hillside. And down the stream, along a clear meadow slope, he walked until he came to the smithy. Hot smoke rose from the forge. Around front he walked, and saw the blacksmith inside the big sliding door, hammering a hot iron bar into a curving shape across the throat of his anvil.
Alvin stood and watched him work. He could feel the heat from the forge clear outside; inside must be like the fires of hell. His muscles were like fifty different ropes holding his arm on under the skin. They shifted and rolled across each other as the hammer rose into the air, then bunched all at once as the hammer came down. Close as he was now, Alvin could hardly bear the bell-like crash of iron on iron, with the anvil like a sounding fork to make the sound ring on and on. Sweat dripped off the blacksmith’s body, and he was naked to the waist, his white skin ruddy from the heat,
streaked with soot from the forge and sweat from his pores. I’ve been sent here to be prentice to the devil, thought Alvin.
But he knew that was a silly idea even as he thought it. This was a hardworking man, that’s all, earning his living with a skill that every town needed if it hoped to thrive. Judging from the size of the corrals for horses waiting to be shod, and the heaps of iron bars waiting to be made into plows and sickles, axes and cleavers, he did a good business, too. If I learn this trade, I’ll never be hungry, thought Alvin, and folks will always be glad to have me.
And something more. Something about the hot fire and the ruddy iron. What happened in this place was akin somehow to making. Alvin knew from the way he’d worked with stone in the granite quarry, when he carved the millstone for his father’s mill, he knew that with his knack he could probably reach inside the iron and make it go the way he wanted it to go. But he had something to learn from the forge and the hammer, the bellows and the fire and the water in the cooling tubs, something that would help him become what he was born to become.
So now he looked at the blacksmith, not as a powerful stranger, but as Alvin’s future self. He saw how the muscles grew on the smith’s shoulders and back. Alvin’s body was strong from chopping wood and splitting rails and all the hoisting and lifting that he did earning pennies and nickels on neighbors’ farms. But in that kind of work, your whole body went into every movement. You rared back with the axe and when it swung it was like your whole body was part of the axhandle, so that legs and hips and back all moved into the chop. But the smith, he held the hot iron in the tongs, held it so smooth and exact against the anvil that while his right arm swung the hammer, the rest of his body couldn’t move a twitch, that left arm stayed as smooth and steady as a rock. It shaped the smith’s body differently, forced the arms to be much stronger by themselves, muscles rooted to the neck and breastbone standing out in a way they never did on a farmboy’s body.
Alvin felt inside himself, the way his own muscles grew, and knew already where the changes would have to come. It was part of his knack, to find his way within living flesh most as easily as
he could chart the inner shapes of living stone. So even now he was hunkering down inside, teaching his body to change itself to make way for the new work.
“Boy,” said the smith.
“Sir,” said Alvin.
“Have you got business for me? I don’t know you, do I?”
Alvin stepped forward, held out the note his father writ.
“Read it to me, boy, my eyes are none too good.”
Alvin unfolded the paper. “From Alvin Miller of Vigor Church. To Makepeace, Blacksmith of Hatrack River. Here is my boy Alvin what you said could be your prentice till he be seventeen. He’ll work hard and do what all you say, and you teach him what all a man needs to be a good smith, like in the articles I signed. He is a good boy.”
The smith reached for the paper, held it close to his eyes. His lips moved as he
Katie Coyle
Steve Yarbrough
J. Alan Hartman
Ellen Miles
Bo Jinn
Danielle Steel
Hannah Harrington
Brett Kiellerop
Sarah Sorana
Xavier Neal