Ludgerâs eyes lingered on the wounded for a moment longer before he finally asked, voice low but steady,
âWhere are they? The barbarians.â
Arslan followed his sonâs gaze to the horizon. He lifted a hand and pointed westward, past the haze of smoke and broken ground, to where jagged walls rose in the distance.
âThere,â he said. âThat town was ours once. A border post, nothing grand, but strong enough to matter. We lost it months ago.â
Ludger narrowed his eyes. The walls looked battered, half-collapsed in places, stone scorched black and timber scaffolds clinging where repairs had been made poorly or not at all. Yet even from this distance, he could see movement on the rampartsâshadows pacing, figures watching, banners of rough cloth fluttering in the wind.
The enemy occupied it openly, like a dog sprawled in someone elseâs bed.
âTheyâve turned it into a nest,â Arslan continued, jaw tightening. âAnd theyâre not leaving. Weâve pushed, weâve bled, but they donât come out to meet us in the open field. They donât need to. They sit behind those walls like itâs all the same to themâhalf ruined or whole, it makes no difference. Theyâre content to wait while our men rot out here.â
Ludgerâs fists clenched, his nails biting into his palms through the gauntlets.
Theyâre not even fighting. Just squatting, letting time and exhaustion do the work.
The smoke from the campfires curled between them, carrying the sharp stench of ash. For the first time, Ludger understood the true shape of the battlefieldâit wasnât glorious clashes of blades, it was a stalemate, a grind, a slow bleed where even victory tasted like rot.
âHow many?â Ludger asked, eyes locked on the ruined walls. âHow many are inside?â
Arslanâs lips pressed into a thin line. âToo many. A few thousand at leastâfighters. Twice that if you count the shamans, the beasts they drag along, and whatever poor bastards theyâve enslaved to carry their supplies. Enough that every time we even talk about a push, the scouts come back saying itâs suicide.â
Ludgerâs brow furrowed. âAnd they just sit there? Like that? No raids, no charges?â
âNot the way youâd expect,â Arslan admitted, rubbing at his stubble. âBarbarians are supposed to be wild, reckless. They hit fast, burn what they can, and fade back into the wilds. But these?â He gestured sharply at the town. âTheyâve dug in. Theyâre defending like trained soldiers, not raiders. Every attempt weâve made to draw them out gets shut down. They donât bite. They just⊠wait.â
Ludgerâs smirk didnât return this time. His stomach turned with unease.
Thatâs wrong. Thatâs not how theyâre supposed to fight.
He thought of what Maurien had told him months ago, of portals and whispers of things stirring. Of how the labyrinths warped everything around them.
âTheyâre not acting like barbarians at all,â Ludger muttered. âItâs like someoneâs holding their leash.â
Arslan glanced at him, eyes narrowing. âExactly. And until we know whoâor whatâis giving the orders, weâre stuck bleeding men against a wall we shouldâve broken already.â
The ruined town stood in the distance, its broken towers like teeth in a hungry mouth, and Ludger felt the air grow heavier.
Somethingâs off. And whatever it is, itâs not just brute strength keeping them in there.
Ludgerâs eyes stayed fixed on the ruined walls, but his voice was sharper now.
âAnd the labyrinth? Where is it?â
Arslan grunted, shifting his stance. âA bit further ahead. You canât see it from hereâterrain dips too much. But itâs there, squatting like a curse. Thatâs why theyâre dug in so deep.â
Ludger turned toward him, brows knitting. âSo why not strike at it directly?â
âBecause itâs suicide,â Arslan snapped, though his tone wasnât angryâjust heavy. âThe labyrinthâs not just a hole in the ground anymore. Theyâve ringed it with guards. At least two thousand of them.â
He jabbed a finger at the distant town. âAnd thatâs not counting the ones holding this place. You try to march on the labyrinth, you donât just fight an armyâyou fight two. One on the walls, one in the field. Itâs a noose waiting to close.â
Ludger exhaled slowly, the weight of it pressing down. Two thousand at the labyrinth. thousands more in the town. A double wall of enemies, patient enough to grind the empireâs soldiers into ash without lifting a finger.
No wonder the camp reeked of exhaustion. No wonder the wounded piled higher every day.
Arslanâs jaw tightened. âThatâs the truth of it, Ludger. Weâre stuck staring at stone and waiting for orders from the capital that never come. And every day, we bleed more men for nothing.â
Ludger clenched his fists, gaze drifting back to the horizon. The labyrinth hidden just beyond their sight might as well have been breathing, pulling strings through the barbarians that waited like wolves on a chain.
Two armies. Two thousand guarding the labyrinth. And weâre just standing here, rotting.
