CHAPTER 2
CORIN DID NOT look back
from where he squatted at the hearth. “Was it Picts this time,
Conan, or shining knights of Aquilonia?”
The crack of the door banging shut almost eclipsed
Conan’s sigh. “I was being careful.”
“Practice, or was there reason?”
The boy set the rabbits on the table at the
hearth’s far side. “If I had seen anything, I would have told
you.”
Corin smiled and stirred the cauldron of stew
hanging over the fire. “You can hang them up, let them season a day
or three. Ronan’s eldest speared a buck. They gave me a down
payment on a sword for him. I’ve cut some up, added it to the
stew.”
“Ardel is going to get a sword?” Conan snorted and
tied the rabbits’ hind paws together. “The buck must have been
trapped in a snowdrift.”
“Ardel may be slow, but he throws a spear
well.”
“Cimmerians are swordsmen.”
“And what if a Cimmerian loses his sword?”
Conan’s eyes tightened as he hung the rabbits from
a peg near the door. “He would sooner die than do that.”
“And likely will, if he does, and if he cannot handle any other weapon.” Corin ladled
thick brown stew into a pair of wooden bowls. “A warrior may
describe his skill with a blade when he’s talking about a battle he
has survived; but to survive there’s not a one of them that
wouldn’t use anything that came to hand as a weapon.”
The boy shook his head. “You can’t use just
anything as a weapon.”
“Yes, you can.” Corin handed his son a steaming
bowl of stew. “There, for example, your supper. You could use that
as a weapon.”
Conan’s brow furrowed as he studied the brown gravy
and bits of meat and beans in it. “It’s not hot enough to burn. And
the bowl is not heavy enough to kill. I don’t see how.”
The smith stood and set his bowl on the table. He
extended his hand toward his son. “Here, let me show you.”
Conan, eyes narrowed warily, handed him the
bowl.
“Good, now just sit over there.” As his son sank to
the floor by the door, Corin seated himself at the table and began
to eat his stew. The venison cubes could have done with a bit more
cooking, and he’d have to trade for more salt before winter ended,
but it tasted good. He suddenly wished for a hearty loaf of
bread—the kind his wife had been famous for making. He’d never
learned how to make it himself, and Conan showed no aptitude for
baking. Not that the boy ever would have
indulged himself in anything that didn’t lead directly to his being
a warrior.
Conan stretched his legs out.
Corin finished his stew and started in on Conan’s
bowl.
The Cimmerian boy’s foot twitched, betraying
impatience. But it wasn’t until Conan’s head began to sink, his
shoulders rise, and glower to deepen that Corin relented and turned
toward his son. “So you want to know how this stew could kill
someone?”
Conan nodded.
“Not counting poison, the stew would kill the way
it is killing you now.” Corin pushed the bowl toward Conan’s place
at the table. “By not having any.”
The boy frowned.
“When you hear stories about our destroying the
Aquilonians at Brita’s Vale, what do you remember?”
Conan’s face brightened. “How Connacht slew a
centurion and scattered a whole legion of knights.”
“Of course.” Corin shook his head. “Don’t you
remember what came before? Why were the Aquilonians at Brita’s
Vale?”
“The Cimmerians forced them there to fight. They
knew they were doomed, so they formed up to defend
themselves.”
“Good, now I want you to do something, Conan,
something very important.”
“Yes?”
“You’ve thrilled to my father’s stories as a child.
I did the same when I was your age. But now I want you to think of
the story with a man’s mind.” Corin closed his eyes for a moment,
remembering when he had learned what he hoped Conan would now
learn, and wishing that it had been his father who encouraged him
to learn the lesson. “The Aquilonians had come north to punish
Cimmerians for raiding along the frontier. They burned villages and
slaughtered people as they came north. They were invincible until
they reached the vale. How did they become vulnerable?”
The boy’s mouth opened for a heartbeat, but shut
quickly enough. Blue eyes flashed warily. Conan’s face became an
iron mask of concentration, and Corin felt pride blossom in his
breast. In that moment he saw the man his son could become, and he
hoped he had the patience and strength to aid him on that
journey.
Conan’s gaze darted toward the stew. “Your father
described raids on the supply trains coming to aid the Aquilonians.
The Cimmerians took away their stew. They killed their
reinforcements. They starved them of men, iron, and food. The
Aquilonians could go no further.”
“Very good, Conan, very good.” Corin toed the bench
away from the side of the table. “Come, finish your dinner and get
more.”
The boy, smiling, sprang to his seat and devoured
the stew. Corin let him finish what was left of the bowl in
silence, then began talking as Conan returned with a second
helping.
“You must understand, son, that many a battle is
won before the first arrow flies or the first sword is drawn.
Brita’s Vale was a close-won battle. The Aquilonian general had
chosen his position well. Had his troops been a little less hungry,
’twould be some noble’s villa on this very spot. The Aquilonians
knew us as we know them . . . and to engage any enemy without
knowing him is folly.”
Conan glanced over, then nodded. “Father?”
“Yes?”
“Why did you never go raiding as your father
did?”
“Are you suggesting I did not have the courage to
go?”
The boy’s spoon plopped back into the stew. “No,
Father, no. I’ve heard the stories. Everyone says you are a great
warrior, that just knowing Corin lives in this village is what
keeps our enemies at bay. It is just that . . .”
