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<h1>TEDRIC</h1>
<p><i>By E. E. SMITH, Ph. D.</i></p>
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<p>"<i>The critical point in time of mankind's whole existence is
there—RIGHT THERE!" Prime Physicist Skandos slashed his red pencil
across the black trace of the chronoviagram. "WHY must man be so
stupid? Anyone with three brain cells working should know that for
the strength of an individual he should be fed; not bled; that for
the strength of a race its virgins should be bred, not sacrificed to
propitiate figmental deities. And it would be so easy to straighten
things out—nowhere in all reachable time does any other one man occupy
such a tremendously—such a uniquely—key-stone position!</i>"</p>
<p><i>"Easy, yes," his assistant Furmin agreed. "It</i> is <i>a shame to
let Tedric die with not one of his tremendous potentialities realized.
It would be easy and simple to have him discover carburization and
the necessary techniques of heat-treating. That freak meteorite need
not lie there unsmelted for another seventy years. However, simple
carburization was not actually discovered until two generations later,
by another smith in another nation; and you know, Skandos, that
there can be no such thing as a minor interference with the physical
events of the past. Any such, however small-seeming, is bound to be
catastrophically major."</i></p>
<p><i>"I know that." Skandos scowled blackly. "We don't know enough about
time. We don't know what would happen. We have known how to do it for a
hundred years, but have been afraid to act because in all that time no
progress whatever has been made on the theory."</i></p>
<p><i>He paused, then went on savagely: "But which is better, to have
our entire time-track snapped painlessly out of existence—if the
extremists are right—or to sit helplessly on our fat rumps wringing
our hands while we watch civilization build up to its own total
destruction by lithium-tritiide bombs? Look at the slope of that
curve—ultimate catastrophe is only one hundred eighty seven years
away!"</i></p>
<p>"<i>But the Council would not permit it. Nor would the School.</i>"</p>
<p>"<i>I know that, too. That is why I am not going to ask them. Instead, I
am asking you. We two know more of time than any others. Over the years
I have found your judgment good. With your approval I will act now.
Without it, we will continue our futile testing—number eight hundred
eleven is running now, I believe?—and our aimless drifting.</i>"</p>
<p>"<i>You are throwing the entire weight of such a decision on</i> me?"</p>
<p>"<i>In one sense, yes. In another, only half, since I have already
decided.</i>"</p>
<p>"<i>Go ahead.</i>"</p>
<p>"<i>So be it.</i>"</p>
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<p>"Tedric, awaken!"</p>
<p>The Lomarrian ironmaster woke up; not gradually and partially, like one
of our soft modern urbanites, but instantaneously and completely, as
does the mountain wild-cat. At one instant he lay, completely relaxed,
sound asleep; at the next he had sprung out of bed, seized his sword
and leaped half-way across the room. Head thrown back, hard blue eyes
keenly alert, sword-arm rock-steady he stood there, poised and ready.
