When Ludger finally returned to the border town, the familiar sight of stone walls and newly reinforced gates came into view. The air smelled faintly of dust and smokeâsigns of construction, not war. A good change.
Off in the distance, near the outer fields, he spotted tents clustered together in uneven rows. Northerners. Their campfires burned like small stars against the gray sky, warriors lounging or sharpening weapons as they waited. Probably holding position until Kharnek gave them the signal to move.
âGuess theyâre settling in for the time being,â Ludger muttered.
He crossed through the gate, and made his way toward the guild buildingâa structure that, thankfully, still stood exactly as heâd left it. Mostly.
The sound hit him first. Laughter. Loud, rumbling, and half-slurred. The kind of laugh that shook the walls.
When Ludger stepped through the doorway, he stopped dead.
At the center of the hall sat Kharnekâthe massive northerner commanderâperched on a reinforced wooden table as if it were a throne. In one hand, he held a tankard the size of a bucket, and in the other, another tankard. Both were empty.
Across from him, Harold sat slumped over, face pale and glistening with sweat, one hand gripping his stomach. The other was braced against the floor to keep him from collapsing completely. A puddle of vomit spread at his boots like an ugly badge of defeat.
Ludger didnât need to ask what had happened. The evidence spoke for itself.
He exhaled slowly through his nose and looked to the sideâwhere Cor, Aleia, and Selene were standing like three guilty children caught in the act. None of them spoke.
Ludger raised an eyebrow. âSo,â he said flatly, âwhich one of you thought letting
that
ââhe gestured vaguely between the two menââwas a good idea?â
Cor adjusted his glasses, clearing his throat. âIn our defense, he challenged Harold to a âdrink of respect.â Cultural exchange, you could say.â
Aleia winced. âWe tried to stop them⊠after the fifth round.â
Selene just crossed her arms and muttered, âThey both said backing out would be an insult to honor.â
Ludger pinched the bridge of his nose and sighed. âOf course they did.â
Kharnek spotted him then and grinned, his deep voice rolling like thunder. âAh, the little stone shaper returns. Your man drinks wellâbut not long!â
Harold groaned in response, head thudding against the table.
Ludger looked at him, then at the giant, and finally at the three so-called responsible adults standing by the wall. ââŠNext time he challenges someone to a contest,â Ludger said dryly, âmake sure itâs something that doesnât involve drowning in alcohol or regret.â
Cor nodded solemnly. âNoted.â
Kharnek raised his tankard with a booming laugh. âThen next time, weâll fight instead!â
Ludger just stared at him, unimpressed. âYeah,â he muttered. âThatâs somehow worse. Great idea.â
Ludger glanced at the puddle of misery that used to be Harold, then turned his attention to Kharnek, who was wiping foam from his beard with a grin that hadnât faded since Ludger walked in.
âRight,â Ludger said, tone all business now. âFunâs over. You ready to depart? Any minute we waste now will slow the progress up north.â
Kharnek slammed his empty tankard onto the table hard enough to make it shudder, the echo bouncing through the hall. âIâm ready,â he said, his voice rough and steady. âBut Darnell isnât.â
Ludger frowned. âThe captain? Whatâs he doing?â
âPreparing wagons,â Kharnek replied, scratching his jaw. âHe says weâll need a few to haul the labyrinth materials.â
Ludger blinked, his expression twisting into confusion. âWaitâ
hauling
? Why are we already moving materials out of the labyrinth?â
Kharnek shrugged, his tone calm, pragmatic. âFood,â he said simply. âWe got a good deal hereâyour people are feeding us, and for free no less. But feeding five hundred northerners for long? Thatâs no small favor.â
He leaned forward slightly, his heavy gaze meeting Ludgerâs. âSo I told Darnell weâd pay for whatâs already been given. Weâll send the materials from the labyrinth as compensationâfor now and for what weâll eat in the coming weeks.â
Ludger frowned deeper, crossing his arms. âYouâre selling labyrinth materials? Thatâs not a light decision.â
Kharnekâs tone didnât waver. âWe are trading. Until your fields are ready, we canât hunt enough to feed everyone. The northâs soil is half stone and frostâwe canât grow anything there yet. But if I pay for the food with materials, we buy time.â
He cracked a faint, humorless grin. âAnd when you finish your partâwhen you build us those fieldsâwe wonât need to take a single coin from the south again.â
Ludger stared at him for a few seconds, then exhaled through his nose. The manâs logic was sound. Crude, but sound.
ââŠAlright,â Ludger said at last. âOnce Darnellâs done with the wagons, weâll move. The sooner we start building those fields, the sooner you wonât have to pay for your meals with labyrinth.â
Kharnek smirked faintly. âThen weâre both racing against hunger, it seems.â
Ludger gave him a sideways look. âYouâre racing against it. Iâm racing against my motherâs letters asking if Iâm eating properly.â
Kharnek chuckled, deep and thunderous. âThen weâll see who breaks first. Sometimes I forgot that you are just a kid without hair down there.â
Ludger just sighed and muttered, â... Not betting on that.â
Ludger preferred his wit like his tea: dry, sharp, and served with the faintest sting.
