Chapter 52 The History Of Dwemer Heart Of Lorkhan
They pressed on through the frozen mountain pass, their boots crunching against packed snow and shards of ice. A bitter wind swept down from the peaks, tugging at Astrid's cloak and carrying with it the faint howl of something distant and unseen. Frost clung to the jagged rocks around them, and each breath escaped their lips in pale clouds.
Astrid quickened her steps to keep pace with Alex, her gaze drifting between the endless white horizon and his steady figure ahead. After a moment of hesitation, she spoke, her voice slightly raised to cut through the wind.
"Hey, Alex…" She brushed a few snowflakes from her hair. "How exactly are we getting to Blackreach? We know the Elder Scroll is there, and that it lies beneath Skyrim but where's the entrance? There's nothing here but ice and stone."
Alex didn't stop. He continued forward with calm, deliberate strides, one hand occasionally lifting as if interacting with something only he could see. His eyes flickered briefly to the translucent system map hovering in his vision before returning to the path ahead.
"I know the way to Blackreach," he replied evenly. "Just follow me."
There was no hesitation in his tone only quiet certainty.
Astrid studied his back for a moment, then exhaled softly. Without another word, she adjusted her grip on her gear and followed him. Whatever doubts she had were swallowed by trust; if Alex said he knew the path, then that was enough.
After a while, the blinding white of the mountains gave way to darker shapes ahead. Massive silhouettes began to emerge through the drifting snow angular, unnatural forms that clashed sharply with the raw wilderness around them.
Astrid slowed, squinting as the wind momentarily eased.
"Hey… is that it?" She pointed ahead, her eyes widening. "Do we have to go there?"
Her voice carried a mix of curiosity and unease.
"Why that place? Is it really connected to Blackreach?"
Alex finally stopped. He turned toward her, the faint glow of reflected snowlight outlining his face. For a moment, his eyes rested on the looming structure ahead, then shifted calmly back to Astrid.
"Yes," he said simply. "Of course it is."
They moved closer, and the full scale of the Dwemer ruin revealed itself. Towering metal arches jutted from ancient stone, etched with geometric patterns and faded runes. Bronze plates, dulled by centuries of frost and neglect, still fit together with uncanny precision. Even broken mechanisms hinted at impossible complexity gears half-frozen in place, conduits carved directly into the walls.
Despite its abandonment, the structure radiated a silent authority, as if it were merely sleeping rather than dead.
Astrid felt her breath catch. She craned her neck upward, eyes tracing the immense facade, a quiet awe settling over her.
"So this is Dwemer craftsmanship…" she murmured.
The mountain wind whispered through hollow corridors and broken vents, carrying with it the lingering presence of a civilization that had vanished but clearly had never been ordinary.
Astrid stood still at the edge of the ruins, her boots sinking slightly into the snow as she slowly tilted her head back. Her gaze climbed the towering Dwemer structure, following jagged metal spires and fractured stone walls that disappeared into the gray sky above. Frost clung to every surface, catching the dim light and making the ancient metal shimmer faintly, as if it still remembered its former glory.
"Waaaw…" she breathed, barely louder than the wind. Her lips parted in quiet wonder, eyes wide and gleaming as she took it all in. "Alex… was all of this really built by the Dwemer?"
Alex stopped beside her, his posture relaxed but alert. He glanced up at the ruins with a measured calm, as though he were looking at a familiar page from history rather than a forgotten marvel.
"Yes," he answered. "Dwemer technology was among the most superior ever created. Most of them were extraordinary minds philosophers, architects, scholars, engineers… thinkers who valued precision and reason above all else."
Astrid lowered her gaze and slowly turned her head, scanning the silent surroundings. The entrance yawned dark and empty, metal doors frozen half-open. No voices. No movement. Only the low whistle of wind passing through broken vents and hollow corridors.
"But I don't see anyone," she said quietly. "Did the Dwemer leave… or something?"
Alex raised a hand to his chin, his brows knitting together as if searching for the right words. For a moment, he remained silent, the wind tugging at his coat while snow drifted lazily between them.
"How should I explain this…" he murmured. Then he turned to face her fully. "The Dwemer weren't fanatics of religion. They were fanatics of knowledge. They acknowledged that gods existed but they refused to worship them with blind devotion. You could say they worshipped logic… and their own intellect instead."
Astrid blinked, processing his words. A spark of realization flickered in her eyes, and she tilted her head slightly.
"Oh… I know," she said carefully. "Did they die because they were punished by the gods themselves?"
Alex let out a slow breath and shook his head, his expression darkening just a little.
"No," he said firmly. "They didn't fall because of divine punishment."
He turned his gaze back toward the ruins, the ancient metal reflecting faintly in his eyes.
"They died or vanished because of their own mistake."
The wind howled louder for a moment, sweeping through the empty halls of the Dwemer structure, as if the ruins themselves were quietly agreeing with him.
Alex turned his gaze back to the ancient structure, his eyes tracing the weathered metal and fractured stone as if reading a story etched into its surface. Snow slid down a slanted wall behind them, the faint scrape echoing in the hollow silence. Centuries had passed since the Dwemer walked these halls, yet their presence still felt… heavy.
After a moment, he spoke, his voice lower than before.
"Do you know, Astrid," he said slowly, "what the greatest fear is for those who already possess everything?"
Astrid shifted her weight, folding her arms against the cold. She looked up at him, brows knitting together as she considered the question.
"Hm…" She tilted her head slightly, lips pursed in thought. "That's a hard one, my love. Not wealth?" A faint smile touched her lips. "Not power?"
