The Torvares estate was ahead just as Ludger remembered it: high stone walls trimmed with ivy, iron gates flanked by armored guards, banners hanging still in the morning air. Heâd only been here twice before, and both times Viola had been in the yard, practicing or waiting. This time the yard was emptyâno clash of steel, no grunts of effortâjust a couple of guards making their rounds and servants moving briskly between the outbuildings.
He slowed to a walk as he approached the main door, adjusting the weights on his arms and legs, and gave his name to the guard. A servant appeared a moment later and bowed slightly. âThis way, Master Ludger.â
âYes, Sebastian.â
âExcuse me? My name is Roland, sir.â
âDonât mind me.â
He followed the servant through familiar hallways lined with tapestries and polished wood, the scent of oil and dustless stone filling his nose. The estate felt quieter than it had during his last visits, the echo of his footsteps louder than he liked.
They stopped at a set of double doors and the servant gestured inside. âPlease wait here. Lord Torvares will be informed of your arrival.â
Ludger stepped into the living room. It was all polished floors, heavy curtains, and a long, low couch that looked like it had been carved from a single tree trunk and upholstered in dark green. He sat down, resting his hands on his knees. The cushions were too soft, the room too quiet.
This was a serious meeting, but the trappings of itâthe formal bowing, the waitingâmade his skin itch. He wasnât here to be treated like some official visitor or pampered guest. He was here to talk straight and walk back out. He exhaled slowly, eyes scanning the room as he settled in to wait for the old bull.
Half an hour crawled by. Ludger shifted on the overstuffed couch, fingers drumming against his knee. The silence of the room pressed on him heavier than his training weights.
This is ridiculous,
he thought.
Iâm not some diplomat here to sip tea.
He was about to stand when the door creaked open. Heavy footsteps shuffled across the polished floor. Ludger glanced upâand stopped.
Lord Torvares entered the room looking nothing like the man in Ludgerâs memories. The last time heâd seen him up close and at his peak was at the tournament a year ago, the old bull roaring himself hoarse from the stands, slamming his cane on the floor with every good strike. That image had been all booming voice and iron presence.
This man moved slowly, shoulders sagging under a fine coat, eyes ringed with dark shadows. His steps had weight but no fire, like someone walking uphill all day. Even the way he lowered himself into the chair across from Ludger was deliberate, careful, as though joints and breath had started to betray him.
Ludger blinked once, understanding dawning.
So thatâs why they kept me waiting.
The old bull was tired. Not just tiredâworn. It was a far cry from the lord whoâd once filled an arena with his voice.
Torvares gave him a thin, tired smile. âYouâre annoyed,â he said, voice lower and rougher than before. âForgive the delay. Itâs been⊠a long morning.â
Ludger straightened, studying him. Whatever heâd come to say, he was going to have to adjust his approach. This wasnât the same man from a year ago.
Ludger decided to hold back his pitch for now. Instead, he leaned forward slightly, eyes narrowing. âYou look⊠tired,â he said. âNot how I remember you.â
Torvares gave a dry little laugh and waved a hand. âSharp eyes. Iâve been dealing with too many problems since the border conflict. Paperwork, bickering nobles, troop movements, merchants whining about caravans. Half my nights are spent reading reports by candlelight.â
He rubbed at his chest with a knuckle. âAnd Iâve been catching colds. Nothing serious, but enough to wear me down. My healthâs been on the decline lately.â
Ludger studied him with a serious gaze. Up close the old bullâs skin looked paler than it used to, the lines around his eyes deeper. Torvares had always seemed like an immovable pillar â even in his late fifties heâd looked strong, voice booming, presence filling any room. Now, edging into his sixties, it seemed even age was beginning to chip at the stone.
The boyâs fingers tightened slightly on his knees.
This isnât the same man who roared over the tournament stands. Heâs still powerful, but timeâs catching up to him.
Torvares noticed the look but didnât comment, just shifted in his chair with a faint creak of joints. âSo,â he said, voice still low but steady. âWhat brings you to me, Ludger?â
Ludger sat very still on the couch, hands laced loosely in front of him. The old bullâs words about sleepless nights and creeping sickness still hung in the air, heavier than the velvet curtains. Up close Torvares didnât look like a baron or a banner anymore; he looked like a man who had spent too many winters at the front and was finally starting to show the cracks.
