The arena did not move.
No one spoke.
After everything that had been said—after choices were redrawn, after the rules themselves had been bent and reshaped—the world seed to pause, suspended between breaths. Broken stone lay where it had fallen, ash drifting slowly enough to be counted, as though even gravity was waiting to see what Durgan Blackvein would do next.
Every gaze fixed on him.
Dwarven elders hovered in silence, their expressions carved from tension and restraint. Human nobles leaned forward without realizing it, hands gripping armrests too tightly. Reporters forgot their quills, their lenses, their questions—because no one wanted to miss the next word.
Luca t Durgan’s eyes.
Despite the blood drying on his face.
Despite the dull ache screaming through his bones.
Despite the fact that he was standing upright on nothing but stubborn will.
"Co on," Luca said, his voice quiet but steady, cutting cleanly through the stillness. "I know you already have an answer in your mind."
Durgan’s eyes narrowed.
The air around him seed to tighten, heat subtly warping the space between them. He tilted his head, studying Luca the way one studies a blade—testing for flaws, for arrogance, for false edges.
"Don’t think like you know , boy," Durgan said slowly, each word asured.
Luca’s lips curved—not into a smile of confidence, but into sothing sharper. Sothing knowing.
"Am I wrong?"
That did it.
For a fraction of a second, Durgan froze.
Then he threw his head back and laughed.
The sound rolled across the ruined arena, loud and unrestrained, bouncing off shattered stone and half-ford constructs like thunder trapped inside a mountain. It wasn’t mockery alone—there was exhilaration in it, a raw, almost delighted recognition.
"Hah—HAHAHAHA!"
His laughter rose, wild and unapologetic, before finally tapering off into a rough exhale.
"I accept."
The words landed with a weight that forced breath from lungs all across the arena.
People inhaled sharply—so in disbelief, so in dread—as the implications settled in. Eyes moved between Durgan and Luca, then back again, as if trying to decide which of them was more unhinged.
Two madn, standing on opposite sides of reason.
Luca didn’t look away.
"Release my master," he said.
No embellishnt. No raised voice. Just the demand—plain and immovable.
Durgan’s amusent faded a notch. He glanced around deliberately, letting his gaze pass over the elders, the crowd, the shattered arena, before returning to Luca.
"Do you think I’m a fool?" he asked, voice calm again—too calm. "The mont I release her, what do you think happens next?"
His eyes flicked briefly toward the elders.
"Won’t you all rush ? Pile on? Kill the second your precious Tower Master is free?"
He spread his hands slightly, a mocking gesture of openness. "I’ve already taken a step back. Don’t expect to be suicidal on top of that."
Luca’s jaw tightened.
Tch... so that was the main reason he put into that situation, he thought bitterly.
Old ginger really is always spicier than he looks.
His eyes shifted—not to the elders, not to the crowd—but upward.
To her.
The Tower Master remained silent within the suppression device, posture composed, expression unreadable behind the veil. Yet sothing in her stillness suggested thought—not resignation, but calculation.
Luca looked back at Durgan.
"That won’t do," he said flatly.
Durgan’s brows twitched.
"Hmph. Don’t push too far, boy."
For the first ti since all this began, the Tower Master spoke.
"It’s fine."
Her voice was calm. Even. Unshaken.
Luca turned sharply. "Master—"
She t his gaze and nodded—slow, deliberate, convincing. Not as soone surrendering, but as soone who had reached a conclusion of her own.
Luca clenched his teeth.
He exhaled through his nose, shoulders stiffening as he forced himself to accept it.
"...Fine," he said at last, the word dragged out like it cost him sothing real.
Durgan’s grin returned.
"Fine," he echoed. "Then listen carefully."
He straightened, presence expanding once more, commanding attention without effort.
"In two hours," Durgan declared, "the Thousand Hamr Crucible will begin."
A ripple of shock ran through the arena.
"We’ll need proper arrangents," he continued, eyes locking onto Luca, sothing sharp and almost amused glinting there. "A fitting arena. Proper preparations. It would be a waste to rush sothing this... grand."
His gaze lingered a fraction longer than necessary.
Luca caught it.
...Hm?
Did this old bastard just give ti to heal?
The thought flickered through his mind, unwelco and suspicious.
Above them, the mountain lood in silence—ancient, unmoved, already waiting.
And sowhere deep beneath its stone heart, a crucible long sealed began to stir.
Elder Hilda descended first.
