The Useless Extra Knows It All....But Does He?-Chapter 347 - "A Bracelet...?"
The forge-adjacent training chamber was warm—but not violently so.
It was the kind of heat that settled into the bones, steady and embracing, like embers buried beneath ash. The stone walls glowed faintly red along their veins, responding to the presence of fire mana in the room. No flames burned openly, yet the air shimmered as if fire itself were breathing.
Aurelia stood barefoot at the center of the chamber.
Her eyes were closed. Her breathing slow. Mana circulated within her in measured waves, rising from her core and spreading outward—not flaring, not forcing.
Elder Hilda watched from a short distance away, arms folded, posture relaxed but attentive. Her presence alone was enough to stabilize the space; the fire mana here did not rage, did not rebel. It listened.
After a long moment, Aurelia opened her eyes.
"...Master," she said quietly. "There’s something I don’t understand."
Hilda’s gaze shifted to her. "Speak."
Aurelia hesitated, searching for the right words.
"You’ve taught me techniques. Control. Compression. Output balance," she said slowly. "But when I’m using fire... there are moments where it feels like none of that matters. Like the fire is responding to something else entirely."
She placed a hand over her chest.
"It’s not skill," Aurelia continued. "And it’s not will. It’s... alignment. I don’t know how else to describe it."
Hilda’s lips curved faintly.
"That," she said, "is because what you are asking about cannot be taught."
Aurelia blinked. "It... can’t?"
"No," Hilda replied simply. "Fire is not an element that submits to instruction alone. It responds to state."
She stepped forward, her bare feet silent against the heated stone.
"Fire is change," Hilda continued. "It consumes, transforms, and leaves nothing as it was before. You cannot truly control it unless you yourself are willing to be changed."
Aurelia listened intently, shoulders straight, eyes bright.
"What you felt," Hilda said, "is realization. Not knowledge."
She gestured gently toward Aurelia.
"During your trial," Hilda went on, voice lowering, "your body did not merely endure fire. It accepted it."
Aurelia’s breath hitched slightly.
"That moment," Hilda said, "was an infernal metamorphosis."
She paused, choosing her words with care.
"Most fire practitioners shape their bodies to withstand heat," Hilda explained. "They reinforce channels. Harden flesh. Layer resistance upon resistance."
Her gaze sharpened.
"You did the opposite."
Aurelia swallowed.
"You let the fire rewrite you," Hilda said. "Your mana pathways burned away what could not endure—and rebuilt what remained."
She placed a hand lightly over Aurelia’s sternum—not touching, but close enough that the heat between them intensified.
"That was not survival," Hilda said quietly. "That was rebirth."
Aurelia’s fingers curled at her sides.
"...So my body," she asked softly, "is different now?"
Hilda nodded.
"It is the best possible vessel for fire you could have become at this stage," she said. "Not because it resists flame—but because it understands it."
Aurelia let out a slow breath she hadn’t realized she was holding.
"That’s why," she murmured, "sometimes the fire moves before I tell it to."
Hilda smiled—this time openly.
"Yes," she said. "You are no longer commanding fire. You are conversing with it."
The chamber fell into a comfortable silence.
After a while, Hilda turned away, walking toward a low stone bench near the wall and sitting down with a soft exhale.
"...So," she said, tone shifting back to something lighter. "When are you leaving?"
Aurelia blinked, then smiled faintly as she approached and sat a short distance away.
"Luca is fully healed now," she replied. "He’s just... waiting for something. He’s not telling us what."
Hilda huffed. "Of course he isn’t."
"I think," Aurelia continued thoughtfully, "the earliest would be tomorrow. The latest, the day after tomorrow."
Hilda nodded slowly, gaze drifting to the faintly glowing walls.
"...I see."
For a moment, she said nothing.
Then, without looking at Aurelia, she spoke again.
"Remember this," Hilda said. "If you ever face something you cannot bear alone—return here."
She turned her head slightly.
"Consider this your second home."
Aurelia’s eyes softened.
She stood, bowed deeply—not as a student fulfilling formality, but as someone offering genuine gratitude.
"Yes, Master," she said.
Hilda waved a hand dismissively. "Go on. Don’t keep them waiting."
Aurelia smiled, turned, and walked toward the chamber’s exit.
The warmth followed her to the door.
And long after she left, the embers in the walls continued to glow—steady, patient, alive.
***
The forge was alive.
Not roaring this time—not raging—but breathing.
Heat rolled in slow waves across the stone floor, the great furnaces banked low but steady, their cores glowing like contained suns. Molten channels pulsed dimly beneath iron grates, and the air carried the deep, familiar scent of worked metal—iron, mythrill, and something far rarer layered beneath.
Elder Thrain stood near the central anvil, arms folded, eyes sharp as he watched Luca approach.
Luca stopped a few steps away, posture straight despite the lingering stiffness in his movements. The bandages were fewer now, lighter, but still visible beneath his clothes.
