The moonfang daggers still hummed faintly in his hands as Ren turned to Master Ferrin, eyes gleaming with satisfaction. But the moment of triumph quickly gave way to his next concern—armor.
"If I'm going to survive what's coming," he said, sheathing the blades across his back, "I'll need more than these." He gestured toward the wolf pelt draped over his shoulders. "I need real gear. Chest, arms, greaves. Something sturdy."
Ferrin didn't even look up from where he was stoking the coals. "Then find a proper smith. I've got three commissions waiting, a noble's order backed up, and a student who still hasn't returned with my black steel shipment. I'm not making a full set of gear for some pup with fancy knives and fire in his eyes."
Ren frowned. "I'll pay. I've got—"
"You could wave gold in my face and I'd still say no," Ferrin snapped. "Coin doesn't buy me time. And it sure as hell doesn't inspire me."
Ren stepped back, deflated for only a second. But then he glanced to the side—his eyes catching on a large, metal-studded barrel shoved into the forge's back corner. It was overflowing with discarded plates, bent buckles, dulled rivets, and fractured bits of enchanted scrap. None of it looked salvageable at first glance, but Ren saw something different.
Potential.
The gears in his mind turned rapidly.
I don't need new material… I need to reshape what's been forgotten.
His eyes narrowed. He turned back to Ferrin.
"What about the scrap?" Ren asked.
Ferrin blinked. "What about it?"
"I want to buy it. The whole barrel. And… I want to use your forge."
The old smith straightened, incredulous. "You're serious?"
"I'll pay. Gold. For the scraps. For forge time. Let me try."
Ferrin's scowl deepened. "Boy, you're either mad or desperate."
"Both," Ren replied without hesitation. "But I'm also serious. You said yourself—those daggers are alive. I helped bring them into being. I learned from you. Let me see what I can make."
Ferrin crossed his arms, gaze hard. "You want to melt down twisted plate and broken guard-rings and turn it into battle-ready gear? That's not forging, boy. That's praying for miracles."
"I'm not praying," Ren said calmly. "I'm experimenting."
A long silence followed. The forge hissed. Sparks cracked in the hearth.
Finally, Ferrin snorted and turned away. "Ten gold. For the whole pile. You warp my hearth, burn down the shop, or crack one of my rune anvils—I'll throw you into the cooling pit myself."
"Deal."
Ren handed over the coin without flinching. A steep price, maybe, but gold was worthless compared to opportunity.
The coins clinked into Ferrin's calloused hand, and the smith gave a short grunt before walking toward the rear door. "The forge is yours until dawn. Let's see if the fire teaches you something… or eats you alive."
And then Ren stood alone, facing the glowing heart of the forge.
He stared at the barrel of junk metal—old blades, scorched mail, half-rings, fractured pauldrons—and smiled.
"This is my grind now," he whispered.
He rolled up his sleeves, summoned the Mana Imprint skill, and got to work.
One by one, he extracted pieces, reheated them, separated alloys, and reshaped fragments. He used Elemental Thread to infuse structure into metal that had once been brittle. He chanted the runes Ferrin had used—imperfectly at first, but with growing fluency—and cast each part in new molds he etched with makeshift rune patterns.
His muscles burned. His mana drained. But every strike of the hammer felt right.
And the system responded:
Skill Rank Up: Mana Imprint – Lv2 → Lv3
Skill Rank Up: Forge-Lore – Lv1 → Lv2
New Skill Acquired: Scrap Tempering – Lv1
You've learned to refine damaged or discarded equipment into usable gear. Forged armor made this way retains unpredictable traits but gains resilience through creative reinforcement.
By the time the coals began to dim and the night's chill crept into the forge, Ren stood before the anvil, sweat-soaked and soot-streaked, staring down at the results of his labor.
They were… underwhelming.
The armor he had attempted to craft was functional at best. Plates were unevenly shaped. The fit was awkward. Some of the enchantments hadn't taken, and a few pieces had warped during the tempering process. One greave cracked along a weak seam the moment he tried to flex it.
He sighed, wiping grime from his brow. His arms ached. His back screamed. The result wasn't what he had imagined.
But it wasn't failure.
