Yeomhwa looked at me with a face that screamed he didnât like this one bit.
âThis isnât some playground for bookish scholars to mess around in.â
âYou brat. Are you saying youâre going to ignore an order right now?â
âNo, sir...â
âYoung Master Jeok says he wants to reforge. Adjust the flames to what he needs. Help him with anything he might need on the side.â
â...Yes.â
His answer was anything but spirited.
âHeâs a benefactor of the Heavenly Forge. If anything happens that offends Young Master Jeok in the slightest, Iâll throw you out.â
âWhat? Y-yes! Ah, understood!â
The moment Yongmyeong said âthrow you out,â Yeomhwa jolted and bowed his head over and over.
âNow then, letâs go. Iâll also show you where youâll be staying.â
At Yongmyeongâs words, I nodded and followed after him.
âWasnât that a bit harsh?â I asked.
âAh, did that make you uncomfortable to watch? I apologize. If I donât lay it on thick like that, heâs the sort of kid you never know when heâll cause trouble.â
âDoes he cause a lot of trouble?â
âItâs because he has too much talent. Of all the kids Iâve seen, heâs the one who handles fire the best. Itâs just a shame he keeps failing the tests, maybe because he has terrible luck with them.â
âI could tell just from looking at the furnace flame. The fire was clean and steady.â
At that, Yongmyeongâs expression turned surprised.
âWell now. You even read the flame properly. Are you sure this is really just a hobby?â
âYes.â
âBetween that monstrous strength of yours and this, youâre the kind of talent anyone would covet.â
âPlease bear with it,â I said, half joking.
Even after my joke, Yongmyeong still looked regretful.
Talking like that, we arrived at the lodging before I knew it.
âThis is where our smiths stay. You can use that room over there. For meals, when the bell rings three times at each mealtime, just head over to the dining hall there and eat as you please.â
âUnderstood.â
âIâm busy, so Iâll have to leave you here. You can start reforging whenever you like, even right away.â
âAll right. Thank you for taking care of everything.â
âHahaha, think nothing of it. If you need anything at all, just say the word.â
Leaving those words behind, Yongmyeong really did hurry off, as if something urgent was waiting for him.
âYoung Master. Are you truly planning to stay here?â Taecheon asked.
âWhy not? Itâs fun. Iâm really excited right now.â
When I spoke with a face that showed I was genuinely enjoying this, Taecheon shook his head.
âThen are you planning to go straight to the furnace?â
âYeah.â
âUnderstood. Then Iâll tidy up the place youâll be staying with Brother Sowon.â
Chu Sowonâs eyes went wide with shock, but Taecheon didnât even spare him a glance.
âI donât like cleaning, though...â
His small, weak protest was lightly ignored.
*****
I went through the discarded swords in the storage.
They were failed blades, but quite a few of them could become masterpieces with the right touch.
To throw these away as failures, huh.
It really was Heavenly Martial Castleâs smithy.
Heâs one of the Five Great Artisans of the Central Plains; of course Master Smith Cheon wouldnât tolerate even minor flaws.
In the end, I picked out a total of five swords.
Among them, I set aside the best one.
That one was for Grandfather.
When I brought the swords to the furnace, Yeomhwa was waiting, sulking hard.
Yongmyeong had told him repeatedly not to get on my bad side, and yet here he was, blatantly wearing that sulky expression.
It made me laugh.
I set the swords down and spoke.
âIâd like to be alone. Could you step out?â
At that, Yeomhwa glanced at the furnace and said,
âHaah... If any blue light comes up from those flames, you have to tell me right away. All right, Young. Mas. Ter?â
âYes. Got it.â
If blue flame rises, that means the temperature inside the furnace has shifted.
Then the heat wonât spread evenly through the iron, and problems will crop up.
He still looked unconvinced, and I could see him forcing his feet to move away.
Once Yeomhwa left, I immediately slid a sword into the furnace.
The fire was so good that the blade flushed red in an instant.
I held my hand lightly over the reddened face of the sword and muttered:
Soul in the flame, tempered a thousandfold.
Crimson blaze unending, steel heart made to live.
White light rose from my palm and slowly began to seep into the sword.
I was unfolding a spell-art Iâd created by fusing the magic Iâd learned with the sorcery of the Central Plains.
This particular incantation was one that strengthened a sword.
My energy wrapped around the entire blade.
I took it out and began to tap the blade with my finger.
TANGâ
Each time my finger struck, my energy surged and was absorbed into the sword.
As the cause of its defect was being stripped away, the swordâs hardness was also shooting up to a ridiculous level.
Each tap of my finger was exerting power on par with the very highest grade of refined steel, steel that had been tempered ten thousand times over.
TANGâ
At the final flick of my finger, the remaining energy was all absorbed, and the blade flashed so brightly it almost hurt to look at it.
I ran my hand over the sword here and there, then, satisfied, set it aside.
Then I picked up the next sword and began the same process again.
*****
I wasnât sure how much time had passed.
Stretching, I stepped away from the furnace.
The moment I did, Yeomhwa, who had been waiting outside, rushed in ahead of me to check the state of the furnace.
The crimson lotus flames were still blazing.
The fact that it had been maintained like that meant Iâd been feeding black coal into the furnace precisely where and when it was needed.
From what I heard later, that was the moment Yeomhwa really looked at me again.
Heâd thought I was just some bookish scholar, but apparently I knew how to handle fire pretty well.
Well, obviously. Why else would I have asked to borrow a furnace?
He suddenly got curious.
