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Standing in the center of a spare, stone-walled chamber in the Hall of Countenance, Torin let the last shimr of his Ebonyflesh spell dissipate. The magical armor faded from his skin like black smoke, leaving only the faint scent of ozone and cold tal in the air.

As he did, a slow, creeping realization dawned on him. It was the kind of feeling you get when the innkeeper brings your stew and sets down two sets of utensils. You just stare for a second, a cold suspicion settling in your gut that you might be… fat. That you should consider ordering smaller portions henceforth.

This was one of those monts. Except instead of extra stew, Torin was starting to suspect he'd gotten himself into sothing more complicated than he'd bargained for.

Again.

Why was the Archmage of the entire College of Winterhold, Savos Aren himself, standing here in a dusty side-room, watching him perform spells like a particularly well-trained troll at a ad festival?

And why, by Shor's beard, was the old Dunr looking at him like he'd just found him kneeling over a still-warm corpse with a bloody dagger?

The Archmage let out a low, thoughtful hum that echoed in the quiet room.

His red eyes, sharp and weary all at once, never left Torin's face. "And you maintain," Savos said, his voice as dry as the ashlands of his holand, "that you learned all of these spells… by yourself?"

Torin let the last of the magicka settle back into his core. He shrugged, the movent easy despite the scrutiny. "Not exactly. I learned Oakflesh and Stoneflesh from proper spell tos. Found 'em here and there, out and about." He paused, eting Savos's gaze directly. "The Ironflesh and Ebonyflesh, though… yeah. I worked those out on my own."

Savos's eyes narrowed. The suspicion in them hardened into sothing more pointed, more professional. "On your own. And how, precisely, does one 'work out' expert and adept level Alteration spells? These are complex formulae, the result of centuries of refinent."

Torin scratched the back of his head, feeling oddly like he was explaining how he'd fixed a wobbly table, not reinvented a branch of magical theory. "Well… I've lived next to the Skyforge my whole life. You breathe in that smoke, you hear the hamr on the steel, you see the way Eorlund coaxes strength from the ore. You understand that iron is a… a concept. Tough, stubborn, unyielding."

He gestured vaguely at his own arm. "Applying that concept to skin, the sa way you'd apply the concept of an oak tree's bark or a mountain's stone… the logic felt the sa. The translation into a spell, though…"

He let out a short breath. "That took so ti. A lot of trial and error. More error, honestly. Had a nasty month where my skin kept trying to rust in the rain once I cast it successfully for the first ti."

He said it lightly, but the underlying truth was anything but. It spoke of endless hours of focus, of dangerous experintation, of a mind that didn't just learn magic but reverse-engineered it from the world around him.

Savos was silent for a long mont, his expression unreadable.

Savos considered the young man's words. What he described wasn't entirely far-fetched. Innovation was the bedrock of the arcane arts. Every spell in every to had been, at so point, raw theory in soone's mind, shaped by observation and will.

A mind with an innate understanding of material properties—especially one living beside a legendary forge—could plausibly bridge the gap from Stoneflesh to Ironflesh. It would be a rough, personal version of the spell, but the principle held.

But Ebonyflesh? That was a different beast entirely.

"And the other one?" Savos asked, his voice deceptively casual. "Ebony is not simply 'tough.' It is rare, magical, and notoriously difficult to work with, even for master smiths. Do you have a source of raw ebony ore at your disposal?"

Torin chuckled, a dry, humorless sound. "Not a source, exactly. More of a lucky coincidence. I'm looked on favorably by a certain Orc stronghold. Dushnikh Yal. They've got a deep mine."

He folded his arms, leaning back against the edge of a stone table. "They happened to haul up a decent-sized chunk of raw ebony a while back. On account of our… friendship… they let study it. For a few months. For a very fair price."

Savos nodded slowly. That, at least, tracked. Orc strongholds were so of the few places in Skyrim where you might find unrefined ebony, and their concept of 'blood-kin' could explain the access.