A connoisseur of sarcasm,
as he liked to think of himselfânot that anyone around him seemed to appreciate the art.
He waved the thought aside and leaned forward, resting a hand on the table. âAlright, jokes aside. We still havenât talked about the labyrinth. Iâll need to know what weâre dealing with before we start sending anyone in again.â
Kharnekâs grin faded. His expression hardened into something grim and calculating. He gave a slow nod. âThe labyrinthâs not kind to outsidersâor to us. Even our strongest warriors struggled there. We barely finished mapping the first zone before the second broke our bones.â
Ludger raised an eyebrow. âYouâve been exploring it for over a year, right? And you still havenât cleared the second zone?â
Kharnekâs jaw clenched. âWe didnât have healers. Our shamans know basic magicânothing more. They can channel magic but when it comes to wounds, poison, or frostbite, theyâre as helpless as the rest of us.â
Ludgerâs expression stayed neutral, though inwardly he was intrigued. âSo, what kind of enemies are we talking about?â
Kharnek leaned back slightly, folding his thick arms. His tone turned cold. âIce skeletons. Thatâs what we call them. The things used to be human, or maybe something worse. They move like soldiersâshieldmen up front, spears behind, archers in the back. Organized. No mindless beasts down there.â
Ludgerâs brows drew together. âSkeletons with
tactics.
Great.â
The northerner nodded grimly. âTheir bones arenât normal. Theyâre made from some kind of glacic mineralâdense, sharp, and filled with mana. They can use it to make weapons on the spot. Spears, shields, even bows. Each swing drains the air around them, freezing everything they touch.â
âMana-draining ice constructs with teamwork,â Ludger said, rubbing his temples. âPerfect. Just what I needed to hear to make my day.â
Kharnek gave a humorless grunt. âThey donât break easy either. A clean cut wonât kill themâyou need to shatter these ice minerals. But each one guards its own, and they fight together to protect it.â
Ludger thought quietly for a few seconds, then muttered, âNo wonder youâve been stuck in the second zone.â
âNot for lack of trying,â Kharnek said flatly. âEvery expedition cost us men. And without healing, every wound froze before it could close.â
That made Ludgerâs mind start spinningâice monsters that used mana like weapons, terrain that froze blood mid-battle, a labyrinth that punished brute force. It wasnât just another dungeon. It was a training ground for tactical warfare.
He looked up at Kharnek, the edge of his smirk returning. âGood thing youâve got me now.â
Kharnekâs lips curled into a faint, toothy grin. âWeâll see if your cleverness works where our strength failed.â
Ludger shrugged. âIf not, weâll just build the next wall out of their bones.â
A couple of hours later, the sound of boots echoed through the guild hall. Darnell entered, posture straight as a spear, his armor freshly polished despite the long hours heâd likely spent working on the wagons.
He gave a crisp salute the moment he saw Ludger. âReporting in, sir. The wagons are ready. We can depart within the hour.â
Ludger blinked, his brow twitching slightly.
Sir.
He wasnât used to hearing that word thrown his wayâespecially not from a veteran captain like Darnell.
Technically, he wasnât anyoneâs commanding officer. The Lionsguard was supposed to be a guild, a bridge between the Torvares army and the frontier territories. Darnellâs men answered to Lord Torvares, not to him. But everyone in the border town knew whose idea this whole operation wasâand who made it actually
work.
Still, having a man like Darnell stand there like a proper soldier awaiting orders made Ludgerâs back itch.
He wasnât a noble. He wasnât a general. He was just a sarcastic moron who liked things done efficientlyâand maybe liked control a little too much. This whole guild idea had started as a convenience, a way to make his life easier while securing a foothold for the family and the north. But somehow, people had started looking at him like a leader.
And that was⊠uncomfortable. Ludger ran a hand through his hair and forced a half-smirk. âGood work, Captain. Didnât expect you to move this fast.â
Darnell allowed himself a brief, proud grin. âYou set the standard, sir. Hard not to follow.â
That just made Ludgerâs skin crawl worse.
The standard,
huh. If only they knew how often he winged it.
He turned toward the open door, catching sight of Kharnekâs towering silhouette outside, barking orders at a group of soldiers and northerners alike as they loaded the wagons. âAlright,â Ludger said, adjusting his gloves. âLetâs get this caravan moving before someone decides to thank me again. Iâm allergic to praise.â
Darnell chuckled, shaking his head as he followed. âUnderstood, sir.â
âDonât âsirâ me,â Ludger muttered under his breath, stepping into the sunlight. âYouâll ruin my reputation.â
As Ludger and Darnell stepped out into the open, the guildâs ragtag members gathered by the entrance, their faces a mix of curiosity and unease. The wagons stood ready, the creak of wheels and clink of harnesses cutting through the dry morning air.