The smith reached out with a scarred hand and gave
his son’s forearm a squeeze. “I heard no disrespect in your voice,
my son. And, like you, the tales of my father’s adventures
certainly filled my dreams. But I think I am a more practical man
than my father. This is why I am a smith. I can take ore and smelt
it. I can pour it into a mold. I can fire it and hammer it and
temper it. I can test it and sharpen it. I can shape it into
something which is real and is useful. I make things which allow
others to live their lives more easily.”
The elder Cimmerian smiled. “For all the stories of
treasure and glory, have you seen a single gem in my father’s
possession? A medal from some distant potentate? A proclamation
from some king thanking him? No. But there is not a single man in
this village who does not carry steel I shaped for him. I am
content in knowing that I keep this village safe. It is my duty,
and a duty I take most seriously.”
“But, you know things of war. You could be a great
war leader.”
Corin sat back and laughed. “There is one tale of
Aquilonia which my father used to tell, but I do not think you have
heard it. When a general wins a great victory, they parade him
through Tarantia in a chariot of gold, drawn by eight white
stallions. Throngs line the streets. They throw flowers and gold
and offer him their daughters. Everyone adores him.”
Conan’s eyes brightened. He sat forward, his
unfinished stew forgotten.
“But in that chariot, nestled at his feet, is a
dwarf. Throughout that parade, through the showers of gold and
flowers, the dwarf says but one thing over and over again.
‘Remember thou art but a man. As you have slain, so shall you be
slain. Glory is fleeting, and you will be but a ghost in a scroll
which will turn to dust before you are ever remembered.’ ”
Conan’s expression of rapture dissolved into a look
of confusion. “But that makes no sense. Crom wishes us to be brave
and fierce. It is for this that we live.”
Corin nodded. “So, you know the tale of Brita’s
Vale. You know its heroes.”
“Of course.”
“And what of the time before that when we threw the
Gundermen back into Aquilonia?”
“I . . .”
“Or the time before that?”
Conan sat straight up and pounded a fist on the
table. “No one will ever forget Conan, son of Corin!”
Unable to contain his pride, Corin laughed
heartily, then clapped his son on both shoulders. “By Crom, that is
a declaration I believe even the gods will honor. Now finish your
stew.”
As his son returned to eating, Corin got up and
crossed the small hut. He reached up and pulled a cloth-wrapped
package from atop a rafter, then returned and laid it on the table.
“While you were dreaming of glories, I made this for you. Ah, no,
finish your meal first.”
There could be no mistaking what lay within the
gray woolen wrapping. Long and slender, with the obvious projection
of a cross hilt, it had to be a sword. Not a great sword or a long
sword, but more than a knife.
Conan, showing more restraint than his father would
have credited him with, finished the stew, then gathered both bowls
and the wooden spoons with which they’d eaten and set them in a
bucket. He looked expectantly at his father, clearly willing to do
the washing up if the order would be given. Corin hesitated for a
moment, then shook his head and smiled.
“Open it.”
Conan lifted the sword in his hand, hefting the
weapon before its unveiling. Then, slowly, with the same care
Connacht had described using when unwrapping a harem wench in Koth,
Conan freed the sword from its confines. With a steel blade half
again the length of the youth’s forearm, a bronze cross hilt and
pommel, and a leather-wrapped grip, it clearly was no toy. Though
the edges remained dull, and the tip rounded, if needed to kill a
man, it would suffice.
Conan reached for the hilt, then hesitated, looking
at his father.
Corin nodded. “Understand some things. I hammered
this from an Aquilonian short sword a scavenger dug out of Brita’s
Vale. It’s not Cimmerian steel—you’ll earn that—but it is better
than a stick for practicing.”
The youth nodded, lifting the blade, slowly moving
it around in lazy circles. He only half listened to his
father—Corin really had expected nothing less. The smith knew he
would be repeating the rules to his son many times, and that more
than once he’d have to take the blade away from him to instill
discipline. Still, the care with which the boy studied the weapon’s
weight pleased him. Any other boy—including those being trained by
the warriors—would have first looked for something to cut, then
would have run into the middle of the room, fighting phantoms and
shadows.
“Conan, you will shape a scabbard for your blade.
You will oil it and care for it. You will not put an edge on it until I give you leave to do
so. Do you understand?”
The boy nodded, then sighted down the length of the
blade.
“It is true and straight, my son.” Like your spirit.
Conan looked up. “Father, I—”
Corin held a hand up. “Do not thank me.”
“Why not?”
“Because it is a terrible thing I have done here,
my son.” I hope your mother will forgive
me. “Know this. Because of this blade, you will be very angry
with me—more times than either of us will care to remember.”
“No, Father—”
“Accept that is so, Conan. And this is the other
terrible part: in giving you that sword, I will let the man you
will become slay the child you have been.” Corin took the blade
from his son. “A weapon like this is only good for killing
men.”
Conan smiled. “I shall destroy our enemies.”
“So I hope, but you must remember, my son, that
this sword cannot tell friend from enemy.” Corin flipped it around
and offered the hilt to his son. “And it
can kill the man at either end of it. Sometimes both.”
Conan accepted the sword, then returned it to its
wrappings. “I shall make a scabbard. I will not sharpen it. And I
will train only after my chores are done.”
“Very good.”
The boy looked up. “Will you train me?”
The question caught Corin off guard. “When the time
comes, Conan, the warriors—”
“Father, I see them look to you. They see you as
their master.” Conan’s eyes widened. “You shape the sword to suit
the swordsman. I would have you shape the swordsman.”
“If you do every chore I set for you, complete
every task I give you, then, yes, I will train you.” Corin nodded
solemnly. “I’ve given you the means to kill men . . . and I shall
train you so you know when to do it, and how to do it well.”