What state were the swords Iâd worked on in?
Looking around, he saw the five swords laid out neatly.
The moment he saw them, he supposedly couldnât help but gasp.
He told me later that heâd never seen swords shine like that in his life.
Just looking at them made his eyes ache from the brilliance.
And the edgesâjust looking at them made it feel like theyâd slice flesh open.
He picked up a sword and examined it. It was perfect.
Even the weight distribution was flawless, and the sword felt light.
When he tapped the flat of the blade with his finger, a clear, pure note rang out.
That meant the hardness of the sword was top-class.
He distinctly remembered having been told those swords were taken from the failures in storage.
Had he been wrong?
Had he given me the wrong directions and pointed me to Heavenly Martial Castleâs armory instead?
Even in the armory, there wouldnât be swords this good.
Anyone could see at a glance: they were masterpieces among masterpieces.
Could it really be that that âscholarâ had reforged them to this level?
If that was true, then that scholar could be truly dangerous.
If he could turn failed swords into masterpieces with nothing but reforging, then how far could he push truly excellent swords?
People with bad intentions would fight to kidnap someone like me.
Or kill me.
If they couldnât have me for themselves, martial world types would sooner kill me.
Either way, Yeomhwa revised his judgment of me once again.
He decided I was an eccentric among eccentrics.
He said he actually felt good.
Why else would I have left those wonderful swords there?
Wasnât it because I trusted him?
Apparently, he felt sorry, thinking heâd treated me badly that day.
He decided that when I came back tomorrow, he was going to treat me right.
*****
That night, he stayed alone at the furnace, hammer ringing as he worked.
He wasnât just talented; he was also the type who put in far more effort than anyone else.
Even on talent alone he outstripped the other trainee smiths, and on top of that he worked harder than they did, so there was no way they could keep up with him.
Because of that, the other trainees ostracized him.
They would deliberately give him low-grade black coal and charcoal, or secretly swap out his iron for stuff so bad you couldnât even use it.
The problem was that even with those trash materials, he always managed to produce something better than what they made.
Despite that kind of talent, he still hadnât become a â NĐŸvĐ”lđght â (Exclusive on NĐŸvĐ”lđght) full smith.
The others, afraid of his talent, had done everything they could to bury it.
On top of that, he had no master teaching him and no patron to lean on.
So people took every opportunity to ignore and bully someone like Yeomhwa, who had no connections and no backing.
But he was stubborn.
Even after all that abuse, he clung to the Heavenly Forge and refused to leave.
Because of that, his personality had grown prickly.
Late at night.
While he was tidying the furnace and carefully gathering up the swords Iâd left behindâ
Masked men burst in and knocked him flat in an instant.
Then they snatched away the swords heâd been holding so carefully.
Even in his dazed state, Yeomhwa grabbed one of the masked menâs legs with all his strength to keep them from taking the swords.
âD-donât... Those swords arenât mine... Leave them...â
The masked man kicked him hard in the face, the one whoâd spoken so desperately.
The impact sent him flying backward, and he blacked out on the spot.
Once theyâd confirmed he was unconscious, the masked men hurried out of there.
*****
The masked men gathered in a deserted spot.
After checking their surroundings, they took off their masks.
âHaah! That bastard grabbed my leg all of a sudden, scared the hell out of me.â
âWhat the hell was in there that he was holding on that desperately? I almost killed him.â
âPretty sure he said they were swords?â
âHe also said they werenât his.â
âSwords? Letâs open it.â
They opened the wooden box, and inside were five swords.
âWh-what is this?â
âTheyâre insane.â
âLook at that beautiful sheen. How the hell did he polish them like that?â
âAnd those edges... Ow!â
The man who touched a blade yelped as red blood dripped from his fingertip.
âI just barely brushed it and it cut me this deep? The sword aura on these things is no joke.â
âYouâre telling me that bastardâs gotten to the level where he can make swords like this?â
âNo way. Even our master couldnât produce pieces like this.â
âNot just our masterâMaster Smith Cheon himself would have to pour his heart and soul into it to make something like this.â
âThen what? You saying that bastardâs at Master Smith Cheonâs level?â
âNo way. He clearly said it, didnât he? They werenât his. Someone mustâve brought them to him for repairs.â
âDoesnât that make it even more dangerous? We donât know who owns these swords, but theyâre not going to be ordinary people.â
âDonât worry about it. Itâs not like thereâs any proof we did it. If he lost them, thatâs his fault.â
âYeah. He can take responsibility.â
âSo what do we do with these?â
They all looked at each other.
âIf we change out the hilts and make new scabbards, no one will know until they actually draw them.â
âYou think we can make scabbards that can withstand this kind of sword aura?â
âWeâll have to try.â
âAnd once we make the scabbards?â
âYou know. We offer them up to the gentlemen upstairs.â
âAh! Right.â
âWith swords like these, those gentlemen will be thrilled.â
âExactly. All right, everyone bring a new hilt and scabbard by tomorrow.â
âGot it.â
*****
The next day, when Yeomhwa opened his eyes and saw that the box holding the swords was gone, he was devastated.
Heâd poured his heart and soul into those swords.
They might have been the masterpieces of his life.
What was he supposed to say?
If heâd just left them by the furnace, they wouldnât have been stolen.
All sorts of thoughts ran through his head.
One thing was certain: he had to go to me, tell me everything exactly as it had happened, and beg for forgiveness.
âUgh!â
When he tried to get up, pain flared through his face like it was breaking apart.