The next morning dawned. Ludger was already up, pack slung over his shoulder, weights strapped to his arms and legs. He stepped into the kitchen where his parents were finishing breakfast.
âIâm heading out,â he said simply. âIâll stop by Aroniaâs to sort the potions first.â
Elaine gave a curt nod, arms folded. Arslan grunted his acknowledgment. Ludger offered them both a small wave. âSee you soon,â he said, then turned and headed down the road, his figure shrinking quickly into the morning light.
Elaine and Arslan stood in the doorway, watching him disappear. The silence stretched until Arslan finally asked, âYouâre just⊠fine with him leaving like that?â
Elaine didnât take her eyes off the road. âFine? No.â She breathed out slowly. âBut I noticed the remains of your little duel half a year ago. He tried to erase the traces with his earth magic, but he didnât hide everything.â
Arslan blinked. âYouââ
âAnd,â she went on calmly, âWe have regulars at the tavern who talk. I hear things.â Her voice stayed level, but the weight behind it made the back of Arslanâs neck prickle. âIf he has gotten strong enough to fight with you, he can protect himself⊠at the same time, I feel like if I force him to stay at home for too long, one day he will leave and he wonât return.â
A bead of sweat rolled down his temple. It seemed his wifeâs possessive streak â and her ability to know exactly what went on under her roof â wasnât going to fade anytime soon.
He gave a weak chuckle and scratched the back of his head. âRight,â he muttered. âOf course you did.â
Elaine finally turned to him, eyes sharp even in the soft morning light. âDonât think Iâll ever stop watching over him,â she said, then went back inside.
Arslan stood in the doorway a moment longer, cold sweat still on his back, before following her in.
Ludger reached Aroniaâs shop just as she was finishing her morning tea, the smell of dried herbs drifting out into the street. He stepped inside, set his pack down, and got straight to the point.
âIâve got work at the border,â he said. âReinforcing the town and the walls. Iâll need your potions like we planned. You can keep storing them; I already talked with my father. Weâll use some of the tavernâs profits to pay you for the whole batch.â
Aronia raised an eyebrow, leaning back against the counter with her arms crossed. âYouâre actually going through with that?â
Ludger nodded. âItâs the best way.â
The half-dryad tilted her head, green hair falling across her shoulder. âI donât get you,â she said flatly. âThe old bull isnât even related to you. Heâs your half-sisterâs grandfather. Why are you accepting all this hassle to help them?â Her lips curved into a faint, teasing smile. âYouâre nine, Ludger. You should be napping, not playing stone mason for nobles.â
She shook her head, genuinely baffled. âI like to relax as much as possible, so I canât even begin to understand this. All this work, for people who arenât even your blood?â
Ludgerâs mouth quirked but he didnât answer right away, just reached out and ran a finger along one of the potion vials lined up on the counter. Outside, the street was quiet, but inside the shop the air felt like the pause before a long explanation.
Ludger finally looked up from the rows of vials, meeting Aroniaâs puzzled gaze head-on. âIâll chill,â he said evenly, âwhen Iâm certain that me, my family, and my friends will be fine no matter what. Until then, I won't get that luxury.â
He tapped a knuckle lightly against the counter, the faint clink of glass between them. âRight now I have to work. I have to keep improving myself, stacking techniques and coin and allies until I can actually accomplish the things I want. Thatâs the only way I get to relax later without watching my back.â
Aronia blinked, then gave a soft snort, her usual teasing fading a little. âHeavy words for a kid,â she murmured, but there was a flicker of respect in her eyes as she looked at him.
Ludger straightened his pack. âThatâs the deal,â he said simply. âI work now so I can chill later.â
Ludger left Aroniaâs shop with a nod, strapped his pack tight, and broke into a run. The road to the border stretched out like a gray ribbon under the morning sun, but even with the weights strapped to his arms and legs his pace never faltered. Each stride kicked up little puffs of dust as his mind churned faster than his feet.
I canât afford to be lazy,
he thought.
If Iâm going to do this, I need to find every edge I can.
He started running through possibilities.
Rain would be a blessing. Wet soil moves easier, packs tighter. I could shape it faster and the walls would settle stronger once it dries.
