Arslan leaned forward on his knees, his usual grin dulled into something heavier. âThe border didnât fall, but it was close. Too close.â
Selene and Aleia crossed their arms, their jaw tight. Harold just stared at the ground, unusually quiet. Cor polished his spectacles, though the motion looked more like a distraction than habit.
âThe barbariansâŠâ Arslan shook his head. âThey donât fight like us. No formations, no lines, no strategy worth a damn. Just raw muscle and a kind of madness that ignores fear and pain. You can cut one down and his brother will still charge through the blood, screaming like heâs already dead.â
Violaâs smugness vanished, replaced with wide eyes. Elaine, who had stepped into the courtyard quietly, clutched her shawl tighter.
Arslan gestured with one hand, voice steady but grim. âThat lack of coordination shouldâve been their weakness. Shouldâve been easy to exploit. But when hundreds fight like wild animals, throwing themselves at you with no thought of retreat⊠even seasoned soldiers buckle under it.â
He looked over his shoulder at his companions. âWe held thanks to Aronia. Her support magic kept us on our feet when we shouldâve fallen. Wounds that wouldâve taken weeks to heal, she closed in hours. She was the pillar holding the line when no one else could.â
Selene nodded once, curt but honest. âWithout her, we wouldnât be standing here.â
Harold grunted in agreement. âAye. Sheâs still there. Said she couldnât leave until the wounded could walk again. Stubborn druid.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed. Arslan and the others looked battered but whole. But it wasnât luckâit was because someone else was still bleeding herself dry on the battlefield.
âSo you came back,â Ludger said flatly. âAnd she stayed.â
Arslan met his sonâs eyes, the grin long gone. âShe stayed. The war isnât finished yet, Luds. Not by a long shot.â
The courtyard was silent, save for the faint sound of Viola shifting uneasily, the weight of those words pressing down on them all.
Arslan exhaled through his nose, rubbing the back of his neck. âWe didnât leave because we were tired. We left because we were ordered to. Directly from your grandfather.â
Viola blinked. âGrandfather? But heâs still at the border, isnât he?â
Selene nodded stiffly. âHe is. And heâs pushing hard. Too hard.â
Arslan leaned back against the steps, staring up at the courtyard sky. âThe old man doesnât just want to hold the line. He wants the war over. Months of fighting, and now heâs demanding a decisive push. Sending letters, barking orders, demanding reinforcements. He wants to crush it before winter.â
Ludger narrowed his eyes, voice cutting through. âRushing a war thatâs already been dragging for months? Thatâs not a good idea. Pressing harder when your troops are worn down just gets more of them killed.â
Arslan gave him a tired smile, but there wasnât much humor in it. âHnh. Youâre right. And the soldiers know it too. They grumble, but when Viola's grandfather gives an order, no one questions it. Not unless they want their heads cut off.â
He shrugged, though the gesture was heavy. âEven I donât know why heâs so desperate to end it fast. Maybe heâs got word from the capital. Maybe heâs just impatient. Or maybe heâs trying to prove something before his enemies back home can use this war against him.â
Selene muttered under her breath, âOr maybe he knows something the rest of us donât.â
Ludgerâs smirk was thin, but his mind worked fast.
If heâs rushing, he has a reason. And itâs not just pride.
The courtyard fell quiet again, the weight of Lord Torvaresâ unseen hand pressing over them all.
Elaineâs embroidery slipped from her hands, the needle clattering against the stone. âLord Torvares is still there? Pushing himself into battle at his age?â Her voice trembled with a mix of worry and anger. âDoes he mean to throw his life away?â
Arslan winced, rubbing the back of his head. âElaine, you know how he is. The old bull would rather die swinging a sword than sitting in a chair. He thinks itâs his duty to see it through.â
âThatâs not duty,â Elaine snapped. âThatâs stubbornness. Heâs not young anymoreââ Her voice faltered, her gaze flicking to Viola and Ludger. âAnd weâre not so helpless that he has to carry the world alone.â
Viola clenched her fists, torn between pride and unease. âGrandfather isnât going to lose. Heâs too strong. Heâll crush those savages.â But her words rang hollow, and even she seemed to hear it.
Ludger, meanwhile, leaned back slightly, eyes narrowing. His gaze slid across the courtyard to Luna, who stood just behind Viola as always. Calm. Still. Her face unreadable.
She knows something,
he thought.
She always knows more than she says.
But when his eyes lingered on her, Luna turned her head away, expression never breaking. Silent.
Ludger smirked faintly, though it didnât reach his eyes.
Of course. If sheâs not talking, then itâs something Iâll have to drag out on my own.
The fire of Elaineâs worry filled the courtyard, but under it ran a colder currentâquestions, secrets, and a war that wasnât nearly as simple as the stories being told at home.
