it to adorable little bloody pieces, anything.
Now, for her admirer, Axev told himself, a handful of iron grains at the ready underneath his cloak. Whereâs that nibbling rat?
3. Curse upon CurseTreading the empty streets, he scoured for a man whose only proof of existence was but a mundane sound. Under carts, behind corners, within bushes, nothing. But not long during his search, he heard, a sharp metal clang on stone from a few yards away. Axev rushed to it while keeping his steps to their lightest and senses to their keenestâespecially his hearing. He circled around the tavern knowing the person would flee from the other side. He reached it in less time it would take for someone to get away.
There was no one.
Convincing himself it could be anything, from a stupid cat to a gust of wind, he turned to leave. Before he could turn, from behind, a gentle touch landed on his shoulder.
âItâs a bit late for someone to be takinâ a stroll.â There was no need to press a blade against Axevâs throat. Floating daggers were enough to tell him not to move.
Five short blades with deformed handles began circling around them like birds of prey. The weapons appeared melted and damaged, an obvious flaw of their forger.
âQuite a trick, eh?â the man said, one of his daggers tapped the wall six yards awayâmaking the same sound Axev heard.
Knowing heâd be stabbed faster than he can forge, out of instinct, Axev raised his hands and yielded.
âI surrender, not that I have much of a choice with you being a forger and all,â he was planning for a quick escape all the while.
âItâs a rare sight, seeing you with a lass, Axev,â He started to sound familiar.
âMy nameâs a hard one to guess,â Axev said, stalling to have time to think, secretly looking for whatever he can use to flee, âif you want the girl, sheâs all yours. Sheâs not dear to me in any way anyway.â It was then that the crude floating blades began to seem familiarâhideous imitations of knives that he admired so fondly from the past.
Then Axev turned his head slowly to see who it was. Looming behind him was a black-haired man who stood a hand taller than him. He wore a shirt filled with patches. Trousers torn then stitched. The man held a hearty grin that he seemed to have since the moment he approached.
Not finding it easy to believe the face he saw, he had to ask, âWilliam?â followed by an exhale of relief. Then he whipped Williamâs chest with the back of his hand, cursing him as he did, âthat was a stupid way to greet me.â
âI found it funny though.â
âThat joke nearly cost you a limb,â Axev presented the sword under his cloak. Sharp and fresh.
âTake the damn things then. I donât need âem,â he laughed heartily at Axev, holding out his arms as though he wanted them cut. Then he threw an arm across Axevâs shoulder. The circling blades around them dissolved into thick syrups of silver, dripping onto the ground until they were no more. âYouâve long surpassed me, Axev. That sword you have⊠didnât even hear you make it. Yet still, youâre a bloody coward,â he raised his hands in mockery of Axev, âI surrender.â
âBecause avoiding is an effective skill for survival.â
âNay,â William replied, âhitting back is better.â
âI hit my enemies back a few times before. Done me no good.â
âYou donât hit hard enough, then,â said William. âWhen you hit âem in the face, make sure the whole head comes off.â
~~~
âYou have time to talk, Axev? Somewhere quiet.â
âWith me⊠a man⊠at a place quiet⊠I feel quite disturbed.â
âThe brink⊠You remember the place, yes?â
âWith a fair amount of dislike, aye.â
William led Axev across the city of Tardel to arrive at its borderâa barrier of massive stone blocks assembled to hold fast against the most violent sieges. Dabs of grass lay quiet along the foot of the wall.
âDonât go shittinâ your trousers now,â said William, making a blob of silver boil between his palms.
âAm I allowed to piss on it, at least?â Axev flicked his crossed fingers, grains of iron crumbled from his hands then slowly collected into a ball as he studied the height of the wall. âDid that thing grow a few yards? Itâs higher than I remember.â
âWalls donât grow. Youâre just more scared than you was.â
William went first, assisted by four thin stakes. Two of which strapped themselves under his feet, the other two stayed taut in his grips, stabbing the crevices on the wall one after another as he went up.
âYouâve gotten slow at this, William,â said Axev, mounting the wall twice faster than his friend by clawing his way using gauntlets with hooks for nails. âYou used to leap from knife to knife.â
âI must be getting too old for this,â said William with labouring breath, struggling halfway to the top of the wall.
