Ludgerâs plan had been simple â
ruthlessly
simple.
Finish the guild hall in one day, make sure it didnât collapse, and then finally get a full week of sleep at home.
That was before
they
got involved.
By sunrise, heâd already mapped out the structure â a clean, functional design with a wide central hall, a second-floor meeting room, and living quarters tucked neatly in the back. Nothing fancy. Nothing unnecessary. Just solid, practical stonework that wouldnât crumble when someone sneezed too hard.
Then Viola showed up.
âToo plain,â she said, standing with her hands on her hips as she eyed the blueprint scratched in the dirt. âIt needs something grander. This is supposed to be the
Lionsguard Guild
, not a barn with doors.â
âItâs supposed to be
done today,
â Ludger replied flatly.
âThen make it impressive fast,â she shot back. âLike two statues in front â lions roaring or something. Big ones. People should know what theyâre walking into.â
Before Ludger could respond, Arslan leaned in, rubbing his chin like a man whoâd just discovered a new hobby. âYou know⊠sheâs right. Maybe add a training yard too. Wide space for sparring and drills, a few posts for weapons, maybe even an outdoor forge. Canât call it a guild if you canât train in it.â
Ludger stared at him. âYouâre supposed to be on
my
side.â
Arslan grinned. âI am. Iâm just making it better.â
By midmorning, the âsimple one-day jobâ had turned into a full-blown architectural disaster. Viola kept suggesting aesthetic flourishes â âA crest on the main wall!â âWindows shaped like lion eyes!â âA balcony where we can give speeches!â â while Arslan kept adding
functional
expansions that somehow doubled the blueprint every half hour.
âHow about a strategy room?â he said. âBig table, maps everywhere. Youâll need it when you start running missions.â
âOr an underground vault,â Viola added. âFor relics. And loot.â
Ludger pressed a hand to his forehead. âYou two do realize this isnât a royal palace, right? Weâre not hoarding dragons here.â
Arslan crossed his arms, smirking. âYouâre the one with all the fancy earth magic. Donât tell me you canât handle a few walls and some ornaments.â
Viola nodded, grinning like a cat. âYeah, Geomancer. Donât be lazy.â
He groaned. âI hate both of you.â
But despite his protests, by noon the ground was already trembling as Ludger set to work. Walls rose, smooth and solid, under his control. The base structure expanded into something far beyond his original design â grand archways, twin lion statues at the entrance, reinforced pillars, and even a raised platform behind the hall that overlooked the training yard.
By sunset, the Lionsguard Guild stood tall, its front etched with the Torvares crest intertwined with a roaring lionâs head. The massive entry doors gleamed under the torchlight, and the wide yard behind it already had soldiers and northerners milling around, admiring the space.
Ludger stood there, staring at the finished product, arms limp at his sides and hair covered in dust.
Viola clapped her hands together, looking satisfied. âSee? Now
thatâs
a guild.â
Arslan nodded approvingly. âDidnât think you had that much patience, Luds.â
Ludger exhaled slowly through his nose. âPatience is dead. Buried under this building.â
Viola smirked. âThen consider it a beautiful grave.â
He just gave her a long, silent look â the kind that promised revenge later â before trudging toward his tent. âFine. Itâs done. Iâm resting for a week after this, no matter what happens. If the Emperor himself calls, tell him the groundâs closed for maintenance.â
As he walked off, Arslan chuckled. âHeâll thank us later, Vi.â
Viola grinned. âEventually.â
Behind them, the new guild hall stood proud â not just as a symbol of alliance, but as proof that Ludgerâs âone-day projectâ had turned into a monument powered entirely by stubborn family meddling and one overworked geomancerâs sheer willpower.
By the next morning, the Lionsguard Guild stood completeâsolid, imposing, and a little too ornate for Ludgerâs taste. The sun was still climbing over the horizon when the camp began to stir. Some soldiers exchanged quick farewells, and a line of riders prepared to head south.
Most of the group was heading home. The battle was over, the alliance sealed, and the town was finally steady enough to stand without them. Still, not everyone was leaving.
Aronia, Harold, Aleia, Selene, and Cor remained behind, gathered near the newly finished guild hallâs front steps. Each of them had a reason to stayâAronia and the others would oversee the supplies and the injured still recovering.
Theyâd already decided to join the guild formally once it opened its doors. Until then, theyâd handle the practical sideâreceiving the shipments Lord Torvares had promised, managing resources, and making sure the allianceâs first few weeks didnât fall apart under its own weight.
