Gaius stood there for a long moment, the dust settling back to the floor around Ludgerâs boots. The boy had just demonstrated something rare, something Gaius hadnât seen in years outside of old bloodlines. And still the old guildmaster didnât move to teach.
He grunted, reaching down to pick up his bottle again. âDonât think this means Iâm going to start handing out lessons,â he said at last.
Ludger only arched an eyebrow. âDidnât expect you to.â
Gaius snorted. âGood. Then we understand each other.â He took a swig, eyes narrowing faintly at the taste.
Someone whoâs lived like me doesnât give up habits that easily,
he thought.
Especially not for free.
Above them on the balcony, the faint breeze rattled an old guild banner. Gaius let his gaze drift to it for a heartbeat, and an old memory rose up with it. The crumpled letter tucked into his desk drawerâthe one written in Torvaresâ heavy, blunt hand.
Iâll send some skilled kids to you,
the old bull had written.
Teach them what you can.
Gaiusâ lips twisted into a bitter half-smile.
Skilled kids. Sure. I never expected heâd send his own heir. Or a boy who isnât even ten. And a maid who moves like a knife.
He took another drink, watching Ludger wipe the last dust from his palms.
What the hell are you playing at, Torvares?
Across the hall, Ludger looked back at him with that small, unreadable smirk. He hadnât expected the man to start teaching yet anyway. Someone who had spent years drinking himself into silence wouldnât change course after one display. Ludger could wait.
Gaius raised the bottle one more time, his gaze heavy on the three of them.
Stubborn old bull sends stubborn little calves,
he thought.
Letâs see how long this lasts.
The guild hall was quiet except for the soft hiss of grit moving against stone. Ludger stood near the center of the cleared floor, eyes closed, hands low at his sides. Heâd moved from just a faint swirl to a thin, steady vortex of dust circling him from the floor to his knees, like a pale halo rising from the cracks in the wood. Each breath he took drew the particles tighter into formation, then let them drift a little before gathering them again.
On the far side, Viola and Luna had pulled a table closer, parchment spread across it. The rough map of the labyrinthâs first zone lay pinned under a few iron shards to keep it from curling.
âWeâve pretty much found all the dead ends in the first zone,â Viola said, tapping a finger against one corner. âIf we keep going the same way, weâll just run in circles.â
Luna nodded once, her cloak slipping from one shoulder. âThen tomorrow itâs time for the next layer.â
Viola glanced toward Ludger, then back at the map. âHeâs going to say the same thing, right? That itâs âabout time for the next step.ââ
Lunaâs mouth curved slightly. âHe already decided. Heâs just testing himself while he thinks.â
A swirl of dust spun higher around Ludgerâs legs as if to punctuate her words. He opened one eye, still controlling the flow, and said quietly, âWeâve mapped what we can here. Tomorrow we step deeper. Different terrain, different ambushes. Weâll have to adjust our formation.â
Viola grinned, already itching for it. âFinally.â
Ludger let the dust settle in a slow drift back to the floor and stretched his fingers. âGet some rest. Deeper layers arenât forgiving.â
Across the hall, half-hidden in the shadows of the balcony, Gaius watched the boy practice and the girls plan, his bottle untouched. The old guildmasterâs expression was hard to readâequal parts curiosity, suspicion, and the faintest flicker of something like pride.
By the time dawn burned through the cracks of the old guild hall, the floor was no longer just dusty â it looked like a miniature storm. Ludger stood in the center, eyes closed, palms open. A wide belt of sand and grit hung in the air around him, swirling in a steady, controlled orbit from his ankles to his chest. Each breath drew the particles tighter, smoother, steadier.
Viola blinked from where she sat lacing her boots. âAre you⊠enamored with sand and dust all of a sudden?â she asked, eyebrow arched.
Ludger opened one eye and let the smallest smirk tug at his mouth. âNo. Iâm progressively improving my skills.â The sand drifted down and settled at his feet in a soft hiss as he released the control. âControl is everything down here.â
He dusted off his hands and looked at the two girls. âPlan for todayâs simple: we sell the ores weâve stockpiled, use the money to buy mana potions, and then we go as deep as we can.â
Both Viola and Luna frowned at the same time. Viola leaned forward. âThatâs⊠sudden. Youâre just going to jump straight into the deep parts?â
Lunaâs expression stayed calm but her voice was cool. âDescending that far without more preparation is risky.â
Ludger shrugged, slipping his armguards on. âMapping the first zoneâs done. Staying there any longer wonât teach us anything. If weâre going to test ourselves, it has to be where it counts. With potions, weâll have a cushion if things go wrong.â
Viola huffed and crossed her arms, still looking uneasy. âYou and your plansâŠâ
âPlans keep us alive,â Ludger said simply, buckling the last strap. âWeâll move carefully, but weâre moving.â
The guild hall fell quiet for a moment except for the faint crunch of sand under their boots and the distant city sounds filtering in from the street.
