The sky above Forgeheart Arena felt wrong.
Not storm-dark.
Not night-dark.
But heavy—like the world itself was holding its breath.
Ash and dust still drifted lazily through the air, illuminated by broken rune-light and the distant glow of magma veins beneath the shattered stone. Below, the arena lay in ruins—cracked platforms, collapsed stands, fractured runic arrays still sparking weakly as if confused about whether they should exist anymore.
High above it all, suspended in the open sky, tension coiled so tightly it felt visible.
The seven dwarven elders hovered in a loose formation, their expressions grim, their auras flaring instinctively as they faced Durgan Blackvein.
At the center of it— Durgan stood relaxed.
One arm rested casually at his side.
The other held the dwarven suppression device—an intricate cage of interlocking runes and forged rings—within which the Tower Master was restrained. Her white hair drifted gently in the wind, veil unmoving, posture composed even in captivity. She neither struggled nor spoke.
She simply observed.
Elder Thrain took a step forward in the air, his massive fra radiating restrained fury.
"Durgan," he said, voice low but carrying effortlessly through the sky, "you are a dwarf."
The word was not accusation.
It was reminder.
"You were forged by the sa mountains as us. You know what it ans to be trusted by another race—to have that trust returned with steel and blood."
His eyes flicked briefly—respectfully—toward the Tower Master.
"She sealed her own power," Thrain continued, jaw tightening, "because she trusted the dwarves. Trusted us. Nothing was supposed to happen to her."
Around him, the other elders nodded subtly.
Elder Hilda’s hands clenched, fire flickering between her fingers.
Elder Brokk’s hamr aura trembled with barely restrained violence.
Even Elder Huldar—normally withdrawn—hovered rigidly, eyes locked on Durgan.
Durgan listened.
Then shrugged.
His expression remained almost bored.
"Trust," he said lightly, rolling the word around as if tasting it. "Is an expensive luxury."
Thrain’s patience thinned visibly.
"You have already caused enough damage to our people," he said sharply now. "That is why you were imprisoned in the first place. Your defiance, your recklessness, your obsession with power—"
He pointed at Durgan, finger shaking not with fear, but rage.
"Don’t tarnish the Blackvein na further. Don’t tarnish ours."
For a mont— Just a mont— It looked like Durgan might actually consider his words.
Then he laughed.
Not loudly.
Not mockingly.
Just... sincerely amused.
"Tarnish?" Durgan repeated, head tilting slightly. "You still care about appearances, Thrain?"
His eyes hardened.
"I care about freedom."
The laughter faded.
Thrain closed his eyes.
When he opened them again, sothing final settled in his gaze.
"...This is it," he said quietly.
The air exploded.
Mana surged as all seven elders moved at once—formations snapping into place from centuries of fighting side by side. Fire, stone, wind, lightning, molten tal, gravity, and raw forge-mana converged in a dazzling convergence of power.
Hilda led the charge, hurling a spiraling inferno that split into layered arcs mid-flight, each one precise, controlled, lethal.
Brokk followed, hamr aura crashing forward like a falling mountain, space buckling under its weight.
Thrain himself vanished—reappearing in a flash of compressed heat and steel—his weapon descending in a strike ant to cleave gods.
Durgan moved.
Not hurried.
Not strained.
He shifted his stance slightly, planting one foot back as his aura expanded—not violently, but overwhelmingly. A dense, ancient pressure rolled outward, swallowing the elders’ attacks as if the air itself had thickened.
Fire bent.
Stone cracked.
Lightning dispersed.
Thrain’s blade struck.
CLANG—
The sound rang like a bell forged from the mountain’s heart.
Durgan caught the strike with his bare forearm.
Runes flared along his skin—old, unfamiliar, brutal.
The force still pushed him back a fraction.
Just a fraction.
Several attacks landed—burning gashes along his armor, a crack spreading across one pauldron, molten rock tearing into his side. Blood splattered into the air, hissing as it touched residual heat.
But Durgan did not fall.
He straightened.
Smiling.
"My turn," he said calmly.
He lifted one hand.
The air ignited.
Not into chaotic fla—but into sothing terrifyingly beautiful.
A vast wave of compressed fire unfurled behind him, layered with molten runes and shimring heat distortion, its edges glowing white-hot. It wasn’t wild.
It was crafted.
Like a master smith releasing a perfected strike.
The wave surged forward.
The elders barely had ti to react.
Thrain crossed his arms instinctively.
Hilda raised a barrier of fla.
Brokk slamd his hamr downward to anchor himself.
It didn’t matter.
The fire wave crashed into them like a collapsing sun.
They were hurled backward—one by one—smashed from the sky and driven into the ruined arena below. Stone shattered anew as bodies struck ground, sending debris skyward in violent bursts.
Coughs echoed.
Smoke rose.
Groans followed.
The elders struggled to rise from craters carved by their own impact, armor cracked, auras flickering unevenly.
Above them, Durgan hovered unscathed.
The Tower Master remained suspended beside him—expression unchanged, eyes calm, almost contemplative, as if watching a lesson rather than a battle.