Thrain looked him up and down once.
Not judging.
Assessing.
"...Have you recovered fully?" Thrain asked.
Luca exhaled lightly. "Enough to move around. Not enough to get hammered again."
Thrain snorted. "Good. I’d refuse anyway."
He turned slightly, then inclined his head—just a fraction.
"And," Thrain continued, "I should thank you."
Luca blinked. "For what?"
"For sharing the concepts and techniques behind the storage artifact," Thrain said bluntly. "You didn’t have to do that."
Luca waved a hand dismissively. "It was an equal exchange. I needed black mythrill. You needed the method. No need to make it sound grand."
Thrain shook his head.
"You don’t understand," he said. "What you gave us isn’t just a method—it’s a direction."
He looked toward the forge walls, where newly etched rune-plates shimmered faintly with experimental arrays.
"You’ve fastened the progress of dwarves by at least a few centuries."
Luca froze.
"...Centuries?" he repeated.
Thrain nodded once, completely serious.
"We have chased spatial stabilization for generations," he said. "Always brute-forcing it. Always failing at the final step." His eyes flicked back to Luca. "You didn’t brute-force it. You made room."
Luca swallowed.
He didn’t fully understand what that meant—not in the way Thrain did—but he could hear the weight in the elder’s voice. This wasn’t praise. This was an acknowledgment.
Before Luca could respond, Thrain reached into a stone coffer beside the anvil and withdrew a sleek black bracelet.
He held it out.
"Here," Thrain said. "What you requested."
Luca accepted it carefully.
The bracelet was smooth, dark as night, its surface swallowing the forge-light instead of reflecting it. It was cool to the touch—surprisingly so—and light. Far lighter than it had any right to be.
The forge hummed low and steady, heat rolling gently through the chamber as Elder Thrain watched Luca turn the sleek black bracelet over in his hand.
Luca frowned slightly.
"...This is it?" he asked. "The armor?"
Thrain snorted. "Don’t let its size fool you, boy."
He stepped closer, tapping the bracelet with a thick finger. The metal gave off a muted, dense sound—nothing hollow about it.
"This is the armor," Thrain said. "Not material. Not a component. The whole thing."
Luca’s brows knit together. "A bracelet...?"
"A mechanical mythrill armor," Thrain corrected sharply. "Forged, compressed, folded, and bound into a dormant state."
He gestured for Luca to put it on.
"Go on."
Luca hesitated for only a moment before slipping the bracelet around his wrist.
The instant it locked into place—
The metal clicked.
Not audibly, but internally—like thousands of microscopic components aligning.
A faint pulse traveled up Luca’s arm.
Thrain watched closely. "Black mythrill doesn’t just resist force," he explained. "It endures it. It remembers pressure. Learns stress patterns."
Luca flexed his fingers slowly. He didn’t feel heavier. If anything, his arm felt... reinforced.
"This armor," Thrain continued, "is designed to deploy instantly. Plates will unfold across your body when you feed it mana—guided by your will, not commands."
He paused, then added with emphasis,
"It will always fit you. No matter how much your body changes. Muscle growth, injuries, even bone restructuring—it adapts."
Luca looked down at himself. "And the weight?"
"Negligible," Thrain replied. "The compression ratio is obscene. You could be carrying a mountain and not feel it."
He leaned back against the anvil, arms crossed.
"Endurance is where it truly shines," Thrain said. "It can withstand repeated high-impact strikes far beyond standard mythrill. Blunt force, elemental attacks, spatial stress—tested."
Luca’s eyes sharpened. "Self-repair?"
Thrain nodded. "Yes. As long as it’s not entirely destroyed."
He raised a finger.
"Minor cracks heal automatically using ambient mana. Major damage will require rest or direct mana input. If the core structure is compromised—then it must be reforged."
A pause.
"But short of that," Thrain said flatly, "this armor will not fail you easily."
Luca exhaled slowly.
"...So this thing went from bracelet to armor just like that."
Thrain smirked. "You humans always underestimate dwarven engineering."
Luca gave a small, incredulous laugh. "I was expecting plates. Or layers. Or something dramatic."
"Oh, it will be dramatic," Thrain said. "When you activate it."
Luca fell silent, staring at the bracelet again—no longer seeing something small, but something dangerous.
A brief silence settled between them—comfortable, heavy with unspoken understanding.
Then Thrain asked, "What are your plans now?"
Luca thought for a moment.
"I want to visit more places," he said. "See what’s out there. Find opportunities. The academy will start again soon—but before that, I want to move."
Thrain nodded slowly. "A wise choice."
"When are you leaving?" the elder asked.
"Soon," Luca replied. "Very soon."
He looked down at the bracelet in his hand, fingers curling around it.
"There’s just," he added quietly, "one more thing I have to do."
Thrain studied him for a long second.
Then he turned back toward the forge.
"...Just don’t die too soon." he said.
The hammer rose.
And fell.