"And?" He pressed, his red eyes keen. "What exactly did you glean from these months of study? Ebony's secrets are not given up lightly."

Torin's smile turned bitter, tinged with frustration at the mory. "Not much, at first. I tested its hardness until my tools blunted. asured its density until my scales broke. Charted its resistance to fla, frost, shock, even common acids. I had notebooks full of numbers, but the essence of it… the thing that makes ebony more than just super-dense rock…"

He shook his head. "It kept slipping away. Like trying to catch smoke. I had to return the ore long before I cracked it."

He rubbed his forehead, his gaze turning inward, searching for the words. "And then, months later, I had a dream. I don't rember the details. Just… impressions. Darkness. Depth. Pressure. And a woman. Feathered, like a hawk, but not quite."

He looked up, eting Savos's eyes squarely. "When I woke up, I understood. Ebony isn't just hard. It's old. It's mory. It's blood and divinity sunk into the bones of the world under impossible weight. It resists, it endures. It rembers being part of sothing… divine."

He spread his hands, a faint, almost apologetic shimr of the black, glass-like armor flickering over his knuckles before vanishing. "That's what I was missing. The taphor. Once I had that, translating it into a spell matrix was… not easy, but possible. It's armor, but It's a layer of condensed history."

The chamber fell silent. Savos Aren did not move. His expression remained that of a carved statue, but behind his eyes, a storm of thought was raging.

A dream.

The boy received inspiration. Divine, or at least deeply spiritual, insight. That changed everything. It moved Torin from the category of 'alarming prodigy with a a suspected Daedric crutch' into sothing far more rare, and far more dangerous: a touched soul.

Inside Savos Aren's mind, a silent, vicious war erupted.

One side, the dominant side forged by decades of thankless stewardship, scread in pragmatic alarm. This boy is a lightning rod for trouble and political complication! that voice hissed.

He speaks of dreams and feather-clad won. He wields power he shouldn't have. Send him away. Now. Before his destiny drags the College into a storm we cannot weather. Our only duty is survival, not harboring troublemaker!

It was the voice of the tired administrator, the keeper of a fragile peace, and it demanded imdiate, cautious exile.

But there was another voice. A smaller, quieter one, nearly buried under years of ledgers, diplomatic snubs, and petty faculty squabbles. It was the voice of the young r who had once co to Winterhold hungry for knowledge, not responsibility.

It was the voice that was exhausted—exhausted of placating jarls, of scrounging for funding, of watching brilliant minds waste away in obscurity, or worst yet, leave for the Synod.

It was the voice of a scholar who'd forgotten what true, raw, world-altering potential looked like.

And that voice whispered a treacherous, hopeful thought: What if?

What if this boy wasn't just a problem, but an opportunity? He was capable of greatness. He had already etched his na into the arcane ledger by sheer, stubborn will and what sounded like divine whimsy.

He was a Nord, a Companion, a figure who commanded respect in the very circles that spat on the College's steps. If his reputation grew, and the College was seen as his crucible… it could undo a century of suspicion in a single generation.

It could make the na 'Winterhold' synonymous with glory again, not just crumbling ruins and strange lights.

The internal debate was fierce but brief. The cautious administrator had been fighting for so long, it had grown weak. The hopeful scholar saw a chance, however risky, to actually build sothing again.

Savos let out a long, weary sigh that seed to deflate him by an inch. The tension in the room softened, replaced by a new, speculative energy.

"Well," he said, his voice dry but lacking its earlier edge of dismissal. "Color impressed, young man. I'm not yet sure what to make of you, but it would certainly be a profound waste of talent—and a personal insult to the pursuit of knowledge—to leave you to your own devices."

He gave Torin one last, appraising look, as if seeing him for the first ti. Not as a threat or a nuisance, but as an extraordinarily complex, potentially valuable new entry in the College's ledger.