Beautifully poised, upon the balls of both feet; supremely ready to
throw into action every inch of his six-feet-four, every pound of his
two-hundred-plus of hard meat, gristle, and bone. So standing, the
smith stared motionlessly at the shimmering, almost invisible thing
hanging motionless in the air of his room, and at its equally tenuous
occupant.</p>
<p>"I approve of you, Tedric." The thing—apparition—whatever it was—did
not speak, and the Lomarrian did not hear; the words formed themselves
in the innermost depths of his brain. "While you perhaps are a little
frightened, you are and have been completely in control. Any other man
of your nation—yes, of your world—would have been scared out of what
few wits he has."</p>
<p>"You are not one of ours, Lord." Tedric went to one knee. He knew, of
course, that gods and devils existed; and, while this was the first
time that a god had sought him out personally, he had heard of such
happenings all his life. Since the god hadn't killed him instantly,
he probably didn't intend to—right away, at least. Hence: "No god of
Lomarr approves of me. Also, our gods are solid and heavy. What do you
want of me, strange god?"</p>
<p>"I'm not a god. If you could get through this grill, you could cut off
my head with your sword and I would die."</p>
<p>"Of course. So would Sar ..." Tedric broke off in the middle of the
word.</p>
<p>"I see. It is dangerous to talk?"</p>
<p>"Very. Even though a man is alone, the gods and hence the priests who
serve them have power to hear. Then the man lies on the green rock and
loses his brain, liver, and heart."</p>
<p>"You will not be overheard. I have power enough to see to that."</p>
<p>Tedric remained silent.</p>
<p>"I understand your doubt. Think, then; that will do just as well. What
is it that you are trying to do?"</p>
<p>"I wonder how I can hear when there is no sound, but men cannot
understand the powers of gods. I am trying to find or make a metal that
is very hard, but not brittle. Copper is no good, I cannot harden it
enough. My soft irons are too soft, my hard irons are too brittle; my
in-betweens and the melts to which I added various flavorings have all
been either too soft or too brittle, or both."</p>
<p>"I gathered that such was your problem. Your wrought iron is beautiful
stuff; so is your white cast iron; and you would not, ordinarily,
in your lifetime, come to know anything of either carburization or
high-alloy steel, to say nothing of both. I know exactly what you want,
and I can show you exactly how to make it."</p>
<p>"You can, Lord?" The smith's eyes flamed. "And you will?"</p>
<p>"That is why I have come to you, but whether or not I will teach you
depends on certain matters which I have not been able entirely to
clarify. What do you want it for—that is, what, basically, is your
aim?"</p>
<p>"Our greatest god, Sarpedion, is wrong and I intend to kill him."
Tedric's eyes flamed more savagely, his terrifically muscled body
tensed.</p>
<p>"Wrong? In what way?"</p>
<p>"In every way!" In the intensity of his emotion the smith spoke aloud.
"What good is a god who only kills and injures? What a nation needs,
Lord, is <i>people</i>—people working together and not afraid. How can
we of Lomarr <i>ever</i> attain comfort and happiness if more die each
year than are born? We are too few. All of us—except the priests, of
course—must work unendingly to obtain only the necessities of life."</p>
<p>"This bears out my findings. If you make high-alloy steel, exactly what
will you do with it?"</p>
<p>"If you give me the god-metal, Lord, I will make of it a sword and
armor—a sword sharp enough and strong enough to cut through copper
or iron without damage; armor strong enough so that swords of copper
or iron cannot cut through it. They must be so because I will have to
cut my way alone through a throng of armed and armored mercenaries and
priests."</p>
<p>"Alone? Why?"</p>
<p>"Because I cannot call in help; cannot let anyone know my goal. Any
such would lie on the green stone very soon. They suspect me; perhaps
they know. I am, however, the best smith in all Lomarr, hence they have
slain me not. Nor will they, until I have found what I seek. Nor then,
if by the favor of the gods—or by <i>your</i> favor, Lord—the metal be
