Lucavion stepped into the forge with the kind of presence that didn’t seek attention—but seized it all the sa.
The mont the ward-sealed door hissed open and the light of the enchantnts spilled over his form, the air in the room shifted. Not from heat. Not from pressure. From recognition.
The runes along the walls flickered.
The forge fla bent ever so slightly toward him.
And the blade—still nestled on the anvil like a relic awaiting war—seed to resonate.
Not loudly. Not visually.
But with a hush. As if the weapon itself had held its breath.
[Why are you smiling?]
Vitaliara’s voice drifted beside him, not amused, not accusing—just curious, with that airy, feline tilt of mischief beneath the words.
"I’m not," Lucavion replied, his tone smooth, casual.
[You are,] she shot back instantly. [Your smirk’s spread halfway across your face. You look like a fox caught in the chicken coop.]
He gave a slow exhale that might have been a laugh. "I’m simply curious."
[Curious?]
"Well, I’m about to et a sword I didn’t forge, in a room where nothing dares whisper without permission. You’d be smiling too."
Vitaliara’s paws padded across the stone beside him in her small, low-slung form, tail flicking once.
[You and your obsessions with swords...]
"It kept alive," he said simply. No drama. Just fact.
Vitaliara didn’t reply imdiately.
The weight of his words—not heavy, but deliberate—hung in the silence between tal and fla.
She didn’t press.
Because she knew.
He wasn’t speaking about just this life.
Or just this place.
Not the Academy, nor the Empire.
But further back.
Further in.
Where nas had different anings, and fire ca without warning.
And in those monts?
It had been the sword that saved him.
Not for glory.
Not for revenge.
Just survival.
The air thickened the deeper Lucavion walked into the forge—each step sinking into the heat like a slow descent into a hearth’s heart. The enchantnts in the walls no longer flickered for show; they pulsed with purpose, their glow casting long shadows over shelves of alloy and racks of runebound tools. The warmth here was the kind that peeled back weakness, that tested your blood for steel.
But Lucavion didn’t flinch.
The heat coiled around him like an old acquaintance. Familiar. Harmless. He’d walked through worse—through blazefields and collapsed vaults, through dreams that burned hotter than any forge.
Fire did not concern him.
It rembered him.
He stopped just at the lip of the inner forge, where the real work was done. Where the walls weren’t just stone but mory, scorched into permanence.
Harlan looked up from where he stood, wiping thick hands on a soot-stained cloth. His eyes crinkled behind that beard more charcoal than white, and his voice ca low, gravelled, but steady.
"Kid. You’re early."
Lucavion gave a casual tilt of his head, just enough to let the smirk rise. "Co on, old man. I ca when I was allowed to."
"Which ans," Harlan drawled, tossing the cloth aside, "you would’ve co earlier if you could."
"Of course."
A beat.
Then a grunt that might’ve been a laugh, or just the forge shifting with him.
"Heh..."
Harlan stepped aside, revealing the blade—not just with ceremony, but with sothing close to pride. The heat shimred faintly around it, like the air itself couldn’t believe what it was holding.
Lucavion’s eyes didn’t widen.
But they focused.
As if sight alone wasn’t enough to see it.
"I better not be disappointed," he murmured.
Harlan turned, arms folding across that broad chest, the firelight casting deep lines across his face. "Who do you think I am, kid?"
Lucavion finally stepped forward. Close now. One arm-length from the blade.
"I think," he said, voice low, "you’re the man who knows how to make a weapon rember its purpose."
Harlan’s reply was imdiate. Quiet. Final.
"You won’t be."
He reached out, not for the sword—but for the cloth draped beside it. A single, smooth pull.
And the forge fell quiet.
*****
Lucavion didn’t speak.
He just stared.
The blade lay before him in quiet defiance of the heat around it—radiant not from polish, but presence. The surface glead like liquid dusk, blackened silver interlaced with shadows that shimred if one stared too long. Etched lines ran down the length of the blade, weaving through the core with a grace that didn’t belong to battle. They pulsed softly—not with mana, but with mory.
He reached out.
Slowly.
Not reverent. But not careless either.
And the mont his fingers wrapped around the hilt—
It hit.
Not like a flare. Not like an explosion.
But like gravity.
Like ho.
A sensation tore through his arm and down to his core, as if the blade had exhaled and rembered who he was. A resonance—not violent, not overwhelming—but perfect. The hum of aligned frequencies. The fusion of intent.
His breath caught.
Not from shock.
But from recognition.
’This... this is like Rackenshore.’
The mory ghosted behind his eyes—of a younger him, standing barefoot in ash-soaked dirt, holding the original blade in his hands for the first ti. That had been the mont the [Fla of Equinox] had stopped resisting him. When the storm inside him had found a form that could hold it.
This was beyond that.
The conduction was seamless. As if the mana wasn’t channeling through the blade—but with it. His energy flowed through it like water into a carved groove, amplified but not distorted. The hilt t his grip like a handshake rembered from childhood. The balance—flawless. The weight—anchored. Not too light. Not too heavy.
Perfectly his.
He turned the blade slightly.
The edge glinted with the shimr of folded umbracite, and the runes whispered back at him with the soft glow of intent. Not burning. Listening.
Lucavion exhaled, low, steady.
"...You weren’t kidding."
Harlan just watched him, arms still crossed, a faint smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth.
"That’s right. You’re not holding a weapon. You’re holding yourself. Just better."
Lucavion didn’t answer.
He turned the blade again, one hand brushing the flat, feeling the layered reinforcent beneath the surface. Even the sound the blade made as it moved through the air was quieter, deeper—like a promise spoken in steel.
This wasn’t just a refinent.
It was a rebirth.
He glanced toward the old man, eyes sharp with sothing unspoken.
"You added to the core alignnt."
Harlan snorted. "Course I did. You think I’m gonna hand over a blade that only ets your last standard? This thing could gut a thunder serpent and still be ready for the second course."
Lucavion chuckled once—brief and real.
"I’ll test that later."
"You better."
The silence that followed wasn’t uncomfortable.
It was full.
Lucavion turned back to the blade, holding it upright now. His reflection shimred across its surface—slightly distorted, but his all the sa.
And for the first ti in a long ti, he felt... settled.
Not safe.
Just aligned.
[You look like soone who fell in love,] Vitaliara’s voice teased, soft and amused.
"I might have," he murmured.
She padded around the anvil, her feline form graceful, tail curling as she looked up.
[At least she’s sharper than your last girlfriend.]
Lucavion didn’t dignify that with a response.
But the corner of his mouth twitched.
Just enough to be a smile.
Yet a voice will take him out of his dreams.
"Wait. That’s not all."
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