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Chapter 198: Chapter 193: Dwarves, Aetherwings, and Titans

Location: Multiple Realms

Ti: 20-22 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI

Realm: Upper Realm (Various Territories)

Part One: The Forges Rember

The Irondeep Holds had been carved into the Worldspine Mountains over the course of thirty thousand years.

Not rely excavated—carved. Every tunnel, every chamber, every soaring cavern bore the marks of deliberate artistry. Dwarven stonework wasn’t about removing rock; it was about revealing the shapes that had always existed within it. The mountains held cathedrals in their hearts, and dwarven hands simply freed them.

High Thane Thorgrund Ironheart stood in the Chamber of First Forging, eight thousand years of life weighing on shoulders broad enough to bear it. He was short by human standards—barely four feet—but built like the mountain itself, all dense muscle and stone-hard bone beneath skin weathered to the color of granite. His beard, iron-grey streaked with white, fell to his belt in seven braids, each braid representing a millennium of service to his people. His eyes were the deep amber of molten bronze, and they reflected the light of forges that had burned continuously for longer than most civilizations had existed.

The Chamber of First Forging was the oldest space in the Irondeep Holds. Here, forty thousand years ago, the first dwarven smiths had learned their craft from beings who shaped reality as easily as dwarves shaped tal. The Luminari had co to the mountains seeking craftsn, and they had found a race whose understanding of stone and ore bordered on the mystical. A partnership had been born—Creators providing knowledge, dwarves providing skill, together producing artifacts that still functioned perfectly after four hundred centuries.

Most of those artifacts sat silent now, their purposes fulfilled or forgotten. The great forges still burned, but they produced ordinary talwork—weapons and tools and armor for trade with the few races who still dealt with dwarves. The true forges, the ones the Luminari had helped design, had gone cold when the Creators departed.

Until tonight.

Thorgrund stared at Forge Seventeen with an expression that mixed wonder and terror in equal asure.

Forge Seventeen was one of the Maker Forges—twelve in total, built to specifications that no living dwarf fully understood. They occupied the deepest level of the Chamber of First Forging, arranged in a circle around a central anvil that had been carved from a single piece of star-iron. For forty thousand years, they had stood dark and silent, monunts to an age when dwarves had crafted wonders beyond imagination.

Now Forge Seventeen was burning.

Not with ordinary fire. The flas that danced within its crucible were gold and silver intertwined, essence-fire that produced no smoke and needed no fuel. Luminari fire. The kind of fla that could lt adamantine, reshape mithril, transform base tals into alloys that shouldn’t be possible according to every law of tallurgy.

And it wasn’t alone.

As Thorgrund watched, Forge Twelve flickered to life. Then Forge Three. Then Forge Nine. One by one, the Maker Forges were waking, their flas casting dancing shadows across walls carved with runes that had been decorative for millennia—runes that were now beginning to glow with soft golden light.

"High Thane."

Thorgrund turned to find his Master Smith approaching—Brunhild Coalheart, six thousand years old, the finest talworker the Holds had produced in three generations. Her face was pale beneath its perpetual coating of forge-soot, her eyes wide as she stared at the awakening forges.

"I’m seeing it too," Thorgrund said before she could ask. "I’m seeing it, and I don’t believe it."

"The Maker Forges haven’t burned since before the Sundering. Since before the Race Wars. Since—"

"Since the Creators left." Thorgrund’s voice was hoarse. "I know."

He approached Forge Seventeen slowly, reverently, the way a faithful priest might approach a suddenly manifest god. The heat that radiated from it was intense but not painful—welcoming, almost. Inviting. As if the forge recognized him as one who belonged in its presence.

"The chronicles say the Maker Forges would only burn when Luminari essence was present," Brunhild said. "That they were designed to respond to Creator power, to amplify it, to allow the crafting of artifacts that ordinary forges couldn’t produce."

"I know what the chronicles say."

