Viola slammed her palms on the table, glaring. âGrandfather wouldnât send us here for
nothing.
Why would he pick someone like you?!â
That finally made the man pause. He lifted his head, bloodshot eyes squinting at her, and for the first time there was something sharper under the haze.
âSomeone like me, huh?â His laugh was bitter, half a rasp. âYour old man knows exactly why he sent you here. Because Iâm what happens when a guild burns down and the people in charge drown themselves to forget. Iâm a failure, girl. Thatâs why.â
Viola faltered, her glare slipping into confusion.
Ludger leaned back, arms folded, watching quietly.
So he knows exactly what he is. That doesnât make him uselessâit makes him dangerous. And maybe⊠valuable.
The man tore off a piece of bread, chewing without looking at them. âEat. Sleep. In the morning, you walk out that door. Donât waste your time on me.â
The bread was still warm in Ludgerâs hands when he spoke, his tone flat but edged.
âIf you knew what you are, then why didnât you accept the call from Lord Torvares? The war, the rebuildingâyou couldâve made more coin than youâd ever drink away. Even failures get paid if theyâre useful.â
The man snorted, washing down a mouthful of bread with a swig from a waterskin. âCoin, coin, coin. Thatâs all you nobles ever see. Money to grease the gears, money to patch over mistakes.â He leaned back in his chair, eyes half-lidded but sharp beneath the bleariness.
âI donât need a lot of money. I donât want a banner over my head, or someone elseâs orders breathing down my neck. I just want to live my life the way I pleaseâcarefree.â
Viola scowled, her fists clenching. âCarefree? You call
this
carefree? Rotting in a dump and drinking yourself half to death?â
The man shrugged lazily, as if her words bounced off. âBetter than bleeding on some nobleâs battlefield, or digging graves for strangers in a town I donât care about.â
Ludger studied him, his expression unreadable.
Heâs not lying. He really doesnât care about the coin or the cause. That makes him dangerous in a different way. A man whoâs already thrown away pride and duty canât be bribed or pressured. Which means if I want him to teach me anything⊠Iâll have to give him something else.
The man yawned again, long and slow. âYou want ambition? Ask someone else. All youâll get from me is honesty.â
Ludger leaned forward, resting his elbows on the battered table. âFine. If you donât care about coin, then tell me thisâwhat happened to the guild? A hall this size doesnât rot overnight. Something gutted it.â
The manâs jaw twitched. He clicked his tongue, a sharp
tsk
, and looked away. âYou donât need to know.â
Viola bristled. âWe
do
need to know! How are we supposed to learn anything ifââ
Ludger raised a hand, silencing her, his eyes never leaving the man. âIf the collapse isnât worth explaining, then what about your magic?â His tone was flat but edged with steel. âThat wall you summoned before. It didnât rise from the groundâit just appeared. Thatâs not normal earth magic.â
The manâs hand froze halfway to tearing another piece of bread. For a moment, silence hung heavy in the hall. Then he resumed eating, chewing noisily, ignoring the question completely.
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed.
So he knows itâs strange. But he wonât give it up for free.
âNot going to answer?â Ludger pressed.
The man gave no reply. He tore another bite, yawned, and leaned back as if he hadnât heard a word. Viola growled, slamming her broom against the floor. âHeâs useless!â
Ludger smirked faintly, though his mind was already ticking.
Not useless. Just the kind of man who only moves if you corner himâor if you give him something he wants.
Ludger leaned back in his chair, studying the manâs slouched frame, the way he chewed with deliberate slowness while pretending not to hear.
Torvares already tried coin. Of course he didâmoneyâs the first leash any noble throws. And this man spat it back in his face. So instead of forcing the issue, her Grandfather sends us. Three children. A reminder of duty, maybe. Or bait. Or simply pawns to needle his pride until he starts moving again.
His lips pressed into a thin line.
If thatâs the plan, itâs sloppy. Iâd rather have proper orders than this cloak-and-dagger nonsense. Torvares shouldâve just said it outright: âGo there, break his walls down, make him useful again.â
The thought made Ludgerâs jaw tighten. He didnât like ordersâhated them, even. His entire second life was meant to be lived free of leashes. But at least an order was clear. Direct. This kind of cryptic maneuvering, these half-truths and roundabout pushes, it was nothing but wasted time.
He sighed quietly, his smirk turning sharp.
Annoying old man. If you want me to rebuild your pawn, you couldâve at least told me so. Instead, you throw me into the mud and expect me to figure it out myself.
