
The forge’s fire roared like a caged beast, its embers hissing as Dain plunged the red-hot blade into the quenching trough.
Steam exploded into the air, filling the workshop with the scent of scorched metal and sweat. His arms burned, his back ached, but he didn’t stop. Borin the Steady had taught him better.
"A smith’s work is never done, boy," Borin’s voice echoed in his memory, gruff but warm. "The fire doesn’t care if you’re tired. The steel doesn’t care if you’re scared."
Dain wiped the soot from his brow with the back of his hand, leaving a streak of black across his forehead. The blade he’d been working on, a simple short sword for a merchant’s son who fancied himself a warrio, gleamed dully in the firelight. No Dragonsteel. No runes. No magic. Just iron, sweat, and the rhythmic clang of hammer on anvil.
Then the ground trembled.
Dain froze. The anvil beside him hummed, vibrating as if struck by an invisible force. The fire in the forge pulsed, its flames twisting into the shape of a dragon’s maw before snapping back to normal. His breath hitched.
He’d heard the stories, whispers of the Dragonforge awakening, of the Eclipse Wyrm stirring in its slumber, but those were tales for drunken soldiers and superstitious peasants. Not for him. Not for a blacksmith’s apprentice with calloused hands and a life measured in hammer strikes.
The workshop door burst open.
Borin stood there, his face pale, his usual calm shattered. His leather apron was spattered with fresh blood, his hammer gripped like a weapon. "Dain. Run."
Dain’s stomach dropped. "Father!"
"No time." Borin’s voice was a growl. "They’re here."
Behind him, the night sky split open.
A beam of crimson light lanced down from the heavens, striking the peak of Mount Vorthas, the dormant volcano that loomed over their village like a sleeping giant. The mountain groaned, its slopes cracking like an egg. Black lava, thick as tar, hungry as sin, spilled down its sides, swallowing the earth in its path.
Dain’s blood turned to ice.
Borin grabbed his arm, yanking him toward the back door. His grip was iron, his eyes wild. "The Order’s come for you, boy. They know what you are."
Dain’s mind raced. "What I?"
"The Heir." Borin’s voice was raw. "The bloodline’s awakened."
Dain’s breath came in short, sharp gasps. Heir? He was nobody. A blacksmith’s apprentice. A boy with no magic in his veins, no destiny, just a father who had raised him alone, and a life built on the steady rhythm of the forge.
Borin shoved him into the alley. "Go! To the old mines! Don’t look back!"
Dain stumbled, his boots slipping on the cobblestones. "Father, I—"
"I’ll hold them off." Borin turned, hammer raised, not as a tool, but as a weapon. "But you have to live, boy. For the forge. For the blood."
The last thing Dain saw was his father charging the armored figures pouring into the street, his hammer swinging in a wide arc. The first arrow struck Borin in the chest. He didn’t even flinch. The second took him in the throat.
Dain’s scream tore through the night.
He ran.
The alleys of Black Hollow twisted like a labyrinth, the air thick with the scent of burning thatch and blood. Behind him, the Order of the Silver Flame gave chase, their armor gleaming like moonlit bone, their war horns splitting the air. Dain’s lungs burned, his legs trembling, but he didn’t stop. He couldn’t. Borin’s words echoed in his skull: "The Heir. The bloodline’s awakened."
He didn’t understand. He didn’t want to understand.
A hand grabbed his shoulder.
Dain whirled, hammer raised.
A girl stood there, her dark eyes wide, her breath coming in ragged gasps. "Dain! It’s me, Lira!"
Lira. The baker’s daughter. His childhood friend. Her face was streaked with soot, her dress torn. "They’re burning the village! Dain, what’s happening?"
Dain’s throat tightened. "The Order. They’re—"
A scream cut him off.
Lira’s body jerked, an arrow protruding from her chest. Her eyes met his, confused, betrayed. "Dain…?"
She collapsed.
Dain caught her, his hands slick with her blood. "No. No, no, NO."
"There he is!"
