Yet no ideas are forthcoming every time I turn my attention to the magic.
Something that could bring nations to their knees.
I stare at the useless length of sharpened steel before thrusting it deep into the kiln to heat the metal. The magic will only set on heated steel. When it’s most malleable.
The warlord will return in two weeks’ time. I’ve reheated the sword more times than I can count, trying to will magic into the blade.
Nothing is taking, because I have no idea what I want the sword to do.
I have made daggers that shatter anything with which they come into contact, a mace that steals the breath from those surrounding it, a longsword that knocks nearby attackers off their feet when struck against the ground, a halberd that calls forth the power of the wind, blinding any enemies.
Countless weapons with countless magical properties—and then, when the most important client of my career comes to me?
Nothing.
I’m useless.
I pull the sword out with a pair of tongs and set it on the anvil. A breeze from the windows stirs the wisps of hair that have come free from my ponytail, and I close my eyes at the brief relief.
The fire-bright tip of the broadsword grows darker as the metal cools, and I wonder how many more times I’ll have to reheat it before inspiration strikes.
“Get out of the road!”
My eyes lift to the windows, where I see a man swerve around a horse-drawn cart. The shouting owner of the cart turns her voice down low to coo at the horses. Meanwhile the man turns to glare after her.
I don’t recognize him from this angle, but that’s not saying much. I hardly know anyone in the city, because I never leave my forge if I can help it.
The man lifts his head heavenward, as though to ask the Sister Goddesses just what the world has come to.
Then he turns, facing my forge, his eyes meeting something above the line of windows.
And I nearly drop my hammer.
Because the man, whoever he is, is—is beautiful.
There’s no other word for him.
He’s tall—a whole head over me. Golden-red locks hang down to his shoulders, the top half secured in a band at the back of his head. The shade is unlike anything I’ve ever seen. He wears an impressive longsword on his back. Not one of mine, but the sheer size of it is a testament to his strength.
Though his figure is intimidating, there’s something about his face that belies that. His features are smooth, gentle almost. So inviting.
And very pleasing to the eye.
I don’t know what’s happening. I feel like something’s been lodged in my throat. I can’t stop staring at the stranger, and liquid heat seems to be moving through my veins.
I almost want to …
I want to touch him.
I’m startled by the unfamiliar thought almost as much as I am by the fact that I’ve inadvertently whispered the words aloud.
A flare of heat hits me from below. Confusion and wariness and some powerful unfamiliar feeling all battle for dominance within me. But the broadsword demands my attention.
It’s … pulsing.
But in the time it takes me to draw my next breath, it stops, and the temperature spike disappears. I look back out the window to find the man moving on.
I just stand there, breathing. But I can see the red-haired man in my vision perfectly, and another wave of heat that has nothing to do with the sword rolls through me.
What is this?
The faintest sprinkling of magic pulls on me from below, and I force myself to wipe the stranger from my memory.
I consider the weapon carefully. It’s as if I’ve started the magicking process but not finished it. What was it I’d said right before the weapon pulsed?
“I—I want to touch him,” I repeat, my cheeks heating.
Nothing happens.
I raise my hammer and bring it down against the hot metal, but before the two can meet, the hammer bounces back up, despite not quite making contact. Intrigued, I try again.
It’s resisting my blows.
Now why would it do that?
All right. What I’d done was say something about the man who wandered past my windows. Perhaps if I try that again?
“He’s quite tall,” I whisper. “With beautiful hair.”
Nothing happens. No pulse of heat.
So it wasn’t talking specifically about the man that did it.
“It’s hot in here,” I say, trying for another fact, but that obviously does nothing for the sword.
Think harder.
What I’d done was whisper a thought I had aloud. I told it to the blade.
No, not just any thought.
A private thought.
A secret.