Cor adjusted his glasses, the glint of sunlight flashing across the lens. âYouâre really going through with it then,â he said, tone more statement than question. âHeading north with Kharnekâs people.â
Ludger gave him a short nod. âSomeoneâs got to make sure they donât build huts on top of weird place or start worshipping ice skeletons as ancestors.â
Corâs brow furrowed slightly. âDo you want us to go with you? Harold and the others are capable enough. We could provide backup if things turn rough.â
Ludger shook his head before he could finish. âNo. Youâre staying here. Help Aronia with the guild setup.â
Aleia frowned. âAronia can handle things on her own.â
âYeah,â Ludger said dryly, âand if she gets bored handling things on her own, sheâll be halfway back to Koa before you can say âstability.ââ
That earned a few awkward looks. None of them said it out loud, but they all knew he wasnât wrong. Aronia mightâve agreed to help them, but her loyalty to the guild was still⊠flexible. The woman loved her independence almost as much as she loved her old hut.
Still, Cor didnât drop it. âYou shouldnât go alone. The alliance is new, and not everyone on their side will be happy about it.â
Ludgerâs smirk returned, though it didnât quite reach his eyes. âYou mean Kharnekâs underlings? Yeah, Iâve thought about that. Theyâre northernersâthey donât stab you in the back for power, they just challenge you in front of everyone for it. Easier to deal with, honestly.â
Selene crossed her arms. âYou sound confident.â
âI sound prepared,â Ludger corrected. âAnd I donât plan to stay long. Iâll help them get settled, set up the groundwork for farming, and return before the Captain starts treating me like a noble again.â
The group exchanged glances, still uneasy.
Ludger caught it and sighed. âRelax. Iâm not walking into a trap. Kharnekâs rough, but heâs honest. BesidesâŠââhe flexed his fingers, faint mana pulsing through the air around themâââŠif they try anything, Iâll just bury their camp under a few tons of dirt and call it urban remodeling.â
Cor chuckled softly, though there was a flicker of genuine concern behind his eyes. âJust donât make a habit of scaring potential allies to death.â
Ludger grinned faintly as he started walking toward the caravan. âNo promises.â
Behind him, the guild members watched silently. Theyâd seen him pull off things most adults wouldnât dare tryâbut the idea of him walking into the heart of the northernersâ territory alone still didnât sit right.
He was far from defenseless, that much they knew. But trusting five hundred restless warriors whoâd lost a war⊠that took a kind of nerve only Ludger seemed to possess.
The group rolled out toward the northern gate, wagons creaking in rhythm with the clop of hooves. The town behind them was already preparing for the night, soldiers shouting orders, a few kids waving as the caravan passed by.
Ludger sat near the front, arms crossed, eyes half-lidded as the horses trudged forward. The air grew colder as they neared the outskirts, where the main road cut into the barren stretch leading toward the northernersâ camp.
Calling it a
road
was generous. It was more like a scar across the landâa mix of broken stone, dried mud, and uneven ruts deep enough to snap an axle. The wagons jolted and lurched every few meters, and Darnell cursed under his breath as a wheel hit a jagged rock.
Before he could bark an order to slow down, Ludger stood, looked ahead, and without a word, jumped off the wagon.
âHeyâwhat are you doing?â Darnell called out, his tone half-command, half-exasperation.
Ludger didnât answer. He walked a few paces ahead, crouched down, and pressed his palm against the ground. A faint hum filled the air, followed by the whispering grind of shifting earth. The uneven path began to level out, the rocks sinking smoothly beneath the soil as the terrain molded itself under his control.
Chunks of stone fused together, creating a flat, solid stretch of road that stretched several meters ahead of the caravan. Dust settled, and the horsesâ hooves clicked sharply against the new surface.
In less than a minute, the patch of road looked like something out of the empireâs capitalâsmooth, firm, and wide enough for two wagons to pass without scraping sides.
Darnell blinked, momentarily forgetting to close his mouth. âYou couldâve mentioned you were going toââ
âWouldâve taken longer if Iâd stopped to explain,â Ludger said, brushing his hands off.
The captain exhaled through his nose, shaking his head. âYouâre something else.â
Ludger smirked faintly and walked alongside the lead wagon as it started moving again. The horses snorted as they passed him, their breath steaming in the cool air. One of them even tossed its head and blew through its nostrils like it was showing approvalâor maybe irritation.
Ludger glanced at it with a deadpan look. âYeah, youâre welcome.â
The horse snorted again.
He sighed. âDidnât sound like a thank you, though.â
As the caravan rolled forward on the newly formed road, Darnell found himself silently grateful. The path ahead would still be longâbut with Ludger reshaping the earth itself, it was a road worth traveling.
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