“Did you use the rock I gave
you?” She asked, wanting to speak of the subject that had brought her to the
forge.
“I did. Usually, I would use
pieces from my ‘treasury’, but that rock, wasn’t just a rock. Not a normal rock
anyway. It was just too heavy.”
“Rivallo gave it to me. He said
that it had fallen in fire, from the sky. I’m not sure that I believe that
bit.”
“Well, wherever it came from, it
was really heavy for the size of it. The bloom was really bright when it was
smelted. I’ve never seen anything like it. There were virtually no impurities.”
“Can I see?” Uedica asked
curiously. “The ‘treasury’, I mean.” She knew it was quite a request.
Metal-workers were a notoriously secretive, throughout the tribes. They guarded
their own secrets well. Never the less, they were a community. They would often
recognise the work of others by name and would admire and aspire to learn from
those they had never met. Annan looked uneasy.
“I don’t usually show it to
anyone other than my father.” He sighed and turned to lift the lid of a heavy
oak box. Whatever the young smith’s skill, he knew in his own heart, he could
never refuse her. She got to her feet quickly and felt as if she were being
admitted to an inner sanctum of knowledge.
She peered inside.
There were items of rough metal
in the form of rings and ingots. There were large stones. An array of clay pots
held an assortment of smaller stones and ground powders. “Oh!” she said softy.
“That wasn’t what I was expecting.” It didn’t look much like ‘treasure’, she
thought.
His heart sank as he saw her
disappointment. “These are the sources of the seven known metals. They are
iron, tin, lead, copper, quicksilver, silver and gold. It’s my ‘treasure’. What
others think of it after it has been worked is up to them. This is the first
form of beauty, in its natural and unadorned state. Each one is unique and full
of the promise of what it may become and mean to others.”
She picked up a bright red stone
and looked at it intently. She’d never seen the like of it before. He smiled as
her selection of the most mysterious metal of them all. “That is cinnabar, from
which comes quicksilver. That one has come all of the way from Iberia.” She
selected a different stone, and watched the light play on its thin, translucent
crystals. Its lustre and shine made it look like a desirable gem in its own
right. “That one is casserite. From that, comes tin.”
“Is this tin?” She asked holding
a thin metal bar.
“It is and it speaks.” He smiled at
her surprised expression. “It does not.” She scoffed. She would not fall for
any of his childish pranks. “It does.” He insisted as he took the metal from
her hand. “When I say ‘speak, it’s actually more of a ‘cry’. He held the metal bar
to her ear. “Listen and you will hear the ‘cry of the tin’.” He gently flexed
the metal to a slight bend. She could hear the metal give a high-pitched
tinkling sound, as it was stressed. “That is the ‘cry’ of the tin.” He grinned.
She listened again. With a little imagination, it wasn’t difficult to think of
the sound as a cry of tiny souls. Everyone had heard metal ring, once hit, but
she’d never heard anything like that before.
“The big shiny, heavy stones are
galena, from which comes lead and silver.” She picked up a small knobbly piece that
nestled in its own pot. “They are small nuggets of gold in their pure form.
Some yellowish, some reddish, depending upon where they are from. The green
powder is copper. We may need some of those later on.”
She began to find Annan’s world
fascinating. She was amazed that from such dull, uninteresting objects, objects
of great soul and shining beauty could be made. She continued to peer into the
chest, inspecting the grubby contents further.
“So, what you do,” she said
distractedly as she intently inspected a shining stone of galena, “is like cooking
but with rocks.”
“Yes.” He grinned at her analogy.
“I suppose it is.”
3 comments:
A very enjoyable and informative piece of writing, Stuart. I remember your reading this at the group. It is rather atmospheric and contains some great imagery. I look forward to reading more about Uedica.
Alex
I love the way this has been researched, so you can create a world we can believe in. Would like to read more of it too.
This is very well written Stuart, as is all of your writing. I need to recap on the story of Uedica although I know you haven't necessarily been reading it chronologically. You've obviously done a lot of research and come up with interesting facts about the source of precious and semi-precious metals
Post a Comment