Evan sat across from Drogmir.
Calm in posture.
But his eyes were anything but calm.
They burnedâsharp as blades, cold as death.
Each glance slicing into the dwarf like invisible razors.
"Drogmir," Evan said quietly, voice laced with frost,
"Where are my weapons?"
He pulled on a black shirt, hiding the holy-mended wounds beneath.
His movements were precise. Controlled.
"I'm running out of patience staring at your greedy little face."
"Give me one reason not to end this now."
Drogmir froze.
He already knew it was over.
Lie or truthâeither way, the end would likely be the same.
Still, with a shiver running down his spine, he tried.
"I⊠I didn't make them," he confessed, voice trembling.
"I thought I could kill you before I had to."
"So I never forged a damn thing."
Shame flickered in his eyes.
But fear drowned it out a second later.
Evan tilted his head, a cold grin curling at his lips.
"You mean to sayâŠ"
"You fooled me with that fake family oathâ"
"And never planned to deliver?"
He drew a simple dagger.
Then pressed it against Drogmir's chestâjust enough to break skin.
"Should I start digging the truth out by hand?"
"No, wait! I'm telling you the truth!" Drogmir screamed, voice cracking.
"I swearâI never made the weapons! I didn't think you'd live!"
Evan watched him.
Carefully.
The fear in those eyesâŠIt wasn't lying.
Tch.
He clicked his tongue.
Even if he forced Drogmir to work now, would it matter?
The dwarf didn't have the guts to forge Erith-rank weapons.
Not for someone like Evan.
âŠSo do I really have to kill him?
Turn him into a summon instead?
His gaze shifted.
Landing on the forge behind Drogmir.
It had survived the earlier attack.
Its core is still glowing faintly.
Enchanted. High-grade.
That forge⊠might be worth keeping.
He turned back to the dwarf.
"So you're not afraid of dying?"
Evan's voice dropped to a near whisper.
"Then maybe I should grant your wish."
A crazed grin spread across Drogmir's face.
"Kill me? DO IT!" he barked, laughter spilling out like poison.
"You think I'm afraid?! My life's already garbage!"
"You think I'm evil for trying to change that?"
He pounded his chest, eyes bloodshot.
"I didn't do anything wrong! I just wanted to rise higher!"
"I saw power in your flames and reached for it!"
"Isn't that what this world is all about?!"
He was shouting now.
Trying to convince himself more than Evan.
"You think a simple death scares me?!"
Evan said nothing.
He let the dwarf scream.
Let him pour out every drop of his delusion.
And thenâ
Evan stepped forward.
His voice was calm.
Ice-cold.
"No, Drogmir."
"It's not wrong to want power."
"It's not even wrong to steal it."
His boots echoed against the stone floor.
"But you forgot one thing."
"The rule of this world."
His eyes darkened.
"The one who takes⊠must be stronger than the one he steals from."
"You tried to take from meâwithout knowing who I am."
"Without knowing what I command."
"And now⊠you've been marked."
Evan reached behind his back.
A streak of silver flashed.
His halberd.
He hadn't used it at all.
Until now.
SHNK.
One clean swing.
Drogmir's head flew through the airâeyes wide in disbelief.
It hit the floor with a dull thud.
The shock frozen on his face was the last thing he left behind.
Evan stood over the corpse.
Silent.
Unmoving.
Thenâ
[You've gained 93 EEP.]
[The Soul of the Dead has been partially absorbed into the Relic Ability.]
(1/????)
[Can be used anytime for any use.]
His eyes narrowed.
"So this is what unlocking Arven's true abilities bringsâŠ"
The system had grown too comfortable with harvesting souls.
He turned away.
This wouldn't end as a clean execution.
No.
It had to look like an ambush.
Evan shattered crates.
Smashed walls.
Burned corners.
He locked the door from inside.
Then turned toward the forge.
"Before I leaveâŠ"
He cracked his knuckles.
"Might as well take everything he's worth."
He raised his hand over the corpse.
[Plunder]
Black tendrils erupted from his palmâtwisting like serpents.
They pierced into Drogmir's corpse with a hiss.
The body twitched.
A pulse of dark energy spread across the room.
The system chimed again.
Evan's eyes gleamed.
"...Let's see what secrets you tried to take to your grave."