His brow furrowed as he sprinted.
If I time the big lifts at dawn, the groundâs colder and firmer; less mana to compress it. Maybe I can dig the tunnels during cooler hours, use the sunâs heat at noon to dry the supports.
He pictured slabs of stone rising like puzzle pieces.
I could anchor pillars first, then fill between them, instead of shaping whole walls at once. Layer it, like bricks. Less mana per stroke, more staying power.
A grin flickered at the edge of his mouth as he leapt over a stone in the road.
And if I use Stone Grip while shaping, I can push denser rock out of the soil, leaving the loose dirt behind for backfill. That alone cuts the load in half.
The wind whipped at his hair but he kept running, ideas stacking up with each stride.
Every bit of efficiency means more wall, more tunnel, less time wasted on recovery.
After half a day, the faint outline of the border town rose on the horizon, Ludgerâs muscles burned but his head was full of plans. If he played it right, he wouldnât just build what Torvares neededâheâd build it faster than anyone expected.
As Ludger crested a small hill and the border town came into full view, his thoughts drifted inward again.
Iâve been spending my free points trying to smooth out my weak spots,
he mused.
Boosting endurance so my stamina doesnât run dry, making sure I can keep up in close combat.
He glanced at his hands as he ran, flexing his fingers inside the weighted guards.
But for this job⊠maybe thatâs the wrong call.
He pictured the walls, the tunnels, the sheer volume of earth waiting to be shaped.
It would be smarter to dump everything into my magic until this is done. More mana, faster shaping, better control. Endurance wonât mean much if Iâm stuck crawling after every wall I raise.
His pace slowed a fraction as he recalculated.
I planned to go back home once a week, stay for two days at a time to see Mom and keep the tavern running.
He exhaled through his nose.
But that might not be possible. Once the barbarians notice what Iâm doing, slipping back and forth wonât be simple anymore. Theyâll be watching. And if they start hitting the town while Iâm goneâŠ
He gritted his teeth and pushed his speed again, the weights clinking softly with each stride.
Iâll just have to adapt. Build fast, build strong, and be ready for when they finally figure it out.
The wind tugged at his hair as he ran, but his eyes stayed fixed on the town ahead â and the work waiting for him.
By the time Ludger reached the outskirts of the border town, his shirt was plastered to his back and the weights on his limbs felt like lead. He slowed to a jog, scanning the settlement as he caught his breath.
Not much had changed since his last visit. A few buildings stood upright now instead of leaning like drunks, but they were still a long way from comfortable. The patched-up roofs sagged under their own weight. The streets were dusty, uneven, dotted with half-finished repairs.
His eyes moved to the walls and his jaw tightened. The holes had been closed, yes â but not reinforced. Piles of loose stone and hastily tamped earth made the fortifications look more like a childâs sandcastle than a barrier against barbarians. A good rain could melt whole sections back into mud.
He adjusted the straps on his pack and headed toward the gate, but before he could step inside, a pair of guards moved to block his path. They werenât hostile, but their hands hovered near their spears.
âHold it there,â one of them said. âWhatâs your business in the town?â
Ludger straightened and met their eyes calmly. âIâm here on behalf of Lord Torvares,â he said. âIâve come to reinforce the walls and start repairs with my earth magic. You can check with your captain if you need to.â
The guards exchanged a look, one of them raising an eyebrow. The otherâs grip on his spear eased just a little.
âYouâre the mage he sent?â the first one asked, skepticism edging his tone.
âThatâs me,â Ludger replied simply, his expression steady. âIâm here to work.â
The guards hesitated, then nodded and stepped aside, still eyeing him with a mix of curiosity and doubt as he walked past them into the battered town.
As Ludger passed through the gate, the atmosphere of the town settled over him. It didnât take long to notice that the faces were different. Most of the guards and soldiers on duty werenât the same ones from last year; new appearance, new accents, new eyes watching him from under their helmets.
They didnât recognize him. Not as the boy who had helped take the town, not as the healer from Koa, not as anything but a kid walking in with a pack and a weapon at his limbs. More than one frown followed him as he moved down the main street.