I came here to drop my plan on his desk,
Ludger thought.
To talk about a guild, a labyrinth, a town to be rebuilt.
He could almost feel the parchment and numbers heâd been rehearsing pressed against his ribs. But now⊠now he saw the dark hollows under Torvaresâ eyes, the way he shifted his weight like his joints hurt.
Heâs already carrying the Empireâs dirty work for a Viscount who doesnât even send help,
Ludger told himself.
And Iâm about to hand him one more burden. Thatâs not a plan, thatâs cruelty.
Ludgerâs jaw flexed, eyes narrowing.
If I add my ambitions to his load and it breaks him, then what? Viola loses the one anchor sheâs had. And Iâd be the one who snapped it.
The roomâs silence stretched. Torvares waited patiently, but Ludgerâs thoughts ran faster.
Do I keep this to myself? Do I change the pitch? Do I look for another backer first?
His fingers drummed once against his knee.
If I really want to think and act big, I canât just charge ahead because itâs convenient for me. I have to choose a way to build this guild without destroying the people who could make it possible.
He drew a slow, quiet breath, still weighing every angle before opening his mouth.
Lord Torvares leaned back in his chair, catching the look on Ludgerâs face. For a heartbeat his tired expression cracked, then a deep, gravelly laugh rolled out of him. It wasnât the booming roar from the tournament, but it still had weight.
âYouâre sitting there with that serious face, boy,â he said, a faint smile tugging at his mouth. âI can see it in your eyes. Youâre thinking about my health, about how tired I look. Wondering if youâre about to dump too much on an old man.â
He waved a hand, still chuckling. âI appreciate the consideration, but I donât need your pity. Iâm old, not dead.â
His gaze softened a fraction. âAnd speaking of things Iâve been remiss aboutâŠâ He leaned forward slightly. âI forgot to thank you. For looking after Viola for almost a year under your roof, and then learning from Gaius with her. Most donât realize what it takes to host a Torvares heir, much less keep her alive and training. I also noticed her growth, you have been a good presence in her life.â
Ludger blinked but stayed quiet.
Torvares sat back again, straightening his coat. âNormally I donât receive visitors without a scheduled audience. Saves me from interruptions and politics. But youâve been good to my granddaughter, and you came anyway.â He gave a small nod. âSo donât hesitate. Whatever you came here to say, say it. No need to dance around.â
He rested his elbows on the armrests, eyes still tired but glinting faintly like steel behind smoke. âI can take it.â
Ludger shifted on the couch, taking the opening but starting with something simpler. âWhereâs Viola?â he asked. âI expected to see her in the yard like before.â
Torvares let out a small breath through his nose. âWith Luna,â he said. âTheyâve been buried in books for weeks now. Sheâs focusing on her studies, almost too much for my liking. Rarely trains anymore.â
The old bullâs brows drew together, just a hint of a frown forming. âSheâs got her reasons, I suppose. My guess is sheâs trying to prepare herself to help me sooner with the work of managing the familyâs territory.â He shook his head slowly. âI canât fault her for it, but sheâs still young. Itâs⊠strange, seeing her trade the sword for ledgers.â
Ludger absorbed that in silence, picturing his half-sister bent over a desk while Luna hovered nearby.
So even sheâs thinking ahead to running the estate,
he thought.
Weâre all getting pushed into grown-up games whether we want to or not.
Torvares shifted in his chair, the tired lines on his face softening as he added, âSheâll be back to training soon enough. Itâs in her blood. But right now⊠sheâs trying to be ready.â
Ludger drew a slow breath. Enough circling. He sat up straighter on the couch, meeting Torvaresâ eyes head-on.
âI didnât come here just to ask about Viola,â he said quietly. âI came to tell you what Iâm planning.â
Torvares leaned back, one brow rising, but said nothing.
âI want to create a guild,â Ludger went on. âNot just any guild â one based in the town we recovered. I want to take that labyrinth and make it ours. Full control, no matter the cost. A place where adventurers work under a banner thatâs actually competent, where we can train, protect, and grow instead of being thrown to the wolves.â
Torvaresâ fingers curled on the armrest, his tired eyes sharpening a fraction. Ludger pressed on.
