The dwarven morning arrived not with birdsong or a cool breeze, but with a dry heat that seeped in through the stone walls like breath from a furnace.
Luca woke slowly, eyes blinking open to the muted glow of mana-lanterns. For a moment, his thoughts were scattered... then they settledâpredictablyâon the same thing heâd been thinking about before falling asleep.
I hope everything went well with Master and Selena.
He pushed himself upright, rubbing the sleep from his eyes as he padded toward the window. Beyond the carved stone frame, the sky stretched clearâbright blue, sun blazing fiercely above the mountains. Dwarves were already bustling about like ants in a forge, their rhythmic hammering echoing faintly even from here.
Luca exhaled softly.
"Finally," he murmured, fingers resting against the cold stone sill. "The Forgeheart Crucible will resume today."
He reached into his storage ring and pulled out a small daggerâsimple, unadorned, but its weight familiar. He turned it in his hand, watching the morning light flicker across the metal.
"It looks like... your use is finally near, huh."
After a brisk showerâdwarven-made, with steaming mineral water pouring through a rune-etched pipe like a miniature waterfallâLuca dressed quickly and stepped out of his room.
The corridor hummed with the faint vibrations of dwarves starting their day.
As Luca made his way toward Lilliane and Syltharaâs rooms, he didnât have to go far. Both girls were already outside, standing together. Lillianeâs fingers fidgeted with her sleeves, her nerves visible in the slight stiffness of her posture; Syltharaâs ears twitched, her legs tapping the ground continuously, contained arcs behind herâmore controlled, but betraying a sliver of anxiety.
"You two ready?" Luca asked as he approached.
Both nodded at onceâLilliane with a breath drawn in, Sylthara with a firm set to her jaw. Determination hardened their expressions.
Luca nodded back, almost automatically matching their spirit.
"Letâs go."
The three walked together through the stone corridors, boots tapping rhythmically against the floor. They hadnât gone far before Luca slowed, eyes widening slightly.
Two figures came into view ahead.
Two figures with the same pale hairâone youthful, cold, sharp; the other mature, elegant, veiled.
Selena and Tower Master.
For a brief moment, none of them spoke. The Tower Masterâs veil fluttered faintly as she turned her gaze toward the group. Selena walked beside her with quiet footstepsâface calm, expression unreadable, but not hostile.
Luca bowed deeply.
"Master."
A simple nod was her reply.
Syltharaâs eyes darted between mother and daughterâsearching, curious. Lilliane kept her head bowed a bit longer than necessary. And Luca... Luca wondered silently.
Theyâre together... so things should be good, right?
The silence stretched just long enough to become awkward.
Thenâ
"Shouldnât we start walking now?" the Tower Master said lightly, breaking the tension with effortless poise.
Luca blinked, startled out of his thoughts. "We... Master, are you coming to watch as well?"
Her eyes curved slightly behind the veilâa smile hidden but obvious.
"I canât risk my disciple worrying for me when I am not in front of him and then failing the trial, can I?"
Luca let out an embarrassed, dry laugh, one hand rising to awkwardly scratch the back of his head.
"Hehe... right."
Their group merged with the larger flow of dwarves heading in the same directionâfamilies, merchants, warriors, and smiths, all murmuring hurriedly as excitement crackled in the air.
"Wonder what todayâs trial will be."
"After what happened on the 1st two days ? Spirits help us, it might be even crazier."
"The fire girl and the thunder-ice one... what monsters will come next?"
When they reached the arena, it was as if the entire mountain had been packed into one place. Tens of thousands of dwarves filled the standsâarmor gleaming, beards braided, voices booming. High above sat the seven dwarven elders on their rune-carved platform.
As their eyes scanned another platform. Lillianeâs breath caught softly.
"There seem to be even more reporters today," she whispered, eyes drawn to the far stands where humans clustered with crystalline cameras and enchanted quills.
Sylthara scoffed lightly. "Looks like the Tower Masterâs appearance attracted them too."
The Tower Master glanced toward that same stand, eyes narrowing slightlyâas if recognizing more than just reporters.
"Those are not only journalists," she said calmly. "It seems some nobles have arrived as well."
Luca scanned the rowsâindeed, he noticed noble crests from several human territories.
"Huh... makes sense," he muttered. "Letâs head to our challenger stand."
The group walked up the steps to their designated platform. Seats carved from polished obsidian stone awaited them. As they settled in, dwarves all around quieted in anticipation...
The Forgeheart Crucible was about to begin again.
The announcer strode into the center of the arena with the theatrical flourish only dwarven commentators possessedâcloak snapping behind him, beard swaying proudly as he raised a glimmering amplification crystal.
The moment he lifted itâ
"DWARVES OF THE ANCIENT MOUNTAINâ!"
His voice detonated through the forge-heat air, booming so loudly the very stone vibrated under their feet.
"WELCOME BACK TO THE FORGEHEART CRUCIBLE!"
Thunderous cheers erupted immediatelyâboots pounding on stone, fists rattling shields, the entire arena roaring as if magma surged beneath their ribs.
The announcer paced dramatically across the center, voice rolling like a storyteller at a great feast.
"Two days have passed in this grand crucible! Two days of fire! Two days of glory!"
