The mont Kael returned to Bryndis, he summoned his inner circle to the newly constructed engineering hall—a vast, vaulted chamber of reinforced stone and gleaming mythril beams.
The air humd with latent magic, the scent of ozone and hot tal thick as Durnek and his dwarven craftsn bustled about, adjusting arcane calibrations.
Lucien, Cedric, Sylvaine, and the rest of Kael’s engineers stood around a central table where a massive schematic glowed to life under Kael’s touch. The intricate design pulsed with holographic precision—a multi-tiered structure of concentric rings, humming with layered enchantnts.
"This," Kael said, his voice cutting through the murmurs, "is the Arcanum Forge."
The room fell silent as they studied the blueprint. The design was unlike anything they’d seen—part foundry, part enchantnt matrix, part living intelligence.
Lucien leaned forward, his silver ponytail slipping over his shoulder as he traced a finger through the hologram. "The mana conduits... they’re arranged in fractal patterns. But the resonance frequencies—"
"Would normally cause catastrophic feedback," Kael finished. "Unless stabilized by an artificial intelligence-driven enchantnt core."
Cedric’s rough hands hovered over the material processing schematics. His eyes widened. "This isn’t just a workshop. It’s a... a magical automaton that builds other automatons."
Durnek pushed through the crowd, his soot-streaked goggles reflecting the holographic light. The dwarf’s wild red beard bristled as he studied the plans.
"By Moradin’s hamr..." he breathed in his thick dwarven accent. "The structural integrity alone... the precision of these enchantnt channels..." He looked up at Kael, his sharp eyes alight. "Lad, this is either genius or madness. How in the deep realms did ye conceive such a thing?"
Kael’s lips quirked. "Let’s call it... inspired adaptation."
Gareth, ever the pragmatist, frowned. "The theory is sound, but the execution—" He gestured to the central AI core schematic. "This level of enchantnt programming would take years to perfect."
"It would," Kael agreed. "Which is why I’ll handle the core enchantnts myself." He tapped his Arc Nexus, the gauntlet pulsing in response. "The rest of you have your assignnts."
He turned to Sylvaine. "I need two hundred workers—your best earth mages and stone-shapers. The foundation must be laid within the week."
Sylvaine’s hazel eyes glead. "Consider it done."
Then to the dwarves: "Durnek, your team handles the structural frawork. The alloy ratios must be exact—no deviations from the schematics."
The dwarf artificer grinned, his teeth flashing beneath his wild beard. "Aye, Baron! Leave the bones o’ this beauty to and mine. We’ll have ’er standing true as mountain stone!"
Murmurs spread through the gathered engineers—so awed, so skeptical. A young mage apprentice whispered, "Is this even possible to build?"
Kael didn’t hesitate. "It is."
His certainty silenced the room.
Lucien straightened, his analytical mind already dissecting the challenges. "The calibration protocols alone will require—"
"Are accounted for in Section 17-D," Kael interrupted, zooming the hologram to reveal nested subroutines. "The forge will self-correct minor imperfections during operation."
Cedric whistled low. "You’ve thought of everything."
"Not everything," Kael admitted. "But enough to begin." He swept his gaze across the assembled team—human, dwarf, mage, and engineer alike. "We have three months before the king marches. The Arcanum Forge must be operational in two."
A stunned silence followed. Even Durnek blinked. "Two months? For a project o’ this scale?"
Kael’s gauntlet flared as the hologram shifted, revealing an accelerated construction tiline. "With round-the-clock shifts and proper mana allocation, it’s achievable." He paused. "Barely."
The dwarven artificer threw back his head and laughed, the sound echoing through the hall.
"By the forges! Ye’ve got stones heavier than grandpappy’s anvil!" He slamd a fist against his chest. "But if any clan can do it, it’s mine. Consider it sworn, Baron—we’ll have this marvel spitting out wonders afore the king knows what hit ’im!"
Kael nodded. "Then we begin at dawn."
As the engineers dispersed—already arguing over material lists and shift rotations—Kael remained at the table, studying the holographic forge. The Nexus pulsed against his wrist.
"Probability of successful completion within tifra: 68.4%," Nexus reported.
Kael’s fingers brushed the schematics. "Then we’ll have to make up the difference."
Outside, the first lights of dawn tinged the sky. Ti was slipping away.
But so too were the limits of what this world believed possible.
---
The massive doors of Hangar Two groaned open as Kael strode in, the morning light spilling across the polished obsidian floor. Sentinel 002 lood before him—a sleek, silver predator resting on its landing skids, its hull humming with dormant power.