{[<Detected a Lv.89 Dwarf.>]
[<What do you wish to do:>]
[<Host has chosen for the Plunder function.>]
[<Plundering in the process...>]
[<No Bloodline, Talent or Abilities were detected. Extracting body stats, Trait, SkillsâŠ>]
[Stats Absorbed] †+31 STR | +11 AGL | +41 INT | +27 VIT | + 39 END | + 36 STA]
[Trait Absorbed] â€
âȘ
Iron Will
â«
]}
[Skills Absorbed] â€
âȘ
Forge Mastery
â«
,
âȘ
Smelting Mastery
â«
,
âȘ
Material Insight
â«
]
[Same path between skill and a source has been detected in the host, do you wish to fuse the skill inside the source:
Blacksmith
(B)]
[Iron Will (
C
)]
: An unyielding trait of relentless persistence. The user refuses to falter, continuing their path regardless of success or suffering.
__
Ash and silence filled the ruined forge.
Shattered tools. A burned anvil. Blood smears the blackened floor.
Evan sat cross-legged in the middle of it all.
Expression unreadable. Gaze distant.
He opened his system interface.
Flicking through the loot panel from [Plunder].
His eyes narrowed.
Something was missing.
There was no [Trait] tab.
"Huh⊠that's odd," he muttered.
"The other system had it.
So this one's either incomplete⊠or hiding it."
A shrug. He moved on.
"Alright, question," he said aloud, addressing the system.
"If I plunder a skill from someone, then raise their corpse as a summonâŠCan they still use the skill I took?"
The answer came instantly.
[Ding! Query received. ProcessingâŠ]
[No, Host. Once a skill has been plundered, the undead cannot use itâunless it's relearned.]
"Tch. So that's a waste," Evan muttered.
He leaned back against a scorched pillar.
"No point forcing class skills into something that can't even use them."
He waved the screen away.
"ButâŠ"
His fingers moved.
From his face, he pulled out a mask.
Thin as death.
Forged of darkened metal.
A faintly glowing crystal is embedded in its forehead.
The
Mask of Concealment
.
Stripped of illusion. Showing its true form.
Evan knelt.
He pressed the mask against Drogmir's severed head.
A flash of light surged from the crystal.
The corpse twitched.
Once.
Then⊠silence.
Seconds passed.
The light faded. The mask loosened.
Evan retrieved it, wiping it clean with calm precision.
He slipped it back onto his face.
[Memory devoured.]
[Target's life experience has been extracted and stored.]
[Would you like to review the memories now?]
"Yeah," Evan said quietly.
"Start to finish. Double speed. Let's see if the fool saw anything useful."
The world dimmed.
Shadows unfolded in his mind.
And he plunged into the sea of Drogmir's memories.
He saw everything.
Even the forgotten.
Even the buried.
The soul could not lie.
And Evan⊠was its god now.
â---
The vision began within the halls of the
Ironbelch Clan
.
A proud Dwarven bloodline, carved into the deepstone of the Tier 4 Expanse.
There were supposed to be seven in the family.
Father. Mother. Four sons. One daughter.
But that number came at a cost.
Childbirth complications struck.
Twinsâthird and fourth in lineârefused to be born.
The healer's verdict was cruel.
Save none⊠or sacrifice one.
The father chose.
He gave up one child⊠to save the mother and the other twin.
The survivorâ
Drogmir
.
A choice made in silence.
Buried. Hidden. Never spoken again.
Even to the mother.
But guilt gnawed.
And in time, the father sworeâ
All his children, no matter how gifted, would be raised equally.
â---
Years passed.
The clan rose in power.
Wealth poured in. The family soared.
The eldest son awakened a
4-Star Divine Fire
Affinity.
A Tier 1 Weaponsmith in months. Forging magic-tier blades.
The daughter awakened Holy magic.
She joined the Church⊠though it came with chains more than glory.
The youngest son grew into a fierce warrior.
A natural adventurer.
And then⊠There was Drogmir.
No affinity. No gifts.
Just sweat, failure, and bitterness.
Still, his family tried.
They never gave up. They encouraged him. Supported him.
But Drogmir didn't see that.
He saw pressure.
Disappointment. Pity disguised as kindness.
And one day, after another argument⊠He snapped.
He left.
No goodbyes. Just slammed doors and resentment.
â---
Time passed.
Bitterness festered.
He tried forging.
Failed.
Tried combat.
Failed.
An adventurer took pity.
Offered to train him.
Five hours of daily drills?
Drogmir lasted one.
Two hours of weapon handling?
He quit in thirty minutes.
Even the adventurer, patient and kind, gave up in the end.
"You don't lack talent, Drogmir.
You lack will."
