Ludger left Aroniaâs shop with the last of the teaâs warmth still in his chest. The streets were brighter now, filled with the smell of bread and the clatter of carts. By the time he reached his own home, the noise had thinned again, replaced by the steady rhythm of birds in the eaves.
He pushed open the gate and stepped into the yard.
Arslan was there, shirt clinging to his back with sweat, sitting on the low fence with a whetstone in hand. His training sword leaned against the post beside him. The heavy drills had stopped for now; he was running the stone along the edge in slow, deliberate strokes, pausing to test it with his thumb. A jug of water sat at his feet.
It looked like a break, but Ludger could see the tension still in his fatherâs shouldersâmuscle memory humming even while he sat still. The man wasnât just keeping himself sharp; he was trying to grind something invisible down with every pass of the stone.
Ludger leaned against the doorframe, hands in his pockets, watching for a moment.
Planning to sharpen his edge for a while, huh.
He smirked faintly.
If he used his head half as hard as he swung that sword, heâd probably make even more progress. Brute force gets you far, but thinking gets you further.
Arslan glanced up at him, catching the look, but didnât say anything. The sound of whetstone against steel filled the quiet yard, the two of them breathing the same warm afternoon airâone honing a blade, the other weighing how best to sharpen himself.
Ludger wandered closer, hands still in his pockets. âDad,â he said, nodding at the whetstone. âYou know how much the tavernâs made in the last two months?â
Arslan paused mid-stroke and glanced up. âYour motherâs got the coin put away somewhere safe,â he said. âLast I checked it was around twenty gold. Place has been packed since word got around you were out there fighting labyrinth monsters. Folks came in hoping for news, and a lot of them came hoping to get patched up for free.â He smirked faintly. âFree healing brings in paying customers. Never underestimate it.â
Ludger raised his eyebrows. âTwenty goldâŠâ
Arslan chuckled and went back to running the stone along the blade. âWhat kind of scheme are you cooking up now, Luds? Planning to buy new gear? Hire a bard to sing about you? Or is this another one of your secret training plans?â
Ludger gave him a dry look. âWouldnât you like to know.â
Arslan laughed under his breath, the sound like gravel shifting. âI would. Every time you ask about money, something explodes or gets fixed. Which is it this time?â
Ludger only smirked, eyes drifting to the yard. âGuess youâll see.â
Arslan shook his head, smiling despite himself. âJust donât burn the whole twenty before your mother finds out. Iâm not taking that blame.â
The whetstone rasped again, the sound blending with their shared quiet as the afternoon sun slanted across the yard.
Ludger didnât answer his fatherâs teasing; he just let a small smirk ghost across his face and wandered back inside. The numbers were already lining up in his head.
Heâd already struck a deal with Aronia that morning: five mana potions a day, each one ten silver coins. Not cheap, but she promised theyâd be stronger and cleaner than the ones heâd been choking down in the labyrinth. If he wanted to push his earth magic the way he planned, heâd burn through them fast.
Which meant heâd need more coin. A lot more coin.
He sat at the kitchen table, absently drumming his fingers while the thought took shape.
Maybe itâs time to start another healing streak,
he mused.
Offer a discount for customers at the tavern, pull in crowds again. That would cover the potions.
But there was another angle too.
If Iâm going to keep relying on Aroniaâs brews, I should invest in her shopâupgrade her equipment, stock her shelves. Sheâd make better potions, Iâd get better prices.
He leaned back, staring at the ceiling.
She probably wouldnât accept the idea, though. Half-dryads and âpatronsâ⊠bad history there. And she likes her independence.
The house was still and quiet around him. Outside, he could hear Arslanâs whetstone rasping, steady and patient. Inside, his own plans were beginning to grind just as steadilyâways to train harder, earn more, and build something bigger without spooking the people who helped him.
He allowed himself a small, dry smile.
Always another problem to solve.
Ludger let the idea of investing in Aroniaâs shop drift to the back of his mind. Sheâd made it clear enough she didnât want the kind of attention that came with bigger premises or âpatrons.â For now, better to let her keep her quiet corner and just pay for the potions straight.
He was still sitting at the kitchen table, lost in thought, when the steady rasp of a whetstone outside stopped. A moment later Arslan stepped in through the back door, wiping his hands on a rag. Without the clatter of his mother moving around or Violaâs voice filling the room, the house felt almost too quiet.
Arslan poured himself a cup of water and leaned against the counter. âSo,â he said, watching Ludger over the rim, âwhat happened out there?â
Ludger looked up. âYou didnât ask before.â
âI didnât,â Arslan said simply. âYour mother and Viola were here. Didnât want to stir her up more than she already was. But now itâs just us.â He raised an eyebrow. âTell me.â
Ludger had been expecting this sooner or later. The memory of the labyrinthâthe elementals, the cloaked figures, the fake wallsârose up fresh again.