He caught snatches of muttered words behind him. âThatâs the mage?â âLooks like a kidâŠâ âAre they serious?â
Ludger didnât let it show on his face. He adjusted his armguards and kept walking, back straight, expression flat.
Fine,
he thought.
They donât have to know me now. Theyâll know me once the walls are standing.
Still, he felt the stares prickling at the back of his neck. The only kid in a town full of hardened soldiers and half-finished buildings â no wonder they were skeptical. But skepticism didnât bother him. He was here to work, and the results would speak louder than his age ever could.
Ludger kept walking, ignoring the stares, eyes sweeping the street for someone who looked like they were actually in charge. The rank-and-file guards clearly knew
of
himâthey hadnât stopped him after his explanationâbut the speed of it bothered him.
I only spoke with Torvares yesterday. News shouldnât have reached this garrison so fast. Unless the old bull truly had a lot more faith in me.
He followed the main road deeper into the town, boots crunching on loose gravel, until he reached the central square. There, under the shade of a half-repaired canopy, a knot of soldiers stood around a rough-hewn table. A map was spread out across it, stones holding the corners down against the breeze. Their voices were low, tense, fingers tapping at drawn lines and markers.
As Ludger stepped closer, the chatter among the guards on the edges shifted. A few whispered to each other, glancing from the boy to the meeting. The ripple spread quicklyâone soldierâs elbow nudging anotherâs, a muttered word passing along the group until several of them turned their eyes toward him at once.
Ludger felt the weight of their stares but didnât slow his pace. He squared his shoulders, armguards glinting in the pale light, and walked straight toward the table where the map lay.
If theyâre already talking about me,
he thought,
I might as well show them Iâm not here to hide.
The group around the map parted just enough for him to step closer, their expressions a mix of curiosity and doubt as the only kid in the town approached their command post.
Ludger stopped a pace from the table, hands resting lightly on the straps of his pack. âNameâs Ludger,â he said, voice even but carrying. âIâm here on Lord Torvaresâ orders to reinforce the town with earth magic. Whoâs his representative here?â
The soldiers exchanged glances, then parted slightly as a man stepped forward. He was tall and broad-shouldered, his armor a polished silver trimmed with red â not parade-plate but heavy field gear with the dents polished smooth. His face was weathered, dark hair streaked with gray at the temples.
He looked familiar in a way Ludger couldnât place â a flash of mud, blood, and the scent of crushed herbs from a year ago flickered at the edge of his memory.
I mustâve healed him back during the fighting,
Ludger thought, but the name wouldnât come.
The man gave a short nod, his eyes sharp but not unfriendly. âCaptain Darnell,â he said, his voice carrying the weight of command. âIâm Lord Torvaresâ representative here. I handle the garrison and the reconstruction until further orders.â
His gaze flicked over Ludger, lingering on the weights strapped to his limbs. âYouâre the mage he sent?â
âThatâs right,â Ludger replied simply, meeting his eyes.
Darnellâs mouth twitched in the faintest hint of a smile. âGood. Weâve been waiting for you.â
Captain Darnell folded his arms over his chest, the silver and red of his armor catching the light. âLord Torvares sent word last night,â he said. âDirect orders. All earth mages currently under contract are to be dismissed. They left this morning. From this point forward, youâre in charge of the work.â
Ludger blinked once, the words landing heavier than he expected. âAll of them?â
Darnell nodded. âEvery last one. You call the shots. Weâll provide support and guards as needed, but the shaping, the planningâthatâs my job. Lord Torvares wants the walls and the tunnel done as soon as possible as planned.â
A ripple of murmurs passed through the nearby soldiers. Ludger forced a small smile, the kind that didnât quite reach his eyes.
Great,
he thought.
No pressure at all.
He adjusted the weight on his armguards, glancing at the patchwork walls around them.
If I screw this up, itâs not just my name on the line. Itâs Torvares, Viola, my family⊠everything.
But aloud he only said, âUnderstood. Show me where you want me to start.â
Darnellâs faint smile widened just a fraction. âThis way,â he said, gesturing toward the northern wall. âLetâs see what you can do.â
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