Lucien and Cedric stood at attention near the vessel’s boarding ramp, their expressions a mix of anticipation and apprehension.
"Status report," Kael said, his gaze sweeping over the craft.
Lucien cleared his throat. "All systems have been triple-checked, my lord. The thrust dampener incident has been—"
Kael held up a hand, silencing him. "About that." His voice was calm, but the weight behind it made Lucien stiffen. "Explain what happened."
Lucien’s fingers twitched toward his rune-marked robes before he caught himself. He glanced at Cedric, then back to Kael, scratching his chin awkwardly.
"I... may have forgotten to check the thrust dampener calibration before the test flight."
Cedric snorted. "Nearly turned us into a firework over the rchant district."
Kael fixed Lucien with a steady gaze. "That oversight could have had serious consequences," he said, his voice calm but firm. "Your skills are valuable, Lucien, but they an nothing without proper attention to safety protocols. We can’t afford mistakes like this - not with lives at stake."
Lucien’s pale cheeks flushed. "It won’t happen again, my lord."
"See that it doesn’t." Kael turned toward the Sentinel. "Now let’s see if you’ve actually fixed it."
Kael moved through the vessel with thodical precision, his Arc Nexus flaring as he analyzed every system. His fingers traced the humming runes along the hull, feeling the steady pulse of energy beneath his touch.
"Resonance is stable," he murmured. "Good."
Crouching beneath the engines, he examined the wind thrusters, nodding in approval at the perfectly balanced enchantnts. He glanced over his shoulder at Cedric. "Your work, I assu?"
The engineer grinned. "Down to the last rune, my lord."
Standing, Kael moved to the twin arcane cannons. The barrels thrumd at his touch, their targeting matrices humming with lethal precision. "Sharper than Sentinel 001’s," he observed.
Finally, he placed his gauntleted hand on the crystal control console. The Arc Nexus pulsed as data stread through the interface.
"Nexus—full diagnostic on the core programming."
The AI’s voice echoed in his mind. "Running analysis... No critical errors detected. Core stability at 98.6%. Sentinel is operational."
Kael stepped back from the console, satisfied. "Prep for test flight."
The hangar crew scrambled as Kael took the pilot’s seat, Lucien and Cedric strapping into the observation stations behind him. With a thought, the Sentinel’s engines whined to life, anti-gravity fields lifting the vessel smoothly off the deck.
"Opening hangar doors!" a technician shouted.
Morning sunlight flooded in as the massive panels retracted. Kael pushed the throttle forward—gently this ti—and Sentinel 002 glided into the sky with predatory grace.
"Stealth systems—activate."
The hull shimred, bending light around itself until the Sentinel vanished from sight. Below, workers in the courtyard gasped as their shadows suddenly stretched without cause.
"Stealth field stable," Lucien reported, monitoring the rune matrices. "No mana leakage."
Kael banked eastward, pushing speed. "Testing defensive barriers."
A pulse of his gauntlet, and layered shields flared to life—interlocking hexagons of blue energy that rippled across the hull.
"Barrier integrity at 100%," Cedric confird. "Even stronger than Sentinel 001’s."
For an hour they tested every system—radar scanning ranges, communication arrays, even the cabin’s environntal controls. All flawless.
Finally, Kael turned the vessel toward the open ocean. "Ti for the real test."
The Sentinel streaked over the waves at full combat speed, salt spray flashing to steam against its shields. Fifty miles from shore, Kael brought them to a hover.
"Arming primary weapons."
The twin arcane cannons unfolded from their housings with a chanical purr, their barrels glowing with gathering energy.
"Target that rock formation." Kael pointed to a distant cluster of sea stacks jutting from the water.
Lucien’s fingers danced across his console. "Locked. Firing solution calculated."
Kael didn’t hesitate. "Fire."
The world turned white.
Twin beams of concentrated Proton Cannons out—not the wild bolts of traditional battlemages, but precise, sustained streams of destruction. The sea stacks vaporized in an explosion of superheated steam, the concussion wave sending up a circular wall of water fifty feet high.
When the mist cleared, only bubbling froth remained where solid stone had been.
Cedric let out a low whistle. "Well... that’ll leave a mark."
Kael studied the energy readings. "Minimal mana drain. Heat dissipation within tolerances." He allowed himself a small smile. "Sentinel 002 is combat-ready."
As they turned back toward Bryndis, the Arc Nexus pulsed. "Incoming communication from Harold. The Arcanum Forge foundation is complete ahead of schedule."
Kael’s smile widened.
Two steps closer to victory.
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