Talk:Hejinmal/@comment-37.136.95.27-20161110121711/@comment-27168967-20161127115806

The current dwarf kingdom is more like a refuge rather than a city as they had been driven from places to places so it is unlikely they had time to make anything grand like the past. Even the treasure vault withstood the passing of time and even the force from an adult dragon. That is more than evident of the gap of technology between the past and the present. Making a city where Dragons can play hide and seek just doesn't seem impossible now, would it? Well at the very least the palace should be huge enough. I think it was implied that dwarves never really mixed with the other races until their king took up arms to defend his country. If I remember correctly, there is a mention in one of the passages that the rest of Papa Frost's family are smaller than he is.

Still, if you look at the picture in volume 11 where it was shown the Quagoa king bowing to Papa Frost, you'll notice that the dragon was sitting behind the throne, one intended for a dwarf. Now try to imagine a dwarf sitting there. Suddenly, NW Dragons don't look very big now, do they? Well, they do not seem to be very proficient with opening doors... except for Hejinmal. Or at least that is the implication of it.

Now, let's retrace a bit. Papa Frost actually went in the library through the entrance. What does that tell us? There might not be a hole in the room or he would probably just went in through that instead. Then, he knocked on the door, fully expecting his kid to OPEN it. Not sure whether there is a doorknob or something but Hejinmal seems to be able to open doors. When Hejinmal went to "intimidate" the intruders, he was wearing his spectacles. There's no mention of him transforming. With his huge claws, he actually took the spectacles and hid them for safekeeping. Can you imagine him reading books by flipping the pages? Not sure about you but I sure can imagine that happening. It would seem that despite being fat, the kid is actually quite agile with his fingers because these are books that have been there for several hundred years though there is no mention of what they were made of.