good enough."</p>
<p>"It will be, but there's a lot more to fighting a platoon of soldiers
than armor and a sword, my optimistic young savage."</p>
<p>"That the metal be of proof is all I ask, Lord," the smith insisted,
stubbornly. "The rest of it lies in my care."</p>
<p>"So be it. And then?"</p>
<p>"Sarpedion's image, as you must already know, is made of stone, wood,
copper, and gold—besides the jewels, of course. I take his brain,
liver, and heart; flood them with oil, and sacrifice them ..."</p>
<p>"Just a minute! Sarpedion is not alive and never has been; does not, as
a matter of fact, exist. You just said, yourself, that his image was
made of stone and copper and ..."</p>
<p>"Don't be silly, Lord. Or art testing me? Gods are spirits; bound to
their images, and in a weaker way to their priests, by linkages of
spirit force. Life force, it could be called. When those links are
broken, by fire and sacrifice, the god may not exactly die, but he can
do no more of harm until his priests have made a new image and spent
much time and effort in building up new linkages. One point now settled
was bothering me; what god to sacrifice him to. I'll make an image for
you to inhabit, Lord, and sacrifice him to you, my strange new god. You
will be my only god as long as I live. What is your name, Lord? I can't
keep on calling you 'strange god' forever."</p>
<p>"My name is Skandos."</p>
<p>"S ... Sek ... That word rides ill on the tongue. With your
permission, Lord, I will call you Llosir."</p>
<p>"Call me anything you like, except a god. I am <i>not</i> a god."</p>
<p>"You are being ridiculous, Lord Llosir," Tedric chided. "What a man
sees with his eyes, hears with his ears—especially what a man hears
<i>without</i> ears, as I hear now—he knows with certain knowledge to be
the truth. No mere man could possibly do what you have done, to say
naught of what you are about to do."</p>
<p>"Perhaps not an ordinary man of your ..." Skandos almost said "time,"
but caught himself "... of your culture, but I am ordinary enough and
mortal enough in my own."</p>
<p>"Well, that could be said of all gods, everywhere." The smith's mien
was quiet and unperturbed; his thought was loaded to saturation with
unshakable conviction.</p>
<p>Skandos gave up. He could argue for a week, he knew, without making any
impression whatever upon what the stubborn, hard-headed Tedric knew so
unalterably to be the truth.</p>
<p>"But just one thing, Lord," Tedric went on with scarcely a break.
"Have I made it clear that I intend to stop human sacrifice? That
there is to be no more of it, even to you? We will offer you anything
else—<i>anything</i> else—but not even your refusal to give me the
god-metal will change my stand on that."</p>
<p>"Good! See to it that nothing ever does change it. As to offerings or
sacrifices, there are to be none, of any kind. I do not need, I do not
want, <i>I will not have</i> any such. That is final. Act accordingly."</p>
<p>"Yes, Lord. Sarpedion is a great and powerful god, but art <i>sure</i> that
his sacrifice alone will establish linkages strong enough to last for
all time?"</p>
<p>Skandos almost started to argue again, but checked himself. After all,
the proposed sacrifice was necessary for Tedric and his race, and it
would do no harm.</p>
<p>"Sarpedion will be enough. And as for the image, that isn't necessary,
either."</p>
<p>"Art wrong, Lord. Without image and temple, everyone would think you a
small, weak god, which thought can never be. Besides, the image might
make it easier for me to call on you in time of need."</p>
<p>"You can't call me. Even if I could receive your call, which is very
doubtful, I wouldn't answer it. If you ever see me or hear from me
again, it will be because I wish it, not you." Skandos intended this
for a clincher, but it didn't turn out that way.</p>
<p>"Wonderful!" Tedric exclaimed. "All gods act that way, in spite of what
they—through their priests—say. I am overwhelmingly glad that you
are being honest with me. Hast found me worthy of the god-metal, Lord
Llosir?"</p>
<p>"Yes, so let's get at it. Take that biggest chunk of
'metal-which-fell-from-the-sky'—you'll find it's about twice your
weight ..."</p>