He drew a slow breath. âIt was supposed to be training. Turned into something else.â
Arslanâs eyes narrowed slightly but he didnât interrupt, waiting for his son to go on.
Ludger laid it all outâthe weeks under Gaius, the second zoneâs iron elementals moving like trained hounds, the cloaked figures slipping through stone, the fake walls and orders to âfind the targets.â He didnât spare details, only kept his voice low and even.
Arslan listened without interrupting. By the time Ludger finished, the water in his fatherâs cup had gone still and forgotten. His eyes, though, stayed sharpâno flicker of fatigue, just the steady look of a man turning pieces over in his head.
He leaned back against the counter, jaw tight. âCould be a lot of things,â he said finally. âCould be someone aiming at Viola. Could be somebody testing you. Could also just be a new crew of scavengers pushing into the labyrinth and seeing who they can scare off.â
He rubbed at the back of his neck, frowning. âI canât say for certain which. But the way you describe themâŠtheyâre organized. That worries me more.â
Ludger watched him quietly. âSo?â
Arslanâs gaze stayed on some distant point, still thinking. âSo we stay sharp. We donât assume every shadow is an assassin, but we donât walk blind either.â His eyes flicked back to Ludger, the edge softening a little. âYou did right getting the three of you out.â
The house was quiet around them, just the sound of the clock ticking in the next room. Ludger felt the weight of his fatherâs words settleâno easy answers, only vigilance.
âIâll reach out to some people,â he said. âFriends, old allies. A few still owe me favors.â His eyes stayed in the middle distance, as if already scanning a map of names and debts. âCanât promise Iâll find anything concrete, but Iâll try. Quietly.â
Ludger tilted his head. âQuietly?â
Arslan nodded once. âIâm also going to contact Lord Torvares. Heâs got eyes in places even the guilds doesnât. But I wonât tell Viola about itânot until I have something worth telling. No sense stirring her up or making her a target while sheâs still figuring herself out.â
He rubbed a thumb along the edge of the counter, a habit when he was thinking hard. âIf someone is moving pieces in that labyrinth, weâll know soon enough. Until then, keep training, keep your head low, and donât show all your cards.â
Ludger leaned back in his chair, a faint smirk tugging at his mouth despite the weight of the conversation. âSounds like youâve still got some fight left off the training yard.â
Arslanâs eyes flicked to him, a dry glint there. âAlways.â
The kitchen fell quiet again, but the silence felt different nowâless empty, more like the pause before the next move in a long game.
Ludger stayed seated after his father left the kitchen, staring at the empty teacup in front of him. The house was quiet again, but his thoughts werenât.
Iâve got earth magic now. A powerful class. Skills that arenât just party tricks.
At first, when heâd left for Meira City, the plan had been simple: train, survive, maybe line up a few reliable allies to watch their backs in the labyrinth. That was it. Stay small. Stay unnoticed.
But the last two months had changed that. Cloaked hunters. Rigged elementals. politics spilling into dungeon floors. His own growth.
Having a handful of friends isnât enough,
he thought, jaw tightening.
If someone wants to pull strings on us, I need more than reflexes and luck. I need power. Money. Influence.
His eyes drifted to the small ledger sitting on the shelfâa list of the tavernâs earnings his mother kept. Twenty gold sitting there already. Not much in the long game, but a start.
There was one obvious way to turn it into something bigger. One organization that had power, money, and influence by design.
A guild,
he thought.
Not just being another name on the rosterâbuilding one. Or taking one. Something that canât be ignored.
The idea settled into him like a stone clicking into place. Dangerous, ambitious, but it felt right.
He stood up, pushing the chair back softly.
If Iâm going to climb, itâs time to plan the next rung.
The kitchen was still. Outside, the sound of his fatherâs whetstone drifted through the open window, a steady rasp like a clock counting down.