Across the table, Viola fumed silently, tapping her fingers against her bread like she wanted to throw it at the drunkâs face. Luna, calm as ever, simply observedâher eyes narrowing as if sheâd reached a similar conclusion.
Ludgerâs gaze lingered on the drunk again.
If Torvares wants you functional again⊠then one way or another, Iâll make you move.
By the time the moon hung high above the cracked rafters, the man was gone. No word, no soundâheâd simply wandered off into the night like smoke slipping through a gap.
The guildhall was quieter without his drunken snores, though not by much; the old boards groaned at every draft, and the faint smell of stale ale still clung to the walls.
Viola sat cross-legged near their packs, arms folded tight, her face locked in a permanent scowl. She stabbed at the firepit with a stick sheâd found, muttering curses under her breath. âUnbelievable. Grandfather sends us here to learn, and we get
that.
Heâs useless. Lazy. Heâs not teaching us
anything!
â
Ludger rolled out his blanket and set it neatly against the far wall, his movements slow and unbothered. âCalm down.â
Viola whipped her head toward him. âCalm down?! We cleaned this dump, and he justâjust
left!
â
Ludger smirked faintly, shaking his head. âGetting annoyed at every little thing wonât change him. Youâll just wear yourself out faster than sweeping did.â He met her glare, unflinching. âSave your fire for when it matters.â
She opened her mouth, ready to snap againâbut then hesitated. The stick in her hands cracked under her grip, and she finally huffed, throwing it into the cold pit. ââŠI still hate him.â
âThatâs fine,â Ludger said, lying back and folding his arms behind his head. âJust donât let it make you stupid.â
Luna, already settled on her blanket near the doorway, glanced between them with her usual calm. âHeâll show his hand eventually. All we have to do is wait.â
Viola groaned, collapsing onto her side with a dramatic flop. âI hate waiting too.â
Ludger smirked faintly in the dark.
Good. Hate it all you want. It means youâll learn patience the hard way.
The guild creaked around them, empty and half-broken, but for now, it was theirs.
âWeâre not just going to sit here waiting for him to sober up. Until he decides to cooperate, weâll need to keep moving. First priority: information.â
He turned his gaze toward Luna. It wasnât a command, not outrightâbut the way his eyes lingered on her carried the weight of expectation.
Luna met his look without flinching. âI understand.â She adjusted the edge of her blanket with practiced precision, then added, âIâll see what I can do tomorrow morning.â
Ludger gave a single nod. That was enough. Sheâd find the right people, the right whispers. She always did.
Viola, meanwhile, rolled onto her back, her grin sharp in the dim light. âWell, if weâre making plans, then
I
want to explore the labyrinth here! Thatâs what adventurers are supposed to do, right? Fight monsters, find treasure, prove ourselves!â
Ludgerâs expression flattened immediately. His frown carved deeper than usual.
âAbsolutely not.â
Viola sat up, indignant. âWhy not?! Weâre in a mining city with a labyrinth right under it! We canât just ignore it!â
âYou can,â Ludger said bluntly. âWithout anyone older to keep you in line, youâll do exactly what you always wantâcharge in, reckless, and hope you donât get killed. Thatâs not exploration. Thatâs suicide.â
Viola scowled, crossing her arms. âYouâre such a killjoy. One day, Iâll show you I can handle it.â
âMaybe,â Ludger said, lying back again. âBut not tomorrow.â
Lunaâs quiet voice cut in, calm as ever. âHeâs right. A labyrinth is no playground. If you step inside unprepared, you wonât walk out.â
Viola groaned, throwing herself back onto her blanket with all the grace of a sack of bricks. âFine! But you canât keep me out forever!â
âOne gold coin says the inverse.â
Ludger smirked faintly, closing his eyes.
Try me.
The hall creaked around them, the night settling in heavy and still.
Viola sat up again, defiance blazing in her eyes. âYou canât just forbid me forever! Iâm not some porcelain doll. I
want
to fight in the labyrinth!â
Ludger turned his head, meeting her glare without a flicker of hesitation. âYouâll go when you prove you can keep your head cool. When you show you can be patient, not reckless. Until then, itâs out of the question.â
Violaâs jaw tightened. âThatâs not fair!â
âLife isnât fair,â Ludger said flatly. He pushed himself upright, his tone sharp as a knife. âYou think I want to drag you back home covered in scars? You think I want to be the one explaining to your grandfather why his heir came back in pieces? No. You want the labyrinth? Fine. Earn it. Show me you can walk in and walk out without getting yourself killed for bragging rights.â
Violaâs fists clenched in her lap, her face twisting between shame and stubbornness.