Dinner was loudâArslan booming about âreal meatâ compared to field rations, Harold demanding a third helping, Selene scolding him, Cor quietly sipping wine. Viola bragged about her âgeniusâ training while Elaine hovered, fussing over her husbandâs bruises.
But exhaustion weighed heavier than food. By the time the plates were cleared, Arslan slumped back in his chair and began snoring like thunder. His companions retreated to their rooms, grateful for silence. Elaine fussed over blankets. Viola pestered Luna about hair braiding.
Eventually, the house quieted.
Ludger waited until the hall went still before slipping from his room. He found Luna where he expectedâby the window in the corridor, moonlight catching her pale profile. Always watchful, even here.
He crossed the floor without a sound, Silent Steps muffling his approach. She didnât startle when he leaned against the wall beside her.
âYou knew,â Ludger said flatly.
Luna didnât look at him. Her gaze stayed on the courtyard below. âKnew what?â
âThat Violaâs Grandfatherâs rushing the war. That thereâs more to it than orders from the capital. You went quiet earlier.â
She didnât answer right away. Her hand brushed the curtain, fingers tightening slightly, then loosening. When she spoke, her tone was as calm as always. âEven if I did know something⊠would it change whatâs happening at the border?â
Ludger smirked, though his eyes stayed sharp. âMaybe not. But it would change how
I
prepare.â
Silence stretched between them. For a moment, it seemed she wouldnât reply at all. Then, finally, she exhaled through her nose. âLord Torvares has reasons he hasnât shared. Reasons Iâm not at liberty to speak of. That is all.â
Ludger studied her profile, the slight tension at the corner of her jaw. She wasnât lying. But she wasnât giving him the full truth either.
He clicked his tongue softly. âFine. Keep your secrets. Just donât think I wonât find out myself.â
For the first time that night, her eyes flicked toward him, calm and steady. âI never doubted it.â
They stood in silence after that, two shadows in the moonlight, the weight of unspoken truths pressing between them.
Lunaâs shoulders rose and fell with a quiet sigh, her calm mask slipping just enough to show the weight behind it. âThe truth, then⊠The states near the border are bleeding strength. Men, coin, supplies. Every week of this war drains them further. And if they falter, if their soldiers break or their coffers run dry⊠the families ruling those territories will fall with them.â
Her eyes hardened, though her voice stayed level. âWhen that happens, the capital will swoop in. Titles and lands will be stripped from the border lords and gifted to others closer to the Emperorâs reach. Those who bled will be ruined. Those who stay safe will grow fat.â
Ludger rubbed at his temple, exhaling sharply through his nose. âPolitics. Always politics.â
The pieces clicked together in his headâthe urgency, the reckless push, the desperation to end it fast. Lord Torvares wasnât just fighting barbarians. He was fighting the clock, fighting vultures waiting to pluck apart the border like carrion.
âSo itâs not about winning the war,â Ludger muttered. âItâs about who gets to keep their chair when itâs over.â
Lunaâs silence was confirmation enough.
He leaned back against the wall, smirk tugging bitterly at his lips. âAnd here I thought things were finally simpleâkill the ones in the shadows, train, get stronger. But no. It always comes back to greedy bastards in tall chairs.â
Luna glanced at him, her expression unreadable, then back out the window. âThat is the nature of power. Blood on the borders, politics in the courts. One feeds the other.â
Ludger snorted, running a hand through his hair. âThen Iâd better make sure I donât get eaten by either.â
Lunaâs words lingered after she left, but Ludger wasnât the type to brood for long. If politics was the game, then waiting around as a pawn was suicide.
Time to think long term.
He wasnât anywhere near Lord Torvaresâ level. The old man could command soldiers, swing whole states with a single order. Ludger was just a boy, with coin tricks and a system in his head. But that didnât mean he couldnât start. Influence wasnât just banners and armiesâit was roots. Quiet ones, dug deep before anyone noticed.
And he had just enough coin to plant the first one.
Twenty gold coins. Months of saving, schemes, and squeezing every copper until it bled. Enough to buy a tavern in the city. On the surface, a modest investment. In practice, a foothold.
Elaine had already agreed to oversee it, her protective instincts shifting neatly into management. Ludger almost smirked imagining her terrorizing lazy staff into shape. If she treated the tavern like her home, the place would run smoother than most noble kitchens.
He figured he could recover the cost in two years. Maybe one, if Elaine leaned into her natural efficiency. But the coin wasnât the real prize. The real prize was within
reach
.
A tavern was a crossroads. Merchants, mercenaries, travelersâall of them passed through, all of them talking, drinking, spreading rumors. Information would flow through those walls like wine.
And Ludger planned to sweeten it further. Heâd show up now and then, playing the part of the helpful boy with curious talents. Offer free healing spells to the right patronsâan aching shoulder here, a deep cut there. Not enough to make him stand out, just enough to make people remember.
