Once Ludger finished saying goodbye to his parentsâhis motherâs final hug nearly breaking a rib, as usual, and his fatherâs parting grin promising another spar the moment he returnedâhe adjusted his heavy pack and set out toward the north.
The air outside the town carried the crisp bite of early autumn. Perfect weather for travel, if you ignored the weight digging into his shoulders and the faint regret of agreeing to carry half the house with him.
As his boots crunched over the dirt road, he considered his route. He could go straight to the border, resume the construction, and check in with Captain Darnell first. But his mind drifted toward another destinationâthe Torvares estate in Meronia.
The old bull had been quiet lately. Too quiet. Ludger remembered the deep lines on the Baronâs face during their last meeting, the weariness that clung to his every movement. Even for a man whoâd spent his life carrying the weight of a noble family, it was clear his body wasnât keeping pace anymore.
âWouldnât hurt to pay a visit,â Ludger muttered to himself. âAt least before the empire decides to pile more trouble on his plate.â
He took the turn toward Meronia. The estate came into view a few hours later, its walls standing as firm and tired as the man who ruled it. Normally, guards would have been posted along the outer path, spears gleaming, eyes sharp. Now, there were fewer than half that number.
Ludger slowed, his brow furrowing. âThatâs⊠not a good sign.â
The gates opened without question the moment they saw him. The servant who greeted him bowed low but spoke softly, his tone respectful and tinged with fatigue.
âYoung master Ludger. The Baron will be pleased to see you. Please, wait in the living room while I inform him.â
Ludger nodded, stepping inside the familiar halls. The air smelled faintly of ink, the scent of overwork and sleepless nights.
He took a seat on the couch by the tall windows. Everything was quiet. Too quiet. No scribes rushing through corridors, no distant clatter of training from the courtyard.
His eyes drifted to the empty chair across from him, the one the Baron usually occupied during his talks. He could almost picture the old man thereâhead buried in paperwork, grumbling about incompetent nobles, yet somehow still finding the strength to bark orders like a commander in his prime.
The seconds stretched into minutes as he waited, the heavy silence of the estate pressing in around him like the calm before a storm.
Eventually Baron Torvares showed up.
Ludger rose immediately out of respect. The old bull looked⊠slightly better than before, but only just. His complexion had regained a touch of color, and his gait was steady, yet the faint tremor in his hand as he gripped his cane betrayed the truthâhis strength was waning, and every step came with effort.
Still, his eyes burned with the same unyielding will Ludger remembered.
âSo,â Torvares began, his voice gravelly but carrying the weight of command even now, âthe prodigy of the border finally decides to visit his old sponsor.â
Ludger allowed himself a faint smirk. âI wouldnât call it that.â
The brief flash of humor faded quickly, replaced by the measured look of an old general assessing his successor. âStill⊠I heard about what you did in the borderlands. The walls, the coordination with the northerners, the duel between your father and their commander. Youâve done a lot.â
Ludger shook his head. âI had help. Father, Viola, even Darnell. Without them, it wouldnât have worked. I just did my part.â
Torvaresâ lips curved in a small, knowing smile. âThat kind of humility doesnât suit someone who just reshaped half a fortress. But⊠Iâll take it.â
He leaned back, exhaling slowly through his nose. The faint sound of his breathing filled the room for a few moments before he continued.
âI you want to ask about Viola, too. Sheâs not here.â
Ludger raised an eyebrow. âNot here? Whereâd she run off to this time?â
Torvares chuckled weakly, though it came out more as a rasp. âNot running, for once. Sheâs in the western region, meeting with the Marquis of Velgrathâon my behalf.â
That made Ludger pause. âThe Marquis? Thatâs⊠not exactly light work.â
âShe insisted,â Torvares said with a hint of pride. âMy healthâs not what it used to be, and someone has to keep the vultures from circling. The Marquis respects strength, not age. Viola can speak his language better than I can now.â
Ludger exhaled slowly, leaning back in his chair. He had expected her to be out training, or perhaps helping organize the reconstructionânot meeting with one of the most powerful nobles in the region.
âShe doesnât do anything halfway, does she,â he muttered.
Torvaresâ smile widened slightly. âSheâs my granddaughter. If she ever starts doing things halfway, thatâs when you should start worrying.â
Ludger gave a small laugh at that, but the sound faded quickly. Beneath it all, the sight of the old manâstill proud, still sharp, but clearly fighting the inevitableâleft a faint ache in his chest.