Ludgerâs lips parted, the words already formingâ
If we keep waiting, weâll justâ
But Arslan cut him off with a sharp look, his voice low but edged with steel.
âDonât.â
Ludger blinked, the retort caught in his throat.
âYouâre smart,â Arslan continued, his tone steady, the same way he might explain a battle plan to a stubborn recruit. âSmarter than I was at your age. But donât start thinking youâve got the whole picture. Strategy isnât just looking at the pieces in front of youâitâs the supply lines, the morale, the politics choking every order before it reaches us. You donât see all of it yet.â
He laid a hand on Ludgerâs shoulder, the grip heavy, grounding. âYouâre here to learn, not lead. To see what war really isânot to start barking orders like some lordling whoâs never bled on the dirt.â
Ludgerâs jaw tightened, but he didnât shrug him off.
Arslanâs eyes softened, if only a fraction. âOne day, maybe. One day youâll be the one who makes the calls. But right now? You watch. You learn. And you survive. Leave the rest to those whoâve already burned half their lives on this cursed line.â
The camp noise filled the silence around themâgroans, hammers, murmurs of tired soldiers. Ludger looked back toward the ruined town, its broken walls clawing at the sky, and forced himself to nod.
ââŠFine.â
But inside, the thought lingered, sharp and unyielding.
Learning doesnât mean staying silent forever. And if they canât fix this, then maybe I will.
Before Arslan could say more, the sound of hurried footsteps broke through the campâs murmur. A young runner skidded to a halt beside them, sweat streaking down his dirt-caked face.
âSirâLord Torvares requests you. Immediately.â
Arslanâs jaw tightened. âWhat is it now?â
The boy shook his head quickly. âDidnât say, sir. Only that it was urgent.â
Arslan exhaled through his nose, the kind of long, weary breath that carried both frustration and inevitability. He gave Ludger one last, heavy look.
âStay put. Donât wander into anything stupid.â His hand squeezed Ludgerâs shoulder briefly, then he turned and strode off with the runner, cloak snapping in the wind.
Ludger stood alone in the dirt, the sounds of the camp pressing in againâthe moans of the wounded, the hammering of armor, the quiet murmur of tired soldiers trying to keep the world from collapsing around them.
He turned back toward the horizon, eyes narrowing on the distant, ruined town.
Watch. Learn. Survive.
The words clung in his head, but so did the stink of ash and the sight of bodies stacked like cordwood. He clenched his fists, jaw tight.
If this is what passes for strategy, then someone needs to come up with better answers.
By the time Ludger made it back to the command tent, the air was thick enough to cut with a knife.
Viola stood outside, arms crossed tight, boot grinding into the dirt with each impatient tap. Her cheeks were flushed, eyes burning, lips pressed into a hard line. She looked like a kettle about to burst.
Ludger didnât need to ask. One glance at her expression told the whole story.
âLet me guess,â he drawled, stopping a few paces away. âYou and Grandfather had a
civilized discussion
about whether youâre old enough to be here.â
Viola snapped her head toward him, scowl deepening. âHe thinks I should be sent home immediately. Like Iâm some fragile ornament! I told him Iâm not leaving, not when our people are bleeding for this war.â
Ludger smirked faintly. âAnd I bet you shouted that part loud enough for the entire camp to hear.â
She huffed, turning away, arms clamped even tighter. âSo what if I did? He needs to understand Iâm serious. Iâm not going to crawl back to home and sit there useless whileâwhile everything burns here.â
Ludger tilted his head, studying her. Behind the fire in her voice was something elseâfear. Not for herself, but for their father, for Torvares, for everyone lying broken in the tents around them.
He leaned against a post, arms folding. âSo neither of you budged.â
âOf course not,â Viola muttered. âHeâs too stubborn. And so am I.â
Ludger snorted softly. âLike looking into a mirror, huh? Old man Torvares finally met his match.â
Her lips twitched despite her anger, but she refused to let the smile form. She kicked at the dirt instead, muttering under her breath.
From inside the tent, muffled voices rumbledâTorvares, barking orders, Arslanâs deeper tone mixed in. The war machine kept grinding, even with family sparks threatening to burn holes in the canvas.