<p>"But I have never been able to work that particular piece of metal,
Lord."</p>
<p>"I'm not surprised. Ordinary meteorites are nickel-iron, but this
one carries two additional and highly unusual elements, tungsten and
vanadium, which are necessary for our purpose. To melt it you'll have
to run your fires a lot hotter. You'll also have to have a carburizing
pot and willow charcoal and metallurgical coke and several other
things. We'll go into details later. That green stone from which altars
are made—you can secure some of it?"</p>
<p>"Any amount of it."</p>
<p>"Of it take your full weight. And of the black ore of which you have
occasionally used a little, one-fourth of your weight ..."</p>
<p>The instructions went on, from ore to finished product in complete
detail, and at its end:</p>
<p>"If you follow these directions carefully you will have a
high-alloy-steel—chrome-nickel-vanadium-molybdenum-tungsten steel, to
be exact—case-hardened and heat-treated; exactly what you need. Can
you remember them all?"</p>
<p>"I can, Lord. Never have I dared write anything down, so my memory is
good. Every quantity you have given me, every temperature and step and
process and item; they are all completely in mind."</p>
<p>"I go, then. Good-bye."</p>
<p>"I thank you, Lord Llosir. Good-bye." The Lomarrian bowed his head,
and when he straightened up his incomprehensible visitor was gone.</p>
<p>Tedric went back to bed; and, strangely enough, was almost instantly
asleep. And in the morning, after his customary huge breakfast of meat
and bread and milk, he went to his sprawling establishment, which has
no counterpart in modern industry, and called his foreman and his men
together before they began the day's work.</p>
<p>"A strange god named Llosir came to me in the night and showed me how
to make better iron," he told them in perfectly matter-of-fact fashion,
"so stop whatever you're doing and tear the whole top off of the big
furnace. I'll tell you exactly how to rebuild it."</p>
<p>The program as outlined by Skandos went along without a hitch until the
heat from the rebuilt furnace began to come blisteringly through the
crude shields. Then even the foreman, faithful as he was, protested
against such unheard-of temperatures and techniques.</p>
<p>"It <i>must</i> be that way!" Tedric insisted. "Run more rods across, from
there to there, to hold more hides and blankets. You four men fetch
water. Throw it over the hides and blankets and him who turns the
blower. Take shorter tricks in the hot places—here, I'll man the
blower myself until the heat wanes somewhat."</p>
<p>He bent his mighty back to the crank, but even in that raging inferno
of heat he kept on talking.</p>
<p>"Knowst my iron sword, the one I wear, with rubies in the hilt?" he
asked the foreman. That worthy did, with longing; to buy it would take
six months of a foreman's pay. "This furnace must stay this hot all
day and all of tonight, and there are other things as bad. But 'twill
not take long. Ten days should see the end of it"—actually seven
days was the schedule, but Tedric did not want the priests to know
that—"but for those ten days matters <i>must</i> go exactly as I say. Work
with me until this iron is made and I give you that sword. And of all
the others who shirk not, each will be given an iron sword—this in
addition to your regular pay. Dost like the bargain?"</p>
<p>They liked it.</p>
<p>Then, during the hours of lull, in which there was nothing much to do
except keep the furious fires fed, Tedric worked upon the image of
his god. While the Lomarrian was neither a Phidias nor a Praxiteles,
he was one of the finest craftsmen of his age. He had not, however,
had a really good look at Skandos' face. Thus the head of the image,
although it was a remarkably good piece of sculpture, looked more like
that of Tedric's foreman than like that of the real Skandos. And with
the head, any resemblance at all to Skandos ceased. The rest of the
real Skandos was altogether too small and too pitifully weak to be
acceptable as representative of any Lomarrian's god; hence the torso
and limbs of the gleaming copper statue were wider, thicker, longer,
bigger, and even more fantastically muscled than were Tedric's own.