Torvares leaned his cane against the side of his chair and sighed, his expression turning serious. âShe didnât just go to shake hands and drink tea with the Marquis,â he said, voice low and steady. âShe also went to negotiate the results of the border conflict.â
Ludger tilted his head slightly. âNegotiate?â
The old man nodded. âYou see, we are already spinning our own tale. According to the reports spreading through the capital, it was
my army alone
that subjugated the âsavage barbariansââno help from the crown, no aid from the other border lords. A nice story, but one that makes certain nobles very nervous. They donât like the idea of one family holding the entire northern frontier without their approval.â
Ludger crossed his arms, piecing it together. âSo Violaâs out there trying to make that story stick.â
âExactly,â Torvares said. âShe declared she wouldnât return until the Torvares family had
formal
control of that region and the labyrinth beneath it. And with my health keeping me confined hereâŠâ He gave a faint, humorless smile. âSheâs taken it upon herself to fight the political war in my stead.â
Ludger huffed through his nose. âThat sounds like her. Sheâll probably end up terrifying half the noble council before sheâs done.â
âShe already has,â Torvares muttered dryly. âThe Marquis respects her resolve, from what I have heard, though. That counts for something.â
Ludger leaned back, thoughtful. For their plans to move forwardâthe guild, the alliance with the northerners, the stabilization of the frontierâViola
had
to succeed. If she didnât secure Torvaresâ claim, the empire would swoop in, replace them with some obedient lackey, and the fragile peace theyâd built would collapse overnight.
âWell,â Ludger said, a faint smirk tugging at his lips, âif she needs extra persuasion, I could always parade Kharnek around a bit. Show them what kind of ally theyâre dealing with. Thatâd make anyone think twice about starting trouble.â
Torvares let out a short laugh that turned into a cough. When he caught his breath again, his eyes had that familiar glint of iron authority. âWe canât solve everything with brawl and bravado, boy. Not now. The empireâs watching, and every move we make will be weighed in their ledgers. We win this phase with words, not weapons.â
Ludger shrugged. âYou say that like Iâve got a talent for words.â
âYou donât,â Torvares said bluntly, though his tone carried amusement. âBut your actions speak loud enough. Let Viola handle the nobles, it will be a good lesson for her as well. You keep building that guild. Between the two of you, we might just pull this off before the vultures realize what weâre doing.â
Ludger nodded slowly, the faint smirk returning to his face. âGuess thatâs our specialtyâmaking impossible things happen before anyone can stop us.â
Torvaresâ lips curved in a weary grin. âThen keep doing it, boy. The northâs depending on you.â
Ludger watched the old bull exhale, the sound heavy and rough, like air escaping from an overworked forge. Even seated, Baron Torvares looked imposingâbroad shoulders, hands like stone, a presence that still demanded respect. But time had carved deep trenches into that strength. His once-steady breath came with effort, his skin pale beneath the glow of the hearth.
For all his resources, for all the physicians and rare potions at his disposal, not even he could wrestle with the truth of age. Ludger could see it in the faint tremor in his hand and the dull edge in his eyes. The man who once commanded armies now fought a slower, more merciless enemyâand losing ground inch by inch.
Ludgerâs jaw tightened. Torvares was more than just an ally. He was the kind of figure the north neededârespected by warriors, feared by nobles. If he fell, everything theyâd built together would become far more fragile.
Maybe twenty years left,
Ludger thought grimly.
Ten if something unexpected happens.
He pushed up from his chair and extended his hand. âYouâve done enough for today.â
Torvares arched a brow, the faintest flicker of irritation crossing his face. âHmph. Donât start treating me like an invalid.â
âIâm not,â Ludger said simply. âJust hold still.â
The Baron frowned, but he reached out regardless. Ludger clasped his hand firmlyâhis grip steady, deliberateâand mana began to hum between them. Green light flickered faintly from Ludgerâs palm, spreading across the old manâs arm like warmth through winter air. The faint lines of fatigue on Torvaresâ face softened, the pallor in his cheeks easing as if life had been coaxed back, drop by drop.
When Ludger let go, the glow faded. âHealing Touch,â he said under his breath, stepping back. âItâs not much. But it should help with the fatigue for a while.â
Torvares blinked, his brows lifting slightly as he flexed his fingers. â...Hah. I actually feel lighter.â His voice carried something like disbeliefâand maybe, beneath it, gratitude. âWhat kind of earth mage are you, boy? My physicians work with royal certifications and they canât do half that.â
Ludger shrugged. âGuess I just donât like watching people crumble when I can do something about it. Besides, I never claimed to be an earth mage.â
The Baron chuckled softly, rubbing his arm. âYou really are a strange one, Ludger. Building walls one day, commanding soldiers the next, and now outclassing my medics.â
Ludger gave a faint, crooked smirk. âJack of all trades. Master of too many headaches.â
Torvares let out a low hum, his eyes narrowing slightly as if reassessing the boy before him. âWhatever youâre doing, keep at it. The empire breeds a thousand mages, but only a handful like you. Just donât forgetâpowerâs only worth something if itâs used for the right people.â
Ludger nodded once, quietly. âThatâs the plan.â
But in the back of his mind, his thoughts drifted elsewhereâto the faint shimmer of mana still lingering in his palm, to the theoretical upper limits of [Healing Touch], and the silent, dangerous curiosity that whispered:
I wonder how far I could take this skill⊠or this class. Reaching level one hundred with it, should help me unlock some crazy skill that can help the old bull stay with us for a bit longer.