âIâm not saying itâll happen tomorrow,â he said. âI know Iâm nine, I know the size of what Iâm talking about. But Iâm already planning for the future. Building coin. Training. Mapping labyrinths. Iâm laying the ground before I even break it.â
He leaned forward, voice steady but low. âThatâs why I came to you. I donât just want to plant a guild in someone elseâs territory and wait to be crushed. I came to ask if thereâs anything I can do â anything we can do â to help you gain enough influence to bring that town under your banner, and the labyrinth with it. If you can secure it, then we can build something real. A partnership.â
The room went still. The only sound was the faint tick of a clock on the far wall.
Torvares didnât blink. The tiredness in his face hadnât vanished, but behind it something old and hard flickered back to life â the look of a man weighing a battlefield. He didnât interrupt, didnât scoff, didnât laugh. He just watched Ludger with a serious gaze, eyes like dull iron studying the boy across from him as if taking his measure for the first time.
Ludger held that stare without flinching, his heart thudding but his voice steady. âThatâs my goal,â he said. âI donât want to stumble into this. I want to build it right from the start.â
Torvares sat back slowly, fingers steepled, silent but no longer tired in the same way â the old bull listening, eyes calculating.
Torvares let the silence stretch for a long moment, eyes fixed on the boy in front of him. Heâd known Ludger wouldnât show up at his estate for some small errand â the kid had always been too deliberate for that â but the scope of what heâd just heard still caught him off guard.
âA guild of your ownâŠâ he murmured, steepling his fingers. âIn the recovered town. Full control over the labyrinth.â His gaze sharpened, but there was no mockery in it. âThatâs⊠bigger than I expected, Ludger. Interesting, to say the least.â
He sat back a little, studying the boy like a general studying a battle map. âThe idea has value,â he said slowly. âA lot of value. But there are issues you may not see yet â politics, manpower, coin, timing. Itâs not just a matter of walking in and planting a flag.â
Ludger leaned forward, eyes steady. âMy father will deal with that part,â he said. âHeâs agreed to handle the management, the permits, the merchants. He wants to settle down more anyway. With a third kid coming, heâs not going to be running off to labyrinths left and right.â
Torvares blinked at that, the faintest flicker of surprise crossing his face again. Then the corner of his mouth curled into a dry smile. âSo youâve already thought of the command structure.â He exhaled through his nose, eyes still fixed on Ludger. âInteresting. Very interesting.â
The old bull tapped one finger against the armrest, his tired expression slowly shifting into something closer to his old self â a man who saw the shape of a fight and was already measuring its odds. âAlright,â he said at last. âTell me more.â
Ludger didnât waste the opening Torvares had given him. He straightened his back, meeting the old bullâs gaze without wavering.
âThe guild will need some basic support at the start,â he said. âI already have some funds saved up, but that wonât solve everything â not manpower, not credibility. If I just throw up a sign and start taking contracts, weâll get every cut-throat and drifter looking for a free meal.â
Torvaresâ eyes narrowed slightly but he stayed silent, letting the boy speak.
âThatâs why I came to you,â Ludger continued. âI want to use the Torvares name to screen recruits. To handle the analysis and recruitment of new members. With your banner on the paperwork, we can keep the worst out and pull in people who are actually worth training. In exchangeâŠâ
He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, voice steady. âIn exchange the guild gives priority to Torvares business. We help your family first. We take jobs to stabilize your territory, protect your caravans, deal with problems before they reach your villages. Anyone working under your banner gets priority support from us.â
Torvaresâ fingers drummed once on the armrest. Ludger held his stare.
âIâm not asking for coin I havenât earned,â he said. âIâm asking for your name. With that, I can build something solid from the ground up, and youâll have a loyal force operating on the border that owes you for its start.â
The old bullâs gaze was sharp now, the fatigue pushed aside as he weighed the offer like a blade in his hand.
A note from Comedian0
Thank you for reading!
Don't forget to follow, favorite, and rate. If you want to read 40 chapters ahead, you can check my patreon:Â /Comedian0