From the rubble, Elder Huldar pushed himself up on one knee, blood trickling from the corner of his mouth. His eyes were wide—not with pain—
—but with disbelief.
"Y-you..." he rasped, staring up at Durgan.
"How... have you grown even stronger?"
The question hung in the smoke-filled air.
And Durgan Blackvein smiled—
as if that was the most amusing part of all.
Durgan’s laughter faded—not into silence, but into sothing rougher.
He rolled his shoulder once, the motion slow, deliberate, as if loosening a joint that had been screaming for centuries.
"You ask how," he said, voice lowering, losing its mockery, "I beca this strong?"
The air around him darkened—not with shadow, but with heat so dense it distorted reality.
"The Sea of Fire," Durgan continued, eyes drifting sowhere far beyond the broken arena, beyond the sky itself. "You rember it, don’t you? The prison you forged beneath the deepest magma veins. Where fla never sleeps. Where even a dwarf’s body is ant to fail."
His fingers curled slowly into fists.
"I was thrown there alive."
The world seed to tilt as his aura shifted—no longer explosive, but suffocating.
"Fire crawled into my lungs every ti I breathed. lted my bones every ti I moved. Burned my flesh away—again, and again, and again."
A faint shimr ran across his skin, as if layers of sothing ancient were briefly visible beneath it.
"There was no day. No night. No rcy. Just burning."
His lips pulled into a crooked smile.
"And do you know what happens when pain never ends?"
He looked at the elders.
"You stop breaking."
His voice hardened.
"You adapt."
The elders pushed themselves fully upright now, battered but unbroken.
Thrain wiped blood from his beard with the back of his hand, eyes blazing—not with fear, but with iron resolve.
"You are not the only one," he said steadily, "who has grown stronger, Blackvein."
He lifted his gaze.
Around him, the other elders straightened as well.
Hilda’s flas no longer flickered wildly—they condensed, burning blue-white at their core.
Brokk planted his hamr into the ground, runes crawling across its surface like living veins.
Huldar’s eyes glowed as ancient sigils unfolded in the air behind him—construct blueprints older than kingdoms.
One by one, they nodded.
The mountain answered them.
The shattered arena began to move.
Stone groaned. Gears erged from beneath broken platforms—colossal dwarven chanisms long dormant, awakening with thunderous clanks. Pillars folded inward, reforging themselves midair. Rune-forges ignited, hovering constructs assembling themselves piece by piece as if the battlefield itself had beco a workshop.
This was dwarven warfare.
Not chaos.
Creation weaponized.
Massive construct arms slamd down toward Durgan, each one forged of layered stone and rune-steel, pistons hissing with molten pressure. Fire channels opened in the ground, redirecting magma into controlled arcs that hardened instantly into glowing barriers.
Brokk leapt forward, riding a rising platform of forged steel, hamr descending with the weight of a collapsing city.
Hilda followed, flas woven into geotric patterns—each strike shaped, calculated, devastating.
Thrain moved last.
Not rushing.
Not shouting.
He stepped forward as the chanisms aligned behind him, the mountain itself lending him its spine.
Durgan t them head-on.
The sky shattered with impact after impact.
Construct fists collided with his body—sending shockwaves rippling through the air. His feet gouged trenches into the stone as he was forced back step by step. Rune-forged chains wrapped around his limbs, tightening with grinding shrieks of tal on tal.
For the first ti—
Durgan struggled.
His aura flared violently, tearing several constructs apart, molten debris raining down like burning hail. He tore free of the chains, counterattacking with brutal efficiency, each strike sending elders skidding back, coughing, as the force slamd into their cores.
Yet still—
No blood fell from him.
Burns marred his armor. Cracks spread across rune-etched plates. His breathing grew heavier.
Another coordinated strike landed—Thrain’s blade crashing into his guard while Brokk’s hamr struck from below, Hilda’s fire sealing his movent.
The impact drove him backward—
And Durgan riding that montum forcefully pushed him forward as he chopped the construct with his bare hands.
Blood splattered into the air as all the elders coughed the blood from the impact.
His eyes narrowed.
"Tch," he spat, straightening, wiping his mouth with his thumb. "Seven elders of the Dwarven Council together... and you can’t even spill one drop of my blo—"
SHHK—
A sound so soft it barely registered.
A silver arc passed through the air.
Durgan froze.
A thin line appeared across his cheek.
Then—
Blood flowed.
Red. Real. Warm.
Durgan’s eyes dropped slowly.
Below him, standing amid broken stone and drifting ash, was a young man.
Blood streaked down the side of his face, one eye unfocused, his posture swaying like a candle on the verge of being snuffed out. His knees trembled. His breathing was ragged. One saber hung loosely in his hand.
Yet his gaze—
Sharp.
Burning.
Unyielding.
He lifted his head, s
taring straight at Durgan Blackvein.
And with a voice that cut colder than any blade, he spoke only three words:
"RELEASE...
MY
MASTER!!!"
The mountain fell silent.
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