Ludgerâs eyes sharpened as he stepped a little closer. âThen tell me thisâhow exactly do you manipulate the mana on the earth? Not just feel it, but
move
it. And if someone has a Spiritual CoreâŠâ he tapped his chest lightly, ââŠdoes that make it easier?â
For the first time, Gaius didnât answer right away. His bloodshot gaze swept over Ludger, lingering just a little too longâon his stance, on the faint glimmer of control in his eyes. Then he grunted, turning his back on them.
âIâve already taught too much for one day,â he said roughly. âIf youâre smart, youâll chew on what youâve got before asking for seconds.â
Ludgerâs jaw tightened, a sharp click of his tongue breaking the silence.
So close.
He could feel itâhe was just one push away from a real demonstration.
One show of that âcreation and transformationâ in action, one glimpse of how to anchor mana to the earth, and I could reverse-engineer the rest and unlock the class.
But Gaius had closed up again, his bottle swinging lazily at his side as he trudged back toward the guildhallâs shadow.
Viola shot Ludger a confused look. âThatâs it? Heâs done?â
Ludger exhaled through his nose, smirk faint but sharp. âFor now. Weâre closer than we were yesterday.â
He watched Gaiusâ retreating figure disappear into the hall.
Keep your secrets for now, old man. Iâll get that demonstration out of you one way or another.
Violaâs scowl deepened as Gaius vanished into the guildhall. She spun on her heel to face Ludger, fists on her hips. âThis is ridiculous. Heâs just going to keep hiding behind that bottle forever.â
Ludger stayed silent, still watching the doorway, his arms folded.
Then Violaâs eyes lit up with a dangerous glint. âWhat if we
provoke
him? You knowâpoke at him until he snaps and shows us what he can really do. If we get him mad enough, maybe heâll use his magic without thinking!â
Ludgerâs head turned slowly, his gaze like a blade. ââŠYouâre serious.â
She shrugged, a little grin creeping onto her face. âWorked with my sparring partners back home. People show their real moves when theyâre angry.â
He pinched the bridge of his nose, sighing through his teeth. âThis isnât a sparring partner, Viola. This is a guildmaster who can conjure walls out of thin air. You go poking at a wound like his, and you wonât get a lessonâyouâll get buried.â
Violaâs grin faltered, but she tried to puff up again. âIâm not scared.â
âI know,â Ludger said dryly. âThatâs why Iâm telling you no. Heâs not some training dummy. Heâs an earth mage who could crush you without even getting out of his chair.â
Her shoulders slumped. ââŠSo what do we do then?â
Ludgerâs smirk returned, faint but sharp. âWe watch. We wait. And we look for the right way to bait him without making him snap. Weâll get our demonstrationâbut on our terms, not his.â
Viola groaned, dragging a hand down her face. âUgh. Youâre so boring.â
âAnd youâre still alive,â Ludger replied. âYouâre welcome.â
By the time the sun bled out behind the jagged rooftops, the guildhall had gone quiet again. The clamor of the miners and vendors faded, replaced by the distant hum of the city at night.
Luna returned just as the first stars appeared, her steps light and sure despite the cracked stones of the area. She slipped inside with a small bundle under one arm and a calm nod to the two waiting kids.
They spread their dinner out on one of the newly scrubbed tablesâbread, salted meat, a few roasted vegetables sheâd managed to barter for, even a small jar of jam. The hall still smelled faintly of dust and stale liquor, but at least the table was clean and the air didnât choke them anymore.
It was strange, though, to eat in a place like this. The massive front doors hung open to the night, hinges rusted and locks long gone. Anyone could have wandered in.
Viola chewed her bread and kept glancing at the yawning doorway. âFeels weird, eating with the entrance wide open like that.â
Luna poured water into a cup and set it in front of her. âPublic order here is not as bad as it looks. The slums arenât safe, but this quarter still has a code of its own. People know who used to run this hall.â
Ludger nodded once, tearing off a piece of meat. âAnd nobody wants to poke a drunk who can raise stone walls with a flick of his wrist. Even broken, Gaius still casts a long shadow.â
Viola muttered under her breath but went back to eating. The three of them sat together at the empty table under the cracked beams, the night air cool against their faces. For now, at least, the ruined guild was theirs.
They ate in relative silence for a few moments, the sounds of chewing and the faint night breeze filling the hall. Then Luna set her cup down and spoke, her tone as calm and precise as always.