He swung around, cloak flaring.
"On the first day, we witnessed the Drayden siblings shatter our expectations!"
He pointed up toward Elder Hilda with a flourish.
"The fiery girl awakened an ancient phenomenonâenough to make even Elder Hilda take a disciple! A rarity not seen for generations!"
Elder Hilda puffed up proudly, beard beads clinking as she nodded with visible satisfaction. A wave of "Oooohs!" rippled through the crowd.
Then the announcerâs tone dipped, lowering into a somber hush.
"But on the second day..."
A heavy pause.
"An unfortunate incident befell the young ice mage..."
Dwarves stirred uncomfortably, murmurs rippling through the stands. Even now, uneasy sympathy lingered among them. But before the mood could sink further, the announcer snapped his fist upward, voice exploding back to full volumeâ
"BUT TODAYâ!"
A blazing smile split his beard.
"WE RETURN TO THE FLAMES OF TRIAL!WE CONTINUE THE ANCIENT RITES OF FORGE AND FIRE!"
The arena erupted againâcheers like avalanches, roars like rolling thunder.
"LET THE THIRD DAY OF THE FORGEHEART CRUCIBLEâBEGIN!!"
He spun toward the challengersâ stand, his expression shifting into something smug... almost arrogant. His chest puffed forward, and he adjusted his beard like he owned the mountain.
Because in the challengersâ standâ
Right in the front rowâ
sat the Tower Master herself.
Her power might have been sealed, but her presence was unmistakable. A primordial calm, a noble stillness. Enough to make even a dwarf announcer overperform in front of her.
He smirked, raising a brow theatrically.
"Well then... who among you dares to step forth as todayâs challenger?!"
He delivered the line with flairâvoice dripping in bravado, chin tilted up as if challenging a legend directly.
In the challengersâ stand...
Luca turned toward Lilliane and Sylthara.
His expression softened.
Encouraging.
Warm.
But steadyâlike a forge that had never once failed them.
"Who wants to go?"
There was no hesitation.
Both girls exchanged a single glanceâsilent communication passing effortlessly between them. Acceptance. Agreement. A decision already forged long before he asked.
Lilliane stepped forward.
Her movement was smallâbarely a shift of her foot, the lift of her chinâbut her entire presence changed. Her green eyes steadied. Her fingers stopped trembling. Her breath deepened. Wind stirred softly around her ankles like a gathering breeze responding to her resolve.
"I will go," she said.
Her voice wasnât loud.
Wasnât forceful.
But it carried a calm determination that made Luca smile.
A real smile.
Proud, gentle, confident.
"All the best, Lilliane."
Sylthara flicked her hands lightly, offering a fanged smirk. "Do well. Try not to faint on the first trial."
Selenaâcool, composed, sitting straight with her hands folded neatly on her lapâglanced at Lilliane with quiet, unreadable eyes.
But she spoke softly.
"...Good luck."
Coming from her, it meant a lot.
Lilliane inhaled once.
Then stepped up onto the railing.
A faint swirl of wind gathered beneath her feetâlifting her effortlessly as if the air itself bowed in support. With a graceful leap, she descended into the arena, landing lightly on her feet, her cloak fluttering like a bird settling upon a branch.
She stood tallâshoulders back, spine straightâas she raised her face toward the eldersâ high platform. The dwarven sun glinted across her light hair, giving her an almost ethereal aura.
Tens of thousands of dwarven eyes locked onto her tiny figure.
A human girl
small among giants
but steady as the wind she commanded.
And Lilliane
lifted her chin
and stared back
without flinching.
The third day...
had truly begun.
The announcer swept his gaze down toward Lilliane, crystal amplifying his voice so loudly the air trembled.
"So then, girl," he said with a booming grin, "whom do you expect to challenge today?!"
Thousands of dwarven eyes locked onto her instantlyâthe crowd falling into a sudden, heavy hush.
Lilliane stood alone in the center of the arena.
The wind curled around her bootsâsoft, nervous, unsureâmirroring the faint tremble in her fingers. Her chest rose and fell once, sharply, as she gathered a breath deep enough to steady the storm inside her.
Everyone is watching... stay calm... you promised yourself.
Her gaze drifted upwardânot to the elders at first,
but to Luca.
He sat at the edge of the challengerâs stand, leaning forward, eyes warm and steadyâno pressure, no demandâjust quiet reassurance.
Her shoulders loosened.
Her heartbeat steadied.
She turned back to the towering platform of the Elder Council.
Seven dwarven elders stared down at herâstone-faced, ancient, imposing. Their beards swayed slightly in the heated air rising from the molten channels beneath the arena.
She straightened her posture.
Lifted her chin.
Placed her hand over her chest in the formal challengerâs salute.
And with a clear, respectful voice that cut through the silenceâ
"I, Lilliane Fairemoore," she declared,
her words carried by a soft breeze,
"respectfully ask Elder Huldor Forgevein for guidance."
A shock rippled through the arenaâ
gasps, murmurs, the sudden clatter of weapons against armor.
Even Elder Huldor himself leaned forward, one thick brow rising in silent surpriseâhis furnace-etched cloak flickering with ember-light.
The third day of the Crucible...
was about to ignite.