They walked the length of the market street, Ludger slowing their pace just enough to point things out.
âSee that?â He nodded toward a vendor piling golden apples high on a cloth-covered crate. âThe brightest fruit on top, the bruised ones underneath. Donât pay until you check the bottom.â
Viola leaned in, squinting. âOh⊠sneaky.â
âCommon,â Ludger corrected. A little further down, he motioned at a spice seller waving his arms dramatically. âAnd that oneâs yelling too much about his prices. If itâs really good, he doesnât need to scream.â
Viola frowned, nodding along, her brows knit in concentration. âSo⊠talk less, watch more?â
âExactly,â Ludger said. âMost people tell you what theyâre hiding without realizing it.â
She was just opening her mouth to ask another question when a familiar voice cut through the crowd.
âLudger. Lady Viola.â
They turned to see Luna approaching, moving with her usual unhurried stride. In her arms she carried a neat cloth bag, its shape betraying loaves of bread, wrapped fruit, and even a stoppered jar of something heavier. Not a hair on her head was out of place despite the bustle of the market.
Viola blinked. âWaitâyou already got breakfast?!â
Luna inclined her head. âIt seemed natural. Supplies as well. Weâll need them if the guild continues to provide nothing.â
Ludgerâs eyes flicked to the bag, then back to her calm expression. He hadnât given her coin, and yet she moved as though sheâd had everything planned from the start.
She was ready for this before I even thought about it. Figures.
Viola groaned, half-impressed, half-frustrated. âUgh, you always make me look unprepared.â
âBecause you are,â Ludger muttered, smirking faintly.
Luna offered the bag toward them. âShall we eat before discussing todayâs tasks?â
Ludger took it without ceremony. âGood. Saves me the trouble.â
He glanced at Viola, still pouting at being outdone.
At least one of us is ready for everything. Which means Iâll have to push the other even harder.
They found a shaded corner near the outer market where the noise of haggling was muted, and Ludger unwrapped the bag Luna had brought back. Bread, crisp on the outside and soft within. Apples, fresh enough to still carry the scent of orchard soil. Even a small jar of honey.
Viola tore into a loaf like she hadnât eaten in days, while Ludger ate slower, more methodically, waiting for Luna to speak.
She did, after a measured pause. âI asked around this morning. The guildâs decline wasnât sudden. It began about ten years ago.â
Ludger glanced up from his bread. âWhy then?â
Lunaâs eyes lowered slightly, her tone calm but edged with weight. âBecause the guildmaster lost his wife and daughter in one of the mines.â
Viola froze mid-bite, blinking. ââŠWhat?â
âThey often went with him,â Luna continued. âBut that day, for reasons no one could explain, he stayed behind. A cave-in struck. By the time he reached them, it was already too late.â
The bread in Violaâs hands lowered slowly. âSo⊠thatâs why he drinks like that.â
Ludger chewed once, twice, before setting his crust aside. His expression didnât change, but his eyes narrowed.
So thatâs the root. Not incompetence. Not greed. Grief.
Luna folded her hands neatly in her lap. âThe guild began to rot from then. With its leader broken, its reputation crumbled. Clients left. Members defected. Ten years later, all thatâs left is⊠this.â
Silence hung heavy for a moment, broken only by Violaâs small voice. ââŠThatâs awful.â
Ludger leaned back, smirk faint but humorless. âAwful, yes. But not useless. At least now we know what broke him.â
He glanced back toward the slums, where the guildhall loomed faintly in the distance.
And maybe what Torvares expects me to fix.
Ludger sat back against the wall, bread forgotten in his hand. Lunaâs words hung in the air, heavier than the morning heat.
Family drama? Iâve had enough of that in two lifetimes. Overbearing parents, suffocating expectations, cold silences around a dinner table. But thisâŠ
He exhaled through his nose, eyes narrowing.
This is darker. Losing your wife and daughter under a mountain of stone. Watching them die while you stood too far away to stop it. Thatâs a wound that never closes.
His lips pressed into a thin line.
And how am I supposed to sympathize with that? Iâm not even really eight. Iâm a man who died once already. My whole existence is borrowed. What do I sayââI know how you feelâ? No. I donât. I canât. It would be too hypocritical.
He glanced at Viola, who sat hunched over her bread, clearly shaken, her face caught between pity and stubborn anger. Then at Luna, calm as ever, but her eyes carried the weight of someone who thought the manâs grief explained everything.
I canât put myself in his shoes,
Ludger thought, smirking faintly though there was no humor in it.
But maybe I donât need to. Iâm not here to heal his heart. Iâm here to figure out what Torvares wants me to learn from himâand how to make him useful.
He tore another bite from the bread, chewing slowly.
Ludger brushed the crumbs from his fingers and leaned forward, voice low but steady.