Not truly.
Skill Rank Up: Mana Imprint – Lv3 → Lv4
Skill Rank Up: Forge-Lore – Lv2 → Lv3
Scrap Tempering – Lv1 → Lv2
Despite the flaws in his armor, the system acknowledged his effort. The skills had grown. That meant he had grown.
As he packed the best of what he'd made into his satchel—salvaging a chestplate that could at least serve as training gear—he heard a rough voice behind him.
"Disaster," Master Ferrin muttered, stepping into view. "But educational."
Ren chuckled weakly. "I know. Still, worth the ten gold, I think."
Ferrin grunted. "You learned something, which is more than most. If you want more scrap, you'll pay the same way."
Ren nodded. "I'll be back. I want to keep working. Keep leveling. I'll take anything you're going to toss."
The smith grumbled but didn't object. "Fine. Just don't clog up my forge when I've real orders."
With that, Ren slung his pack over his shoulder and left the forge, the scent of metal still clinging to his clothes.
He found the inn not long after—"The Boar and Lantern"—a warm timber-framed building with flickering lanternlight in its windows. Inside, the common room glowed with hearthfire and the soft hum of conversation.
Ren paid for a room without argument. The innkeeper, a heavy-set woman with kind eyes, handed him a key and a plate of food without even asking. "You look half-dead. Eat first."
He blinked. "Right… food."
Only then did he realize just how long it had been since his last real meal.
He sat quietly in a corner while she brought him a bowl of hot soup—thick with root vegetables and bits of seasoned meat—alongside a slab of bread and a clay cup of clean water. Ren ate in silence, savoring every bite. Warmth returned to his limbs. His thoughts slowed.
Afterward, he climbed the stairs and entered his room, collapsing into the straw mattress without even undressing fully. The day's exhaustion weighed him down like a mountain. Sleep claimed him almost instantly.
But something woke him.
A soft breeze.
Moonlight streamed through the open window, cool and quiet, casting silver across the wooden floorboards.
Ren sat up slowly, his thoughts drifting back to the forge. The hammer strikes. The dull hiss of magic refusing to bind. The moment the greave cracked.
"Seraphina," he whispered, still half-lost in the haze of sleep.
"I'm here," she replied softly, her voice more subdued than usual.
"That armor… I failed. Was it just my low skill level? Or… am I missing something else?"
There was a pause, as though she were weighing her words.
"Both," she said gently. "Your Forge-Lore and Imprint skills are still underdeveloped. But forging is more than numbers and technique. You lack knowledge in rune harmonization, alloy theory, magical stabilization—fields of study beyond your current access."
Ren leaned back, watching moonlight dance on the ceiling. "So there's more."
"There's always more," Seraphina said. "Blacksmiths study for years to forge enchanted gear. Some dedicate their lives to a single technique. You've taken your first steps. And they mattered."
He closed his eyes. "What else can I do to improve?"
"Seek knowledge. Observe more masters. Experiment. Fail again. And in time… evolve your skills. Perhaps even unlock crafting fusion."
Ren smiled faintly. "Sounds like a grind."
"It is," she replied. "But it is also creation. And creation… is power."
The wind shifted outside, rustling the leaves beyond the window. The forge might have been cold now, but the fire inside him still burned.
Tomorrow, he would begin again.
The bell above the bookstore door chimed gently as Ren stepped into the quiet shop. The air smelled of parchment and dust, with a faint trace of lavender. Rows of tall wooden shelves reached toward the ceiling, each packed with leather-bound tomes, brittle scrolls, and journals with metal clasps. Light from enchanted lanterns flickered gently, casting a warm golden hue over the interior.
A soft voice greeted him before he had fully stepped inside.
"You're new."
Ren turned.
Behind a small counter stood a young woman with sharp emerald eyes and silver-rimmed glasses. Her long dark hair was braided neatly and tucked over one shoulder, and her robe—faded blue and laced with silvery thread—suggested both academia and enchantment. She adjusted her glasses, watching him with mild curiosity.
"Looking for anything in particular?" she asked.
Ren nodded, pulling his hood back. "Something… about forging. Mana flow traces. Runesmithing, maybe."
