The walk toward the arena felt longer than it should have.
The path cut through stone corridors newly reforged, the walls still faintly warm, runes along the surface glowing with a restrained, disciplined light. Luca walked at the center, his pace steady, his posture straight—not rigid, not defiant—simply resolved. The black and white sabers rested at his sides, quiet, almost solemn, as if they too understood where he was going.
No one spoke at first.
Kyle walked slightly behind him, hands shoved into his pockets, his usual swagger absent. His jaw was tight, eyes fixed ahead, occasionally flicking toward Luca’s back before snapping forward again, as if afraid that saying anything might fracture the fragile balance holding the mont together.
Selena walked on the other side, her steps asured, her expression cool and composed—but her fingers flexed subtly at her side, betraying the tension she refused to voice. Sylthara followed just behind them, her golden eyes calm yet alert, carrying the quiet gravity of soone who knew this was not a path that could be interrupted once chosen.
Lilliane walked with Sylthara.
She said nothing. She looked at nothing in particular. And yet, every few steps, her gaze drifted—briefly, almost unconsciously—toward Luca, as if so part of her knew this mont mattered even if she could not fully grasp why.
Ahead of them, the arena erged.
Or rather—it stood.
Whole.
Perfect.
As if it had never been broken.
The Forgeheart Arena rose in towering grandeur, its blackstone walls flawless, runic engravings pristine, every crack erased, every scar reforged into seamless stone. Massive pillars encircled the battleground, their surfaces etched with ancient dwarven sigils that pulsed faintly like a sleeping heart. The floor beneath their feet glead with polished obsidian and reinforced rune-lines, each intersection carefully aligned—crafted not just for spectacle, but for endurance.
The stands were already filled.
Dwarves packed the terraces in disciplined rows, armor gleaming, expressions solemn rather than celebratory. Reporters occupied their elevated platforms, crystal lenses hovering and stabilizing, quieter than usual, as if instinctively aware this was not a mont for spectacle alone. Human nobles sat stiffly in their section, silks and enchanted garnts immaculate, faces drawn tight with anticipation and unease.
And high above it all—
On the elevated platform carved from a single slab of ancient stone—
Sat the seven dwarven elders.
Their presence pressed down like weight, each of them seated with rigid stillness, gazes fixed forward. Among them sat Durgan Blackvein, relaxed where others were tense, one arm draped casually over the armrest of his throne, eyes already locked on the figure approaching the arena floor.
To the side, suspended within the dwarven suppression device, the Tower Master hovered in silence.
The device’s runes glowed steadily, chains of interlocking light holding her in place. She did not struggle. She did not speak. Her white hair drifted gently as if caught in a breeze that did not exist.
Her eyes never left Luca.
He felt it.
Not as pressure. Not as fear.
As presence.
At the edge of the arena, Luca stopped.
His friends did too.
No words were exchanged.
Kyle t his gaze and nodded once—not encouragent, not farewell, just acknowledgnt. Selena looked at him for a second longer than the others, her eyes sharp and searching, then inclined her head with quiet certainty. Sylthara placed a hand briefly against her chest in a warrior’s gesture of respect.
Even Lilliane looked at him then.
Her eyes were still unfocused.
But they lingered.
One by one, they turned away and walked toward the challengers’ stand, their footsteps echoing softly against the stone until the gates closed behind them with a heavy, final sound.
Luca remained.
Alone.
He stepped forward, boots crossing the threshold into the arena’s center. The space opened around him—vast, symtrical, unforgiving. The air felt heavier here, charged with expectation, with ancient mory, with the weight of what was about to begin.
He stopped at the center mark and looked around.
The crowd watched.
The elders observed.
Durgan smiled.
Above them all, the Tower Master watched him quietly from within her bonds.
Luca drew in a slow breath.
There was no hesitation left in him now.
No doubt.
No need to look back.
He was yet again standing in the sa place, sa position.
Just this ti...
The choice had already been made.
Durgan leaned forward slightly on the high platform, resting his forearms against his knees as he looked down at Luca. The amusent in his eyes was still there, but beneath it lay sothing sharper—intent, heavy and unyielding.
"Let state the conditions again," he said, his voice carrying effortlessly through the vast arena. It did not need amplification. The mountain itself seed to listen.
"Whether you win or lose the trial," Durgan continued, "the Tower Master will be released. No dwarf, no elder, no outsider is permitted to raise a hand against for the duration of the Crucible."
A murmur rippled through the stands, restrained but uneasy.
"And if you win," he added, eyes narrowing just a fraction, "I will form a master–slave bond with you. I will obey. I will fulfill any command you give."
The words settled like iron filings drawn to a magnet.
Luca nodded once.
No questions. No protests.
Yet the silence that followed was not empty—it was crowded with a single unspoken thought. Even the elders felt it, their gazes tightening, brows furrowing as they studied Durgan anew.
