They all erupt againâloud, confident laughs.
âHeâll fold,â one sneers.
âYouâll cry when the hammer hits,â another adds.
âBetter bring a handkerchief, little Human,â the third says, grinning.
Lathrasiel watches them, amusement fading into calculation.
âFine,â he says to me. âYouâll have your show. They can stand and watch.â
I meet their eyes one by one. My voice is calm.
âWatch closely.â
I make them lay out the raw ore on two tables. Same light. Same scales. Same crucibles. No excuses.
Lathrasiel goes first and brings a basket of random Platinum ore.
He picks a lumpy, dull-gray piece with clouded veins and a rough fracture.
Is he trying to make a point? Is he stupid? It doesnât matter how skilled he is. If this is bad enoughâŠ
The Grimoire blinks in my sight.
[Platinum Ore â Purity 15%. High silicate, sulfur veins, iron inclusions.]
He doesnât even look twice. He drops it into his bucket like heâs picking rocks for a road.
I take my time. I break three rocks with a cold chisel.
The fourth piece rings cleaner. Fine, tight grain. Pale metallic sheen in the fracture, almost waxy. The Grimoire nods.
[Platinum Ore â Purity 90%. Trace iridium, nickel 0.7%, low sulfur.]
I set it on the scale. The apprentices stop snickering for half a second, then start again.
âLook how long he took! He thinks heâs a Blacksmith!â
âMaybe heâll meditate at it next,â one of them says. âAsk the ore to behave.â
âCareful, he might sing to it,â another adds. âHumans love their little rituals.â
Lathrasiel doesnât stop them. He watches my hands, cold and distant. âIf you need a chisel to pick ore, youâve already failed,â he says. âA true smith sees quality at a glance.â
I keep my face blank.
âSure, buddy. Just get to work.â
âTrust me, boy,â the third apprentice calls out, âPlatinum doesnât care about your careful eyes. It cares about the forge that shapes it.â
âRelax,â I say. âYouâll get your show.â
They smirk like itâs already over. Lathrasiel gestures at the hearths. âThen stop wasting everyoneâs time. Charge your crucible. Weâll see what your âcareâ is worth.â
We work in parallel. The forges roar. I move like a man following steps on a floor he just learned. I fumble a tong change. I almost set a glove on fire. The three apprentices howl every time I reach for the wrong tool, then grab the right one when I look at Lathrasiel.
Lathrasiel doesnât look at me. He runs his hearth hot and open, stoking hard, flame white and loud. He acts like heâs done this a thousand times. He probably has.
I let the Grimoire tell me when to lift, when to wait, when to pour. I donât try to be clever. I just do what it says. The numbers climb, hold, settle. My hands keep the rhythm. I can feel the melt going smooth.
âWatch him, heâs counting in his head,â one apprentice says. âMaybe he thinks numbers will bless the metal.â
âMaybe he thinks smiling helps,â another adds.
I realize Iâm grinning and donât bother to hide it. The line is clean. The pool looks right.
âLook at him,â the third snorts. âHappy because it didnât explode. Adorable.â
Lathrasiel pours first. The stream is steady and bright. The surface settles flat. His three shadows clap and nod like theyâve just watched a temple rite.
âPerfect, masterful!â one says.
âTextbook,â another adds.
âTry to learn something,â the third throws at me.
I donât rush. I pour my melt. The lip wobbles once. A drip kisses the rim. The ingot looks rough on top. The snickers come back hard.
âThatâs your âcareâ?â
âPut it back and start over.â
âMaybe heâll pray to it.â
We cool. We bring them to the bench.
This story is posted elsewhere by the author. Help them out by reading the authentic version.
âGo call the Quartermaster,â I say with a smile.
They do, and then I look at the metal.
I worked in a mine, so I know a thing or two.
âRing test,â I say.
Lathrasiel taps his. The note is short. It dies fast. I tap mine. The tone is clear and long. The room goes quiet.
I scrape a corner. His face dulls under the file, veins of black streaking through the cut. Mine shows a tight, clean shine. I chip a sliver from each. The Grimoire flashes in my eye.
[81% purity, slag inclusions.]
Then mine.
[99% purity, slightly non-uniform grain.]
The quartermaster strides over, frown already set.
âWhat now?â he mutters. âYou lot turning this forge into a circus again?â He doesnât wait for an answer. He looks at the two ingots on the bench.
He taps the first oneâLathrasielâs. The note dies fast. He barely nods. âSort of adequate,â he says. âToo brittle, though.â
He snaps the ingot in two with his bare hands.
âMeh. I guess that for an Apprentice Knight focused on combat, this in not bad, Cloud. But waitâŠâ
Oh. He thinks thatâs mine. This is going to be fun.
He doesnât wait for an answer. He looks at the ingots, wipes his hand on a rag, and points at the cleaner one.
âGood work, Lathrasiel,â he says. âA bit rough on top, but I can see the quality from here. He raps it with a knuckle, barely listening for the note. âSee?â He says toward me. âProper.â
He flicks his eyes again to my ingot, shaking his head.