Her boots touched the fractured stone with a muted thud, flas dimd low around her shoulders—not extinguished, but restrained. She looked at Luca for a long mont, eyes sharp yet carrying a weight that only centuries could give.
"Go and heal yourself, boy," she said, her voice firm but not unkind. "Don’t worry about your master. We will look after her."
Luca inclined his head once.
No words. No hesitation.
That was enough.
Amid the low murmurs rippling through the arena—half awe, half disbelief—Luca turned away. Kyle and Sylthara moved instinctively to his sides, their shoulders slipping beneath his arms to support him as his legs finally betrayed the strain they had been hiding. Selena followed close behind, silent, watchful, her eyes never leaving his back.
They left the center of attention behind.
Past broken stone and half-repaired constructs, they reached a quieter stretch of rock tucked away beneath a jagged overhang—far enough that the crowd beca noise instead of pressure.
The mont they stopped, Luca wrenched himself free.
Kyle barely had ti to protest before Luca staggered forward, seized a nearby mud pot left behind by a dwarven worker, and without pause lifted it over his head.
Water crashed down.
Cold. Dirty. Mixed with ash and grit.
It soaked his hair, stread down his face, ran red as it carried blood with it. Luca sucked in a sharp breath as the shock hit his system, then let himself slide down against the stone wall behind him, shoulders slamming into it as his knees finally gave out.
He leaned forward and spat.
Water and blood splashed against the ground.
His breathing was heavy now—deep, unrestrained—each inhale dragging air back into lungs that had been screaming for it. Steam rose faintly from his skin in the cool mountain air.
Sylthara stepped closer, her golden eyes scanning him carefully.
"Are you okay?" she asked quietly.
Luca lifted a hand without looking at her, flicking his fingers once.
A silent don’t fuss.
He closed his eyes, resting his head back against the stone as he forced his breathing to slow—counting heartbeats, grounding himself, dragging control back from the edge.
No one spoke.
Kyle and Selena exchanged a glance, then moved in sync. Storage rings shimred faintly as both of them pulled out small vials and sealed packets—healing potions, restorative draughts, compressed mana tonics. They knelt beside him, pressing them into his hands without ceremony.
Luca took them imdiately.
No pride. No delay.
He cracked the first vial between his fingers and swallowed it in one go, grimacing slightly as the bitter liquid burned its way down his throat. Another followed. Then another. His jaw tightened as he forced down a mana stabilizer, veins along his neck briefly glowing before settling.
Then—
Another hand entered his vision.
Small. Pale.
Holding a potion.
Luca opened his eyes.
Lilliane stood there.
Her pink hair hung loose around her shoulders, eyes still unfocused, her posture faintly unsteady as if the world beneath her feet hadn’t fully decided to stay solid yet. She didn’t look at him—not really—but the hand holding the potion was steady.
Luca froze for a fraction of a second.
Then he reached out and took it.
"Thank you," he said softly.
She didn’t respond.
She simply stepped back, returning to Sylthara’s side, standing there quietly like a shadow that hadn’t learned how to move yet.
Luca’s gaze lingered on her for a mont longer than necessary.
Then he looked away and drank.
Minutes passed.
Then more.
The potions did their work—slowly knitting torn muscle, dulling pain, steadying mana flow—but they couldn’t erase fatigue that had settled deep into bone. Luca didn’t rush it. He stayed seated, eyes closed, letting the silence do what noise never could.
Sylthara broke it at last.
"Do you really need to do this?"
Her voice wasn’t accusatory.
It wasn’t pleading.
It was simply... honest.
The others didn’t interrupt.
They all wanted to hear the answer.
Luca didn’t open his eyes.
"It’s not a need," he said, voice low, calm, unshaken.
"It’s a necessity."
No elaboration followed.
And none was needed.
Kyle looked at him for a long mont, then leaned back against the stone with a quiet huff. Selena turned her gaze away, lips pressed thin—not in disagreent, but acceptance. Sylthara nodded once, slow and deliberate.
The mountain breathed.
Ti passed.
Two hours slipped by—not marked by bells or announcents, but by the slow return of steadiness to Luca’s body. When he finally opened his eyes, they were clear. Focused. Grounded.
He rose.
No wobble. No hesitation.
His spine straightened as if pulled upward by an invisible line. Mana settled cleanly beneath his skin. With a familiar motion, his hands reached back.
Black saber.
White saber.
They slid into his grip like they had been waiting.
Luca turned toward the direction of the arena, eyes burning with quiet intent.
"Let’s go."
And without another word, he stepped forward—toward the crucible that waited.
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