Aliandra
“What do you an, you don’t know?” Ali demanded, glaring at the ancient, stubborn troll with frustration. “You lived through it, didn’t you?”
She pushed the giant scale-bound draconic to away from her in frustration, and it bumped into a pile of precariously balanced books, making Ryn squeak as she caught them with a flare of her unique magic.
“Sorry, Ryn,” Ali said. She had been searching for hours through the books Azryet had lent them, but useful information on the ancient wells and tips for how to find them were scarce and tenuous at best.
“No problem,” Ryn offered.
“Aliandra, contrary to what you may think, I’m not being opaque or difficult,” Val’korr said with a rueful smile on his face. “I may have lived through The Breaking, but I think you underestimate just how much damage it wrought upon the lands. The Lich had found so way to open rifts to other realms, unleashing a continent-wide realm break and spilling titanic monsters of incredible power into our realm. In the chaos, he unleashed devastating magic upon the cities and kingdoms that were woefully unprepared to even understand what was happening. Armies of undead marched across the plains like a plague of locusts. Thousands of heroes spent their lives to halt his evil plans, and cast the monsters aside, and the damage wrought by all that concentrated magic left the land unrecognizable.”
“Unrecognizable?” Ali asked. But she had seen the maps, and she knew what he was saying – the familiar shape of the continent she had learned in her youth was nothing like the maps Calen and Ryn had shown her. Even so, it was hard to believe. And the rifts, too? Was he responsible for the rifts she was now guarding?
“The Spine of the World and The Tempest did not exist before The Breaking. Aalion, once a city of light and air perched upon the Thousand Celestial Peaks, was at the epicenter of a cataclysmic World Magic that tore the continent asunder. None can now point at where the Thousand Celestial Peaks once were, let alone find Aalion itself. The Dol Kerriadh mountains were not a peninsula,” Val’korr said. “All I know of the whereabouts of Mi’ir Valdanis is that it used to be about halfway between Aalion and Ciradyl, which might be approximately where the Spine of the World is today, but I wouldn’t bet anything significant on that. If you give an old map, I can point out where it used to reside.”
“I’ll keep searching, Ali,” Ryn said. “Look, Tiraza gave us a lot of books to start with, but there are many more in her library. I’m sure we’ll find sothing.”
“Thanks, Ryn,” Ali said. But that still didn’t help them solve the problem. Nathaniel Sunstrider had corrupted the Well of Souls, and she was certain they couldn’t use corrupted water for the elixir. Without figuring out a way to travel back in ti till before The Breaking – a task she knew was impossible – there seed to be no way to find the Well of Eternity, nor gain a vial from the destroyed Well of Divinity.
The worst of it was, she was beginning to take her frustration out on her friends. She knew that wasn’t helping anyone, nor was it their fault, but unless they found a different way, Lira would remain trapped in the cursed acorn forever. Or worse, erge changed. Ali grimaced, recalling Azryet’s warning.
“Maybe I’ll take a break for a few minutes,” she said, finally admitting she needed to reset. Turning her back on the books for now, she walked over to the tea stand and charged the runes in the teapot with a few points of mana, making the water heat up rapidly, and only when the white steam began rising from the spout, did she asure the tea leaves.
The simple act of following the ritual of brewing Lira’s favorite tea for all of them slowly settled her mind, and the frustration began to dissolve. The impossibility of finding the wells still remained, but sohow, she imagined she could hear the kind and gentle words that Lira would have spoken to her, counselling, understanding, and supportive.
By the ti she sat down with a hot cup of aromatic elven tea, her mind had quieted, and she found she could just enjoy the aroma and flavor. She would have approved, she thought, knowing Lira would probably have made the tea for her even before she had noticed her frustration.
Val’korr nodded his thanks and took a sip while Ryn smiled.
From the calm sanctuary of her tea and couch, Ali let her mind roam. Deep below, in the mines, a raid group prepared to face the drake boss she had created to protect the Anvil of the Emberforge. Throughout the sewers, groups of new adventurers awkwardly contended with their first monsters as they muddled their way through understanding teamwork and their skills and abilities. Far away, deep among the frozen peaks of the Fangs of the Frost Wyrm, she shadowed Calen as he searched the desolate, wind-swept ice and rock for signs of the Blind Lich himself.
I’m doing everything I can. I just wish there was more I could do.
Grelda Flabellows
Grelda was terrified. It was not often she could honestly say that. But the dragon, a real, bona fide dragon, was enormous, and the waves of fla and fire mana were powerful enough to make her sweat even from the hiding place she shared behind a huge boulder.