Alex turned to her, his expression grave. He shook his head once.
"They had all of that already," he said. "The one thing they didn't have was "
He stopped mid-sentence.
For a heartbeat, there was only the sound of the wind threading its way through the ruins. Even the mountains seemed to hold their breath.
"…immortality."
The word fell heavy between them.
The air seemed to sharpen, the cold biting deeper into the skin. Astrid inhaled sharply and felt a chill crawl up her spine. She rubbed her arms, a faint shiver betraying her unease.
"So…" she said carefully, her voice quieter now, "how did they try to make their race immortal? And why did they fail?"
Alex's eyes darkened as he answered, his tone deliberate almost reverent.
"The Heart of Lorkhan."
Astrid froze. Her eyes widened, and she stared at him as if she had misheard.
"Lorkhan?" she repeated. "The one who created Nirn?" Her voice rose with disbelief. "Then why does he even have a heart?"
She shook her head slightly, confusion written plainly across her face.
Alex exhaled and began to explain, lifting one hand as if carefully arranging fragments of a long-buried truth.
"There are many rumors," he said. "Some claim it was Lorkhan's punishment for creating Mundus. Others say the gods tried and failed to destroy his heart, so they sealed it far beneath Skyrim, where no one was meant to find it."
He lowered his hand slowly.
"And yet… the Dwemer found it."
Astrid's brows furrowed deeper.
"But how?" she asked. "How could they find something like that?"
Alex's gaze drifted past her, toward distant mountains hidden behind swirling clouds.
"They discovered it beneath Red Mountain," he continued. "Kagrenac sometimes called Kagrnak the Dwemer's chief tonal architect and high priest, was the one who took the next step."
As he spoke, his voice grew steadier, heavier with meaning.
"He began experimenting on the Heart of Lorkhan. An idea took root in his mind a chance to fulfill a mad ambition: to grant immortality to his entire race."
Alex clenched his fist briefly, then relaxed it.
"To do that, he created powerful tools Keening, Sunder, and Wraithguard each designed to interact with the Heart itself. And that wasn't enough."
He paused, then delivered the final revelation.
"He ordered the construction of Numidium a colossal golem. A god forged from metal and will."
Alex looked back at Astrid, his expression unreadable.
"He wasn't just trying to defy the gods," he said quietly.
"He was trying to become one."
Astrid let out a short, breathy laugh, the sound oddly light against the weight of the story. She shook her head, one hand lifting in a half-dismissive, half-amused gesture.
"Hah… how ironic," she said, a crooked smile tugging at her lips. "A race that barely believed in gods ended up trying to create one themselves."
Alex gave a slow nod, his expression unreadable as his eyes lingered on the silent ruin before them.
"Yes," he replied. "But their ambition didn't go unchallenged."
He straightened slightly as he continued, his voice steady but carrying an undercurrent of gravity.
"Indoril Nerevar and Dagoth rose against them, alongside the Chimer armies. With nearly all Dwemer resources and attention poured into that single project, they were unprepared. They were defeated."
Alex paused, then clenched his jaw almost imperceptibly.
"In desperation, Kagrenac used his tools on the Heart of Lorkhan."
He spread his fingers slightly, as if illustrating something slipping away.
"And in an instant… the entire Dwemer race vanished."
The words seemed to drain the warmth from the air. Alex let out a quiet breath, his shoulders lowering just a fraction.
"I don't know exactly what happened after that," he admitted. "Some say they were transported to another world. Others believe they were cast out of Mundus itself. Whether they died, disappeared, or were banished…" He shook his head faintly. "It remains a mystery."
Astrid stood silent for a moment, absorbing it all. Then she looked back at him, her curiosity resurfacing through the unease.
"Then… what happened to the Heart of Lorkhan?" she asked.
Alex lifted one eyebrow and turned fully toward her, as if measuring how much more truth to give.
"Long story short," he said, "the artifact fell into Nerevar's hands."
He shifted his stance and continued, his voice taking on a more historical cadence.
"Later, King Wulfharth Lorkhan's avatar, or as the Nords call him, Shor's avatar believed the Heart to be Shor's own. He gathered Nord warriors, Orcs, and House Dagoth to claim it."
Alex's gaze hardened slightly.
"That clash became known as the Battle of Red Mountain."
Astrid lowered her eyes, exhaling slowly as the weight of it settled in.
"Wow…" she murmured. "All of that. Blinded by greed and power… because of a single artifact."
Alex looked at her then, his expression softer, touched with quiet understanding.
"And countless lives were wagered," he added.
For a brief moment, silence enveloped them. The wind whispered through the broken metal halls, and the ruins loomed like a grave for forgotten ambitions.
Then Alex turned and stepped toward the dark entrance of the Dwemer structure, his pace unhesitating.
"Let's get the Elder Scroll."
Astrid blinked, then let out a light chuckle as she followed a step behind.
"Huh… so we can just stroll into this place casually, right?" she joked. "Haha!"
Alex glanced back at her with a faint, knowing smile.
"Haha… you'll see."
Astrid narrowed her eyes slightly.
"What do you mean, Alex?"
But he had already crossed the threshold, his figure disappearing into the shadowed interior.
"Hey Alex!!" she called after him, then muttered under her breath, "You idiot…"
Shaking her head, Astrid followed him inside.
Together, they stepped into the Dwemer ruins known as Alftand, where ancient metal groaned softly, and the darkness waited patiently to welcome them.
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