Ludger let out a slow breath and rested his elbows on his knees. āThe wall work? Thatās just the surface. Torvares didnāt drag me out here only to patch stones. He knows I donāt do charity.ā
Elaine tilted her head but stayed silent, letting him speak. Arslan leaned back, arms crossed, eyes narrowing with interest.
āI owe him and he owes me,ā Ludger went on. āHe gave me room to train under Gaius, and heās been slipping me potions and supplies without charging market prices. In return, I reinforce this border town so it doesnāt collapse when the next barbarian wave hits. But the real favorā¦ā His lips twitched faintly. āā¦the real favor is what comes next.ā
He reached over to the low table and dragged a fingertip through the thin layer of dust, sketching a quick outline of the town. āIām building more than walls. Underneath the foundations, Iām carving a hidden tunnel network. Supply routes, evacuation routes, kill corridors if it comes to it. Nobody but Torvares and his crew knows the full layout.ā
Elaineās brows knit. āYouāre digging tunnels?ā
āNot just digging.ā Ludgerās eyes sharpened. āStructuring. Reinforced choke points, blind angles, places to collapse at will. Itās a lever I can pull if the town gets taken or if Torvares needs an edge.ā
He sat back, wiping the dust off his hands. āAnd while Iām doing that, Iām planting the seed for my own guild. Not some glory-seeking merc band ā a real guild. One built around labyrinth work, building projects, and defense contracts. Something that can fight, but also repair and fortify. We clear dungeons, we secure towns, we build safe zones. Everyone else chases treasure and kills monsters; weāll be the people who make sure the world doesnāt fall apart afterwards.ā
Arslanās brows rose slightly at that. Elaine just stared at him, her expression unreadable.
Ludger shrugged, a small smirk flicking across his face. āTorvares gets a fortress and a hidden ace under his town. I get a launch point and a reputation as the kid who can do what full-grown mages canāt. The guild becomes the go-to name for anyone serious about surviving labyrinth incursions and other serious stuff.ā
He leaned back against the tent pole, eyes half-lidded but voice firm. āThatās the plan. Build fast, build smart, keep my promises, and walk away with a guild no one can ignore.ā
For a heartbeat the tent was silent except for the faint murmur of the camp outside.
āThatās what Iāve been doing out here,ā Ludger finished. āItās not just favors. Itās groundwork.ā
Elaineās fingers tightened on her cup as she listened. When Ludger finished, she stared at him for a long moment, her lips parting just slightly. āYouāre talking about running supply lines, choke points, contractsā¦ā she said softly. āLudger, youāre not even ten. Most adults wouldnāt work like this in their entire lives.ā
Arslan let out a low whistle. āSaints, Luds.ā He leaned back on the bench, arms still crossed but his expression a mix of pride and disbelief. āI came here thinking Iād have to pull you out of trouble, and instead youāre already laying better foundations for the guild.ā He shook his head, half-smiling. āI donāt know whether to be proud or scared.ā
Elaineās voice was steadier now, but her eyes stayed sharp. āYouāre making yourself a target with this,ā she said. āPower, influence, tunnels, guilds⦠the kind of people youāre describing wonāt take kindly to a child building an army out here.ā
Ludger only shrugged, but he felt the weight of her words. In his head, a flicker of thought rose unbidden:
Maybe I used too pretty words.
Once, not long ago, it had been simple ā he wanted power, money, influence to protect the handful of people he cared about. But the moment heād opened his mouth, the plan had rolled out in polished phrases like a seasoned tacticianās briefing.
He wasnāt sure when heād started talking like that, or why.
He gave his mother a faint, crooked smile that didnāt quite reach his eyes. āIāll be careful,ā he said. āYou can both relax. For now, itās just stone and sweat.ā
Elaine and Arslan exchanged a look across the table, each seeing the same thing: a boy with dust on his boots and eyes far older than they should have been, building more than walls without even realizing how far heād already gone.
Ludger caught the way his motherās knuckles whitened around her cup and the crease in his fatherās brow. The heavy mood in the tent hung there like damp canvas. So he did what he always did when things started feeling too heavy.