The librarian's expression sharpened at the mention of those words. She studied him for a heartbeat longer, then motioned for him to follow.
"Section thirteen. Restricted studies—old forging arts and warcraft manuals. Most of it's junk. But there's one book that gets asked about more than most. No one's managed to make much sense of it." She paused. "Maybe you'll be the exception."
Ren trailed her through the shelves until they reached a locked glass case tucked into the farthest corner. She murmured a soft chant, and the lock clicked open.
From within, she retrieved a thick, soot-stained tome bound in blackened iron. The cover was cracked leather, embossed with a forge's anvil breaking apart—flames spilling from the crack like molten rivers. The title, written in forgotten runes, shimmered faintly in his perception.
"The Tome of Broken Flame."
Ren took it into his hands, and the moment he touched the cover, a jolt of understanding sparked behind his eyes.
[New Skill Acquired: Mana Trace Purge Lv1]
Allows complete erasure of residual mana flow from salvaged materials during reforging. Enables clean foundation for re-imprinting.
[New Skill Acquired: Imprint Weave Lv1]
Permits infusion of new mana flow traces using a runic powder blend into molten metal. Requires balance of element, intent, and force.
[New Skill Acquired: Rhythm Hammer Lv1]
An advanced forging technique that utilizes rhythmic strikes to bind new mana traces in geometric harmony. Reduces mana turbulence in final equipment.
Ren blinked. The book wasn't just theory. It was encoded with system recognition—lost knowledge so refined it was still compatible with the world's mechanics.
His mouth curled into a slow, excited grin.
This… was it.
This was what he needed.
He sank into one of the reading tables, flipping page after page. Diagrams danced before him—sketches of forging circles, mana suppression arrays, elemental distortion fields. The techniques were ancient and brutal, but elegant in design. Some of them were clearly meant for war-era mass production, others for elite enchanters who treated their craft like divine art.
But Ren didn't stop there.
Once he finished the tome, he returned to the shelves. Another book—Runic Powder Recipes of the Western Peaks. Then Basic Leatherworking for Nomads. Introduction to Tailoring: Stitch, Weave, Bind. Even Ironflow Martial Theory: Open-Fist and Blade Harmony caught his attention.
Each new book brought new understanding.
And each one unlocked new abilities.
[New Skill Acquired: Basic Leatherworking Lv1]
[New Skill Acquired: Improvised Tailoring Lv1]
[New Skill Acquired: Martial Stance – Counter Edge Lv1]
[New Skill Acquired: Material Analysis Lv2 → Lv3]
[New Skill Acquired: Precision Grip Lv1]
Time dissolved into ink and pages. His body remained seated, but his mind burned with ideas. If I can create armor from scraps… maybe I can stitch a robe that channels elemental resistance. Or gloves that stabilize casting channels. I could even enhance mobility through balance-anchored plating…
It wasn't until a hand gently tapped the table that Ren snapped back into the present.
The librarian stood above him, eyebrows slightly raised.
"Sorry to interrupt your enlightenment," she said dryly, "but I need to close the shop. It's well past midnight."
Ren blinked. He looked at the enchanted lantern by the desk. Its color had dimmed to twilight blue—an indication of deep night.
"I didn't even notice…"
"Clearly," she said with a faint smirk.
He stood up and carefully closed the books, bowing his head respectfully. "Thank you for letting me stay this long. I'll be back."
The librarian gave him a small nod, her eyes softer now. "Then I'll keep the good ones unlocked."
Ren stepped out into the cool night, the stars above him shining like silver needles through the sky. He returned to the inn and collapsed into bed with a satisfied exhaustion. His hands, still sore from hammer work, twitched in his sleep—mimicking the rhythm of his next creation.
Because now he had a plan.
Forge in the day. Study at night.
Skill by skill, piece by piece—Ren Arclight would forge his own future.
The forge hissed awake with the first breath of morning.
Ren stood before the hearth once again, the flames crackling with eager hunger as he laid out a set of warped, failed armor pieces from his earlier attempts. The battered chestplate, half-melted bracers, and uneven shoulder guards were misshapen, dull with slag and shame—but they would become his canvas now.
He exhaled and focused.
