Yeah, it is. I actually wrote it without those newlines, and put them in because i posted this on a pc with a big screen and a small font. Most of the paragraphs ended up in a single line, which was even worse to read
I actually did that on purpose as well, because i wanted to convey that childs viewpoint and figured a 8-year-old wouldn't think in long convoluted sentences. But I guess I might have gone too far there, I'll see if i can rework that to make it more reader-friendly
anyway, heres the opening part ... or better, the first part of the first part
I just keep posting as i write, so the next piece of that chapter should be ready tonight (hopefully)
Edit: actually i just added another small piece... more to come later
* Malachite, 1042 *
Kivish could not stop grinning as another goblin fell at his feet.
"Ha! This is true work for a dwarf! Chop! Chop!", he yelled as he clashed into the next group. A Spearpoint glanced of his armored shoulder. He swung around and his axe severed the golins head in a single clean cut before continuing its arc to bury itself in the chest of another spearman. Kivish smashed a face with the rim of his shield, tore his weapon free, rolled under another thrust and severed the legs of his last enemy above the knees.
All the while he laughed.
On his left, Tharnas wove through a group of lashers in an intricate dance. Tharnas's sword flashed up and down, from side to side, cutting of arms, legs and heads with precision.
"How could we ever not love this?", Kivish called over.
"Remember how we feared our first battle? How we almost ran when they came? Ha!", Tharnas shouted as he dispatched the last golbin in his reach, "These filthy bastards dont even count as training!".
"Truly spoken old friend. Now, do we hold or charge?", Kivish said with a smirk.
A few paces to the right, Vanel tore through the enemy ranks like an avalance, felling goblins with every hammerstrike. They called him the Bloodsmith for a reason.
"We charge. Before there is nothing left to charge at. We shall earn our names today.", Tharnas grinned.
***
About two hours later Kivish was wiping his axeblade on the frayed cloak of a fallen goblin. It had taken him some time to find a piece that was not yet completely soaked with blood. Cleaning your weapons was important - it would be disgraceful to let a good tool go to rust, much more so a named weapon like his own. He had called it Kathilvukcas, The Wet Crescent, a name he had chosen when he returned from the campaign against the southern Kobold tribes six years ago, because the wavy lines in the etched steel of the curved blade always reminded him of a river.
Around him the scribes were still counting the corpses of the slain, and interrogated the prisoners - few as there were - for details of the battle. Mostly they asked for the names of the fallen, and recording them when the corresponding body could be identified - so they could pass into legend. This was the last honor that was granted to every warrior, both friend and foe. The Codes of War were very strict in these matters.
Once a body was accounted for it was frisked for valuables, and then thrown into the chasm below the drawbridges at the gate. Vultures were already circling that pit in swarms that darkened the sky, waiting for their chance to claim their part of the rotting spoils.
A few strides away Tharnas had finished relating his kills to a scribe, who was recording them for the official counts.
He started to walk towards Kivish, carefully stepping over the bodies and severed limbs that still covered the battlefield like a carpet. His slender build and that strange gait made him look like a child playing hopscotch. A very large child wearing full steel armor.
"So, how many?", Kivish called to him.
"Seventeen! That makes a total of One Hundred and Six! How about you?"
"Twelve. Though I think the scribe missed one."
Tharnas paused for a second. "Still, thats a total of One Hundred and Three, right? That means we both made it!", he said with a smile.
Kivish grinned broadly. "Yeah, welcome to legend, brother!"
"Still, I win again.", the swordsdwarf said as they turned toward the great gates, "You owe me a barrel of whip wine. And not the cheap stuff, at least three years old."
"Right, right.", Kivish gumbled.
***
The steel bar was still emitting a bright orange glow as Amal thrust it back into the flames. She needed more heat, otherwise the metal would not be hard enough for the spears she was making. The chunks of gabbro in the forge would provide that, as they were close to melting themselves thanks to the magma flowing only a few span below. Magma was a great asset in a dwarven forge, eliminating the need for coal and the tedious pumping of bellows. She had learned how to work all metals in a traditional forge of course, but day after day she thanked the gods for not having to. In a way, she considered, magma itself might be something holy. After all, it runs through the depths of the earth like blood runs through a body. She wondered where the worlds heart might be.
She pulled the steel bar from the forge with her tongs, its glow now close to white, and kicked the pedal to drop the forge cover. Then she took a deep breath - she had been holding it so she wouldn't inhale the toxic burning gases rising from the depths - and turned towards the anvil. She continued beating the metal into shape with slow, rhythmical strikes, the hammer in her right hand feeling like a natural extension of her body. She rarely put it down these days - except when she was eating or sleeping.
Around her, the great Metalworks were crowded with dwarfs, each one busy with his own tasks - some were carrying ores to the long line of smelters that ran along the left of the room, others bringing the freshly cast metal bars over to the forges on the right, and again others loading the finished products into minecarts and sending them off towards the grand stockpiles in the upper fortress. Today almost all the smelters and forges were manned and worked, only a handfull on the far end of the room stayed cold. This bustle of metals and people looked like complete chaos, and yet it was perfectly organized and efficient. She always thought of it as a beautiful dance.
That was how she noted the oddity. There was a dwarf here that did not belong, a dwarf without a purpose. He was milling around in the center of the walkway and kept getting shoved aside by the haulers as he got in their way. And as he turned around and showed his face she realized she knew him. His mother was working in one of the smelters, so she had seen him around here when she was a kid - she could not remember his name, though. Arel? Adil? Either way, apparently he'd seen her too, and started to walk straight towards her. As he came closer she noticed he was wearing a scribes garb - flowing blue cloth robes embroidered with images of scrolls and codices.
"Ah, there you are!", he called, "Its quite hard to find anyone in this madhouse!". The last got him some angry stares from the haulers close by. "I've been looking for you for a good hour now!"
Me?, she thought, What in the name of the gods does he want from me?. But she still called out to him: "The forges are not that large, Adil! Perhaps you should stay in the gatehouse until your eyes adapt to the darkness. I heard it has windows."
"Very funny, Amal! I see the fumes have not yet dimmed your wits!", he answered. Nothing about me using the wrong name. Guess I got that right, Amal mused as the dwarf that was probably Adil entered her forge. "Well then, what is it? Out with it! Unlike you scribes, I have work to do."
"The battle is over. Our troops have broken the siege and...", he started.
"We all heard the bells, Adil. Get to the point." Amal put the steel aside for now. It was cold now anyway, and she could not open the forge with this fool around. Or the fumes might dim his wits even more, she thought glumly.
"Well, its your brother...", Adil said. Amals face went white.
"What happened to him? Is he alright?", she yelled at him.
Adil raised his hands as if to defend himself. "He is fine, don't worry!", he answered.
"Then what?", Amal asked, angry that the scribe had shocked her like that, but relieved that Kivish had not been harmed.
"He has been accepted into the circle of legends. The naming ceremony is held tomorrow evening.", he said flatly. "Consider this your official invitation."