Luna spoke softly, though her words cut clean. âHeâs right, Lady Viola. A leader canât throw herself into danger just because she wants to. Not without proof she can handle it.â
Viola groaned, collapsing back onto her blanket with a loud
thump
. âYouâre both impossible.â
Ludger lay back down too, folding his arms behind his head, smirk tugging faintly at the corner of his mouth.
Good. Let her stew. If she wants the labyrinth, sheâll have to sharpen herself first. Otherwise, sheâll never make it past the first floor.
The guildhall was quiet in the early hours, the broken windows bleeding pale sunlight across the dusty floor. Viola stirred awake, rubbing her eyes and stretching, only to hear the steady hum of mana from the far side of the hall.
Ludger sat cross-legged on the boards, his hands resting lightly on his knees. His breath was controlled, measured, the faint glow of his
[Spiritual Core]
pulsing steadily in his chest. Tiny threads of mana rippled around him, gathering, condensing, then sinking back into his body as though he were drinking from the air itself. A thin bead of sweat rolled down his temple, but his expression was calm.
Viola watched for a moment, then yawned and shuffled over, dragging her blanket like a cape. âSo⊠whenâs breakfast?â
Ludger cracked one eye open, staring at her flatly. âBreakfast doesnât just appear.â
Viola frowned. âWell, someone has to make it.â
âExactly,â Ludger said, closing his eye again. âGo walk around. Find Luna. Or my mother, maybe you can find her lurking around looking for me.. Either one will make sure you donât starve.â
Viola pouted, crossing her arms. âThatâs not fair. You shouldââ She froze mid-sentence, blinking. A realization hit her like a slap. ââŠWait. Do we even
have
money for food?â
Ludger exhaled slowly through his nose, eyes still shut. âFinally caught up, huh?â
Her cheeks flushed. âI-I didnât even think about that!â
âObviously,â Ludger muttered, rubbing his forehead.
Sheâs eleven years old, a nobleâs heir, and the most important parts of her lifeâfood, coin, safetyâare all in someone elseâs hands. If she doesnât change that, sheâll never stand on her own two feet.
He sighed and got to his feet, brushing dust from his trousers. âCome on. Weâll find Luna and see what she dug up. Maybe she at least thought ahead.â
Viola groaned but trailed after him, muttering, âI
was
thinking ahead⊠just not about money.â
âWhich means you werenât thinking,â Ludger said dryly, pushing the door open.
The streets were already buzzing when they left the guildhall. Miners clomped toward the hills with picks over their shoulders, adventurers strapped on armor as they argued about contracts, and vendors hawked breakfast from cartsâskewers of roasted meat, fried dough, mugs of steaming broth. The air was thick with the smell of oil, dust, and smoke.
Violaâs eyes widened as she drifted from stall to stall, gawking at sizzling pans and baskets of fresh bread. âWow⊠look at all this! Can we just pick something? Iâm starving.â
Ludger caught her by the sleeve before she could dart off. âDonât wander around like a moron. People will take advantage of you.â
She turned, scowling. âI wasnât wandering!â
âYou were gawking,â Ludger corrected, his tone dry. âBig difference. Walk like you know what youâre looking for, even if you donât. Keep your chin steady, donât let your eyes linger too long. Otherwise, you might as well pin a sign to your chest that says "easy
mark.
â
Viola huffed, puffing her cheeks. âYou make it sound like everyoneâs out to rob me.â
âThey are,â Ludger said bluntly. His gaze swept the crowd, sharp and calculating. âHungry adventurers, crooked vendors, even kids running errandsâthey all look for weakness. A soft target. If you can see through what people are thinking, itâs easy enough to stay ahead.â
She tilted her head, frowning. âSee through what people are thinking? How do you do that?â
Ludger smirked faintly, eyes flicking toward a nearby vendor who was loudly praising his âfresh bread.â The manâs loaf was half-burned on the bottom, his eyes constantly darting to the bigger bakery stall across the street.
âWatch their eyes, their hands, their posture. What they
donât
say matters more than what they do.â He gave Viola a sidelong glance. âAnd donât let your hunger think for you. Thatâs when youâll get fleeced.â
Viola groaned. âUgh, you make it sound so boring. Canât I just
eat?
â
âYou can,â Ludger said dryly. âOnce you prove youâre not going to get scammed buying stale bread at twice the price.â
She grumbled under her breath, but straightened her back and tried to mimic his cool expression as they walked deeper into the market.
Ludger smirked faintly.
At least she listens when sheâs hungry.
[Dissection of Knowledge +10 XP ]
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