âPretending we donât know about his past is a waste of time. Heâs broken, not blind. The second Viola tries to act like she doesnât know, sheâll give herself away.â
Viola nearly choked on her bread. âHey! Why me?!â
âBecause youâre terrible at acting,â Ludger said flatly. âYour face shows everything youâre thinking. Subtlety isnât your strong point.â
Her cheeks flared red. âThatâsâ! I canâ!â She clamped her mouth shut, realizing heâd just proven his point.
Ludger smirked faintly and shook his head. âSee?â
Luna hid a small smile behind her hand but didnât intervene.
âAnyway,â Ludger went on, his tone sharpening again. âWeâre not here to play pretend. Weâre here to learn. If he refuses coin and ignores orders, then the only way forward is to make him teach us something he thinks is fair. Something he finds necessary.â
Viola frowned, hugging her knees. âLike what?â
âThatâs what weâll have to figure out.â Ludgerâs eyes narrowed slightly, mind already ticking.
Grief or not, a man like that has principles buried under the rot. The trick is digging them out without wasting months on pity.
Luna nodded once, calm as ever. âDirect. Practical. That is the best approach.â
Viola groaned. âUgh⊠this is going to be so annoying, isnât it?â
âYes,â Ludger said dryly. âBut if we want results, weâll make it work.â
Ludger finished the last bite of his bread and wiped his hands on the cloth. âBefore we waste more timeâwhatâs his name? And what was the guild called?â
Luna didnât hesitate. âThe man is Gaius Bront. Once known as âStonefist Gaius,â an earth mage of considerable renown. The guild was called the
Iron Vein.
At its height, it was one of the most respected in this region. Reliable, disciplined, and skilled in both mining and labyrinth work. Many noble families and merchants contracted them.â
Viola perked up, blinking. âWaitâ
that
guy? He was famous?â
Luna inclined her head slightly. âYes. Until the cave-in.â
Viola groaned, slumping back. âUgh. So now heâs just a washed-up drunk with a tragic backstory.â
Ludger smirked faintly, though his eyes stayed sharp.
Gaius Bront. Stonefist. A man with that kind of reputation doesnât lose his edge completely. Which means her Grandfather sent us here because he knows thereâs still something worth dragging out of him.
He stood, brushing dust from his trousers. âAlright. We donât press him today. If heâs going to teach, weâll have to bait out whatever he still values. Until then, we watch. See how the city remembers him, and what parts of his pride he hasnât thrown away.â
Viola groaned louder. âMore waiting?!â
âYes,â Ludger said simply. âTry not to explode before it pays off.â
As they walked back toward the slums, Ludger glanced sidelong at Luna. âWhat about the labyrinth here? What do you know?â
For the first time that morning, she hesitated. A faint crease formed between her brows. âI didnât look for details on the labyrinth,â she admitted. âI didnât expect you to agree with Lady Violaâs request.â
Viola puffed up immediately, grinning. âHa! See? Even Luna thought youâd say no!â
Ludger ignored her, eyes steady on Luna. âSo? What do you know, then?â
Lunaâs voice returned to its calm cadence, though there was still a hint of reluctance. âThe labyrinth beneath this city is an iron vein that mutated over decades. When enough mana gathers around deposits of ore, sometimes the iron itself takes shape. Thatâs where the iron elementals come from.â
Viola tilted her head, frowning. âElementals? Like⊠golems?â
âSimilar,â Luna said, shaking her head lightly. âBut not the same. Their bodies look humanoidâtwo arms, two legs, a torso. But the pieces donât connect. Limbs float where they should be joined, like magnets holding them together. Their strikes are heavy, and their iron hides make them hard to kill. Worse, they can use earth magic at range⊠their attacks are not mindless.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed thoughtfully.
So⊠tough hides, strong swings, and ranged support. Fighting them in tight tunnels would be a nightmare for anyone who panics.
Viola leaned forward, excitement sparking in her eyes. âThat sounds amazing! Fighting something like thatââ
âWould crush you flat if you donât think,â Ludger cut in dryly.
She pouted, but he didnât soften his tone. âWeâll only go down there once you can prove you wonât get yourself killed in the first ten minutes. Until then, itâs out of the question.â
Viola groaned. âYouâre impossible!â
âI am not. I do exist.,â Ludger corrected.
They reached the edge of the slums again, the broken guildhall looming in the distance like a corpse left to rot. Ludger stopped, dusting his hands off, and turned to Luna.
âForget just the guild,â he said flatly. âWe need more than that. Find out everything useful about this cityâits politics, who pulls the strings, which groups to avoid. Weâre not in Torvares territory anymore, and we donât have allies watching our backs. Trouble here will come faster than we can blink if weâre careless.â
Lunaâs expression didnât change, but her eyes sharpened with focus. âUnderstood.â
She inclined her head, then moved with her usual graceful efficiency into the crowd, vanishing as easily as a shadow slipping into the cracks.