"Seraphina," he said under his breath, "ready the new skill."
[Skill: Mana Trace Purge — Active]
Initiating…
The air around him dimmed slightly. The world muffled. Ren raised one gauntleted hand over the twisted chestplate and began channeling the skill. His hand glowed with a pale silver fire—not heat, but purification.
The skill didn't just burn. It dissected.
Mana strands within the metal—once erratic and tangled—flared to visibility. Like knotted threads of ghostly energy, they pulsed in defiance. But Ren pressed harder. The silver glow surged, enveloping the piece in a shimmering field.
And then—
Snap.
The mana strands unraveled one by one, dissolving into glowing motes that drifted away like sparks in the wind.
A moment later, the chestplate dimmed. Its surface dulled, but the energy inside had vanished.
[Mana Trace Purge — Success.]
Residual Flow: 0%
Material Purity: 97%
Bonus: Slight increase in forging compatibility.
Ren grinned. "It worked."
He moved quickly. One by one, he purged the remaining pieces. The warped bracers let out faint whines as their flow traces were cleansed. The jagged greaves vibrated under the pressure of the skill, but eventually submitted.
Once done, he gathered the now-cleansed materials and placed them into the smelting furnace.
Time for the next step.
He retrieved a small pouch—his latest purchase from the alchemist shop down the road. Inside, grains of glimmering dust shimmered in red, blue, and gold hues. Runic powder. Mixed exactly according to the recipe in the Tome of Broken Flame.
He poured a careful measure into the molten pool. The metal shifted instantly—bubbling, glowing with spectral veins. As the heat rose, Ren activated his next skill.
[Skill: Imprint Weave — Active]
Runic Integration Protocol Initiated…
He whispered the chant that came with the skill, voice low and deliberate.
"Form from flame, bind from breath—let my mark etch true through death."
The molten metal pulsed. Fine trails of glowing glyphs spread through the liquid—circuit-like, intricate, elegant. They responded to his intent. The weave patterns from his imagination began forming: endurance, agility, and basic mana channeling. He shaped the infusion with both will and precision.
The skill demanded focus—lose clarity, and the traces would warp.
But Ren held firm.
Finally, he poured the metal into the cast mold and lifted his hammer.
[Skill: Rhythm Hammer — Active]
Pattern: Tri-Phase Pulse (Balanced Flow – Tier I)
His strikes echoed like a drumbeat of creation. Not brute force, but tempo. The hammer moved in sets of three—tap, strike, pulse. Each blow locked a segment of the mana weave in place, smoothing turbulence and aligning the glyphs with geometric symmetry.
The heat fought back. The metal hissed and flickered.
But Ren's hands did not falter.
He struck with rhythm. He struck with intent.
And slowly, for the first time—something took shape.
Two hours later, sweat streaking down his jaw, Ren lifted the finished piece from the water barrel. Steam billowed around him, clouding the forge in misty reverence.
The armor gleamed—not perfect, not ornate—but whole.
[Forged Item: Emberweave Chestplate]
Type: Light Armor
Defense: +16
Bonus: +3 Agility, +1 Mana Regeneration, +4% Fire Resistance
Durability: 90/90
Forge Grade: C+
Trace Alignment: Balanced (78%)
Ren stared at it in awe. Not scrap. Not failure.
A real piece of equipment.
He slumped against the forge wall, letting the wave of exhaustion finally crash over him.
[Forging Skill: Imprint Weave Lv1 → Lv2]
[Forging Skill: Rhythm Hammer Lv1 → Lv2]
[General Forging Lv7 → Lv8]
Master Ferrin's gruff voice cut into the haze. "...Didn't think you'd get anything decent from that junk."
Ren turned, smiling faintly. "Neither did I."
Ferrin grunted. "Still ugly. But functional. Better than most apprentices in their first year. If you're serious about this, I'll keep setting scraps aside. But you pay."
"I'll pay," Ren said immediately. "Every last piece. I'm learning more with every strike."
The blacksmith gave a heavy nod and turned back to his anvil. "Then get some rest. The next batch'll be worse."
Ren chuckled.
Worse meant harder.
Harder meant stronger.