She was in a dungeon. A real dungeon. She yelped at the roar and sizzle of the dragon’s fla and the sudden wave of heat, wondering how the bear could even stand being in that much fire. It was hotter than her forge at ho.
Suddenly, there was a loud hiss and a thump, followed by cheering.
“It’s clear now,” Thuli said, offering a hand for her to stand. “Let’s show you the anvil. Is there any specific enchantnt you wish to learn?”
“Um, ice resistance?” she said, staring at the massive corpse of the dragon and the happy adventurers that were sitting around recovering, or harvesting the dragon’s scales. At Thuli’s raised eyebrows, she said, “Even a Flabellows needs ice protection enchantnts when Southport contends with Death Knights.”
“Oh, hmm… That should be easy,” Thuli said. “Kavé, did you bring that frost-ward shield with you? The repair job?”
“Yes,” the dragonkin apprentice said, producing a shield that seed to radiate cold even in the heat of this chamber. To Grelda’s practiced eye, the damage to the shield was obvious – but not that difficult to fix.
“Repair this while focusing on the shield with tal sense and the enchantnts with mana sight, and the dungeon should be able to teach it to you pretty quickly,” Thuli said, collecting the heavy tal bulwark from his apprentice and offering it to her.
“Oh,” Grelda frowned. “I don’t have mana sight.” It was in part what had led her to this predicant. “I can only see fire mana.” She couldn’t even learn other enchantnts from studying items purchased from the auction house. Only fire. All the advantages that ca with her specialization would be worthless here.
“No matter,” Thuli said, stepping up on the dais and stopping before a great anvil. “The anvil has you covered. See? Use your Identify.”
The anvil in front of her was enormous – a great big slab of black stone and tal, imbued with thousands of glowing runes. And the sense of power that radiated from the artifact could be felt simply by standing nearby.
With a sense of profound awe, Grelda identified it. Every hair on the back of her neck prickled at once. It’s true!
Anvil of the Emberforge
The legendary black anvil of Thovir Emberforge. It shows heavy use and appears to have a network of cracks that emit a powerful heat and red glow from within, while delicate runes trace the surface, imbued with power. This anvil has been restored by the Dungeon of Knowledge.
Owner: Aliandra Amariel.
Requirents: Smithing class.
10 to all Smith skills.
43 to Perception.
50% to Fire resistance.
50% to stamina regeneration.
Grants level 41 tal Sense skill.
Grants level 38 Mana Sight skill.
Domain Tithe: The Anvil of the Emberforge draws heavily upon the mana of the domain, granting a 50% reduction to the mana cost of Smith skills. Experience earned toward Knowledge and Mastery traits is greatly increased while using the anvil. A portion of this knowledge and experience, and the imprints for items crafted and repaired upon the anvil, is tithed to the owner.
Quality: Legendary, Unique.
Anvil – Artifact
“How do I use it?” she asked, simply stunned to be standing before the legendary anvil of Thovir Emberforge, all doubts about its authenticity banished in an instant.
“Make sothing,” Thuli said, his thick beard failing to hide a smile. Grelda heard reverence in his voice and sothing inside of her chest seed to unclench. “I recomnd making your best work and using tal Sense and Mana Sight continuously. It will help the anvil get to know ya.”
“This one thinks that’s not how it works at all, Master,” Kavé said. “The anvil improves your perception and connects knowledge you already have in new ways, yielding new insights.”
“How did ya learn to make those dungeon-dropped shields then?” Thuli countered.
The dragonkin just fell silent.
“As ya can see, we don’t fully know how it works,” Thuli admitted with a grin. “But it does.”
“You can learn to make dungeon drops?” Grelda said. If that were true, then the value of this shrine was exponentially higher than even she had believed.
“Oh yes,” Thuli said. “The easiest way is to buy sothing the adventurers dropped from the guild store and then repair it here.”
Grelda approached the anvil with far more questions than she had originally started with, but the sight of an anvil and a forge before her steadied her mind.
Am I really going to do this?
It was her family’s secret technique, but she was its sole inheritor. If she went out of business, her techniques would be worthless. Perhaps it’s ti to take a risk, she thought. And finally, a sense of peace settled within her heart as she recalled her grandfather telling her that blacksmithing was all about continuously learning. And how, once you stopped, you may as well hang up your hamr.