"Then this ans—"

"I know what it ans." Thorgrund reached out, letting his calloused hand hover near the golden flas. They didn’t burn him. If anything, they seed to reach toward his palm, curious and gentle. "Sowhere in Doha, sothing carrying Luminari essence has awakened. Sothing powerful enough that forges dormant for forty thousand years can feel it across whatever distance separates us."

He turned to face Brunhild, and in his ancient eyes she saw sothing she hadn’t seen in centuries—hope.

"Send word to the Clan Fathers. I want every smith who can hold a hamr in this chamber within the hour." A fierce grin split his weathered face. "The Maker Forges burn again, Brunhild. Do you understand what that ans? The projects we’ve kept blueprints for across four hundred centuries—the artifacts we’ve dread of completing—they’re possible again."

"But High Thane, we don’t know what’s caused this. We don’t know if it will last. We don’t even know where—"

"No." Thorgrund cut her off. "We don’t know where. The forges sense Luminari essence, but they can’t point us to its source. Whatever has awakened is hidden from us—protected, perhaps, or simply too far away for precise tracking." He shrugged massive shoulders. "It doesn’t matter. What matters is that the power is there. The Makers’ legacy stirs again. And we—" he gestured at the circle of blazing forges "—we need to be ready."

"Ready for what?"

Thorgrund turned back to Forge Seventeen, watching the gold-and-silver flas dance.

"For forty thousand years, we’ve been keepers of knowledge we couldn’t use. Guardians of techniques we couldn’t practice. The Luminari trusted us with their secrets, and we’ve preserved them faithfully, generation after generation, even when it seed pointless. Even when younger dwarves asked why we bothered maintaining blueprints for artifacts we’d never build."

He drew himself up to his full height—not impressive by human standards, but radiating a dignity that made the chamber itself seem to stand at attention.

"Now we know why. The Makers saw further than we ever could. They knew this day would co—the day when their essence returned to Doha, when their forges would burn again, when everything we’ve preserved would finally have purpose." His voice dropped to sothing almost reverent. "I don’t know who carries their blood. I don’t know where they hide or what dangers they face. But I know this: when they need weapons, when they need armor, when they need artifacts worthy of Luminari heritage... we will be ready to provide them."

He turned to Brunhild one final ti.

"The Irondeep Holds have slept for forty millennia. Tonight, we wake. Spread the word to every clan, every hold, every dwarven settlent in the mountains." His grin was fierce and proud and ancient. "The Maker Forges burn. The age of waiting is over. And the dwarves of Irondeep will not be found wanting when the Creators’ heir cos calling."

***

Part Two: The Sky Rembers

The Windborne Citadel floated three miles above the highest peaks of the Stormwall Mountains, suspended on currents of essence that had flowed since before the first Zartonesh invasion.

From below, it would have been invisible—the citadel’s foundations were carved from cloudstone, a mineral so attuned to Galebreath essence that it naturally bent light around itself. Only those who knew where to look, and how to look, could perceive the massive structure that hung motionless in the eternal winds.

It was beautiful in the way that storms were beautiful—vast and powerful and utterly indifferent to the concerns of ground-dwellers. Towers of crystallized air rose from platforms of solidified wind. Bridges of woven lightning connected structures that seed to defy every law of architecture. Gardens grew in open air, their roots drinking essence instead of soil, their flowers blooming in colors that existed nowhere else in Doha.

This was the ho of the Aetherwings, and it had been their sanctuary for longer than most races rembered they existed.

Matriarch Velkaria stood on the Observation Platform at the citadel’s highest point, her wings folded against her back, her silver eyes tracking patterns in the dinsional fabric that only her kind could see.

She was ancient by any standard—fourteen thousand years old, though she looked no older than a human woman in her pri. Her features were sharp and angular, beautiful in a fierce way that made lesser beings uncomfortable. Her skin held a faint luminescence, as if starlight had been woven into her flesh. Her wings, currently folded, spanned twenty feet when extended—great sweeping appendages of feather and mbrane that shifted color depending on the light, sotis silver, sotis gold, sotis colors that had no nas in any ground-dweller tongue.