Name: Ludger
Level:
41 (2,450 / 4,100)
Current Job:
Cook (Lv 35 â 620 / 3,600)
Current Class:
Pugilist (Lv 41 â 1,300 / 4,200)
Health:
1,590 / 1,590
Mana:
3630 / 3630
Stamina:
2830 / 2830
Strength:
167
Dexterity:
186
Intelligence:
316
Vitality:
159
Wisdom:
363
Endurance:
283
Luck:
90
Classes & Jobs Skills
Pugilist Lv 41
(+2 STR, +2 VIT/level)
[Hard Fists Lv 35]
[Iron Guard Lv 27]
[Quick Fists Lv 12]
[Straight Cannon Lv 03]
[Quick Kicks Lv 03]
[Bone Breaker Lv 01]
[Bodyslam Lv 01]
[Headbutt Lv 01]
[Shatter Palm Lv 01]
(new)
Cook Lv 35
(+1 DEX, +1 INT, +1 WIS/level)
[Knife Handling Lv 30]
[Seasoning Sense Lv 22]
[Fire Control Lv 19]
[Food Preservation Lv 18]
[Dish Presentation Lv 15]
[Quick Cooking Lv 05]
[Brewing Lv 05]
[Butchery Lv 01]
Mage Lv 33
(+2 INT, +2 WIS/level)
[Create Water Lv 28]
[Tinder Lv 20]
[Dust Lv 14]
[Cold Wind Lv 14]
[Mana Pulse Lv 11]
[Fireball Lv 01]
[Stone Arrow Lv 01]
Swordsman Lv 31
(+2 STR, +2 DEX/level)
[Basic Swordplay Lv 22]
[Parry Lv 15]
[Quick Thrust Lv 13]
[Counter Stance Lv 03]
[Guard Break Lv 11]
[Counter Swing Lv 01]
[Cross Slash Lv 01]
Sage Lv 34
(+2 INT, +4 WIS/level)
[Mana Bolt Lv 25]
[Mana Wall Lv 06]
[Spiritual Core Lv 32]
[Meditation Lv 11]
[Mana Armor Lv 01]
[Mana Arrow Lv 01]
[Arcane Arrow Lv 01]
Druid Lv 24
(+3 INT, +3 WIS/level)
[Healing Touch Lv 36]
[Root Snare Lv 01]
[Herbal Whisper Lv 01]
[Plant Growth Lv 01]
[Verdant Shield Lv 01]
Bard Lv 09
(+1 INT, +1 WIS, +1 DEX/level)
[Song of Ease Lv 16]
[Battle Hymn Lv 01]
Courier Lv 24
(+1 DEX, +3 END/level)
[Dash Lv 25]
[Quickstrike Lv 21]
[Focused Stride Lv 01]
[Stamina Regen Lv 14]
[Stamina Resilience Lv 01]
Assassin Lv 21
(+2 DEX, +2 END, +3 LUK/level)
[Silent Steps Lv 25]
[Backstab Lv 04]
[Dual Wielding Lv 01]
[Knife Throwing Lv 01]
[Camouflage Lv 01]
Tactician Lv 9
(+3 INT, +3 DEX/level)
[Tactical Insight Lv 14]
[Battlefield Analysis Lv 04]
Teacher Lv 10
(+3 INT, +3 DEX/level)
[Dissection of Knowledge Lv.11]
[Student Insight Lv.11]
[Guiding Words Lv.11]
Geomancer Lv 14
(+6 INT, +3 WIS/level)
[Earth Manipulation Lv 15]
[Stone Grip Lv 12]
[Quicksand Lv 01]
Later that evening, Ludger sat cross-legged on his bed with the window cracked open. Cool night air drifted in. The numbers stared back at him in neat columns: mana high, INT and WIS climbing past anything heâd ever imagined.
He leaned back, exhaling through his nose.
Iâm starting to look more like a mage than anything else,
he thought.
At least on paper.
Yet the scars on his knuckles and the calluses across his palms told a different story. All the hours of fists, footwork, and kicks hadnât gone anywhere.
Iâm not half bad up close either,
he reminded himself. He could still break cores with his hands, still drop an elemental with a well-timed strike.
His eyes drifted to the city beyond the window, lamplight flickering like a field of fireflies.
Maybe I could use thisâmy reputation, my skillsâto start something bigger. A guild of my own.
The idea had been tugging at him all day, like a thread in the back of his mind. Power, money, influence. A way to protect the people around him before anyone else tried to pull strings.
But then the other side of it surfacedâquieter, heavier.
Would that be enough?
A name and a roster didnât stop cloaked killers. Not without the right people, the right strategy, the right foundation.
He drummed his fingers against the paper, the faint smile on his lips not quite reaching his eyes.
First build myself. Then the guild.
The room was quiet except for the soft city sounds outside, and the flicker of plans he wasnât ready to say out loud yet.
Ludger closed the ledger and pushed it aside. The numbers would keep. The guild idea would keep. All of it was just noise until he handled the one thing in front of him.
First things first,
he thought, flexing his hands.
If Iâm going to lead anyone, if Iâm going to be more than just another name with a high mana pool, I need to prove I can win where it counts.
His mind replayed the yard from that morningâViolaâs blade crashing against Arslanâs sword, the heat of his fatherâs Overdrive, the way each strike had pushed her back no matter how hard she rooted herself. Experience, power, refinement.
Defeating Father at his own game. Close combat. That is the first real step.
It wasnât about pride, not really. It was about having the reflexes and instincts carved into him so deeply that even assassins in the dark wouldnât matter. About being a fighter first, not just a mage who happened to punch.
He leaned back, staring at the ceiling, the corner of his mouth quirking into a dry smile.
Once I can beat him head-on, then Iâll start thinking about building a guild. Until then, training.
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