âYouâre twenty-four,â Axev replied, dust and grains sprinkled down wherever his feet pressed. âPerhaps youâre ill?â
âIll? Whyâd you think meââ The stake on Williamâs right foot shattered, causing his leg to skid fifteen yards above ground, a dangerous height for a misstep. âCould be.â
Being the faster to reach the wallâs peak, Axev held out his hand to William and chains formed to fill the gap. William was not in the mood for help. âJust take the damn line, man,â Axev gave the chain a tug.
William gave no mind to the line dangling to his left. Instead, he held on to his pride. âI remember it was me givinâ you somethinâ to grab.â He made to finish his climb alone.
Finally at armâs length, William took the helping hand.
âDamned wall did grow a few feet, I suppose.â Out of breath, he was hauled up by Axev. Heaving breaths and hands on knees, William stood at the edge of the wall to behold the cliff beyond it; at its distant bottom were endless pointed rocks and raging waters.
âQuite a long way down, ainât it? A shame if some fool was to fall by accident,â William fearlessly stood at the wallâmore at ease, hands together behind him, half of his right foot peeking beyond the edge.
Axev, being the weak-hearted man that he was, first lay flat on his chest before looking down the wall. âI concur.â
âEver heard of the maidenâs curse, Axev? The bewitcherâs curse many call it.â
âJust rumours,â he answered, âI donât like mulling over stories invented to make forgelings believe theyâd fall under some curse if they toy with the power.â
âThere is truth in every story,â William laid a hand on his friendâs shoulderâto which Axev winced noticeably. âYouâre hurt?â
âA bit too severely, I believe. I was at the woods. I thought I finally found the wolf, that one-eared whelp. Tossed a blade at the bastard. Turns out, I came across a demon possessing a long-tail. I fought it⊠and lived.â Axev shook his head. âI didnât believe in demons before.â
âAxev, that wolf has been a decade gone⊠itâs long dead by now.â
âLong-tail wolves can live to half a century. Itâs alive.â
âKilling it wonât bring back our friends, Axev.â
âSparing it would be spitting to their graves.â
Not a word passed between them for a few minutes. William sat along the wallâs edge, feet dangling far above the water. Axev took a step behind where it was flat and safe. The two enjoyed the nostalgic scene of an unseen horizon between a starry night sky and a boundless sea, hearing the crashing waves far below them while the wind whispered them songs.
âWhen we were little pieces of shits, there used to be more of us sitting here,â said Axev, tapping his knees left and right.
âIf killing that wolf would let us hear voices from under graves, Iâd turn that whole forest to cinders. Make things quicker.â
âNow thereâs a thought.â Axevâs lips curled an impish smile. âArsony⊠why had it never crossed my mind?â He leered to William, waiting for how the man would react.
âHave you ever been in love, Axev?â he spoke, eyes set far into the distance. Not the answer Axev was expecting. âThat maddening crave for a woman that carves fools out of the wisest men.â
Axev answered with quizzical brows, âIâve liked a few in the past,â nodding, âgirls.â
âItâs a sad feeling, I tell you. Donât you fall in love. Take my word for it.â
âYouâre acting a bit strange.â
âAye, that thereâs the proper word. Strange,â William stretched his arms, âitâs this bewitcherâs curse. Limiting me to forging only those measly knives you saw earlier. Itâs a bloody miracle I got this high up given my condition. All I forge easily break while my heart screams her name. For a long time, Iâve treaded a path of sanity⊠and I see that girl one step beyond its end.â
âThe curse is real?â
âAs real as the metal in our veins. Pain whenever you forgeâa curse cast by the fairest woman youâve beheld. When I start talking about her, I wonât run out of things to tell. Thatâs how fine a lass she is. Anita⊠oh damn, there, I said it. Ainât Anita so pretty a name?â William eased on his back, feet still dangling down the wall. He held a smile painted with dreaming and joy, âdo you think me deranged?â
âJust so you know, Will, you donât look deranged⊠to me, at least⊠yet.â
âYour eyes betray you, my friend,â said William, staring blankly at the glowing moon. âIâve already become so madly in love with her. Just weeks ago, there she wasâtroddinâ along Melic lane, all sedate and lady-like. Clean dress, clean face, clean all. I walked up to her, eâery bit of courage with me⊠and I talked. Highborn as she were, Anita was kind enough to talk to people like us. I liked that about her. Adds colour to my day, talkinâ to her. Before we knew it, we were sittinâ on a fence⊠just talking. She looked so splendid that I canât pull my eyes from her lips. I knew it was rude
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