The Aetherwings had served the Luminari as scouts and ssengers, their natural ability to perceive and travel through dinsional rifts making them invaluable to Creators who operated across multiple planes of existence. When the Luminari departed, the Aetherwings had retreated to their sky citadels, maintaining their ancient techniques, watching the dinsional boundaries that separated Doha from the infinite realms beyond.

Those boundaries had been unstable for forty thousand years. The Luminari’s departure had weakened them, and the four Zartonesh invasions had damaged them further. Velkaria had spent her entire life watching rifts tear open without warning, sensing the constant pressure of other dinsions pushing against Doha’s reality, knowing that soday the barriers might fail entirely.

Tonight, for the first ti in her fourteen millennia of existence, the rifts were stable.

"You see it too."

Velkaria didn’t turn at the voice. She’d sensed her daughter’s approach long before the younger Aetherwing landed on the platform.

"I see it," she confird. "The dinsional fabric is... healing. Knitting itself back together. Rifts that have been bleeding essence for centuries are closing. The pressure from beyond is easing." She finally turned to face Thessaly, her eldest surviving child, eight thousand years old and bearing the sa fierce beauty that marked their line. "I haven’t felt the boundaries this stable since before I was born."

"The elders are frightened," Thessaly said. "They rember the stories—how the dinsions were calm during the Golden Era, how everything began to unravel when the Creators left. If the boundaries are stabilizing now..."

"Then sothing carrying Luminari essence has awakened." Velkaria’s voice was carefully neutral. "Sothing powerful enough to affect the fundantal structure of reality across Doha."

"Shouldn’t we be celebrating? If the rifts are healing—"

"The rifts are healing because sothing is healing them. Sothing we don’t understand, can’t locate, and have no way to evaluate." Velkaria turned back to the dinsional patterns, watching essence flow through channels that had been damaged for four hundred centuries. "The Luminari were many things, daughter. Powerful. Wise. Generous with their knowledge. But they were also demanding. They expected absolute loyalty from those who served them. Absolute obedience. Absolute dedication to purposes they rarely explained."

She spread her wings slightly, catching a current of essence that whispered secrets in languages older than speech.

"Our ancestors served them faithfully, and in return received gifts beyond asure—the ability to walk between dinsions, to see the fabric of reality itself, to fly on wings of pure essence. But those gifts ca with obligations. Expectations. When the Luminari said go, our ancestors went. When they said stay, our ancestors stayed. When they said die..." She let the sentence hang unfinished.

"You think the heir will be the sa?"

"I think we don’t know anything about this heir. We don’t know who they are, where they hide, what they want, or what they’ll demand of races who once served the Creators." Velkaria’s silver eyes were hard. "The dwarves will rush to pledge themselves, I’m certain. They’ve spent forty millennia dreaming of the Maker Forges burning again, of completing projects left unfinished since the Golden Era. The elves will debate and deliberate, but eventually their precious oaths will compel them to kneel. And the Titans..." She shook her head. "The Titans will follow their ancient programming without question, because that’s what Titans do."

"And the Aetherwings?"

Velkaria was silent for a long mont, watching the dinsional patterns flow and shift.

"The Aetherwings will watch," she said finally. "We will observe. We will gather information. We will not rush to serve an unknown master simply because our ancestors served that master’s ancestors forty thousand years ago." She turned to face her daughter fully. "The Luminari were gone for four hundred centuries, Thessaly. Four invasions. The Race Wars. The Sundering. All of it, we faced without them. We survived without them. We thrived without them, in our own way."

"And if this heir proves worthy of service?"

"Then we will serve. But worthy must be demonstrated, not assud. The blood of Creators does not automatically confer wisdom, or kindness, or the right to command races who have managed perfectly well on their own." Velkaria’s wings rustled with suppressed agitation. "Pyratheon was Luminari. When he returned to Doha, he didn’t co as a savior—he ca as a destroyer. The Sundering killed millions. He tore the world apart in his grief and rage, and then he left again, abandoning us to clean up the devastation."

She reached out, touching a strand of dinsional essence that pulsed with new stability.