Make them feel indebted. Make them think kindly of the family. When something happens, theyâll hesitate before turning against us.
He leaned back on his bed that night, hands folded behind his head, a faint smirk tugging at his lips.
I might not have her grandfatherâs armies or his authority. But I can build something of my own. Quietly. Sooner than anyone expects.
The next morning, Viola was busy swinging her sword under Arslanâs encouragement. Elaine watched from the porch as she got ready to move to the tavern, already scolding them both for making too much noise. Perfect cover.
Ludger slipped out with little more than a flask of water and his armguards strapped tight. His legs hummed with restless mana as he hit the streets, his pace picking up until the city gates shrank behind him.
Then he let Quickstride and Dash carry him.
The world blurred into a rhythm of pounding steps and sharp bursts of speed. He pushed through dirt roads, across rolling fields, past startled farmers who barely caught sight of a small figure vanishing in the distance. The wind whipped at his hair, his breathing heavy but controlled.
Six hours by horse,
he thought, the memory of dusty caravans and slow escorts flashing in his mind.
But horses pace themselves. I donât need to.
Quickstride kept his strides efficient, conserving energy where his bursts left him gasping. Dash cut the distance in violent flashes, skipping minutes in heartbeats. Every time fatigue started to creep in, he forced himself into the rhythm againâburst, recover, burst.
The sun had barely shifted two fingers across the sky when the trees thickened, the air cooling. The faint, unnatural pressure pressed at his skin. The dungeonâs aura.
Ludger slowed, dropping into a steady jog, then finally stopped. He exhaled hard, hands on his knees, sweat dripping down his brow. His lungs burned, his calves ached, but his lips curled into a faint smirk.
He had made it.
Not in six hours. Not even close. Barely over one and a half. Faster than heâd dared expect.
Two hours? No. Less.
A long breath escaped him, part relief, part satisfaction. For the first time, the dungeon stood before him not as a distant challenge, but as something within his reach.
Steam drifted faintly off his skin, his body radiating the heat of overclocked muscles and burning mana. Ludger rolled his shoulders, sucking in deep gulps of the damp air that clung to the dungeonâs entrance.
His smirk thinned into a line.
Too much burn. I reached it fast, but not fast enough. If I go inside like this, alone, Iâll just collapse halfway through a fight.
He straightened, wiping sweat from his brow with the back of his armguards. Every step had shaved minutes off the trip, but his legs trembled faintly from the strain. His body wasnât ready to fight the dungeon and cover the return trip in one go. Not yet.
I need more stamina. More speed with less waste. Quickstride is working, but itâs still sloppy. If I want to make dungeon runs a habit, I need to get there fresh, not steaming like a roast pig.
He let his eyes linger on the dungeon gates a moment longer, the oppressive aura seeping out from the stone, before finally turning his back.
âIâll be back soon,â he muttered under his breath. âWhen I can go in and walk out alive.â
The road stretched ahead, and this time he didnât sprint. He set into a controlled pace, letting the rhythm carry him back toward the city. His breathing slowed, his mind already dissecting the run. Which bursts wasted too much mana. Where he shouldâve cut corners tighter. How many sprints his legs could realistically endure before his lungs gave out.
The numbers werenât good enough yet. But they would be.
By the time the city walls came into view again, Ludgerâs body ached, but his grin returned.
Soon. Just a bit faster, a bit stronger. Then the dungeon wonât just be reachableâitâll be mine.
By the time the city gates came back into view, Ludger had steadied his breathing and wiped most of the sweat from his face. He slipped through the streets with Silent Stepsânot for stealth this time, but for subtlety. Moving like he belonged, blending into the crowd, so no one would think twice about a boy walking home.
The house walls loomed soon after. Ludger slid through the back entrance, careful to time his steps between the shuffle of servants. By the time he pushed open his door and dropped onto his bed, the house was alive with the same background noise as alwaysâElaine humming faintly in the kitchen, Arslanâs booming laugh shaking the walls, Viola shouting something about landing a clean hit.
No one had noticed he was gone. Ludger let out a slow breath, smirk tugging at his lips.
Good. Thatâs how it should be.
But as his calves twitched from the strain, another thought sparked in his head. He tapped his shin guards absently, the metal still warm from the run.
What if I add weight?
Dash and Quickstride made him faster, but if he trained with heavier legs, every step without them would be even sharper. He imagined running the roads with weights strapped tight, each stride dragging like leadâthen removing them and feeling his body fly.
His smirk widened. âYeah⊠weighted training. Push harder now, move freer later.â
The idea settled in like iron. Tomorrow, heâd find a way to slip some lead or dense stone into the guards. If he was going to reach the dungeon and fight fresh, he needed more than speed. He needed endurance carved into his bones.
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