But Drogmir didn't hear that.
He only heard betrayal.
Another one.
Just like the rest.
He grew bitter.
Rot spread in his heart.
Even his nannyâthe one who raised himâleft.
For a better job.
And that⊠broke him.
Completely.
He drowned himself in liquor.
Stumbled home drunkâon his birthday, no less.
His father slapped him.
Hard.
Evan smirked, watching the memory unfold.
His siblings wept.
His mother collapsed to her knees.
But Drogmir didn't see love.
He only saw judgment.
So he ran.
That very night, he stole the money he thought he deservedâŠ
âŠand took the family's ancient forge.
The same one Evan had nearly destroyed.
And then he vanished.
In his madness, he'd even taken a forbidden art.
A technique that stole potential from others in exchange for borrowed life.
Now, Evan understood.
That's why Drogmirâbarely in his thirtiesâlooked like a rotting husk.
He'd used it.
Sacrificed decades of his future.
And gained nothing in return.
Because he never had the will to wield what he stole.
The memory faded.
Evan opened his eyes.
Only thirty minutes had passed.
He looked down at the corpseâheadless, burnt, broken.
No pity stirred in his chest.
But now, he understood the man.
"Misunderstandings," he muttered.
"They really do destroy more lives than swords ever will."
He stood and stretched.
The Ironbelch Forge.
The full Forbidden Art. All buried in Drogmir's mind.
Everything had value now.
And he intended to use every piece.
The scent of ash still clung to the air.
Evan stood above Drogmir's corpseâmind sharp, heart cold.
A severed head lay nearby.
Charred.
Lifeless.
A part of him wanted to feel something.
Satisfaction? Regret?
All that came was emptiness.
He recalled the look on Drogmir's faceâFleeing like prey from his own blood.
Evan once believed Drogmir had chased him for his flames.
But nowâŠ
He knew the truth.
Drogmir had wanted Kael's flames first.
He only stopped because Kael was a friend.
But when Evan showed upâa stranger, a nobodyâThat hesitation vanished.
No guilt.
No pause.Just the desire to take.
Evan's blood simmered.
"It's easier to justify killing a stranger, isn't it?" he said.
"Even if they're innocentâŠ"
He took a breath.
Tried to shake off the spiral.
He wasn't innocent either.
But what if it had been someone else?
Someone who didn't survive?
No more what-ifs.
His eyes sharpened.
Time to move.
He raised a hand.
<Raise Undead>
Mana surged from his core, coiling like smoke.
It dove into Drogmir's remains.
The head twitched.
The body jerked.
Spectral threads wove between them.
Flesh melted, revealing cracked, blackened bone.
In moments, a dwarf-sized skeleton stood upright.
Tattered robes hung from its frame.
Its eye sockets burned blue.
[Collected soul retrieved from Ability Storage.]
[You have raised a Skeleton Blacksmith (
Elite
) â Lv.89]
Evan skimmed the stats.
The blacksmith's skills were intact.
But the tenacity traits were goneâdevoured by him.
"Perfect," he muttered.
"You'll forge my weapons now⊠until I surpass you. Or break you for a better one."
The skeleton tilted its head.
Blank.
Confused.
Evan ignored it and began looting the forge.
He snatched up rare metals, tools, and weaponsâ
Even ones Drogmir had selfishly crafted using Evan's own materials.
That thought made him scowl.
He glared at the undead dwarf.
It looked back with hollow innocence.
Unaware.
Tossing everything into his inventory, Evan turned toward the room's centerpieceâ
The Royal Forge.
Melted at the edges.
But still intact.
A legacy from the king to Drogmir's father.
And this fool had wasted it.
He reached outâ
And winced.
It was unbelievably heavy.
Ancient enchantments flickered across its runes.
This was no ordinary tool.
It was a relic.
'Definitely needs testing later.'
Evan braced his legs, poured mana into his arms, and heaved.
The heat seared his skin.
He didn't care.
With a final grunt, he shoved it into his inventory.
Then came the rest.
Anvil.Tongs.Hammers.
Every forge-related item followed.
When he was done, his body ached.
Sweat clung to his skin.
His hands were red and raw.
Only one task remained.
"Same old plan. No witnesses. No evidence."
Evan raised his hand.
Two undead emerged from the void.
âHis loyal Undead Mage.
âAnd a Goblin Skeleton, roughly Drogmir's size.
"Lie down here."
He pointed to the forge's former heart.
The goblin dropped without hesitation.
No questions.
Just blind obedience.
