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= The Blackmane Spire Fragments =
= The Blackmane Spire Fragments =
''Recovered from the Throne Chamber of Blackmane Spire''<blockquote>Transcribed from deteriorated parchment discovered among the collapsed stones of the Spire’s upper hall. The script appears to have been written in blood. Portions are missing or obscured. Orthography suggests the hand of someone literate but writing under strain.</blockquote>
----
== Fragment I — Entry ==
She returned at dusk.
The outer wards stirred before she reached the gate. Whatever remained of their enchantment responded to her presence, though whether in recognition or resistance cannot be determined.
The dead within the lower halls grew restless. Several skeletons were found later collapsed near the stair as if compelled upward and then abandoned mid-motion.
The throne chamber doors were already open when she arrived.
----
== Fragment II — The Confrontation ==
The lich rose from his seat before she crossed the threshold.
He addressed her by name, though the portion bearing the name has been scraped away or ruined beyond recovery. The remaining text suggests familiarity, not hostility.
He spoke of time wasted, of betrayal, of eternity promised and denied. His tone, if the script may be trusted, shifted from command to accusation and finally to something resembling supplication.
The woman did not respond in kind. The fragments contain no recorded speech from her.
The scribe notes only that she stood without visible fear.
----
== Fragment III — The Breaking of the Throne ==
What followed is described imperfectly. The ink grows thicker here, the script less steady.
There are references to light within shadow and to heat that did not scorch the stone. The throne itself is described as splitting along its spine of iron and bone. A section of the ceiling collapsed during the exchange, though whether from magical force or structural weakness cannot be determined.
The lich attempted retreat toward the altar.
The author records that he “moved as a man who remembers pain,” a curious phrasing given his state.
----
== Fragment IV — The Phylactery ==
The vessel was taken from its resting place.
The text suggests hesitation — though whether by the lich or the woman is unclear. A smear across the page obscures several words, but the final account is unambiguous: the phylactery was destroyed.
The description of its shattering is clinical rather than poetic. It notes the sound as “sharp, like glass against stone,” followed by an abrupt stillness in the chamber.
The lich fell.
The scribe records that moisture gathered along the hollow of his cheek before his body collapsed entirely. Whether this is literal or metaphorical is debated among archivists.
----


The '''Blackmane Spire Fragments''' are documents recovered from the ruins of [[Blackmane Spire]], the northern fortress where [[Virilian Steadmane]] once lived with [[Ori of the Vale]] and where Ori, after his fall, became the lich known as '''Ori the Hollow King'''. The fragments are written in blood on aged parchment. They describe the return of a silver-haired woman to the Spire and her confrontation with the lich. No author is named; the script is hurried and in places illegible.
== Fragment V — Aftermath ==
The throne room sustained significant damage. The altar remained intact.


== Discovery ==
Two rings were placed upon the stone surface. The fragments do not state who placed them there. Their positioning is described as deliberate.
The fragments were found by adventurers who explored the Spire some centuries after the disappearance of Virilian and Elara. They lay among the debris of the collapsed throne room, near Ori's shattered phylactery. Two intertwined rings — one of black iron, one of silver — were resting upon the altar in the same chamber. The parchment had been partially damaged by time and exposure; only a few passages could be read with certainty.


== Contents ==
The woman departed. No direction of travel is recorded.


=== The Line of the Return ===
The final line of the manuscript trails unevenly:
The best-known passage reads:


: ''"The Dark Elf came to end what love began. The lich wept as he died."''
“Thus ended the Hollow King.
----


The text does not name Virilian or Ori. It refers to "the Dark Elf" and "the lich." The image of the lich weeping at death has been taken to mean that Ori, in his last moments, recognised his beloved and perhaps the ruin his obsession had wrought.
== Archival Notes ==
The identity of the “silver-haired woman” described in the fragments is widely assumed to be Virilian Steadmane, though the text never names her directly. The reference to the lich’s prior familiarity and the setting of Blackmane Spire make alternative interpretations unlikely.