"Since your… affinities… seem to lie so strongly with the School of Alteration," Savos continued, "I will place your education in the hands of Tolfdir. He is a more patient and knowledgeable man than you are likely to et again in this life. He is also our Master of Alteration. You would do well to listen to him. He may help you understand why your spells work, not just that they do."

He turned, his robes whispering against the stone floor. "Find him in the Hall of the Elents or his study. Tell him I sent you. And, Torin?" Savos paused at the doorway, glancing back, his red eyes glinting in the magelight. "Try not to break anything. We're on a tight budget."

...

The blizzard that had swallowed Winterhold's bridge was a re suggestion out on the open tundra. Here, it was a tyrant. Wind scread across the frozen expanse, scouring the rock bare and piling snow into razor-edged drifts.

It was a place of white noise and biting silence, where the cold nopped and gnawed.

Echo moved through it with the steady, unbothered pace of a creature born for harsher things. The snow that would have buried a horse ca only to her knees. Her thick, shaggy fur, matted with ice, was a fortress against the wind. She didn't fight the storm; she simply existed within it, a dark, purposeful shadow against the endless white.

Her mind, a landscape of instinct, mory, and a bond that felt like a warm stone in her chest, held a simple directive: Find shelter and sustenance. Wait for the call.

The call would co. The man-that-was-pack would make the low, rumbling sound, and she would go. Until then, she needed a den. Sowhere out of the wind's teeth, where the snow couldn't reach.

Her nose, a miracle of sensitivity even in the frozen air, caught a scent on a wayward gust. Not just rock and ice. Damp stone. Moss. Old at.

A cave.

It was a dark seam in the side of a wind-scarred cliff, half-hidden by a curtain of frozen waterfall. The entrance was just wide enough for her to squeeze through without scraping her sides. Perfect.

She pushed inside, shaking a small avalanche of snow from her shoulders. The sudden silence was imdiate, profound. The wind's scream beca a muffled moan at the mouth of the cave. The air inside was still, cold, but bearable. It slled of wet earth, mineral deposits, and that lingering, faint tang of old kills.

And sothing else.

Sothing musky, thick, and very much alive.

Echo went still, her dark eyes adjusting to the gloom. The cave widened into a small chamber. And in the center, on a nest of filthy hides and gnawed bones, a shape uncoiled itself from sleep.

It was massive, even by her standards. Pale, stringy fur covered a body of knotted muscle and thick, sagging skin. Its arms were too long, ending in claws like shards of dirty ice.

A heavy brow ridge shadowed tiny, stupid, hostile eyes that now blinked open, fixing on her. A low, guttural growl vibrated through the chamber, shaking loose a trickle of dust from the ceiling.

A frost troll. And this was its den.

The troll hauled itself to its feet, its head brushing the cave's ceiling. It snuffed the air, its piggish nose wrinkling at her unfamiliar scent—bear, yes, but also man-smoke and steel and strange magic. It didn't like it. This was its place. Its kills were on the floor. Its stink was on the walls.

A challenge.

Echo didn't growl. She lowered her head, her own shoulders bunching with power. The warm-stone feeling in her chest didn't waver. This was not her pack. This was a thing in the way of shelter. A thing between her and her new lair.

The troll's growl erupted into a deafening, mindless roar of outrage, spraying frozen spittle. It slapped its chest with fists that could shatter stone, the sound like rolling thunder in the enclosed space.

Echo answered.

Her roar wasn't mindless. It was a deep, booming declaration of territory, of intent, a sound that had made bandits drop their swords and wolves turn tail. It filled the cave, drowning out the troll's noise, vibrating in the bones scattered on the floor.

For one frozen heartbeat, the two giants faced each other in the murky den, breath pluming in the cold air.

Then the troll charged, a blur of pale fury, its claws raking the stone floor.

Echo charged to et it, a wave of dark fur and fury, a living avalanche.

The cave's walls trembled as the roars rged into one crashing, violent sound.

...

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