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The mont Eron stepped forward, the strange shimr in the air around the old man’s hut fractured like a glass pane struck by a hamr. The warped twilight of the cursed land wavered and folded in on itself.

In the next breath, he was standing once more in that dim, cavernous space—the sa dungeon-like hall where it had all started. The air slled faintly of soot and hot tal, just like before.

A deep, resonant chi echoed in his ears. His system’s interface flared alive.

[Quest Complete: Legacy of the Ashedforge]Status: Completed.Rewards:

New Class Unlocked:

Unique Trait:Emberheart’s Endurance – All crafted weapons and armor gain 5% durability.

Skill Learned:Forge’s Whisper – When working at a forge, allows you to instinctively sense the "temper" of materials, improving quality of crafted items.

Reputation Gain: 500 [Velondar city]

Legacy Progression:Ashedforge’s Bond (1/3)

Eron blinked. His hands trembled—not from fear, but from the sudden rush of it all.

Another notification pulsed into view.

[Title Acquired: Scion of the Ashedforge]A title bestowed upon those who have inherited the will of the long-fallen forge-masters. Increases blacksmithing efficiency by 10% and grants minor resistance to heat-based damage.

The text lingered before fading, leaving Eron staring at the now-quiet forge in the corner of the dungeon room. The forge itself wasn’t lit—no glow of coals, no ringing hamr—but he could feel sothing in it. Almost like it was watching him.

"Guess it’s official now..." he murmured, voice rough. "Blacksmith, huh?"

"Ashedforge huh? That was the na of the old man’s forge. seems like I am his heir."

His reflection in the tal rim of the forge looked older sohow. Tired eyes, soot-smudged cheeks, and the faintest trace of... acceptance.

He thought back to the old man. Their final exchange still clung to him—sharp in places, but strangely warm in others. The pain of knowing what had happened to those families would never fully fade. But for the first ti, he felt like he was carrying that story forward rather than being crushed under it.

The teleportation glyph shimred at the far end of the room. With a slow breath, Eron stepped onto it.

[Confirm Return to Velondar?]Yes / No

He selected Yes.

The world bent sideways.

In the next instant, he was standing at Velondar’s outskirts—the southern trade gate, where caravans ca and went like a restless tide. The air hit him first: warm, dry, and filled with the scents of spice, sweat, and distant ocean wind.

Velondar lood ahead like a living fortress. Sunlight danced across its sandstone walls, catching on banners dyed in the city’s deep azure and gold. Above the gates, brass horns announced the arrival of yet another rchant train.

Eron didn’t move imdiately. He stood at the side of the dusty road, just outside the press of travelers, letting the mont stretch.

Everything felt... different.

The dirt beneath his boots seed to hold him a little steadier. The clang of a blacksmith’s hamr sowhere beyond the gates didn’t sound like noise anymore—it sounded like an invitation. The conversations of passing rchants, the creak of wagon wheels, the faint tang of iron in the air... all of it felt sharper. More real.

As he started walking, he noticed the weight of the hamr on his back. The sa starter tool he’d been given when the quest began—but now, it felt like more than just a lump of forged tal. It was a promise.

He passed the guards without a word. The gatehouse shadow stretched over him for a mont before spilling him into Velondar’s bustling streets.

Here, life was in constant motion. Spice-sellers hawked their goods with rhythmic chants. Jewelers displayed trays of cut stones beneath awnings that glittered in the afternoon light. An inn’s open window spilled the sll of roasting at into the street, making his stomach growl.

For a mont, he let himself slow to the pace of the crowd. His boots scuffed against the sun-ward stone. He had no rush in him—not now.

..............

Near the artisan district, he stopped in front of a familiar building: The Anvil’s Crown. Its signboard—a wrought-iron crown resting atop a hamr—creaked in the wind.

Inside, the rhythmic clang of steel-on-steel was steady, almost ditative.

Master Thalric, the smith who’d once dismissed Eron as "just another curious wanderer," looked up from his anvil. His brow furrowed when he saw the shift in Eron’s stance.

"You look... different," Thalric said, setting his hamr aside.

Flashback:

The clang of hamr on steel echoed through the cramped workshop, the rhythm steady but unhurried. The air inside slled of charcoal, hot iron, and age-old dust—a scent that clung to the skin like a stubborn mory.

Eron had stood just inside the doorway, his boots leaving faint muddy prints on the worn stone floor. He didn’t know whether to knock, speak, or simply turn around and leave.

Behind the anvil, an old man with a fra like knotted wood barely looked up. His beard was a wiry tangle streaked with white, and his eyes—sharp, calculating—flickered to Eron for the briefest of monts before returning to the glowing bar of tal on the anvil.

"Whatever you’re here for, I don’t sell my stuff to gawkers," the old man said without pausing in his work. His voice was gravel—worn down by years of shouting over roaring forges.

Eron’s jaw tightened. "I’m not here to buy. I’m here to learn."

That earned him a pause. The hamr stilled, its head hovering just above the steel, as if even the tal itself was waiting for an answer.

"You?" Thalric’s gaze dragged over Eron like a weight. "Hands too soft, stance too uncertain. You’ve got the look of soone who’s never even lifted a hamr in anger, let alone in craft. Smithing is for those who understand pain—yours and the tal’s. You... you look like you’d quit the mont the blisters start."

Eron bristled. "And you look like soone who’s decided the world’s already made up its mind for him."

Thalric let out sothing between a grunt and a chuckle, though his expression stayed hard. "Words don’t forge steel, boy." He set the hamr down with a dull thud and turned fully toward Eron. "Tell why you think you can stand here, wasting my ti."

Eron hesitated. The truth wasn’t clean. He didn’t have a heroic speech—only a stubborn fire that refused to die no matter how many tis life tried to snuff it out. "Because I need sothing I can shape with my own hands," he said finally. "It will allow to help my friends and that ’s what I want to do."

Thalric studied him for a long, silent mont. Then he shook his head. "Wanting is cheap. Steel demands more."

And just like that, the hamr rose again, the conversation dismissed. Eron lingered at the threshold for another heartbeat, then turned to leave, feeling the sting of the words even more than the heat of the forge.

.........

Back to present

"I am," Eron replied simply. He stepped forward, unhooking the hamr from his back and placing it on the workbench. "And I’m ready to learn for real this ti."

Thalric studied him for a long mont before nodding once. "Then let’s see what that forge of yours has made of you."

...............

By nightfall, his clothes were stiff with sweat and soot. The forge’s heat still clung to him as he stepped outside. Velondar’s streets were quieter now, lit by the warm glow of oil lamps.

He made his way slowly toward the inn where Rai and Alex were likely staying. His steps were unhurried, almost ceremonial.

For the first ti since entering this ga, he didn’t feel like he was chasing after soone else’s pace. He wasn’t just following Rai’s lead, or reacting to the next fight, or scrambling to survive.

He had his own path now. One built on both the mistakes of the past and the forge’s promise of creation.

And as he walked beneath Velondar’s lamplight, Eron felt it—an ember of resolve, steady and warm, carried ho from the ashes.

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