Viola stood near them, arms folded and chin high. She was smiling, though her eyes betrayed a hint of annoyance. âYouâre all lucky,â she said. âI donât get to join officially.â
Ludger smirked as he adjusted his pack. âYeah, but youâll still boss everyone around anyway.â
Her glare couldâve cut stone. âSomeone has to keep the guild from turning into a tavern with a fancy door.â
Arslan chuckled under his breath. âSheâs not wrong.â
Viola huffed, then turned toward the others. âYou know what to do. Keep things running until Lord Torvaresâ supplies arrive. And if anyone causes troubleâHarold, you hit them first, ask questions later.â
Harold grinned. âMy favorite kind of diplomacy.â
Aronia sighed softly but smiled all the same. âWeâll handle it. Go home and rest, Ludger. Youâve done enough for now.â
âNot sure I believe that,â Ludger muttered, but he nodded anyway.
The group shared their farewells before mounting up. The road stretched south, cutting through the plains toward the next major townâMeronia. It was a quiet ride, the kind that felt too calm after weeks of noise, battle, and dust.
When they reached the edge of Meronia, Viola reined in her horse. âThis is where I stop,â she said. âGrandfatherâs waitingâand heâll want every detail.â
Ludger gave her a nod, half a smirk tugging at his lips. âTry not to make him collapse this time.â
She rolled her eyes. âTry not to get stabbed again.â
Arslan chuckled, watching as she turned her horse toward the city gates. âSheâs got your temper,â he said.
âPlease,â Ludger replied, âIâm way more reasonable.â
That earned him a look of pure disbelief from his father.
Once Viola and Luna disappeared into the city, it was just the two of themâLudger and Arslanâriding toward home. The wind was cool, the roads empty, and for the first time in what felt like forever, there were no soldiers, no screaming orders, no chaos.
Just silence.
âAlmost home,â Arslan said quietly. âNot a bad word after all this.â
Ludger gave a small nod, eyes fixed on the horizon. âYeah. Letâs go face the real battle.â
Arslan smirked. âElaine?â
âMother.â
And with that, they both spurred their horses forward, heading toward the place that waited for themâtheir home, their peace, and the inevitable storm that came with being part of Elaineâs family.
The return home went smoother than Ludger expected. No shouting, no flying cookware, no lecture about âreckless behavior.â Just the familiar creak of the old gate, the smell of woodsmoke, and his motherâs voice calling his name from the porch.
Elaine met them halfway across the yard, her pace slower than usual, but her arms still strong enough to crush the air from his lungs when she hugged him.
âStill alive,â she murmured against his shoulder, her tone half-relieved, half-accusing.
âBarely,â Ludger wheezed. âMother, ribsââ
She laughed quietly and let go, though her hands lingered on his arms for a moment longer, as if checking he was really there. Her belly had rounded since heâd last seen her; she carried herself with more care now, moving deliberately instead of her usual impatient stride.
Arslan stood nearby, trying and failing to hide his grin. âShe went easy on you this time,â he said. âGuess Iâm the one getting the scolding later.â
Elaine shot him a look that could still silence a warband, but her voice stayed calm. âYou both came home. Thatâs enough.â
Maybe it was restraint, or maybe fatigue, but she didnât make a fussânot the full storm Ludger had braced for. He suspected she didnât want to strain herself or upset the child she was carrying. Or maybe, seeing him alive and standing, sheâd decided that was punishment enough.
The next few days passed quietly. Ludger spent them doing absolutely nothing of consequenceâeating home-cooked meals, sleeping late, and occasionally helping Arslan with light chores before inevitably sneaking off to nap again.
Elaine watched him from the kitchen doorway more than once, her expression softening a little each time. It was rare to see him so still, not pacing with plans or studying maps or muttering about mana efficiency.
For the first time in months, he looked like what he actually wasâa boy, tired but alive, content to breathe and exist for a while.
And for Elaine, that was enough proof that her son finally knew how to pace himself⊠at least until the next storm came.
On the surface, Ludger looked perfectly at peace. He lounged on the veranda, the afternoon sun spilling over the yard, a cup of tea cooling in his hand. From the kitchen window, Elaine could probably see nothing more than her son taking a well-earned break, finally acting like a normal boy his age.
But inside his head, things were anything but quiet.
Every idle moment, every breath of calm, was just more room for his mind to move. Plans unfolded in silence behind his eyesâcalculations, resource lists, timelines, training schedules. Heâd never been good at doing
nothing
for long.
Focusing too much on one thingâs a waste,
he thought, staring into the teaâs reflection.
But right now, I donât have a choice.
His earth magic was evolving fastâtoo fast, almost. The precision, the density control, even how mana flowed through the ground⊠all of it was sharper now. The problem was keeping it there. Without constant use, the improvements would dull like an unused blade.