Ludger adjusted the strap of his pack and exhaled. âAnyway,â he said, tone casual but his eyes sharp, âIâll be heading north again soon.â
Torvares raised an eyebrow. âBack to work already?â
âSomeone has to keep things moving before the nobles find new excuses to stick their noses into our business,â Ludger replied. âBesides, the northerners still need housing, and Iâm not trusting anyone else to build it properly.â
The Baron nodded slowly, his expression thoughtful. âThatâs a heavy burden for someone your age.â
Ludger gave a small shrug. âBetter I carry it now than let someone ruin it later.â
He turned toward the door, but paused halfway there. âOh, and if Viola wants to come back before I returnâŠâ He smirked faintly over his shoulder. âTell her it might not be a good idea to visit the north anytime soon. The place can live in peace for a while without her noise.â
Torvares frowned at first, his protective instincts kicking in. âSheâs my granddaughter, boy. Watch your tongue.â
Ludger raised both hands in mock surrender, his grin widening. âJust sayingâif she starts shouting orders up there, half the northerners will think another warâs breaking out.â
For a moment, the room was silent. Then Torvaresâ frown cracked, and a deep, gravelly chuckle escaped him. âYouâre impossible. That is something she says oftenâ He shook his head, amusement glinting in his tired eyes. âYou two arenât exactly alike. But both are too proud to admit how much you actually care.â
Ludger smiled faintly at that but didnât comment. He simply adjusted his pack again and headed for the exit.
âTake care, Ludger,â Torvares called after him. âAnd keep that sharp tongue of yours from starting another conflict before Iâm dead.â
âNo promises,â Ludger said over his shoulder, his smirk lingering as he stepped out of the quiet estate and into the brisk air of the road north.
Ludger resumed his run north, the road stretching ahead in an endless ribbon of packed dirt and wind-bent grass. The pack on his shouldersâstuffed with enough gear to outfit a small expedition, thanks to his motherâdragged against his spine like a slab of stone.
At first, he kept a steady pace, his breathing even. But after the first few hours, the strain started to build. His thighs burned, his calves felt like lead, and each step began to thud heavier than the last.
He muttered under his breath, âSo this is what carrying half the pantry feels likeâŠâ
When the dull ache began turning sharp, he pressed a hand against his leg and used
Healing Touch.
Warm light pulsed from his palm, seeping through muscle and tendon. The pain dulled; the stabbing edges softenedâbut it wasnât enough. Within minutes, the ache crept back like a stubborn echo.
He frowned. Healing Touch could mend damageâtears, sprains, open woundsâbut what he was feeling wasnât an injury. It was
strain.
The accumulated stress of muscle fibers pushed to their limit. Healing Touch restored what was broken; it didnât strengthen what was simply overworked.
He sighed. âGuess thereâs no skill that can replace proper rest.â
Still, the thought nagged him. Healing Touch drew on pure mana. If he could control it betterârefine its flow the way he shaped earth through Geomancyâmaybe he could
adjust
how the magic behaved. Not just mend, but reinforce.
His mind drifted to his other disciplineâthe Sage class. It wasnât just about spellcasting; it was about understanding the
essence
of mana itself. If he learned to manipulate that flow with Sage techniques, he could reconfigure the healing spell into something newâsomething that could adapt to different conditions.
Ludger slowed his pace, focusing on the rhythm of his breathing. Mana flowed through him like a second bloodstream, faintly humming against his skin. He tried to picture it bending to his will, shifting not to restore damage, but to
fortify
the body before the damage occurred.
The attempt fizzled, of course. He wasnât skilled enough yet. But the concept held promise.
âHuh,â he muttered, cracking a small smirk despite the fatigue. âMaybe Iâve been healing too literally.â
The idea stuck with him as he resumed his runâeach step a test, each ache a reminder that his magic still had room to grow. If he could bridge the gap between healing and reinforcement⊠then even exhaustion would become just another obstacle to outthink.