"I am grateful that the rifts are healing. I am glad that the barriers are strengthening. But I will not pledge my people to an unknown power simply because that power carries the echo of beings who abandoned us forty millennia ago." Her voice hardened. "Let the heir prove themselves. Let them demonstrate that they’re worthy of the loyalty our ancestors gave freely. Until then, the Aetherwings watch. The Aetherwings wait. And the Aetherwings keep their own counsel."

Thessaly bowed her head in acknowledgnt. "I’ll inform the elders."

"Do. And tell them this as well: strengthen the citadel’s wards. Increase patrols along the boundary lines. Whatever has awakened, others will have sensed it too—including beings who may not have Doha’s best interests at heart." Velkaria’s wings spread fully, catching essence currents that lifted her slightly off the platform. "The age of waiting may be ending. That doesn’t an the age of caution should end with it."

She launched herself into the sky, riding winds that had carried her ancestors since the dawn of ti, watching dinsional patterns that were finally—finally—beginning to rember what stability felt like.

Sowhere in Doha, Luminari essence burned again.

Velkaria intended to know everything about that essence before she decided what her people would do about it.

***

Part Three: The Stone Rembers

Deep beneath the Shattered Peaks, in a valley sealed since the aftermath of the Race Wars, sothing stirred.

The Titan Vaults had been created as a refuge—a place where the greatest of the Luminari’s warrior-servants could sleep away the ages, waiting for a ti when they would be needed again. The Creators had understood that Titans were not ant for peace. They were beings of war and construction, built for purposes that had no place in a world without cosmic threats. Better to let them sleep than to watch them dwindle into purposelessness.

Sixteen thousand years they had slumbered, since the end of the Race Wars. Sixteen thousand years of dreams that spanned centuries, of consciousness that drifted in patterns too vast for mortal minds to comprehend. The Titans had been ancient when the Golden Era ended, had fought in all four Zartonesh invasions, and had built structures that still stood forty millennia later. They had earned their rest.

Now, one of them was waking.

Korvathus the Mountain-Breaker opened eyes that had been closed since before humans learned to forge bronze. The process was slow—it took three full days for awareness to seep back into a body that had been stone for sixteen millennia. His thoughts moved like glaciers, vast and inexorable, gradually rembering what it ant to be.

He was lying on his back, he realized eventually. On a bed carved from the living rock of the mountain, sized for a being who stood thirty-two feet tall and weighed more than most buildings. The chamber around him was dark, but Titans didn’t need light—they felt the stone, read its vibrations, understood the world through senses that had nothing to do with eyes.

Other presences surrounded him. His brothers and sisters in stone, still sleeping, still dreaming. He could feel them—two hundred and thirty-seven Titans, all that remained of a race that had once numbered in the tens of thousands. The wars had taken most of them. The wars always took most of them. Titans were made for battle, and battle was made for death.

But sothing had changed.

Korvathus lay still, letting his ancient mind process sensations he hadn’t felt in sixteen thousand years. The stone spoke to him, as it always had—the deep vibrations of the planet’s bones, the slow heartbeat of Doha itself. But there was sothing else now. A new resonance. A frequency that hadn’t existed when he’d closed his eyes.

Luminari essence.

He would have gasped if Titans gasped. The sensation was unmistakable—he’d served the Creators for twenty thousand years before they departed, had fought beside them, built for them, bled for them. He knew their essence the way a child knows its mother’s voice.

And he was feeling it now. Faint. Distant. Concealed behind protections that prevented precise location. But there, undeniably there, after forty millennia of absence.

The Makers return, whispered the part of his mind that was still dreaming. The Makers return, and we must be ready.

Korvathus began the slow process of sitting up. It took him most of a day—muscles unused for sixteen thousand years didn’t respond quickly, even for a Titan. But eventually he was upright, his back against the chamber wall, his eyes adjusting to a darkness that posed no obstacle to his kind.

The other Titans slept on around him. He could feel their dreams, vast, slow things that spanned centuries and touched on mories older than most civilizations. They dread of the Golden Era, when Luminari walked among them and gave them purpose. They dread of wars fought and won, of structures built that defied mortal understanding. They dread of the day when they would be needed again.