âAnd thisâthis is what happens when Knights play at forging. Rough mouth. Sloppy pour. Keep fighters out of my line next time.â He shakes his head. âOf course a blacksmith apprentice will win. You donât see us grabbing swords and running at monsters, do you?â
Everyone else but me and the Quartermaster has suddenly become
very
pale.
The Quartermaster suddenly leaves, uninterested in this little feud.
I donât give Lathrasiel the chance. I step in, catch his wrist, roll his sleeve. He jerks, too slow. I slap him. Once. Clean, open-handed. The sound echoes off the stone
âThatâs for melting my ore,â I say, voice flat. âNext time, test before you talk.â
Twice.
âThis is for the lack of respect when talking to another student.â
Then a third time.
âThis is just because I donât like you.â
* * *
The Mithril Golem watches without being seen. Its veil holds. Heat rolls through the Quarters; it stands still and records. This is the place it understands. Fire. Weight. Time.
The boy works like someone new to the tools, but his eyes stay on the numbers only he can see. He does not chase the flame. He does not copy the elf. He follows sequence, holds the heat, pours on count. The note of his ingot hangs longer. The grain speaks for itself.
It marks the other signs. He picks ore by core, not skin. He keeps his temper until the work is done. He ignores noise. When pressed, he defends his material. He wants
his
metal, not any metal. That matters.
Rafnovâs first step is earth and judgment. The second is forge and obedience: to heat, to timing, to the truth of the pool over pride. The boy meets it in function, if not in form.
Blacksmithing is an important step to be worth of my masterâs legacy.
Itâs time for me to make arrangements.
Heâs ready for the second trial.
* * *
Lathrasiel is nursing his cheek when a large man enters the forge.
Lathrasiel is hunched over a stool, hand on his cheek, when a large man steps through the archway. Broad shoulders. Burn scars up his forearms. The room goes quiet.
Garin Holt looks once at the ingots, then at Lathrasielâs face, then at me. âWhatâs the meaning of this?â
âHe said he melted my Platinum,â I answer. âSaid he sent it to a Bronze batch. Said my order was blacklisted because the ore was bad. We had a little bet based on blacksmithing and I slapped him when he lost. I was waiting for you because I
want
my Platinum back. No matter what.â
âI bet youâre Jacob Cloud. The Fakâthe Champion.â Garinâs jaw tightens. He lets out a slow breath. âNo. Your ore is in my vault. Sealed under my mark. I donât hand ssuch material to apprentices, and I donât mix unassayed stock.â He turns to one of the Apprentices. âHave the Quartermaster bring Vault B, crate thirty-seven.â
The apprentices wonât meet my eyes.
âSo⊠he just lied?â I ask Garin.
Garin looks back at me. âWhatever he told you, it wasnât done. We cut a
shop
sample for training this morning. Not yours.â He rubs his brow. âYou brought me clean Platinum. I was planning to test it with you present because I heard it was
very
high-quality. Thatâs standard procedure, I was surprised that you didnât come before.â
âOh, I wasnât aware of this. When I came, I just found him and...â
Lathrasiel tries to speak. Garin lifts a hand.
âEnough. You lied to a client in my forge. You made a call you had no right to make.â His voice stays flat. âYouâre suspended from work. You watch and you take notes. You donât touch a crucible.â
The Elf hunches his shoulders and the other three apprentices behind him look
very
scared.
The quartermaster returns with a sealed crate stamped with Garinâs mark. He sets it down. The seal is unbroken.
Garin meets my eyes. âYour ore is safe. Weâll do this properly.â He glances at the better ingot on the bench. âAnd weâll start by testing
that
.â
Garin doesnât waste words. He takes my ingot, shaves a sliver the size of a nail, and drops it into a clear vial of pale fluid. The liquid clouds, then shifts color. It settles into a calm, heavy silverâthe exact tone of the metal itself.
He stares for a heartbeat, then lets out a low whistle. âThatâs Platinum,â he says. âNot just good. That is⊠clean. Iâve never seen a shop test swing that far. This is near perfect.â
The quartermaster leans in. The apprentices crowd closer and then pull back. Lathrasiel goes still, eyes on the vial, jaw tight.
Garin sets the vial down. âThis is unprecedented,â he says. âNo slag trace. No sulfur. The Mana content feels⊠Whoever picked that ore knew what he was doing, or heâs walking with a very generous spirit watching his hand. This is just about the highest grade of Platinum Iâve ever witnessedâ He looks at me. âYou did this?â
I shake my head.
Garin sets the vial down and looks at me. âYou have any forging experience, boy?â
âA lot,â I say.
The three apprentices trade looks. One snorts at my ingotâs rough mouth. Another shakes his head like Iâve just lied to his face.
Shameless! Look at that ingot! What experience are you talking about?!
Garin doesnât blink.
âGood. Youâre helping me forge your set. Iâll handle the other Champion orders myself.â He turns to the quartermaster. âPrep the good forge. This Platinum warrants True Diamond treatment.â