=== Other Legible Passages ===
The rings recovered from the chamber — one of black iron, one of silver — are preserved separately from the fragments. Their metallurgical composition has been verified as consistent with materials available during the late pre-TRA centuries.
Other fragments speak of "a woman with silver in her hair," "the circle broken," and "the throne cast down." One line states that "no mortal witnessed the battle." Another mentions "the rings upon the stone" perhaps the two rings found on the altar. The tone is terse and factual, as if a witness or participant had set down the outcome in haste.


== Interpretation ==
No independent witness account of the confrontation has ever surfaced.
The fragments do not state when the confrontation occurred or how the writer came to be present. They record only that the Dark Elf came, that the lich died, and that the phylactery was shattered. The identification of the silver-haired woman with Virilian rests on her known history: the Spire was her home; Ori had once been her love and had become her hunter; and she had reason, in the eyes of many tellings, to return and end his undeath. The documents themselves remain anonymous and fragmentary.


== Preservation ==
The Spire has remained structurally unstable since the recorded event.
The original fragments are held in a private collection; copies and transcriptions are held in the archives of [[Avaria]] and in the scriptorium at Norin. Quotations from the fragments appear in chronicles of the Spire and in accounts of Virilian's life and legacy.


== See Also ==
== See Also ==

Latest revision as of 11:00, 26 February 2026

The Blackmane Spire Fragments

Recovered from the Throne Chamber of Blackmane Spire

Transcribed from deteriorated parchment discovered among the collapsed stones of the Spire’s upper hall. The script appears to have been written in blood. Portions are missing or obscured. Orthography suggests the hand of someone literate but writing under strain.


Fragment I — Entry

She returned at dusk.

The outer wards stirred before she reached the gate. Whatever remained of their enchantment responded to her presence, though whether in recognition or resistance cannot be determined.

The dead within the lower halls grew restless. Several skeletons were found later collapsed near the stair as if compelled upward and then abandoned mid-motion.

The throne chamber doors were already open when she arrived.


Fragment II — The Confrontation

The lich rose from his seat before she crossed the threshold.

He addressed her by name, though the portion bearing the name has been scraped away or ruined beyond recovery. The remaining text suggests familiarity, not hostility.

He spoke of time wasted, of betrayal, of eternity promised and denied. His tone, if the script may be trusted, shifted from command to accusation and finally to something resembling supplication.

The woman did not respond in kind. The fragments contain no recorded speech from her.

The scribe notes only that she stood without visible fear.


Fragment III — The Breaking of the Throne

What followed is described imperfectly. The ink grows thicker here, the script less steady.

There are references to light within shadow and to heat that did not scorch the stone. The throne itself is described as splitting along its spine of iron and bone. A section of the ceiling collapsed during the exchange, though whether from magical force or structural weakness cannot be determined.

The lich attempted retreat toward the altar.

The author records that he “moved as a man who remembers pain,” a curious phrasing given his state.


Fragment IV — The Phylactery

The vessel was taken from its resting place.

The text suggests hesitation — though whether by the lich or the woman is unclear. A smear across the page obscures several words, but the final account is unambiguous: the phylactery was destroyed.

The description of its shattering is clinical rather than poetic. It notes the sound as “sharp, like glass against stone,” followed by an abrupt stillness in the chamber.

The lich fell.

The scribe records that moisture gathered along the hollow of his cheek before his body collapsed entirely. Whether this is literal or metaphorical is debated among archivists.


Fragment V — Aftermath

The throne room sustained significant damage. The altar remained intact.

Two rings were placed upon the stone surface. The fragments do not state who placed them there. Their positioning is described as deliberate.

The woman departed. No direction of travel is recorded.

The final line of the manuscript trails unevenly:

“Thus ended the Hollow King.”


Archival Notes

The identity of the “silver-haired woman” described in the fragments is widely assumed to be Virilian Steadmane, though the text never names her directly. The reference to the lich’s prior familiarity and the setting of Blackmane Spire make alternative interpretations unlikely.

The rings recovered from the chamber — one of black iron, one of silver — are preserved separately from the fragments. Their metallurgical composition has been verified as consistent with materials available during the late pre-TRA centuries.

No independent witness account of the confrontation has ever surfaced.

The Spire has remained structurally unstable since the recorded event.

See Also