With her heart finally at ease, she pulled out several steel ingots, slipped on the mana sight and tal sense of the anvil, and began to forge a shield. Ti vanished for her, leaving only the strangely full sense of mana, heat, and the familiar ringing of the forge as she slipped into her blacksmith trance, pouring her mana, stamina, heart, and soul into the piece. She crafted her shield with the best of her knowledge, inscribing first the mana for her fire resistance enchantnt, giving everything to make it the best she knew how. Then she inscribed Fla Wreath, studying the way her enchantnt appeared under full mana sight. Then she rounded it out with strength and vitality – not the highest versions the shield could take – for she had never found the money to learn those. But as she crafted the enchantnts, her mind twisted, shifting strangely as if unlocking hidden knowledge from behind concealed doors, imported from elsewhere – almost as if the spirit of Thovir were speaking to her through the anvil every ti her hamr ca down or her mana infused her work.
Finally, she looked up, finding both Thuli and Kavé studying her work with interest.
Fla Bulwark of Resistance – level 73
A Fireforged steel bulwark suitable for the discerning tank. Perfect for blocking dragon fla or inflicting fire damage, this shield is enchanted with Fla Wreath and a high-level fire resistance enchantnt.
Armor: 525
Block Chance: 30% (Blocked attacks cannot cause critical damage.)
615 Fire Resistance.
46 Strength.
36 Vitality.
Fla Wreath (this shield is wreathed with fla, retaliating with Fire damage against the attacker on every block).
Requirents: Strength 256.
Created by Grelda Flabellows in the Dungeon of Knowledge.
Off Hand – Shield – Fireforged Steel.
Blacksmith’s Precision has reached level 37.
Imbued Enchanting has reached level 42 ( 2).
You have learned the Enchantnt: Strength V (Armor).
Strength… five? Wow!
She stared speechless at her piece, but the forty-six-strength enchantnt refused to go away. This is… impossible… She had dread of learning this enchantnt, but her savings were ever eroded by her need to pay the bills, hunt for commissions, and in the end, she had never been able to afford to purchase the instruction or the books she required to learn it. But here it was, on a piece proudly holding her mana signature, and a notification to prove it.
“Your work is beautiful,” Kavé nodded.
“Aye, she is a master crafter, one who cares about the old ways and doing things right,” Thuli said, speaking to his apprentice. “Kavé, you will learn this Fla Wreath. I want you to be able to make it.”
Did I just give away my skill for a strength enchantnt? Grelda felt a sinking feeling in the pit of her stomach. Strength was an incredibly sought-after enchantnt, but was it really worth her unique skill?
“But first, we should see how much Grelda can learn from the anvil in exchange for her gift,” Thuli said, and grinning, he pulled out several weapons and armor pieces, including the ice resistance shield. “Here, repair these on the anvil.”
Oh! Oh, I’m going to enjoy this! She squared her up shoulders. “Alright!”
***
Grelda mopped the sweat from her brow, her mind reeling from the experience. It was like a drug – a very powerful drug indeed – and she no longer had any regrets about taking the risk.
You have learned the Enchantnt: Strength V (Weapon).
You have learned the Enchantnt: Endurance V (Armor).
You have learned the Enchantnt: Sword Mastery (1).
You have learned the Enchantnt: Double Strike (Weapon).
You have learned the Enchantnt: Ice Resistance I-IV (Armor).
You have learned the Enchantnt: Death Resistance I-III (Armor).
You have learned the Enchantnt: Added Ice Damage I (Weapon).
You can enchant a fifth enchantnt onto shields and armor.
You have learned to forge Eimuuran Steel.
You have learned to forge Blood Steel.
And these were just the enchantnts and tals she had learned. Her blacksmithing skills had all skyrocketed under the influence of the Anvil and its tithe enchantnt. She had ntioned in passing that she wanted enchantnts that could help equip the forces fighting the Death Knights, and the adventurers that had co to kill the dragon for them had imdiately offered suggestions and items to try out on the anvil. She had hoped for ice resistance, but nobody back ho even knew about death resistance.
And the enchantnt to grant one skill level to all Sword Mastery skills was going to single-handedly change her entire business.
“How can I ever thank you?” Grelda asked.
“You already taught sothing new,” Thuli said.
“What about her? This… Aliandra Amariel,” she said, mouthing the unfamiliar na carefully. The anvil listed her as the owner.
“I’m sure she will be happy with what she learned from you,” Thuli said. “But if you co across sothing interesting in the future, she would love it if you brought it here and taught it to the anvil. And maybe collect whatever new tricks we’ve learned here.”
“I can do that,” Grelda said. She certainly planned to return, and regularly. As soon as she leveled up, in fact. And she would most certainly be keeping an eye on the auction house for enchantnts she thought would be valuable. I should tell Dradur and Yair, she thought, knowing her friends would most certainly want to learn here, too.
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