Why was he so adamant about this bond?
A dwarf like Durgan Blackvein—proud, unchained, scorched by centuries of fire—was not soone who spoke of servitude lightly. And yet, here he was, returning to it again and again, as though it were the true prize all along.
Just what does he want?
The question lingered in the air, unanswered.
Luca felt it too, the faint unease at the edge of his thoughts—but he let it pass. This was not the mont to dig into Durgan’s motives. Whatever truth lay there would reveal itself in ti... if he survived long enough to see it.
He closed his eyes.
The noise of the arena dulled. The weight of countless gazes faded. He drew in a slow, deep breath, filling his lungs until it hurt, grounding himself in the simple rhythm of being alive.
It’s do or die.
No room for hesitation.
No room for retreat.
He opened his eyes again and lifted his gaze to the dwarf above.
"Let’s get started."
For a heartbeat, nothing happened.
Then—
The arena answered.
A deep, resonant clang rolled through Forgeheart, so low it felt less like sound and more like a vibration inside bone. The rune-lines etched into the arena floor ignited at once, blazing molten gold as the ground began to shift.
Stone plates slid apart with thunderous precision. Massive segnts of the floor sank, rotated, and locked into new configurations, revealing layers beneath—forge chambers, magma channels, and colossal chanisms that had not seen the light of day in centuries.
The walls rose.
Not outward—but inward.
The stands pulled back as towering barriers of rune-forged stone climbed upward, sealing the arena into a vast, enclosed crucible. Heat surged imdiately, dry and oppressive, carrying the unmistakable scent of molten tal.
Above, the ceiling opened.
A circular aperture yawned wide, revealing a column of seething fire descending from the mountain’s heart like a controlled sun. Magma flowed through reinforced channels, bathing the arena in hellish light that cast everything in shades of gold, crimson, and shadow.
Durgan stood.
As he rose, the chanisms responded, gears the size of siege towers grinding into motion. Along the walls, enormous hamr-constructs unfolded—thousands of them—each suspended by rune-chains and articulated arms, their heads forged from layered blacksteel and glowing with internal heat.
"Behold," Durgan said, spreading his arms slightly, his voice echoing against the reforged walls, "the Thousand Hamr Crucible."
Luca’s breath slowed.
His pulse did not.
"This trial," Durgan continued, "was never ant to test talent. Or technique. Or talent dressed up as courage."
The magma column flared brighter.
"It is a forging."
The first hamr descended.
It did not strike Luca.
It struck the air—detonating it.
A concussive wave slamd into his body, driving heat and pressure straight through muscle and bone, forcing a grunt from his throat as his feet dug shallow grooves into the reinforced floor.
Durgan’s voice remained steady.
"Imagine a weapon," he said. "Thrown into fire. Beaten again and again until impurities burn away—or until it shatters."
Another hamr fell.
Closer.
The impact sent a shockwave directly into Luca’s chest, his ribs screaming as if struck from within. His vision blurred for a fraction of a second, the taste of iron blooming at the back of his tongue.
"This crucible does the sa," Durgan went on. "But instead of steel..."
A third hamr.
Harder.
"...it shatters the body."
The hamr struck Luca directly this ti.
Not skin.
Not armor.
But existence.
Pain exploded outward, white-hot and absolute, as if every nerve in his body had been struck simultaneously by a burning anvil. He staggered, barely managing to keep his feet beneath him as his muscles seized in rebellion.
"Each strike," Durgan said calmly, "is stronger than the last."
The hamrs began to move.
Not one.
Not ten.
Dozens.
Then hundreds.
They fell in rhythm, a rciless cadence that filled the crucible with thunder—each impact doubling the force of the previous one, compressing heat, pressure, and mana into Luca’s body as though he were being reforged from the inside out.
Bones creaked.
Muscles tore and reknit under the brutal influence of the crucible’s runes.
Mana surged violently, then was crushed back inward, forced to circulate under intolerable strain.
"This is not pain ant to kill you quickly," Durgan said, eyes locked on Luca as the boy fought to remain standing. "It is pain ant to last."
Luca dropped to one knee as another hamr struck, his hands slamming into the floor to keep himself from collapsing completely. Sweat evaporated from his skin before it could fall. His vision fractured, light and shadow bleeding together as his heartbeat roared in his ears.
"Most die screaming," Durgan continued. "So go mad. A few beg."
The hamrs rose higher.
The heat intensified.
"And a rare few," he said quietly, "are reforged into sothing else entirely."
Luca clenched his teeth.
His body scread at him to stop.
To yield.
To fall.
But beneath the pain—beneath the crushing, impossible force—sothing deeper answered.
A will that refused to break.
The Thousand Hamr Crucible had begu
n.
And it showed no rcy.
And before even 10 strikes had passed,..
"Couph..."
Ssshhhh!
The blood had already stained the ground.
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