He pressed on. The path, clearly landscaped, led the way, first through a darkened passage where the canopy let no light in, then into a clearing streaked by light, casting split shadows across a low, wide stone building at its centre. Two solid stone slabs formed the walls; a steel-hinged door stood front and centre.
Entering, eyes adjusting to the change in light, the room was bathed in a magical blue glow. Open, with two forges burning hot, one to the back left corner, the other opposite on the far right, anvils, metalwork, pincers and other tools all orderly placed around the space, several smiths working.
One broke off from a conversation with another working on some iron. A girl with a thick, dark, curly head of hair framing a young, pretty face. Although she wore workers' leathers, she did not have the grime of the forge upon her; instead, a large green emerald hung from a leather thong, marking her as an Artificer.
Young, thought Brenn, as she walked towards the bench, holding customers at bay from the dangers of the forge. "Morning, Captain, how can I help?"
"I'm here for a new soldier." He thrust his papers forward for her to take.
Taking them, she read for a moment. "Dare I ask what happened to your last one?"
"Disappeared."
"Disappeared, what do you mean?" A look of curiosity passed across her face. "What denomination?"
"P1c. He was in battle with us, took some damage, he was down, but before one of the crew could get to him, he simply disappeared. His body was there one moment, and gone the next. Vanished."
The girl looked at Brenn for a moment, thinking. "P series, that's before my time." Without looking at him, she bent, pulled a ledger from behind the counter, opened it and ran her finger down the page, stopped, looked to the paper, back to the ledger.
"Right then, I am Jedda. I'll be helping you today. I suspect things have changed since you were here last. We don't just push our soldiers out the door; we introduce them. Come with me, please."
Moving to the corner of the counter, lifting the hatch, she walked past him and back out the way he'd come in. Turning left from the doors and left again, she moved to the back of the stone building, not pausing, not looking back, assuming Brenn would follow.
The two of them plunged back into the dark of the forest, leaving the sunlit clearing behind them. Brenn had not been here before. The last time he'd turned up, they had Pick lined up with several other soldiers, and he had simply chosen him. Or had Pick been chosen for him? He couldn't quite remember. It was so long ago.
As they proceeded into the forest, Brenn noticed paths leading off at right angles to their own every hundred, hundred and fifty metres or so, many of them ending at a hedged wall. After about ten minutes of walking, eight hundred metres by Brenn's calculation, this place was massive. One of the side paths did not end in a hedge; rather, the hedge was pulled aside as if a door had been opened. In the alcove beyond, he saw one worker moving about an opening, a small enclave walled by thick trunks, closer together than he'd seen before.
Stopping, Brenn squinted, trying to see what the fellow was doing. At the base of several of the trees he could make out the black sheen of metal, adamantine. Stacking them, like a frame of sorts. The couple he could see, already completed, looked oddly like a skeleton; just much simpler in one sense, just bars of metal and hinges, not connected but placed in position. "What's going on there?"
Jedda had stopped several feet ahead. "That is the first stage of formation. Come, I'll show you the process, that is why you are here." She walked on.
At the next right-angle turn to the left, Jedda turned down, stopping to pull aside the hedge. Brenn was impressed to see how easily it moved, yet there was nothing mechanical enabling it, no frame, no hinges. Nothing mechanical, yet it moved. Beyond, the two of them looked upon another enclave, its oaken walls close, a tangle of roots and branches bursting from their base into the clearing.
Again Brenn adjusted his sight, trying to discern what was going on, and then, amidst the tangle of leaves and branches, he was able to make out a humanoid figure, patches of black adamantine visible. "So you see, we don't build them, we shape them. We provide the framing, and then the forest provides the muscle, the sinew. We just provide the scaffolding, the merging of metallurgy and nature. Come."
Leaving, shutting the hedge behind them, the two walked on again, further into the forest. Ahead, one of the paths to the right was alight, a bright clear light spilling out onto the path. Stopping on the path, there was no need to go in for a closer look. Within the enclave before them, a lone figure stood at its centre. The trunks of the trees were clear, the branches and bracken of the previous enclave gone. Sitting in their place were six large humanoid figures of wood, barked in a manner not dissimilar to the trees themselves.
"What are they doing? Why the light?"
"Training, or what we call training. When they reach this point we start to pour knowledge into them. They don't learn as we do; they don't learn by doing, but by absorbing. As a tree grows through absorption, so do the Warforged. It is here we teach them things like healing, protection, fighting and so forth. More extensive than when we trained your Pick."
"Do you train their personality? Pick seemed to have a personality of his own, of a nature not taught."
"You are correct. There is a randomness to the process that we cannot quite deduce. Like I said, we provide the conditions, the knowledge, but what a Warforged turns into is somewhat beyond us. They are sentient beings. An intelligence grown."
"Well, that explains the Lord of Blades." Brenn stated it matter-of-factly, then went on: "So what you're saying is it was pure luck that Pick was a good one?"
"Well, yes and no. They are forged by humans, they learn and absorb, and much of that learning will come from you and those around them. Yet again, that is no guarantee. They are sentient, intelligent beings, and they have motivations, some of which we may never know, or, in the case of the Lord of Blades, find out too late."
"Great."
"You say Pick turned out well. Come, we are nearly at your soldier." Jedda turned and walked on, not bothering to wait or look back for Brenn.
The two walked on in silence for several minutes. Brenn was deep in thought about what he'd just learnt, missing Pick. Pick had been good, a solid member of the squad, personable, humorous even in his own way, reliable. He'd had no idea how he had been grown, trained.
His reverie was broken by Jedda: "We are here." She turned left and into an enclave. Here the two of them found yet another worker, clearly a metalsmith, fitting a helmet to a lone Warforged seated in the enclave. No others in sight.
"Brenn, this is 0AK, the newest member of your squad."
A final click, and the metalsmith stood back, stepping clear, giving them space. Silently, the Warforged stood. Standing a good foot taller than Brenn, it turned its head towards him, crystalline eyes shining a bright white.
Jedda spoke to Brenn without looking at the Warforged. "You have eye contact. Name it."
Brenn did not speak. He stood there looking at the Warforged, it at him. The frame, now fully clad in armour. Its stillness. The cut of the metallic face. He thought of everything he had just learnt, of what he had seen, and he thought of Pick. The way the soldier stood before him, its stance, how it held itself, the space it occupied.
"Oak."