He let the corner of his mouth curl up into that familiar, crooked smirk. The one that always drove Viola crazy. āRelax,ā he said, voice slipping back into its dry rhythm. āIāll be fine.ā
He leaned back a little, gesturing vaguely at the walls outside. āIāve had a lot of excellent teachers. Gaius, Father, Aronia, a few labyrinths that tried to kill meā¦ā The smirk deepened. āItās going to take more than a few ruffians with crossbows to scare me. Or even scratch me.ā
Arslan exhaled through his nose, the tension in his shoulders easing. Elaineās lips pressed together, but her grip on the cup loosened.
āThatās more like you,ā Arslan muttered, a small smile tugging at his own mouth.
Elaine gave her son a long look. He still had dust on his tunic and circles under his eyes, but the cocky edge in his voice sounded like him again. For the first time since stepping off the carriage, she let herself breathe a little easier.
Ludgerās smirk stayed in place as he poured them more water. āSee?ā he said lightly. āIām still me.ā
Elaine watched her son over the rim of her cup as he poured more of the water, that crooked little smirk back on his face. It always unsettled her, that expression. Not because it was ugly or false ā but because it was so completely Ludger.
Sheād long told herself he must have picked it up from someone else. Maybe one of Arslanās old drinking buddies, maybe some rough-edged mercenary heād seen around. But the truth was, from as far back as she could remember, heād had that same look ā a lopsided, knowing grin that made him seem older, like a boy playing at being a veteran and somehow pulling it off.
It was a little concerning. Most children his age wore open smiles or sulks, not this half-predatory curl of the lips. But at the same time, she couldnāt deny what it meant: confidence. Not the empty swagger of a spoiled nobleās heir, but a confidence with weight behind it, supported by skill, training, and scars. Bigger than a mountain and stubborn as bedrock.
Elaine sighed softly, brushing a thumb over the edge of her cup.
At least he believes in himself,
she thought.
And at least heās got the strength to back it up.
Across from her, Ludger caught her gaze and the smirk twitched just a little wider, as if he could read every thought sheād just had.
Elaine rose from the bench, smoothing her skirts with one hand. Her eyes lingered on the seamless wall visible through the tent flap, then on her son. āAll right,ā she said at last, voice softer but steady. āWeāll go back. Iāve seen enough to know youāre fineā¦and that youāll keep being fine.ā
Before Ludger could respond, she stepped forward and wrapped him in the same rib-cracking hug sheād been giving him since he was small. Dust puffed off his tunic as she squeezed, ignoring his stiff posture. For a heartbeat, all the fortress-building and assassination attempts melted away; he was just a boy being held by his mother.
āDonāt work yourself to death,ā she murmured against his ear. āBe careful. Being confident is goodā¦but donāt turn it into arrogance.ā She leaned back enough to look at him, one hand still on his shoulder. A faint, wry smile tugged at her mouth. āThough maybe itās already too late to tell you that.ā
Ludger chuckled under his breath, returning the hug briefly before slipping free. The smirk flickered back into place as he looked at her. āIāll keep that in mind,ā he said.
Elaine gave his cheek a quick pat and turned toward the flap where Arslan was already waiting. Outside, the carriage stood ready to take them home. Inside, the tent smelled of stone dust and fresh water, and a boy with eyes older than his years watched his parents leave, already planning the next layer of the wall.
As Elaine moved toward the tent flap, Arslan hung back for a beat, watching his son over the rim of a faint grin. His hand rested on the hilt of his sword, thumb tapping against the guard ā a habit from years of sparring.
āWhile youāre out here playing with mud,ā he said, his voice low and teasing, āIāll be back home training and keeping an eye on your mother. Getting stronger, too.ā He straightened, mock-serious now. āNext bout we have? It wonāt be like last time. For me itāll be a cakewalk.ā
Ludger arched an eyebrow, dust still clinging to his tunic. āCakewalk, huh?ā he said dryly, smirk tugging at his lips. āBig words for someone who couldnāt land a clean hit last time.ā
Arslan chuckled, stepping closer to clap a calloused hand on his sonās shoulder. āKeep that mouth sharp. I like a challenge.ā His eyes glinted with pride beneath the joking tone. āDonāt get too comfortable behind your walls, Luds. Iām coming for that win.ā
Ludger gave a small shrug, still smirking. āThen Iād better hurry up here so you have someone worth fighting when youāre done.ā
The two locked eyes for a moment ā father and son, both stubborn, both planning their next move ā before Arslan laughed and turned to follow Elaine out of the tent.