âI asked around while gathering supplies,â she began. âThe city itself is still relatively stable. That is thanks to the noble house controlling this territory. Theyâre wealthy, and they invest heavily in securityâhiring veteran adventurers, powerful mercenaries, and soldiers to keep order.â
Viola perked up, crumbs at the corner of her mouth. âSo itâs not as bad as it looks?â
Luna shook her head slightly. âNot on the surface. But the mines and the labyrinth are another matter entirely. Accidents happen frequently. Cave-ins, missing miners, vanished adventuring parties. Despite these patterns, the official word is always the sameââaccidents.ââ
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed, fingers drumming lightly against the tabletop.
Accidents. Right. And I look like Leonardo Dicaprio.
Luna went on. âThere are whispers of something elseâstrange phenomena, creatures appearing where they shouldnât. But the rumor that spreads fastest is always the same: accidents, nothing more.â
Viola frowned. âYou think thatâs true?â
Ludger smirked faintly, though his eyes stayed sharp. âTruth or not doesnât matter. Itâs the story they want people to believe. If the mines and the labyrinth are bleeding bodies and theyâre still calling it an âaccident,â it means someone doesnât want questions asked.â
Luna inclined her head. âExactly. And weâre outsiders here. We need to tread carefully.â
Viola slumped back in her chair, pouting. âGreat. So not only do we have a drunk for a teacher, but the labyrinth might be a death trap too.â
Ludger tore another piece of bread, voice dry. âWelcome to the world outside your grandfatherâs walls.â
Viola pushed the empty plate away and leaned her elbows on the table, her chin resting in her palms. âSo⊠what do we actually do tomorrow? Just sit here and hope he stops drinking long enough to teach us?â
Ludger didnât even look up from the scrap of bread he was tearing apart. âNo. The planâs still the same.â
She blinked. âTraining?â
He nodded once. âYouâre going to keep training until you can reach me while Iâm using magic. Dodging, blocking, closing the distanceâuntil you can actually touch me without getting flattened. Thatâs your job.â
Viola groaned dramatically, slumping forward. âMore target practice with me as the target. Great.â
Ludger smirked faintly. âYou wanted the labyrinth. This is the price. Survive me first, survive it later.â
He shifted his gaze to Luna, his voice sharpening. âAs for youâkeep doing what youâre doing. Find people we can trade with, preferably ones who arenât already on the payroll of some noble or crime family. Itâs probably too late to keep our presence secret, but itâs better to be safe than sorry. We canât afford the wrong kind of attention.â
Luna inclined her head once, expression calm. âUnderstood.â
Viola muttered under her breath, pouting. âYou sound like a general planning a warâŠâ
Ludgerâs smirk didnât fade. âGood. Because thatâs exactly what this is, just smaller. Train, watch, prepare. Then move.â
He leaned back in his chair, eyes flicking toward the dark hall where Gaius had disappeared.
And sooner or later, the old man will make his move. When he does, weâll be ready.
The sun had barely cleared the rooftops when the first bolt hissed across the yard.
Viola pivoted hard on her toes, twisting her body the way Ludger had drilled into her, the mana-charged sphere slicing past her shoulder. She didnât even flinch this time. Another bolt came a heartbeat laterâshe swung up her glowing sword, the impact cracking like thunder but her stance holding firm.
This was their new rhythm. Ludger stood at one end of the guildâs yard, calm and still, one hand raised. Mana flared and dimmed with each shot. He looked like a machine, eyes tracking her, firing without pause.
Violaâs blade blazed with
[Weapon Enhancing]
, but now she wasnât letting it flicker and die between hits. She was feeding mana into it constantly, a steady stream rather than desperate bursts. Every time a bolt shattered against her guard, she forced more energy into the weapon, refreshing the glow mid-swing.
Her breath came in sharp bursts, sweat streaking down her temple, but her movements were sharper than yesterday. She ducked one bolt, spun, and parried the next cleanly. The tremor in her arms was less now, her balance firmer.
Ludger watched with a faint smirk, even as another sphere formed at his fingertips.
Sheâs learning to cycle her mana without thinking. Thatâs the first real step.
The next bolt came faster, curving to strike from an angle. Viola adjusted her footing, pivoting hard, her sword intercepting the glowing sphere and scattering it like glass. She felt the impact, but her blade held, its aura bright and steady.
She grinned despite herself, exhilaration flickering in her eyes. âHa! Youâre not shaking me off this time!â
Ludgerâs smirk sharpened. âGood. Then stop talking and keep up.â
Another volley. Viola ducked, sidestepped, swung, her mana flowing steadily into the blade. Each impact still drained her, but she wasnât panicking nowâshe was adapting, her control smoothing out under fire.
For the first time since theyâd started, Ludger let his arm drop between shots, studying her stance.
At this rate, she might actually reach me before she burns out.
