The heavy tinted goggles protected his eyes, although he realized that he wasn’t using his vision, but that sense of feel, a sense that somehow seemed to break everything into degrees of something. What that something was and how he would categorize it were more questions he couldn’t answer.
He didn’t try, instead releasing the power stud and letting his senses check the cut and the metal-which felt rough, almost disordered.
With another deep breath, he flicked on the laser and spread the beam for a wider heat flow, using his senses and the power from the laser to shape and order the edge of the blade, trying to replicate something like the feel of the Sybran blade.
After the second pass, he unpowered the laser and pushed back the goggles, wiping his forehead. Then he bent and picked up the plastic cup, swallowed the last of the water in it, and set the empty cup back on the ground beside the cell bank where the power cable wouldn’t hit it.
One of the marines-Istril-sat atop one of the rocky ledges and watched as he readjusted the goggles and studied the model blade again.
Once more, he picked up the metal that had been a brace and triggered the laser, shifting his grip, and trying to ensure that his gauntlets were well away from the ordered line of powered chaos emanating from the powerhead.
After his first rough effort at shaping the blade, he turned to the curved hand guards and tang. As he shaped the metal, he tried to smooth it, just as he once had smoothed power fluxes through the Winterlance’s neuronet. When the rough shape was completed, he unpowered the laser and checked the cells-a drop of less than one percent so far. Not too bad for a first try.
He pushed back the goggles and blotted the area around his eyes, then studied the blank blade. Even with one rough cut, the shape looked better than the local metal crowbars.
He could feel Istril’s eyes on him, but he did not look toward the rocks. The smoke from the cook fire was more pronounced, as was the hum of people talking. He did not look toward the landers, either. Instead, he inhaled, then exhaled deeply and replaced the goggles and lifted the laser.
Trying not to feel like an idiot, he triggered the laser and continued to use his mental netlike sense and the power of the laser to work the metal, almost to smooth the grains into an ordered pattern while trying to create the equivalent of a razor edge on both sides of the blade.
By the time he finished with the laser, not that long it seemed, sweat poured down his forehead, out and around the goggles, and his knees trembled. Done with the laser, he set the powerhead down and waited as the metal cooled toward the color of straw.
The oil-and-water mixture in the crude trough felt right, but whether it was … time would tell. Using the modified space gauntlets, he swirled the mixture in the trough and eased the blade into it, letting his new sense guide the tempering-or retempering. Then he laid the blade on the sheltered sunny side of the black boulder where it would complete cooling more slowly.
He set aside the goggles and checked the power meters-a drop of one percent, maybe a little more. He nodded. He could make something that looked like a blade, but was it any good?
As he saw Ryba’s broad-shouldered figure striding grimlytoward him, he offered himself a smile. He’d get one opinion all right-and soon.
“Why did you take my blade? It had to be you. No one else would-”
Nylan held up a hand to stop her. “I’m guilty. I didn’t hurt it. I needed a model, and I didn’t want to feel like a fool.”
“Model for what?”
His eyes turned toward the flat rock where his effort rested.
“Darkness! How did you do that?”
“Art, laser, dumb luck-all of the above. Don’t touch it; it’s still hot enough to burn your skin, and I don’t know if it will work. It looks right; it feels right, but I’m no swordsman. It could shatter the minute it’s used. I don’t think so, but it could.”
Ryba stepped up to the blade and looked down at the slight curves of the deep black metal. “It’s beautiful.”
“Technology helps,” Nylan admitted. “But I don’t know if it will even work. It could break apart at the first blow.”
“I don’t think it will.” Ryba looked at him. “It looks like it will last forever.”
“It doesn’t matter what it looks like. It’s how it feels and lasts.”
She studied the blade again. “I need to teach you more about using blades. It would be a shame for someone who can create this not to be able to use it well.”
“You don’t even know if it’s right.”
Ryba’s dark green eyes met his. “About some things, I can tell.”
Nylan shrugged.
“How many of these can you make?”
“Over time, enough for everyone, and probably a few more. I’d guess a little less than a two-percent charge on the bank for each. But I don’t want to do that many until we’ve got enough stone for the tower.”
“We need both.”
“It will take more than half a season with the portable generator to fully charge a whole bank of cells. We’ve gonethrough nearly three banks, and that only leaves one that’s completely full. We’ll probably have the first recharged before we finish the tower. I haven’t done the math, but I could probably forge ten blades on a depleted bank if I recharged two cells. But I need a base load of twenty percent for stone-cutting.”
“You’ve got piles of cut stone here,” pointed out Ryba.
“It’s not enough.” He shrugged. “Right now, the mortar’s the problem, but I think I’ve got that set.”
“That’s a terrible pun.”
“Didn’t mean it that way.”
The former captain looked at the smooth and sheer black stone wall that rose nearly twice her height, then at the square door frame whose base stood nearly her height above the visible base of the tower. “You’re building a demon-damned monument.”
“Why are you letting me? Could it be that I’m right?”
Ryba laughed. “The others look at this, and they all see that it can be done, and that we’re here to stay. Nothing I say is as effective as your killing yourself. They all see how you drive yourself. But is everything that you’ve planned really necessary?”
Nylan pointed to Freyja-the ice-needle peak that towered above the unfinished tower, above the other mountains. “You can tell from the ice on those peaks that the winter is as cold, if not colder, than northern Sybra. Also, a tower isn’t enough. We need stables, and next year, we’ll need more storehouses, and workrooms for all the crafts we’ll need to develop, and we’ll have to defend them all. I’ll end up cannibalizing the landers for metal and everything else, because that’s easier than trying to develop iron-working from scratch or than trading for it. Once we run through the plunder, what can we use to buy goods? Or food? I certainly haven’t seen traders galloping to find us. Also, there’s going to be a gap between when we lose all high technology and when we can master lower technology.”
Ryba looked at the blade. “What gap?”
“It would take me days to forge a blade like that with coalor charcoal and hammers. Maybe longer, and that’s if I knew what to do. That’s if I had an anvil, if I could find iron ore, if …” He snorted. “How long will the emergency generator and the charging system last? Maybe a local year … and it might quit in the next eight-day.”
“Then you’d better do at least a few blades, and others, as you can fit them in. We’re going to need them. I hope not soon, but we will.”
Nylan wiped his forehead. “I’ll try to balance things. Has anyone heard anything about this so-called bandit trader? Can’t we get something from him? Big cook pots, even cutlery?”
“I’m working on a list. What do you think we really need?”
“Some heavy cloth, wool maybe, and something like scissors, to cut it, thread and needles. We’re not equipped for winter. There were-what? — two cold-weather suits in the paks? Any dried or stored food we can buy. What about something like chickens … for eggs? The concentrates might last until mid-winter. Salt. Some of that stuff Gerlich kills could be dried and salted. Oh … I need to figure out how … never mind …”