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    Every mind in his head was racing to try and make sense of what he was seeing. Magic nullification was the one skill that he knew couldn’t be enchanted with, the very nature of the power destroyed the enchantments it was a part of, but when he looked at the sword as a whole he found another reason that couldn’t be the case.

    The sword couldn’t be enchanted with magic nullification because there were no enchantments on it to begin with. He didn’t see a single weave of mana or any of the other less common forms of enchanting, he didn’t even see a skill or magic placed on the item in a way a beginner might go about it, which pointed to a single direction that could have been possible.

    Bestowal. The rarest of rare crafting skills with no known way to acquire through training. It had to have been accomplished through that mysterious ability which meant it was compatible with magic nullification in a way enchanting just wasn’t, but that only raised more questions.

    Ben didn’t know of many famous craftsmen in the history of the world, but he would have heard of that. Someone with those two rare skills at once wouldn’t have just left a mark, there’d be artifacts of their work across the globe. The few books he’d read on either topic would have addressed them by name, just for having proven that the two skills were compatible in such an unexpected way.

    I mean, it’s not like that’s the only option of course. Technically, since neither bestowal or magic nullification are affinitied that means any non-affinitied mage should be capable of it too, but that’s also easier said than done. I’m literally partially responsible for three of the five that currently exist on the planet and if we’d never been summoned there’d only be one, it is not an easy skill to awaken to. Plus, at least from what I’ve read, they typically don’t seem to lean toward the few crafting-type magics. Like, it’s possible one decided to fiddle with it and didn’t realize what they’d pulled off but that still seems unlikely.

    And why a sword of all things? If I could get magic nullification on anything it would be on an armour. I mean, I guess I can see an argument against it. You want to be able to pass it down to future generations so height differences would make that less than ideal, but in that case, do a shield! Not a sword, good god. I so badly want to meet whoever made that and ask what they were thinking, but…

    But they were almost certainly dead, likely for centuries, if not thousands of years. The condition of the blade told him as much.

    For all of the criticism he held for some of the design choices, there was one he wouldn’t argue against. The sword has been made of orichalchum.

    Binding a type of magic that destroyed all others to a material that could only be damaged by magic was both obvious and genius. It meant the blade should have been practically indestructible, with practically being the keyword, for despite how powerful a weapon like that should have been, slowly as the decades passed by, it had to have faced enough attacks to get through and warp it to its current state.

    And that same level of strength would mean nobody would normally be able to repair it either. You’d have to be insane to try.

    <I take it that means you want to try?>


    This book was originally published on Royal Road. Check it out there for the real experience.

    Obviously, yes.

    It would be a ridiculous amount of work, but rather than dread it, the thought was making him salivate as he imagined just what he’d need to do to get the blade to a better shape. The act would strain not only his body, but his mana as well, with every point he had fighting against the nullifying effect while he’d have to do his best to use those split seconds to get it back into shape.

    Imagining it didn’t do the challenge it was sure to be justice but that just made the thought sweeter. Perhaps taking a vacation had been good for him at first, but now it was wearing on him a different way. He was craving that sort of stimulation. He wanted to put himself against a challenge and see who would break first, same as the various competitors of the contest before him.

    The contest he’d all but forgotten about before coming back to his senses and returning to his seat to watch, promising himself that he’d corner the man regardless of how the fight turned out when it ended as blows were exchanged on stage.

    In a match like that, the spear was always going to have the advantage as it gave a level of range and control that the sword couldn’t replicate, but as Ben watched the swordsman struggle, he knew there was more to it than that. Given that the blade itself was warped from untold centuries of use, it wasn’t going to move through the air in the way its wielder desired, with each attack just a little hampered by its poor form.

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