That day had co.

But Korvathus didn’t wake them. Not yet. He wasn’t foolish enough to rouse two hundred warriors based on a sensation he barely understood. The Makers’ essence had returned—that much was certain. But in what form? Through what vessel? For what purpose?

He reached out with senses that most races couldn’t comprehend, touching the stone that surrounded them, reading the vibrations that carried information across continental distances. The mountains rembered everything, and they shared their mories with those patient enough to listen.

Wars. Invasions. The Sundering that had torn Doha into three realms. Sixteen thousand years of history, compressed into patterns that Korvathus absorbed over the course of hours. The world had changed while he slept. Races had risen and fallen. Powers had shifted. The Luminari’s creations—phoenixes and silver dragons—had been hunted to extinction, or near enough.

And yet... the essence was there. Unmistakable. Impossible, but real.

An heir, Korvathus realized. Not the Makers themselves, but their blood. Their legacy. Soone carrying enough of their essence that even I can feel it, even here, even through whatever protections hide them from detection.

He considered his options, such as they were. Titans were not subtle creatures. They did not spy or sche or play political gas. When they acted, they acted directly, and their actions tended to reshape landscapes.

But they also understood patience. They had been born from stone, after all, and stone understood ti in ways that flesh never could.

We will wait, Korvathus decided. We will wake slowly, one by one, and we will prepare. The Makers’ heir will reveal themselves when they are ready. When they need us. When the ti cos for Titans to fulfill the purpose we were created for.

He began the process of standing—another day’s work, at least. Around him, he felt other presences beginning to stir. The resonance of Luminari essence was affecting all of them, seeping through sixteen thousand years of slumber, awakening instincts that had been dormant since before the Race Wars.

Two hundred and thirty-seven Titans, beginning to wake.

It would take months, perhaps years, for all of them to fully rouse. Titans did not hurry. But when they finally stood, when they finally marched, when they finally rembered what they had been created to do...

The mountains themselves would tremble.

And sowhere in Doha, an heir who didn’t yet know what forces were stirring in their na would eventually learn that the servants of the Luminari had long mories, and longer patience, and a loyalty that forty thousand years of silence had done nothing to diminish.

***

Epilogue: The World Rembers

Across Doha, in hidden places and forgotten corners, the ancient races stirred.

In the Whisperwood, an elven scholar pored over texts that glowed with light unseen for four hundred centuries, searching for knowledge her ancestors had preserved against exactly this mont.

In the Irondeep Holds, dwarven smiths gathered around forges that burned with Luminari fire, pulling out blueprints that had been theoretical dreams since before the first Zartonesh invasion.

In the Windborne Citadel, an Aetherwing matriarch watched dinsional rifts heal for the first ti in living mory, weighing caution against curiosity, obligation against independence.

In the sealed vaults beneath the Shattered Peaks, Titans woke from dreams that had lasted sixteen millennia, ancient purposes stirring in minds older than most civilizations.

None of them knew what had awakened. None of them could locate the source—whatever carried Luminari essence was hidden behind protections that defied even the most sophisticated tracking. But all of them felt it. All of them rembered, in blood and bone and essence, what it had ant to serve beings who could reshape reality with a thought.

The Golden Era had ended forty thousand years ago. Four Zartonesh invasions. The devastating Race Wars. The Sundering that had nearly destroyed the world. Sixteen thousand years of isolation, of hiding, of preserving traditions that seed increasingly pointless.

And now... this.

A stirring. An awakening. The faintest echo of power that shouldn’t exist anymore, reaching across impossible distances to touch races that had almost forgotten what they were waiting for.

The heir didn’t know they were being sensed. Didn’t know that their transformation had sent ripples through the fabric of Doha itself. Didn’t know that ancient oaths were activating, dormant forges were burning, dinsional boundaries were healing, and sleeping giants were opening eyes that had been closed since before humans built their first cities.

The heir was hidden. Protected. Unknown.

But the world rembered.

And the world was waking up.

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