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A Flame to Come

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An alarmed murmur consumed the damp air of the justice hall. An older man, a dwarf with a face covered in a silver beard and clothed in purple robes, held up a golden mace.“Indeed esteemed dwellers, artisans and nobles. It is true as it is said. Our fellow—or should I say former—brother was seized by the northern gate having exited the Great Hall, carrying the tongs, our only remaining artifact from our esteemed founder Narog Hamar – Hallowed is his name!”

The noise made a pause and in unison the chamber echoed “Hallowed is his name.”

The Patriarch continued—"Does the accused confess to these charges?"

The murmur did not rise anew, but the gathered circle instead let their glances fall upon a sturdy, dwarven man with ashen black hair sitting between them, arched down upon a stool and fettered with a chain to an iron bar on the floor. As the nerves were about to build amongst the gathered, the man straightened himself as if roused from slumber, intensively returning the gaze to the man who had adressed him.

“Yes”. His sombre replied echoed as he let his thoughts to be swept away again in a sea of voices.

He closed his eyes and as he did, his sister – seemingly the only silent member of the crowd – was fervently trying to comprehend the sudden series of events that had escalated to this very scenario—Her brother, recently a respected priest with integrity, now an almost foreign criminal. She could not make sense of it, particularly as she was still obsessed by the appearance of his supposed self-mutilation, the bronze-coloured flames tattooed to his eyelids.

She could not let go of it with her eyes, and as she stared it felt as if something burnt her. Whether it
was something present or the mere memory of their interactions, she could not tell.


“By the Gods brother! What is this and who did this to you!”

Lithi was obviously distraught by the appearance of her brother’s eyelids, when closed the skin of
each had been decorated with the image of a bronze-coloured flickering flame. Never before had his
eyes appeared as dark and remote, as when juxtaposed to these bright and radiant colours.

“You weren’t meant to see that!”

“How could I not!? And what do you mean by ‘meant’?”

“It means ... I did it to myself.”

Her twitching motions betrayed her and it was evident that she became rapidly distressed by what she had just heard, much to his dismay as he had hoped for fewer, if any, expressions of affection.

“I’ve told you what I’ve seen. I’ve told you that I feel something calling me. I’ve told you.

“Yes, and I’ve heard you brother. But the fact that I’ve heard it makes it no less nonsense, nor any less concerning to hear those very words expressed by my brother’s mouth.”

“What would you have me do?! LIE?! Am I to swear and sermon on things of which I do not hear? Of which I do not see nor feel?”

“Faith falters sometimes, as do the Gods. Patience brother.”

“Don’t belittle me – I know damn well the meaning of those words! Who dons the robes? I do!”

“Then act as such!”

“I do! I know the meaning of faith. I know the meaning of communion. And the Gods may have faltered. But someone or something is seeking me in its stead. Maybe the Gods have left me to some other fate. Maybe they were never there. But there is something there, which I am to pursue.”

“What do you expect? The Patriarch won’t stand for this, neither your physical nor verbal heresy.” She felt as though she was arguing with a madman.

I know.” he replied, reciprocating those very sensations and isolating her from his professed knowledge – The thought of which made her only far more concerned. As she examined him in silence, he closed his eyes and opened them again. From a burning flame, to utter darkness. He had never felt this distant to her before, as she stood there observing him in his chambers.


“Settle down!” the Patriarch cried, but the aged dwarf himself knew that no body of water had been tamed with mere utterances, and once stirred they carry debris and foam as scornful gestures and spitting manifested itself. But just as flood turns to ebb, an old dwarf knows how to manage his kin.

“He is hereby condemned to exile.”

The ocean of contempt withdrew and an empty, silent shore of uncertainty appeared. To a dwarf, death was the most terrible fate. But being exiled from dwarven society was also uncertain. Many lacked experience of the outside world, knowing only of it through stories and tall tales. Death in that sense was a known, quick fate. Exile was the opposite – A fate, but unknown and slow if it could be put in those terms at all.

“Would any soul want to speak up on behalf of the accused?”

Ithil, warily turning her head between the observing Patriarch and her chastised brother as if panicked hesitation, caught glimpse of his eyes. His head was slumped over and turned down as if in shame, but she felt his eyes penetrating her, and saw how he discretely shook his head. “He knew this, he wanted this.” she thought, just as suddenly nauseated, infuriated and confused. She was panicking, although not hesitating, as she slowly retreated backwards, surrendering to instinct. As the tears began to protrude, she turned and disappeared into the hushed crowd without a sound, and quietly became part of the collection of petrified statues surrounding him

“It is settled.”* The Patriarch declared in an almost jovial tone, and ill-hidden satisfaction. “You leave tonight.”
* The chronicles differ as to what the utterances were. According to some sources he was quoted as ‘That’s a bingo!’


He gave one last glance to the belongings he had spread out on the bed in his chambers, hoping he had remembered it all. The disagreement with his sister did nothing to assist his concentration as he felt doubt beginning to seep through. “Maybe she is right? But in what sense? How can I stand here, profess one creed, and then have it guide me elsewhere? How can you speak of closing a door, as you hold it open?” No, it had to be. For every time he obeyed, he had been rewarded. For months it had grown on him, only to intensify. This door was opening.

First it had been a cold, long, dark, cavernous hall – A boring dwarven dream by most standards. But eventually the further wall had begun to crack, two horizontal openings, slowly widening each night. Then one night, a fire had come alive in them. He had gazed into it, and felt the radiant heat penetrate his very being. As he touched the flames, he came awake – With a burnt hand. As time went by the openings had greater and greater flames licking out of them, as if eyes set in the very rock with flaming eyelashes.