Viola slumped against the wall, arms crossed. âAlways so serious. Weâre just here to learn from that drunk, arenât we? Do we really need to worry about all that?â
âYes,â Ludger said without hesitation. âOne wrong move in the wrong city, and youâll find yourself sold, dead, or worse. You donât get to rely on your family name here.â
Viola wrinkled her nose. âYou make it sound so dramatic.â
Ludger smirked faintly, though his eyes stayed cold. âItâs not drama if itâs true.â
He watched the path where Luna had disappeared, his thoughts sharp.
With her digging up details and Viola forced to keep her head down, weâll stay one step ahead. Until then, patience.
Viola kicked at a loose stone, her scowl deepening. âSo if weâre not going into the labyrinth, then what
are
we doing? Just waiting around until that drunk feels like teaching us?â
Ludger folded his arms. âNo. Weâre training.â
Her head snapped up, eyes brightening. âFinally! About time!â
âDonât get excited,â Ludger said dryly. âYou know how to swing your sword. What you donât know is how to stay alive when someoneâs firing spells at your head.â
Viola blinked, tilting her head. â...Spells? You mean youâre going toââ
âYes.â He smirked faintly. âIâll throw magic at you until you stop panicking and learn to move properly. If you canât get used to it here, youâll get flattened in the labyrinth.â
Violaâs face split into a grin. âThat sounds
amazing!
â
Ludgerâs eyebrow twitched. âNo. It sounds painful. For you.â
âI can take it,â she said, puffing out her chest.
âGood,â Ludger replied. âBecause I wonât hold back much. If you want the labyrinth, youâll earn it by surviving me first.â
Her grin widened, reckless and eager. âDeal!â
Ludger smirked faintly, though his eyes stayed sharp.
Letâs see if youâre still smiling after the first firebolt.
Ludger stood with his arms folded, his tone flat and merciless. âYou want the labyrinth? Fine. You donât get near it until you can reach me. That means dodgingâor blockingâmy mana bolts. Until then, forget it.â
Viola grinned wide, practically bouncing on her toes. âEasy! Iâll just smack them away or dodge like thisââ She mimed swinging her wooden sword and twisting her body with exaggerated flourish.
Ludger didnât bother replying. He scanned the courtyard outside the guildhall until his eyes landed on a rotting barrel leaning against the wall. Perfect.
He extended one hand, focused, and summoned:
[Mana Bolt].
The sphere of condensed blue light launched with a sharp
crack
, slamming into the barrel. The explosion shredded the wood into splinters, scattering debris across the dirt. The bolt didnât stop thereâit drilled into the ground, leaving a neat, smoldering hole nearly twenty centimeters deep.
Smoke curled upward.
Viola froze mid-pose, her smile stiffening. Sweat broke out on her forehead as she stared at the smoking crater. ââŠO-okay,â she said, forcing a laugh. âBlocking that should be⊠easy.â
Her voice wavered, and her attempt at confidence looked about as convincing as a beggar claiming royalty.
Ludger smirked faintly. âSure. Easy.â He tilted his head, eyes narrowing. âLetâs see how long it takes before you stop shaking.â
Viola swallowed hard, her knuckles white around her wooden sword, but she still managed to snap back, âI-Iâm not shaking! Youâll see!â
Ludgerâs grin sharpened.
This is going to be fun.
Ludger didnât waste a word. His hand lifted, mana gathering with a faint
crackle
before snapping into shape. A
[Mana Bolt]
hissed through the air toward Viola.
She tensed, her stance awkward, shoulders tight. But as the glowing sphere closed in, she realizedâit wasnât nearly as fast or massive as the one that had gutted the barrel. This one was smaller, slower, deliberate.
Her eyes sharpened. âFine, I got this!â
She swung her wooden sword upward with all her strength. The blade connected with the bolt in a flare of sparks and heat. The sphere shattered, bursting into harmless fragments of dissipating mana.
The victory lasted half a second. Then the tremor hit. The force rattled up her arms, the wooden blade quivering so violently she almost lost her grip.
Violaâs eyes widened.
If heâd gone any harder, my sword wouldâve snapped in halfâŠ
Her jaw clenched, but she forced a shaky grin, pretending it didnât faze her. âS-see? Easy.â
Ludgerâs smirk was thin and merciless. âNot bad. But if that toy broke, youâd be bleeding already. Donât complain when I test your grip next time.â
Violaâs forced grin twitched, but she lifted her sword again. âI can handle it!â
âGood,â Ludger said, raising his hand again. âBecause Iâm not stopping.â
The next bolt snapped into being, faster than the last.
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