As they gathered their packs, Viola eyed the pouch of cores at Ludgerâs belt, her brows drawing together. âWhy only use the money from the ores?â she asked. âI know youâve got more coin than that. You donât look like the stingy type.â
Ludger slanted a look at her, the faintest smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. âYou talk like someone whoâs never worked a day in her life.â
Viola bristled. âI work plenty!â
âSwinging a sword at things isnât the same as paying for it,â he said dryly. âI
could
fund all of this myself, sure. But if our progress doesnât fund our next step, itâs not really progress. Itâs just burning through a purse until itâs empty.â
He tightened the strap on his pack. âYou want to grow strong, you use what you earn to buy the next thing that makes you stronger. Not somebody elseâs coin.â
Luna, already checking her knives, gave a small nod at that. âThat logic holds. Gains paying for further gains creates stability.â
Viola rolled her eyes and blew out a sharp breath. âYouâre thinking too much again.â
Ludger just shouldered his pack and moved toward the door. âThinking too much keeps us breathing.â
Viola groaned but followed, sword tapping lightly against her hip as she muttered under her breath. Luna fell into step behind them, silent but faintly approving of Ludgerâs reasoning.
Outside, the morning light caught on the red-silver of his armguards as they headed for Meiraâs market.
The morning sun was bright over Meiraâs market square, striking sparks off piles of ore and polished weapons. Merchants barked prices from under faded awnings, adventurers bartered over bundles of arrows and coils of rope.
Ludger led the way through the maze of stalls until he found an older merchant behind a counter of dull iron. The manâs beard was streaked grey and his eyes narrowed at the sight of the red-silver armguards. For a heartbeat his expression flickeredârecognition.
âIron VeinâŠâ the merchant murmured under his breath as Ludger dropped a pouch of cores on the counter.
âSelling,â Ludger said simply.
The man picked up one core, turned it in his fingers, then nodded once. They struck the deal quickly. The merchant counted out the silver coins, hands steady but eyes still darting between Ludger and the two girls at his back, like he was trying to see the guildâs ghost standing behind them.
Next they crossed to a crooked stall at the edge of the square where a thin old alchemist sat behind rows of glass bottles. The manâs hands shook slightly as he set out the potions, but his prices were blunt. âFive silvers for one mana potion. Cheapest in town,â he rasped.
The rate was one mana potion for five silver coins, and each ore was ten percent of that. Ludger slid the coins across the counter without a word, eyes flicking over the bottlesâ watery blue glow.
I donât know how much these will actually recover,
he thought.
Cheapest stock usually means weakest stock. But itâs better than nothing.
He distributed the potions between their packs, slipping two into his own, one into Violaâs, one into Lunaâs. Viola peered at the little bottle in her hand and frowned. âThis wonât last long.â
âIt wonât,â Ludger said. âSo donât waste it.â
They stepped back into the flow of the market, coins lighter, packs heavier with glass. Around them, a few older merchants still stole glances at the trio, murmuring âIron Veinâ under their breath like a name out of the past.
Ludger caught one of those glances and didnât smile, but there was a flicker of satisfaction in his eyes.
Step one.
The three of them left Meira behind, the cityâs noise fading into the morning air as the road curved toward the mountains. The dark mouth of the labyrinth waited ahead, torches flickering like watchful eyes at its entrance.
Viola walked beside Ludger, her sword balanced across her shoulders. For once she wasnât humming or bouncing on her toes. She glanced up at him with a serious expression. âLudger⊠cover for me.â
He cocked an eyebrow. âI do that all the time. Even when youâre breathingâkeeps you from inhaling too much dust.â
Violaâs cheeks colored. âStop joking around.â She dropped the sword from her shoulders, gripping the hilt. âIâm serious. I want you to cover for me while I test something.â
Ludgerâs pace slowed, his eyes narrowing. âTest what?â
âInstead of you stunning the monsters like before,â she said, her voice firm, âI want you to stop their bullets. All of them. Iâll handle the rest.â
Ludger studied her for a long beat, red-silver armguards glinting in the light. âYouâre asking me to be the shield while you charge in blind.â
âIâm asking you to trust me,â she shot back.
He exhaled through his nose, gaze flicking toward the jagged peaks beyond which the labyrinth lay.
Always pushing. Always reckless.
But her eyes were steady now, not playful.