Dust swirled in the air as the flap fell shut behind them, leaving Ludger with his smirk, the faint echo of his fatherās challenge, and the fortress rising outside.
After a while Captain Darnell caught sight of the carriage rolling toward the town gate. Elaine and Arslan sat inside with the small escort of Torvaresās household guards riding alongside ā the extra protection the baron had sent as soon as heād heard about the assassination attempt. The whole column moved out under the morning sun, the banner snapping faintly in the wind until it vanished beyond the palisade.
A few minutes later Ludger stepped out of his tent, gloves back on, dust already streaking his sleeves again. He didnāt even watch the carriage disappear; he just started toward the unfinished stretch of wall, boots crunching over the packed earth.
Darnell fell in beside him. āEverything good?ā the captain asked.
Ludger only gave a loose shrug without slowing his pace. āThey got the peace of mind they wanted,ā he said flatly. āNow I just have to work to make sure it stays that way.ā
He pressed a palm to the ground and mana hummed up through his fingers. Another section of foundation shifted under his will, the boy already sinking back into the rhythm that had turned a border town into a fortress.
Darnell watched him for a beat, then nodded silently and moved to clear the area.
The carriage jolted gently as it rolled away from the border town. Inside, the noise of hooves and wheels was a steady backdrop while Arslan and Elaine sat across from each other, both looking out the window at the walls Ludger had built.
Arslan was the first to break the silence. āHeās something else,ā he said, a note of pride under his gruff tone. āWhen I saw him out there shaping stone like that⦠Iāve fought beside veteran mages who couldnāt do half of what heās doing now. And he handled that assassin like a grown warrior, not a child.ā
Elaineās eyes stayed on the passing countryside. āHeās grown strong,ā she murmured. āStronger than I thought possible.ā She paused, then her fingers tightened around the edge of the seat. āBut seeing him like that, with those eyes⦠part of me feels like Iāve failed him.ā
Arslan turned his head, frowning. āFailed him?ā
āI spent years raising him alone while you were away,ā she said softly. āI did what I had to, but maybe all that time taught him he couldnāt lean on anyone. That he had to handle everything himself.ā She blinked hard, watching the road blur past. āItās good heās independent. But at his age he should still believe someone can protect him.ā
Arslan was quiet for a long moment, then reached across the carriage to rest a calloused hand over hers. āHeās alive because of what you gave him,ā he said. āHeās confident because he knows you fought for him. Donāt twist that into a failure.ā
Elaine let out a small, shaky sigh. āMaybe,ā she whispered. āI just⦠I wanted him to have a childhood, not a war council.ā
Arslan squeezed her hand once, eyes back on the fading silhouette of the fortress behind them. āHeās still our boy,ā he said quietly. āAnd whatever heās building out there, weāll make sure he doesnāt forget that.ā
Arslan kept his hand over hers for a moment longer, then leaned back against the seat with a low breath. āElaine,ā he said quietly, āthere are people like that. Every hundred years or so, one of them shows up ā a person who grows too fast, who doesnāt fit inside the world they were born into. They outstrip everyone around them and end up changing everything.ā
He glanced out the window at the last glimpse of Ludgerās walls rising against the horizon. āYou canāt shield someone like that from whatās coming. You can only give them a base strong enough to stand on while they build their own future.ā
Elaineās eyes stayed on the dust road ahead, her fingers still curled in her lap. āAnd thatās what heās doing,ā she murmured. āBuilding his own future.ā
Arslan nodded slowly. āWe may want him to stay a child a little longer, but heās already past that. All we can do now is make sure he knows weāre there, even if he doesnāt lean on us.ā
Elaine exhaled, some of the tension in her shoulders easing. āI just hope he doesnāt carry all of it alone.ā
Arslan gave a faint, wry smile. āIf heās anything like you,ā he said, āhe wonāt. Heāll carry what he must, and heāll build the rest himself.ā
The carriage rattled on, the border town shrinking behind them, and inside the two parents sat in silence, thinking of the boy shaping stone and shaping a life too big for his years.
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