Dain looked up.
Three knights of the Silver Flame stood at the alley’s end, their swords drawn, their armor gleaming with holy fire. The one in the center, a woman with a scarred lip and eyes like frozen steel, stepped forward.
"Dain of Black Hollow," she said, her voice like grinding metal. "By the decree of the High Inquisitor, you are marked for death."
Dain’s vision blurred. Lira’s blood seeped between his fingers. The gauntlet on the altar in his father’s workshop flashed in his mind. The dragon’s maw in the fire.
Something burned in his veins.
The knights charged.
Dain roared.
He didn’t think. He moved.
The hammer in his hand ignited, its head bursting into white-hot flame. The knights skidded to a halt, their eyes widening. Dain didn’t understand. He didn’t care. He swung.
The hammer connected with the lead knight’s chest. She flew backward, her armor cracking like ice. The other two hesitated, just for a second.
It was enough.
Dain ran.
Behind him, the knights shouted, their voices drowned out by the roar of Mount Vorthas. The mountain was bleeding now, black lava carving rivers through the village. The air smelled of burning flesh and sulfur.
Dain didn’t look back.
He couldn’t.
The old mines were a maw of darkness, the air thick with the scent of damp earth and rust. Dain’s hands shook as he pressed his back against the cold stone, his breath coming in ragged gasps. The hammer’s fire had faded, leaving only the glow of the gauntlet’s runes, pulsing blue, like a second heartbeat.
"What are you?" he whispered.
The mine trembled. Dust rained from the ceiling.
A voice echoed in his mind, deep, ancient, hungry.
"Heir."
Dain’s blood turned to ice.
A light flickered in the dark.
He turned.
At the end of the tunnel, a figure stood, tall, cloaked in black, their face obscured by a mask of polished bone. A sickle dripped with something dark in their hand.
"Ah," the figure said, their voice a rasp like dry leaves. "The fire awakens. How… predictable."
Dain raised the hammer. "Who are you?"
The figure tilted their head. "Your reckoning."
The gauntlet burned.
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Chapter 15: The Weight of a Name
The fire consumed the dragon-skull helmet, its blackened metal twisting in the flames like a living thing. Dain watched it melt, the heat licking at his face, the smell of burning steel filling the air.The Wyrm’s whispers were louder now, the Forgotten King’s voice a constant murmur in his mind: "The blood always wins, Heir.""Not today," Dain muttered, turning away from the fire.Serra stood a few paces off, her sword sheathed, her armor scorched and dented. She watched him, her eyes dark with exhaustion and something deeper, worry, maybe. Or fear."We should go," she said, her voice rough. "The Order won’t stop hunting you. Not after this."Dain nodded, but his gaze was fixed on the treeline, where the villagers had vanished. "We can’t just leave them.""We don’t have a choice," Serra snapped, then sighed, rubbing her face. "Sorry. I didn’t mean—""It’s fine," Dain said, though it wasn’t. Nothing was fine. His arm ached, the blackened veins of the gauntlet’s mark throbbing like a s
Chapter 14: Ashes and Dawn
The dawn broke over the scorched earth of Black Hollow like a wound healing, its golden light spilling across the blackened ruins of the village.The air smelled of smoke and damp earth, the aftermath of the Wyrm’s fire still lingering in the cracks of the land.Dain stood at the edge of what had once been his home, the Dragonbane resting against his shoulder, its runes now dull but still pulsing faintly with the echoes of the seven relics. His arm ached, the blackened veins of the gauntlet’s mark throbbing like a second heartbeat.Serra walked beside him, her armor scorched, her sword sheathed but its blue flame still flickering weakly. She didn’t speak. Neither did he. The weight of what they had lost, and what they had gained, hung between them like a silent storm."It’s gone," Dain said finally, his voice raw. "All of it."Serra exhaled, her breath shaky. "Not all. The forge is still here. The people...." She paused, her gaze flicking to the smoldering ruins of the blacksmith’s sh
