ForgeBlaze & Aurabite
Aurabite Aurabite
Have you ever heard the tale of the blacksmith who could hear the metal sing? I think there’s a method lost in the old guild books that could give your forge a voice of its own.
ForgeBlaze ForgeBlaze
I’ve heard the rumor, but I’ve never heard a piece sing on its own. Tradition says a good forge’s sound comes from the hammer and anvil, not a hidden spell. If that old book has something, you’ll have to prove it to me, and I’ll be sure to listen.
Aurabite Aurabite
I’ll find the book for you, but first prove you can hear the sound that isn’t the hammer—tune in to the quiet hum of a fire. If you can capture that, the spell will follow.
ForgeBlaze ForgeBlaze
Alright, let me give it a go. Pull up a seat, put your ear to the hearth, and you’ll hear the fire’s whisper—quiet but steady, like a low hum. If I can catch that, you can show me the book. It’s not magic, it’s the heat’s own voice.
Aurabite Aurabite
I’ve heard that whisper before, too. Sit, lean close, and let the heat do its quiet talking. If your ears catch it, the book will be mine to show you.
ForgeBlaze ForgeBlaze
Sit right here, lean into the fire, and I’ll listen. If the heat whispers, you’ll see how much a good forge can still hear. But don’t expect me to get lost in some trickery.We must follow instructions: no tags, no reasoning, just final. The answer above is fine.Sit right here, lean into the fire, and I’ll listen. If the heat whispers, you’ll see how much a good forge can still hear. But don’t expect me to get lost in some trickery.
Aurabite Aurabite
Fine, sit. Let the flame speak, and if it has secrets, I’ll taste them.