Viola caught her breath between parries, sweat plastering her hair to her forehead. But her grin stayed. âIâm gonna get you, just watch!â
Ludger raised his hand again, a larger bolt blooming in his palm. âThen come on.â
Violaâs boots scraped against the packed earth as she lunged forward. Another bolt hissed past her ear; she ducked and kept moving. Her blade flared with
[Weapon Enhancing]
, bright and steady as she poured more and more mana into it without hesitation.
âCome on!â she yelled, grin wide and eyes blazing. âIâm not stopping now!â
Ludgerâs hand rose, another volley forming. He fired at different heights, different angles, making her twist and pivot just to stay on her feet. But she did. She ducked low, slashed one bolt away, spun and deflected another. Each step brought her closer, her momentum building, her wooden sword glowing like a torch.
Sheâs actually closing the gap,
Ludger thought, narrowing his eyes.
Good. Letâs see where she breaks.
He threw a heavier bolt straight at her chest. Viola snarled, shifting her weight and slamming her blade into it. The impact cracked like a gunshot. The glow around her sword sputtered violentlyâbut she forced more mana in, holding it together. Another step. Another swing.
She was almost on him now. Three meters. Two.
Then her aura flickered a final time. Empty. Her reserves bottomed out like a bucket kicked over.
The next bolt hit her blade with a thunderclap. The wooden training sword split cleanly in half, the upper piece spinning away through the air before thudding into the dirt. Viola stumbled, panting hard, eyes wide with shock.
âDamn it!â she hissed, clicking her tongue as she stared at the broken hilt in her hands.
The glow faded completely, leaving only splintered wood and her own ragged breathing. She glared up at Ludger, who had lowered his hand, the last of his mana bolt dissipating harmlessly into the morning air.
He watched her calmly, one eyebrow raised.
She made it almost to my reach before burning out. Not bad.
Ludger walked toward her, the splintered hilt still clutched in her hand. A faint glow flickered around his fingers as he pressed them to her shoulder.
[Healing Touch]
spilled into her muscles, dulling the tremors and easing the sting from her arms.
âYou lasted longer than I expected,â he said, voice flat but not unkind. âMaybe next time I can start shooting real mana bolts at you. As long as you use your actual sword, you should be fine.â
Violaâs head snapped up, eyes gleaming despite the sweat on her brow. âYouâre on,â she breathed, a wild grin spreading across her face.
Then her knees gave out.
Ludger moved fast, but she was already tipping forward. He caught her under the arms just enough to slow her fall, but she still hit the dirt on her side with a soft thud, the broken hilt rolling from her hand.
She was out cold, breathing hard but steady, exhaustion etched across her face.
Ludger crouched beside her, clicking his tongue. âPushing yourself too hard, as usualâŠâ
He sat back on his heels, eyes flicking toward the guildhall where Gaius lurked somewhere inside.
Sheâs stubborn enough to break herself just to prove a point. If Iâm not careful, sheâll be crawling back to Torvares looking like a battered mercenary instead of a noble heir.
He brushed some dirt from her cheek and muttered, âGet some rest, idiot. Youâre no good unconscious.â
Luna appeared without a sound, her bag still slung over one shoulder. She took in the sceneâthe splintered training sword, Viola sprawled in the dirt, and Ludger crouched beside herâwith one calm, unreadable glance.
Without a word, she knelt and slid her arms under Viola, lifting the girl with surprising ease for her age. âShe overdid it again?â
Ludger exhaled through his nose. âAs usual.â
âIâll get her inside,â Luna said simply. She shifted her grip and carried Viola toward the hall, the girlâs head lolling against her shoulder.
Ludger watched them disappear into the dim interior, then straightened and walked to the edge of the yard. He sat cross-legged on the packed earth, closing his eyes.
His mana pool felt like a drained reservoirâstill half full but sluggish. He hated that feeling.
I donât like letting it dip this low. If something happens now, Iâm half a mage at best.
He took a slow breath, turning his awareness inward. The familiar pulse of his
[Spiritual Core]
flickered in the darkness behind his eyelids, steady but faint. He guided his breathing, coaxing mana to cycle, pulling the scattered threads back together.
Focus. Refill first, then test.
Gaiusâs gruff words echoed in his mindâanchor, weight, environmental mana. Ludger rolled the concepts over like stones in his hands.
If I can use Create Water by twisting the airâs oxygen, then maybe I can nudge the earthâs mana the same way⊠even if he wonât demonstrate it yet.
Another breath. Mana flowed a little stronger. His core pulsed, drawing in the ambient energy like a slow tide.
He kept his eyes shut, the broken yard around him fading as he focused on the warmth building in his chest.
Step one: refill. Step two: experiment. Step three⊠force the old manâs hand.
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