| The Sword and the Stone | |
|---|---|
| |
|
Origin |
King Arthur/Arthurian Legend |
|
Type |
Sword and Stone |
|
Effects |
Becomes intangible when in proximity to the stone |
|
Downsides |
None Identified |
|
Activation |
Proximity to the stone. |
|
Collected by |
Myka Bering and Pete Lattimer |
|
Section |
|
|
Aisle |
Unknown |
|
Shelf |
Unknown |
|
Date of Collection |
2010 |
| [Source] | |
Origin[]
Exact origins unknown. Placed in a rock sometime before the 4th century by unknown means. The Stone may have been involved. Drawn by Arthur to prove his worthiness as True King of England after he was presented with the paired stone artifact by Merlin some two-hundred years later. The sword was later broken (according to legend in Arthur's battle against Sir Pellinore, after which Arthur acquired Excalibur), and reforged.
Effects[]
When dormant, neither the Sword nor the brick-red stone possess any unusual powers. When in proximity, however, the stone will glow and the blade of the sword becomes intangible, able to pass effortlessly through solid matter. Analysis of the blade show it to be simple iron, and the stone is an opal vein seemingly originating from Australia. Besides this, neither are particularly remarkable.
Collection[]
Collected by Agents Myka Bering and Pete Lattimer. The exact circumstances are unknown, but it is known that the sword was being used as a decoration in Wales. The stone had been recovered previously and was used by agent Bering to defend herself from an unknown assailant wielding the Sword.
Trivia[]
- This sword is NOT Excalibur. Agent Taylor constantly tried to change this, and eventually succeeded after Excalibur was recovered.
- How the sword prevented itself from being drawn by anyone other than Arthur Pendragon is unknown. Merlin presumably had a hand in this.
- The blade has faint lines crossing it, indicating where it was presumably reforged after breaking.
