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The clang of hamrs and the roar of the molten rivers echoed like a symphony through the cavern as Branthor led the group onward throughout The HeartForge on the tour.

The oppressive heat all around the various students had quickly beco a steady rhythm against their enchanted barriers, and the sound of the forge’s beating heart resonated through every breath they took.

Every breath the student took ford as visible steam as they walked forward. The bridge the group was walking on curved around the imnse molten lake that released an outrageous amount of heat around them.

The bridge was winding towards a titanic gate carved from obsidian and crimson steel.

Symbols older than the current written language itself were etched into its surface, glowing faintly with a dim, ancient pulse, alive, as if the gate itself rembered every spark that had ever been struck upon it.

Branthor raised one hand, and the runes across his body flared brightly, synchronizing with the symbols on the gate and suddenly, the gate shuddered, and a low, tallic groan reverberated through the entire cavern as the massive doors parted.

A wave of heat and radiance washed out, so intense that even through Ysvara’s enchantnts, the group instinctively shielded their faces.

Beyond lay the beating heart of the Infernus Smiths.

The chamber that awaited them dwarfed everything they had seen before. It was a world unto itself, vast, alive, and radiant with creation. Thousands of anvils floated in the air, suspended by gravitational runes, and on each one, a smith worked tirelessly.

Sparks rained like stars and rivers of molten tal flowed along carved channels into grand crucibles that humd with binding sigils. Chains the size of towers dangled from the unseen ceiling, pulling and rotating enormous slabs of glowing ore.

At the center of it all stood a colossus of pure fire and shadow, an anvil the size of a castle, inscribed with symbols that predated civilization itself. Each rune pulsed with the rhythm of the forge’s heartbeat.

"Welco," Branthor said, spreading his enormous arms wide, "to the Soul-Foundry of the Infernus Clan, where the strongest weapons are ford from our flas,"

His deep voice filled the space with power, and even the younger smiths paused montarily in their work to glance toward the visitors.

"The air itself sings here," Miranda whispered, her voice hushed in reverence, "Every spark feels... alive."

"It is," Branthor said, "As I explained before, the flas we use here have mories. Each ember carries the echo of every weapon we’ve forged in the past, which builds our experience to improve our craft the more ti passes. That is the true essence of the HeartForge, and why we’ve maintained such quality, creation and mory intertwined."

"A-lot of our history has been lost to ti, but we still rember the important parts of course," Branthor said, and he began walking, leading them along a stone walkway that overlooked the working smiths.

"Long before the various histories were written, before the major empires were ford and the Abyss had a firm foothold in the world, there were the Infernus Smiths. We were not born of solely flesh or blood, but also of molten soul and burning stone. The First Fla gave us life."

He placed a heavy hand over his chest, the runes beneath his skin flaring briefly like living veins of magma. "We were its keepers, the first forgers, the Shapers of the Dawn. When the first stars were slted into the heavens, our ancestors hamred the sparks that beca their cores."

A reverent silence followed. Even the arrogant and outspoken Zeus looked humbled, his golden eyes reflecting the rivers of fire.

Branthor’s molten gaze drifted upward, toward a colossal mural carved into the wall of the chamber.

It depicted an enormous figure of fla and shadow, a being so imnse it seed to hold the world in its grasp, surrounded by legions of smiths wielding hamrs made of starlight.

"That," Branthor said, his voice reverberating with pride, "is Kha’dran, the First Forgemaster. While the nas of a-lot of figures in our past have been lost to ti, Kha’dran will never be forgotten,"

"It was he who shaped the weapons of the first gods, the Blade of Dawn, the Spear of Aetherion, the Shackles of the Abyss. All ca from his hands."

Elara stepped closer, her gaze tracing the carvings. "And you’ve preserved his legacy all this ti?"

Branthor nodded gravely. "Through war, cataclysm, and silence. We do not age as others do, and even when the world forgets, the fire does not. Each Forgemaster inherits the runes of those before them — their mory, their skill, their burden."

His molten eyes glowed faintly brighter. "I have borne that fla for over two thousand years."

The words hit the students like a weight. Even Miranda, whose sense of wonder often seed boundless, could only stare in quiet disbelief.

Lira tilted her head slightly, crimson eyes thoughtful. "Two thousand years of forging... You must have seen every age of the world pass."

Branthor chuckled, the sound like distant thunder, "Aye. I’ve seen empires rise and fall like sparks in the wind. I’ve seen the Divine wage war upon the Abyss, and mortals claw at the bones of gods for power. And through it all, we have kept the forge burning, for soone must rember how to rebuild when the world burns itself down again."

They crossed another bridge, this one arched over a pit filled with molten chains that slowly twisted together, weaving patterns of glowing sigils.

Zeus peered down into the pit, wiping sweat from his brow despite the enchantnts. "You really forge using magma like that? It looks like the mountain itself is alive."

Branthor’s eyes glead. "The mountain is alive, boy. The Heartforge is no re volcano, it’s a living artifact, one of the last remnants of the world before written word,"

As they walked, they passed a chamber where younger smiths chanted in deep, resonant tones, their voices blending with the rhythm of the molten rivers.

Each chant shaped the fire, coaxing it into new forms. Weapons floated in midair, their glowing blades slowly hardening as if breathing.

"This is where the Flabound are born," Branthor said. "Each weapon we forge is given a soul, a spark of will. It is not enough to make a sword sharp. It must also desire to cut."

He led them onward to a raised platform where the molten flows converged into a circular pool of blinding brightness.

Above it hung several completed weapons, blades, hamrs, and staves, suspended in midair, their forms constantly shifting between solid and liquid as though deciding what they wished to be.

Each of the students could feel it, the faint presence of consciousness within those weapons. They all felt like the weapons were staring at them, even judging them for if they were worthy to wield the weapon.

Branthor approached the pool and rested a massive hand on the railing, "This is the Crucible of Souls. Every weapon forged here is tempered not only in fla, but in intent. The will of its forger becos its first breath."

"The will of the maker defines the weapon’s fate," Ysvara said quietly, "A blade born of fear will always tremble. A blade born of vengeance will always seek blood."

Branthor’s grin widened, showing teeth like carved obsidian. "Aye. Well said."

The Forgemaster turned back toward the molten crucible. "Rember that, all of you. The greatest sin a smith can commit is forging without purpose. The fla demands aning. Without it, even the brightest steel becos ash."

For a long while, the group stood in silence, watching the molten fire ripple like a living thing. The forge roared, the hamrs sang, and above it all, Branthor’s deep voice carried like an ancient hymn.

"We have been called many things over the years you know," he said softly. "Monsters. Artisans. Keepers. But we are, and have always been, the sa, those who shape the world, so that others may wield it. Now, we work to stop the Abyss,"

He turned then, facing the students fully, his molten veins pulsing with every word.

"You co from nations that war. From bloodlines that chase glory. But here, in the forge, none of that matters. All are equal before fla, for the fire burns truth into every soul. You will either endure it... or be remade."

The air seed to hum in answer. Even Ysvara, silent and regal beside him, inclined her head slightly, a rare gesture of respect.

And in that mont, as the light of the Heartforge danced across their faces, every student, even the proud Zeus, felt the sa thing.

A quiet awe, and a reverence that transcended normalcy. The sense that they stood not rely in a place of craftsmanship, but before a living god of fla and mory.

And as Branthor’s deep, rumbling voice faded into the rhythm of the forge, the HeartForge itself seed to breathe again, releasing steady and ancient thumps.

~Thoom~ Thoom~Thoom!~

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