And that meant progress.
The warm glow of the bookstore's lanterns greeted Ren like an old friend.
The dust hanging in the air shimmered beneath the light as he stepped through the door, the bell above him letting out a soft chime. He had returned from the forge exhausted, but after a hot shower and a meal that actually tasted of seasoning, his mind had reignited. The thoughts from earlier—his ideas, the runes, the forging traces—they all begged for more clarity. And he knew where to find it.
Behind the counter, the librarian looked up from a stack of scrolls, her spectacles low on her nose. She offered him a knowing smile.
"I had a feeling you'd be back," she said softly. "You've got the look of someone starved… not for food, but for answers."
Ren gave a tired grin and a respectful nod. "And you have the look of someone who knows exactly where to find them."
She chuckled and motioned for him to follow. "Come. There's more than combat and crafting in this world."
She guided him through a narrow archway deeper into the building—past rows of battle theory and spellbooks, into a quieter, older section. The air here felt older too, the kind that hung over knowledge buried by time and dust.
He dove in with quiet hunger.
First, he took a tome titled "Barrier Theory: Foundations of Protective Magic." A few pages in, and a system prompt shimmered into view.
[New Skill Acquired: Mana Barrier (Active)]
Creates a static barrier that absorbs up to 50 points of damage. Duration scales with Magic.
He grinned. Support magic… that'll come in handy.
Next, he found "Blood and Flow: The Art of Regenerative Threads"—a text detailing how mages once mimicked the body's healing processes through stabilized mana channels.
[New Skill Acquired: Lesser Regeneration (Active)]
Gradually restores HP over time. Amount scales with Magic and Endurance.
Then came "Seeing the Invisible: A Study on Mana Vision."
[New Skill Acquired: Mana Vision (Toggle)]
Reveals mana signatures in creatures, objects, and the environment. Costs 2 MP per second.
Ren sat back, blinking as the faint glow of magical threads flickered into view. Even the bookshelf beside him radiated faint enchantments now. The runes in the spine bindings. The latent auras in scrolls. He could see it all now.
"Unbelievable…" he whispered, and reached for the next book.
He shifted focus. The next row bore faded green spines and alchemical symbols—mortars, vials, symbols of the seven elemental essences.
He opened "Foundations of Reactive Mixtures," and within minutes—
[New Skill Acquired: Basic Alchemy Lv1]
Reading on, he learned not only theory but recipes: Minor Stamina Elixirs, Fire Salts, Binding Adhesives. Every paragraph he read expanded the skill. Every successful concept clicked like a puzzle piece into his mind.
[Basic Alchemy Lv1 → Lv3]
[New Recipe Learned: Basic Mana Potion]
[New Recipe Learned: Salve of Resistance (Fire)]
[New Recipe Learned: Coagulation Draught]
Ren glanced down at his hands. He hadn't touched a cauldron yet. Not even mixed a solution. And yet—he could feel the steps of the process forming like a ritual in his mind. The system wasn't just granting rote knowledge. It was awakening innate potential.
He read for hours more. Titles blurred. Theories layered on top of techniques, and applications bred ideas he hadn't dreamed of.
Until—
"Excuse me, dear," came the quiet voice of the librarian once more. She stood in the hallway, holding a small lamp. "It's well past midnight. I'm closing up."
Ren blinked, and only then noticed the crick in his neck. He rubbed it sheepishly. "Ah… sorry. I lost track of time."
She smiled and began extinguishing the candles. "That much is obvious. But that's the best kind of reading—when you forget everything else."
He stood, gently closing the final book he had been reading on potion catalysts. "I'll be back tomorrow," he promised. "There's so much here I haven't even touched yet."
She nodded and opened the door for him. "Then I'll leave a lamp burning."
Ren stepped into the cool night air, the moon hanging high in the sky like a watchful guardian.
He exhaled, mind still reeling with knowledge. Support spells, mana vision, alchemy—it was like he'd opened the floodgates.
Tomorrow, he would forge with these new insights.
And at night, he'd return to the ink and parchment.
He was no longer just a hunter, or a wanderer, or a smith.
He was becoming a scholar of this world—one page, one failure, one revelation at a time.