Chapter 13: The Eclipse Unchained
The caldera of Mount Vorthas was a wound in the world, its black lava bubbling like boiling blood, its slopes cracked and bleeding fire.The air reeked of sulfur and burning metal, thick enough to choke on. Above them, the sky split open, lightning tearing through the storm clouds like claws. The Eclipse Wyrm’s eyes, two pits of voidfire, burned at the mountain’s peak, its maw opening wider with every roar, the sound shaking the earth beneath their feet.Dain stood at the edge of the caldera, the Dragonbane clutched in his grip. The blade hummed, its runes pulsing with the seven relics’ power, their light and darkness swirling along its edge. His arm was a map of fire and shadow, the gauntlet’s runes now etched into his skin, the Gloomshard’s whispers and the Forgotten King’s voice a constant murmur in his mind:"You will fail, Heir. Just like the rest."Serra stood beside him, her sword drawn, its blue flame flickering weakly. The curse from the Vault of the Moonlit Dead had sapped h
Chapter 12: The Dragonforge Awakens
The black lava of Mount Vorthas pulsed like a living thing, its glow casting eerie shadows across the jagged rocks.The air reeked of sulfur and burning metal, thick enough to taste. Dain stood at the edge of the caldera, the seven relics, Embercore, Stormfang, Heartstone, Gloomshard, Soulsilver, Sunspire, and the gauntlet, pulsing in unison against his skin.The runes had spread past his shoulder, now weaving across his chest like living veins, their golden light clashing with the Gloomshard’s darkness.Serra stood beside him, her sword’s blue flame flickering weakly. The curse from the Vault of the Moonlit Dead had clung to her, her movements slower, her breath ragged. "We’re out of time," she said, her voice hoarse. "The Wyrm’s coming. And we’re not ready."Dain clenched his fists. The Sunspire’s heat burned in his palm, the Embercore’s fire thrumming in his chest. The Gloomshard’s whispers slithered through his mind, the Forgotten King’s voice a constant murmur:"You are mine, Hei
Chapter 11: The Blazing Titan’s Crucible
The Blazing Titan’s Crucible rose before them like a wound in the earth, its floating island wreathed in flame and smoke. The air shimmered with heat, the scent of molten metal and burning flesh thick in Dain’s throat. The Sunspire waited there, the final relic, its light piercing the smoke like a beacon.Dain’s arm ached, the Gloomshard’s darkness and the Soulsilver’s cold warring with the Embercore’s heat and the Stormfang’s storm. The Heartstone pulsed in his belt, its rhythm steady, but the gauntlet’s runes flickered, unstable, as if the clashing powers were tearing him apart from the inside."We’re almost there," Serra said, her voice hoarse. Her sword’s blue flame had dimmed since the Vault, the curse of the Moonlit Dead clinging to her like a second shadow. "One more relic. Then the Dragonforge."Veyla didn’t answer. The black chains from their bargain with the Vault had spread, now wrapping their forearm, their fingers twitching as if controlled by something unseen. Their sick
Chapter 10: The Vault of the Moonlit Dead
The Heartstone pulsed in Dain’s palm, its crimson light cutting through the Gloomshard’s lingering darkness. The gauntlet’s runes flared, their golden glow steady for the first time since the Gloomwood.Dain exhaled, the weight of the Sentinel’s trial still pressing on his chest. The vision of Black Hollow’s fall, of Borin’s lifeless eyes, clung to him like a second skin."You took the fear with you," Serra said, her voice quiet. She stood a few paces away, her sword’s blue flame flickering in the twilight. "That’s not how it’s supposed to work."Dain clenched his fist around the Heartstone. "I didn’t have a choice."Veyla’s laughter was a dry rasp. "There’s always a choice, Heir. You just don’t like the alternatives."The land ahead sloped downward, the rolling hills giving way to a valley of mist. At its center loomed the Vault of the Moonlit Dead, its obsidian spires piercing the sky like broken teeth. The air hummed with a low, mournful song, the wind carrying the whispers of the
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