These dreams began to preoccupy him, and they continued as his previous religious sentiment faded in favour of this new feature of his sentient life. And as he did, the distinctions faded and thoughts turned into prayers and prayers became granted, and his dreams progressed as well. But for some time he had been stuck. By the flickering eyes there had appeared an anvil and a bucket of water, and inside one of the openings he could see something inside the fire burning – But he had no
means by which to retrieve or work it. He needed some tongs, and he understood what it meant.

Zigilgathol had been founded by Hamar the Forger. Of his time there remained only one artifact, a pair of tongs hung behind the Patriarchs seat in the great hall – A symbol of what needs to be built. As local law decreed, all punishments was to be proportionate to the crime. All crime was met with scorn, but the punishment of theft was a return of property. Infidelity was divorce. Murder was punished by death. As he belonged to the priesthood, albeit more and more distancing himself, Thikil had realized the Patriarch might be lenient so as to not diminish their societal status, among which the Patriarch’s own son belonged. For these reasons he first thought he ought to let tattoo himself, so as to mutilate the face which the religious creed insisted must remain untouched. As such, he would be forced to leave the priesthood. After which, if he were to steal Hamar’s tools, he would be banished. Or so he hoped.

He considered for a moment that he may have been slow to interpret his dreams and had maybe been expected to leave his home and livelihood for some time. Maybe he had failed in some regard and was now being tested – To receive a sentence such that he may not remain but nor may suffer. Regardless, this time there were no misunderstandings. He snapped himself from his thoughts and began packing all his equipment and ready it for departure. Soon enough he would make it to the Great Hall and intentionally get caught, after which this would come to use. Or so he hoped.


“I think it’s unfair” one of the guards let know with an air of confession.

“Bah, serves him right.” the other muttered.

Thikil was being hurriedly escorted by the guards to the southern gate. By late noon the sentence had been passed and it had decreed he was to be out by sundown. Somehow though surprisingly darkness was yet late off and he was already fully dressed and on the go – Massaging his right hand.

“I mean, I agree but we only jailed him two days ago and now he’s out. Like that. Say he’s innocent, would you want to be treated like that?”

“Except I’m not.” Both guards stopped, turned around at looked at him. Those were the only words he had uttered ever since they were fetched to carry out the sentence. They both gave him a confused look, then each other before realizing that he had been co-operative to the extent they were just walking along with him with little regard as to the timeless art of managing a criminal.

“Don’t you stop, on you go” the less sympathetic guard snarled at Thikil, as he motioned him forward by thrusting his axe into the air. And just as co-operative he had been, he continued to be. As the guards continued jabbering on the contrasting merits of Dwarven jurisprudence on their way to his imminent departure, Thikil was as happily surprised on the turn of events. The guards had caught him, retrieved Hamar’s tongs, put him in jail and then the rest was just the Patriarch’s own workings – To hurriedly and comfortably rid himself of a personal nuisance through a show trial.

It was all perfect. Except Ithil’s reaction of course. More so Thikil hoped that it was what he had foreseen in his last dream in jail. As he was pondering it’s ultimate meaning and interpretation, he was presented with the southern gate – Wide open. He did not turn to look at his companions.

“A few hours off there’s a trading post. I suppose it might’ve been pitch black had you’ve been kicked out by sundown but as it looks now, you might make it”.

“Well, considering you get caught out of luck and sense inside these walls I would not count on it being any different out there. Good riddance.”

“The same to you. Give my sister my regards.”

His last words caught him off-guard. He had not intended to say anything of the sort.

“Outta the way!” As he was standing there stuck, trying to decide on whether he had acted in accordance with the intention of the dream a tradesman passed by on a cart, forcing him to move out of the way. As it rolled past him his intuition got the better of him, and after a quick nod to the guards he went after the cart. The irritable guard shouted something behind his back that he didn’t make out as he hurried forward, trying to understand what he had lost – And hoping it was to a greater gain than the potential company of a lonesome trader handling a donkey cart.

 

Sleep had come surprisingly easy to him in jail, maybe out of exhaustion for what had been, before the thought of what was to come or simple eagerness of what might be discovered.

Once again he found himself present in the cavernous hall, with two openings that suddenly came alight with flickering flames. He paced towards the fires, the footsteps echoing forcefully against a ceiling which could not be made out – if it existed at all.

He glanced inside the fire and as usual he could make out something within there, but this time looking towards the anvil – Tongs! He would be able to extract this something out of the searing flames which was working it. He grabbed the tongs off the old anvil and inspected them. Just like Hamar’s. He hoped with these tools he would gain some insight as to the workings of this divine entity he had found himself subjected to by extracting the item. But he managed to restrain his eager curiousity, realizing that he would not want to expose his entire body so close to the flame.

So instead he slowly approached the fire from the side and only exposing as little as possible of his body, so as to not get burnt by the radiant heat. By this point in time the openings had expanded so much from his initial visions that he could actually place his hand inside of it without touching the flames. As such he slowly reached inside with the tongs, grabbing for the item inside.

He could not reach it, so he extended his hand inside a little further.

He felt himself touching the object using the tongs, and began to navigate it using the tools.

And just as he struggled with reaching, the flames came alive.

Both fires turned towards him, as if though they were pupils constricting – Suddenly fiercesomely piercing him with their gaze.

He was frozen in terror for a moment, and just as he was to pull his hand out the very rock shut itself on him. Stuck with his arm in the wall in an excruciating and crushing pain, he awoke, flailing and screaming – Not sure what it had meant or what he had just witnessed.

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