A Malazan Book of the Fallen Collection 3
weapons. Brys had collected a lantern along the way and he now hung it from a hook in a crossbeam. He walked to a rack crowded with swords. 'Why a private collection, Ceda?'
'Curios, most of them. Some antiques. I am fascinated with forging techniques, particularly those used by foreign peoples. Also, there is sorcery invested in these weapons.'
'All of them?' Brys lifted one particular weapon from its hooks, a close match to the description relayed to him by Kettle.
'Yes. No, put that one back, Finadd. It's cursed.'
Brys replaced it.
'In fact,' Kuru Qan went on in a troubled voice, 'they're all cursed. Well, this could prove a problem.'
'Perhaps I should go to the regular armoury—'
'Patience, Finadd. It's the nature of curses that allows us to possibly find a reasonable solution. Two swords, you said?'
'Why would sorcerors curse a weapon?'
'Oh, most often not an intentional act on their parts. Often it's simply a matter of incompetence. In many cases, the sorcerous investment refuses to function. The iron resists the imposition, and the better the forging technique the more resistant the weapon is. Sorcery thrives on flaws, whether structural in the physical sense, or metaphorical in the thematic sense. Ah, I see your eyes glazing over, Finadd. Never mind. Let's peruse the antiques, shall we?'
The Ceda led him to the far wall, and Brys immediately saw a perfect weapon, long and narrow of blade, pointed and double-edged, modest hilt. 'Letherii steel,' he said, reaching for it.
'Yes, in the Blue Style, which, as you well know, is the very earliest technique for Letherii steel. In some ways, the Blue Style produces finer steel than our present methods. The drawbacks lie in other areas.'
Brys tested the weight of the weapon. 'The pommel needs to be replaced, but otherwise ...' Then he looked up. 'But it's cursed?'
'Only in so far as all Blue Style weapons are cursed. As you know, the blade's core is twisted wire, five braids of sixty strands each. Five bars are fused to that core to produce the breadth and edge. Blue Style is very flexible, almost unbreakable, with one drawback. Finadd, touch the blade to any other here. Lightly, please. Go ahead.'
Brys did so, and a strange sound reverberated from the Blue Style sword. A cry, that went on, and on.
'Depending on where on the blade you strike, the note is unique, although each will eventually descend or ascend to the core's own voice. The effect is cumulative, and persistent.'
'Sounds like a dying goat.'
'There is a name etched into the base of the blade, Finadd. Arcane script. Can you read it?'
Brys squinted, struggled a moment with the awkward lettering, then smiled. 'Glory Goat. Well, it seems a mostly harmless curse. Is there any other sorcery invested in it?'
'The edges self-sharpen, I believe. Nicks and notches heal, although some material is always lost. Some laws cannot be cheated.' The Ceda drew out another sword. 'This one is somewhat oversized, I'll grant you—'
'No, that's good. The stranger was very tall.'
'He was now, was he?'
Brys nodded, shifting the first sword to his left hand and taking the one Kuru Qan held in his right. 'Errant, this would be hard to wield. For me, that is.'
'Sarat Wept,' the Ceda said. 'About four generations old. One of the last in the Blue Style. It belonged to the King's Champion of that time.'
Brys frowned. 'Urudat?'
'Very good.'
'I've seen images of him in frescos and tapestries. A big man—'
'Oh, yes, but reputedly very quick.'
'Remarkable, given the weight of this sword.' He held it out. 'The blade pulls. The line is a hair's breadth outward. This is a left-handed weapon.'
'Yes.'
'Well,' Brys considered, 'the stranger fights with both hands, and he specified two full swords, suggesting—'
'A certain measure of ambidexterity. Yes.'
'Investment?'
'To make it shatter upon its wielder's death.'
'But—'
'Yes, another incompetent effort. Thus, two formidable weapons in the Blue Style of Letherii steel. Acceptable?'
Brys studied both weapons, the play of aquamarine in the lantern-light. 'Both beautiful and exquisitely crafted. Yes, I think these will do.'
'When will you deliver them?'
'Tomorrow. I have no desire to enter those grounds at night.' He thought of Kettle, and felt once more the clasp of her cold hand. It did not occur to him then that he had not informed the Ceda of one particular detail from his encounter at the tower. It was a matter that, outwardly at least, seemed of little
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