Finally he nodded once. âFine. But you slip once, and we pull back. Understood?â
Viola grinned fiercely, her earlier seriousness breaking for just a heartbeat. âUnderstood.â
Luna, walking a step behind, glanced between them but said nothing, her expression unreadable.
They reached the worn stone steps leading down into the labyrinth. Ludger adjusted his armguards, the faint shimmer of mana already gathering around them. âAll right,â he said quietly. âLetâs see what youâve got.â
At the edge of the worn stone steps, Ludger paused and flexed his fingers inside the red-silver armguards. The faint shimmer of mana gathered at his palms like static before a storm. He glanced at Viola.
âListen,â he said evenly. âI canât block all the attacks with just these.â He tapped the armguards with a knuckle. âToo many projectiles, too many angles. Youâd get shredded before I caught them all.â
Viola tilted her head, frowning. âThenââ
âSo Iâll use my magic instead,â Ludger cut in. âMana Bolts. Itâll be good training for my precision and reaction speed. You focus on striking. Iâll handle the bullets.â
Her eyes widened for a second, then she smirked. âSo youâll be my wall
and
my artillery.â
âThink of it as target practice,â he said dryly. âBut if you push too far, we pull back. Got it?â
Viola nodded once, her grip tightening on her sword. âGot it.â
Luna stood behind them, cloak drawn close, scanning the dark mouth of the labyrinth. Her expression didnât change, but she gave the smallest approving nod.
Ludger drew a slow breath, mana pulsing around his arms in a faint blue glow. âAll right,â he said. âLetâs see how well we both react.â
Together they descended the rough steps into the cool dark, the echo of their boots swallowed by the labyrinthâs depths.
The cool, stale air of the labyrinth wrapped around them as they descended the last step. The torches along the walls hissed softly, their orange light flickering across twisted stone. Ludger rolled his shoulders once and drew a slow breath.
Focus. Armguards are easier, but thatâs not the exercise.
He let the faint glow of mana creep from his
[Spiritual Core]
down into his palms. Blue light danced across his fingers, flickering like tiny sparks.
A grinding noise echoed from the ceiling ahead. âIncoming,â Ludger muttered.
With a clatter of floating plates, a random iron elemental slid out of its camouflage above the corridor and dropped to the floor, its core pulsing red. It didnât hesitateâchunks of iron shot from its body like bullets, streaking straight toward them.
Ludger didnât move to raise his armguards. Instead, he adjusted his stance, mana coiling at his fingertips. âLetâs test this,â he murmured.
[Mana Bolt]
snapped out in a staccato rhythmâquick, precise pulses rather than heavy shots. The first few collided with the incoming iron bullets midair, bursts of sparks lighting the tunnel as the projectiles shattered.
Another volley from the elemental. Ludgerâs eyes narrowed, his hands flicking almost too fast to follow. Bolt met bullet, power against power. He had the beast beat in sheer output, so he started throttling his shots, bleeding off some power from each pulse, tuning them until they werenât smashing but canceling.
Sparks hissed and died midair where the bolts and bullets annihilated one another, a rhythm like hammer blows in reverse. Behind him, Viola held her sword ready but didnât chargeâwatching, eyes wide as she realized what he was doing.
Ludger exhaled slowly, mana thrumming through his arms.
Precision and reaction. Thatâs the training.
The elemental paused, its core flickering uncertainly as its attack pattern faltered under the unrelenting counter-fire.
âYour opening,â Ludger said flatly.
The elemental hesitated under Ludgerâs rapid counter-fire, its core flickering as another volley of its bullets crumbled into sparks mid-air. Dust and iron shards floated in the corridor like frozen rain.
Behind him, Viola lowered her stance. She drew in a sharp breath, one hand loosening from the hilt so she held her blade in a single grip. Slowly she shifted the sword to the side, tip angled toward the target, her free arm moving in front of her for balance. The point of the blade turned just enough to line up with the elementalâs glowing core.
For a heartbeat she stood like thatâstill as a drawn arrow.
Then she burst forward in an explosion of movement.
[Weapon Enhancing] and Overdrive
flared around the blade in a bright surge, mana flooding her muscles. Her boots struck sparks from the stone as she closed the distance faster than sheâd ever moved before.
The elemental tried to lift its arm, but another quick flick of Ludgerâs bolts shredded its projectiles midair, leaving the core exposed.
Violaâs sword snapped upward and then thrust straight through the creatureâs center mass. The enhanced blade punched into the core with a sharp
crack
âand the impact blasted the whole thing apart. Plates and fragments spun outward, clattering across the corridor as the core shattered, its glow snuffing out like a dying ember.
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