Evan sighed.
Explaining was useless.
The dead didn't think.
They followed.
He turned to the mage.
"Charge a fireball. Maximum output."
A skeletal hand rose.
Mana churned, condensing into a sphere of raw fire.
It grew hotter, brighter, unstable.
Meanwhile, Evan worked.
He scattered metal fragments.
Smashed weapons.
Bent tools Drogmir once held.
Props for the illusion.
A forgery of a final moment.
Thenâhe stepped closer.
Ashen fire gathered at his fingertips.
A whisper of Kael's flame.
A trick he'd memorised.
He wove it into the fireball.
The sphere twisted.
Its colour darkened.
Its nature warped.
No longer standard flame.
But mutated.Phoenix-born.A mimicry of destruction.
Once it stabilised, Evan dismissed the mage.
Took the fireball in his own hand.
The orb hovered above his palm, seething.
Enough heat to warp stone.Enough pressure to flatten steel.
He didn't hesitate.
<Meteor Dash> <Leap>
He sprinted.
And hurled the fireball behind him.
The moment he exitedâ
BOOOOOOOM!!!
A hellish blast ripped through the forge.
Flames howled.
Walls vaporised.
Shrapnel screamed.
The shockwave slammed into Evan's back.
But Bone Armour and Mana Shield caught most of it.
[Your Undead (Goblin Skeleton) has been destroyed.]
He didn't stop.
Didn't look back.
The front door burst open.
<Shadow Leap>
His body melted into the shadows, vanishing.
Behind himâThe Ember & Anvil exploded.
Fire swallowed the blacksmith whole.
Smoke billowed into the sky.
The very street trembled.
Pedestrians screamed.
Guards mobilised.
Spells flew.
But what they foundâŠ
âŠwas ruined.
The forge was gone.
Reduced to char and rubble.
Adventurers poured in.
Mages formed barriers.
Water spells danced through the air.
But nothing stopped the blaze.
And amidst it allâ
Kael arrived.
Flanked by his party.
His gaze locked onto the inferno.
Then, without warningâ
He charged in.
Flames bent around him.
His Phoenix-born resistance turns fire into mist.
Heat pressed in.
But he didn't flinch.
His eyes scanned the wreckageâUntil they landed on a broken form.
A blackened skeleton.
Still smoking.
Collapsed in the center.
Kael froze.
"âŠNo."
He stumbled forward.
Ribs charred.
Limbs half-melted.
Face unrecognisable.
Butâ
A scorched cloak.
A shattered pendant.
The unmistakable size.
"âŠDrogmir?"
His voice cracked.
He dropped to his knees, trembling.
"Vela⊠is thisâ"
A shimmer appeared beside him.
VelaâA flickering spark of Death Phoenix flameâKneeled at his side.
Her gaze was somber.
"I can't be sure.
The fire consumed too much.
But the mana here⊠It's near the 9th Star.
And more than thatâ"
Her voice dipped.
"My flame is here. Yours too."
Kael's fists clenched.
"Drogmir⊠used it?"
"He must have.
No one else in this region could've channelled Phoenix fire.
Not even in the Second Expanse.
His greed gets over him."
Kael lowered his head.
Silent.
No argument.
The truth scorched deeper than the fire.
He picked up the bones.
Lifted the skeleton in his arms.
Not a corpse.
Not ashes.
But a comrade.
A brother in arms.
Someone who had once believed in him.
Gasps echoed around him.
But Kael said nothing.
Tears ran down his face.
Ash stained his armour.
Behind him, the girls followed.
Silent.
Eyes dim.
The Ember & AnvilâA legacy of fire, steel, and craftsmanshipâWas gone.
Forever.
Or so they believed.
âHigh above, in the shadowsâŠ
Two figures watched.
Evan stood still, arms folded.
Beside himâ
A tall, armoured skeleton.
Enchanted hammer in hand.
A blacksmith reborn in undeath.
"Drogmir."
His voice was cold. Commanding.
"Get to work. I want my gear in three days.
No breaks. No rest."
He turned away.
The burning forge reflected in his eyesâBut no guilt lived in them.
Only purpose.
Only control.
The reborn Drogmir pausedâlooked down one last time.
At Kael.
At the flame.
At the body that wasn't his.
Thenâ
He turned.
And followed his master.
His eternity had just begun.
And when it would endâ
No one could say.
â To be continuedâŠ
I hope you enjoy the chapter and add it to your library for instant updates on new mysteries in the Zeroth Expanse.