Ludger pushed off the post and gave Viola a sharp look. âDonât waste all your fire fighting him. Youâll need it when the real fight comes.â
For a long moment, Viola just glared at the tent flap, fists tight at her sides. Her jaw worked like she wanted to spit back another defiance, but then she stopped herself. She drew in a sharp breath, exhaled through her nose, and muttered, âMaybe⊠youâre right.â
Ludgerâs brows lifted slightly. âDidnât hear that. Say it again, louder?â
Her glare snapped to him, cheeks coloring. âDonât push it.â
That smirk crept across Ludgerâs face again. He stepped back, rolling his shoulders, fists tightening in his gauntlets. âGood. Then letâs put that fire where it belongs. Spar with me. Show me you can keep your head clear while fighting instead of burning it all yelling at your Grandfather.â
Viola blinked, caught off guard. âHere? Now? I only have my real sword.â
Ludger spread his arms in mock invitation, grin widening. âSo what? Use it. Iâm not planning on getting hit anyway.â
Violaâs lips curled into a grin of her ownâhalf frustration, half excitement. The anger in her shoulders shifted, sharpening into energy as she drew the blade from her scabbard.
âFine. Donât cry when I cut too close.â
âDonât miss too much,â Ludger shot back, dropping into stance.
Around them, a few soldiers slowed in their work, the sight of Torvaresâs granddaughter and the infamous boy from the tournament squaring off drawing their attention. The low murmur of the camp softened, as if even the war itself was pausing to watch.
Viola didnât wait. The moment her feet dug into the dirt, her aura flared hot, Overdrive surging through her legs. She shot forward like a bullet, sword gleaming in the midday sun.
The first strike came fast and heavy, steel hissing down toward Ludgerâs shoulder. He slid back a step, body tilting just enough for the blade to cut air.
Viola pivoted, her boots grinding into the earth, Overdrive shifting into her arms as she swung again. A diagonal slash meant to catch him off-guardâLudger dipped low, the edge whistling inches over his head.
Blow after blow came, her attacks fast, vicious, a storm of steel and raw intent. But Ludgerâs movements were water to her fireâslipping past, leaning away, twisting his frame so each strike barely missed. His feet slid across the dirt in short, sharp steps, his eyes never leaving hers.
âFaster than last time,â he muttered between dodges, a faint grin tugging at his lips. âBut still predictable.â
âShut up!â Viola snapped, her cheeks flushed with the effort. She poured more mana into her legs, exploding forward with another Overdrive burst, blade carving arcs that wouldâve split a lesser opponent open.
Ludger ducked, sidestepped, weavedânever rattled, never flinching. His gauntlets caught the light as his hands flicked out to parry the air near her blade, never quite touching steel but close enough to make her second-guess her rhythm.
The soldiers watching began to murmur, some grinning despite their exhaustion. It wasnât just a sparâit was a spectacle. Torvaresâs granddaughter raging with fire, and the boy in red-and-silver gauntlets flowing around her like smoke, untouchable.
Violaâs breathing grew heavier, her attacks sharper but wilder. Ludger, meanwhile, smirked faintly, every dodge deliberate, every escape a lesson.
Keep your head clear, Viola. Letâs see if you can fight smarter, not just harder.
Violaâs sword tore through the air again and again, each strike sharper than the last. She drove her legs with Overdrive, her blade with Enhancing, sweat already slicking her browâbut no matter how fast or hard she struck, Ludger slipped away.
He leaned back just enough for her blade to graze the space before his chest, tilted his head so steel hissed past his ear, slid a foot aside to let the ground take the blow meant for his shin. His gauntlets flashed as he moved, arms loose, body flowing.
Never once did he block. Never once did her sword bite anything but air.
The soldiers nearby slowed their work, heads turning toward the clash. At first, they only glanced. Then they stopped. Tools and weapons stilled in their hands as they watched, murmurs rising like smoke.
âThose are kids, right?â one whispered.
âTorvaresâs granddaughterâsure, sheâs always had fire, but look at that skillââ
âAnd the boy⊠heâs not even armed.â
âNo, heâs worse. Heâs
calm.
Like heâs been doing this for years.â
More soldiers drifted closer, exhaustion forgotten for a moment. The spectacle carried its own kind of weightâthe granddaughter of their commander fighting like a storm, and the boy who danced around her with a smirk, untouchable.
Whispers rippled through the growing crowd.
âTheyâre more skilled than half the line.â
âMore than half? Hell, Iâve seen sergeants who couldnât keep up with those movements.â
âKids like this? Maybe the gods havenât abandoned us after all.â
Viola, panting now, gritted her teeth and swung harder. Ludger twisted aside, the edge missing his cheek by a hairâs breadth. He grinned faintly, his voice cutting through the hush of awe.
âCome on, Viola. Donât just swing harder. Swing smarter.â
The murmurs grew louder. What had begun as a spar was now something elseâa moment of spectacle in a camp drowning in despair. And Ludger could feel it: eyes on them, soldiers pulling strength from the clash of two children who fought with more purpose than most grown men.
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