Also, the figure was hollow; filled with sand throughout except for an
intricately-carved gray sandstone brain and red-painted hardwood liver
and heart.</p>
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<p>"They come, master, to the number of eleven," his lookout boy came
running with news at mid-afternoon of the seventh day. "One priest in
copper, ten Tarkians in iron, a five each of bowmen and spearmen."</p>
<p>Tedric did not have to tell the boy where to go or what to do or to
hurry about it; as both ran for the ironmaster's armor the youngster
was two steps in the lead. It was evident, too, that he had served as
squire before, and frequently; for in seconds the erstwhile half-naked
blacksmith was fully clothed in iron.</p>
<p>Thus it was an armored knight, leaning negligently upon a fifteen-pound
forging hammer, who waited outside the shop's door and watched his
eleven visitors approach.</p>
<p>The banner was that of a priest of the third rank. Good—they weren't
worried enough about him yet, then, to send a big one. And only ten
mercenaries—small, short, bandy-legged men of Tark—good enough
fighters for their weight, but they didn't weigh much. This wouldn't be
too bad.</p>
<p>The group came up to within a few paces and stopped.</p>
<p>"Art in armor, smith?" the discomfited priest demanded. "Why?"</p>
<p>"Why not? 'Tis my habit to greet guests in apparel of their own
choosing."</p>
<p>There was a brief silence, then:</p>
<p>"To what do I owe the honor of this visit, priest?" he asked, only half
sarcastically. "I paid, as I have always paid, the fraction due."</p>
<p>"True. 'Tis not about a fraction I come. It is noised that a strange
god appeared to you, spoke to you, instructed you in your art; that you
are making an image of him."</p>
<p>"I made no secret of any of these things. I hide nothing from the great
god or his minions, nor ever have. I have nothing to hide."</p>
<p>"Perhaps. Such conduct is very unseemly—decidedly ungodlike. He should
not have appeared to you, but to one of us, and in the temple."</p>
<p>"It is un-Sarpedionlike, certainly—all that Sarpedion has ever done
for me is let me alone, and I have paid heavily for that."</p>
<p>"What bargain did you make with this Llosir? What was the price?"</p>
<p>"No bargain was made. I thought it strange, but who am I, an ordinary
man, to try to understand the actions or the reasonings of a god? There
will be a price, I suppose. Whatever it is, I will pay it gladly."</p>
<p>"You will pay, rest assured; not to this Llosir, but to great
Sarpedion. I command you to destroy that image forthwith."</p>
<p>"You do? Why? Since when has it been against the law to have a personal
god? Most families of Lomarr have them."</p>
<p>"Not like yours. Sarpedion does not permit your Llosir to exist."</p>
<p>"Sarpedion has nothing to say about it. Llosir already exists. Is the
great god so weak, so afraid, so unable to defend himself against a
one-man stranger that he...."</p>
<p>"Take care, smith—silence! That is rankest blasphemy!"</p>
<p>"Perhaps; but I have blasphemed before and Sarpedion hasn't killed me
yet. Nor will he, methinks; at least until his priests have collected
his fraction of the finest iron ever forged and which I only can make."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, the new iron. Tell me exactly how it is made."</p>
<p>"You know better than to ask that question, priest. That secret will be
known only to me and my god."</p>
<p>"We have equipment and tools designed specifically for getting
information out of such as you. Seize him, men, and smash that image!"</p>
<p>"HOLD!" Tedric roared, in such a voice that not a man moved. "If
anybody takes one forward step, priest, or makes one move toward spear
or arrow, your brains will spatter the walls across the street. Can
your copper helmet stop this hammer? Can your girl-muscled, fat-bellied
priest's body move fast enough to dodge my blow? And most or all
of those runty little slavelings behind you," waving his left arm
contemptuously at the group, "will also die before they cut me down.
And if I die now, of what worth is Sarpedion's fraction of a metal that
will never be made? Think well, priest!"</p>
<p>Sarpedion's agent studied the truculent, glaring ironmaster for a
long two minutes. Then, deciding that the proposed victim could not
be taken alive, he led his crew back the way they had come, trailing
fiery threats. And Tedric, going back into his shop, was thoroughly
aware that those threats were not idle. So far, he hadn't taken too
much risk, but the next visit would be different—very different. He
was exceedingly glad that none of his men knew that the pots they
were firing so fiercely were in fact filled only with coke and willow
charcoal; that armor and sword and shield and axe and hammer were at
that moment getting their final heat treatment in a bath of oil, but
little hotter than boiling water, in the sanctum to which he retired,
always alone, to perform the incantations which his men—and hence the
priests of Sarpedion—believed as necessary as any other part of the
metallurgical process.</p>
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