To build what he wantedâa network strong enough to rival the empireâs infrastructureâheâd need to push the skill further, every single day. The labyrinth, the northern base, the guildâthey all depended on him staying ahead of his own curve.
Still, there was something else tugging at his thoughts.
He set the cup aside and leaned back against the railing, eyes narrowing slightly. âYvarâŠâ he muttered under his breath.
The scholar had been Violaâs teacherâa historian with too much patience and far too much curiosity about unusual topics. Ludger had hired him months ago to help with theoretical frameworks, but Yvarâs insight ran deeper than that.
Having him nearbyâat the guild, as an
archivist
âwould do more than just organize their growing knowledge. It would give Ludger access to the kind of information most nobles spent fortunes to hide. The histories of labyrinths, bloodlines, and so on⊠Yvar could put the puzzle together faster than any dusty library ever could.
Keeping him close would save me weeks of waiting for replies,
Ludger thought.
And Iâd rather have the answers before anyone else asks the questions.
He stood, stretching lazily to keep up the illusion of relaxation, then glanced toward the small desk by his window. The stack of paper and ink waiting there wasnât for restâit was for his next move.
âIâll send him a letter tomorrow,â he said to himself, tone quiet but resolute.
To everyone else, it looked like Ludger was finally taking a break.
But in truth, his mind was already back in motionâlaying the foundation for the next phase of his quiet, relentless plan.
Once the week passed, Ludger began to pack his things.
Heâd hoped to do it quietlyâgrab the essentials, tighten the straps on his pack, and slip out before anyone decided to âhelp.â That plan, like most of his plans at home, didnât survive contact with Elaine.
Before he could even fold his second shirt, she was there, hands on her hips, eyes sharp enough to cut steel. âYouâre not bringing just that,â she said. âYouâll freeze or starve or both.â
âIâm not going to the tundra,â Ludger replied, trying to sound patient. âIt isnât that cold in the north.â
She ignored him. A moment later, an extra blanket landed on top of his pack, followed by a set of spare boots, more shirts, dried fruit, and a small box of herbs that smelled faintly of mint and threat.
He forced a smile, trying to keep the muscle under his eye from twitching. âIâll, uh⊠try to carry all this without breaking my spine.â
Elaine adjusted the straps on his pack as if she hadnât heard him. âGood. Builds character. You can also just use a horse like everyone else. It isnât like your legs will stop working if you donât cross miles and miles everyday running.â
He sighed inwardly, knowing resistance was futile. It wasnât that he didnât appreciate her careâhe just wasnât exactly traveling light. Since he wasnât taking a horse this time, everything she packed was going on his back.
While she fussed over a cloak, she gave him a sidelong glance. âYouâre not going to do what you did last time, are you?â
Ludger paused. ââŠWhat did I do last time?â
Her eyes narrowed, but her voice stayed calm. âYou said youâd come home once a week. You came back two months later.â
He gave another strained smile, one that probably fooled no one. âThings got⊠complicated. The walls wouldnât build themselves, and the barbâ the northerners needed supervision.â
âUh-huh.â
He could hear the disbelief in her tone. Elaine set down a folded shirt with a decisive thump. âIf youâre going to disappear for weeks again, at least send letters. Iâm pregnant, not blind. Iâll know when youâre overworking yourself.â
Ludger rubbed the back of his neck, avoiding her gaze. âIâll try. The labyrinthâs a bit farther this time, soââ
âThe labyrinth,â she cut in smoothly, âis exactly why Iâm thinking of visiting. If you trust these northerners so much, then I can see them myself, right? Your father can come with me.â
Ludger froze mid-motion. The image of his heavily pregnant mother walking into the middle of a frontier construction zone full of half-wary northerners made his brain ache.
âThatâs⊠not exactly what I meant by alliance,â he said slowly.
Elaine crossed her arms. âYou think I canât handle a visit?â
âNo,â he said quickly. âYou can handle
anything.
Thatâs the problem.â
Her brow arched. âSo Iâll go with Lord Torvaresâ entourage, then. When he decides to inspect your progress. Iâm sure heâd appreciate the companyâand someone needs to make sure youâre eating properly.â
Ludger groaned under his breath but didnât argue. Technically, that wasnât a terrible planâTorvares would eventually want to see the new townâs progress himself, and if Elaine went under his protection, it would keep her safe enough.
âFine,â he said at last, shoulders sagging. âIf the Baron goes, you can come. But promise you wonât wander off to inspect every dangerous spot within a mile.â
Elaine smiled sweetly. âNo promises.â
He sighed again, tightening the last strap on his overstuffed pack.
So much for traveling lightâor traveling without worry.
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