Ludger stepped closer, still half in disbelief. The twins were impossibly small, bundled in soft cloth, their breathing light and steady â one with faint wisps of pale hair like Elaineâs, the other with a darker hue that matched Arslanâs.
He cleared his throat, his voice quieter than usual. â...So,â he said, âwhat are their names?â
Arslanâs expression softened immediately. He shifted his stance slightly, adjusting the baby in his arms with a kind of care Ludger rarely saw from him. âElle,â he said, nodding toward the tiny girl in Elaineâs arms. âAnd this little warrior here,â he lifted the boy slightly, âis Arash.â
âElle and Arash,â Ludger repeated slowly. The names rolled off his tongue easily â elegant, but simple.
Arslan chuckled, clearly pleased with himself. âYour mother named you, so itâs only fair I got to name these two. Tradition, balance⊠call it what you want.â
Elaine smiled tiredly but with amusement. âI didnât protest. He wouldnât stop pacing the room until he decided.â
Ludger blinked, studying the names for a moment, then let a faint grin creep across his face. âElle⊠ArashâŠâ He tilted his head slightly. âYou really used names similar to yours, didnât you?â
The room went quiet for a second, and then all eyes turned to Arslan.
His grin widened like a man whoâd just been caught doing something clever. âYou noticed.â
Elaine laughed softly, shaking her head. âOf course
he
did.â
Aronia chuckled from where she stood near the window. âThatâs adorable â in a âI canât believe he actually did thatâ kind of way.â
Harold let out a bark of laughter. âSo the next oneâs gonna be called
Arlaine
?â
âShut up,â Arslan said, but even he was laughing now. âYou try coming up with something meaningful under pressure.â
Cor smirked. âMeaningful, sure. Subtle? Not so much.â
Ludger folded his arms, grinning now. âGuess I canât mock you too hard. At least theyâll always know who to blame for the name choice.â
Yvar adjusted his glasses, looking entirely too amused. âItâs actually rather fitting. A symbolic link between the two of you and your children â unity of blood and heritage, one might say.â
Arslan gave a firm nod, looking oddly satisfied with that interpretation. âExactly. See? Someone gets it.â
Elaine sighed with mock exasperation. âYou mean youâre just glad someone called it poetic instead of lazy. Well, the names are pretty, so it is alright.â
âPoetic sounds better in front of the kids,â Arslan said, smirking.
The room filled with laughter again, the kind that carried warmth rather than noise. Even Ludger couldnât help but chuckle, shaking his head.
âElle and Arash,â he said again under his breath, looking at the sleeping twins. âNot bad, old man. Not bad at all.â
Arslan puffed out his chest slightly, looking far too proud for his own good. âOf course not. You think Iâd waste good names on anyone else?â
Elaine rolled her eyes, but there was love in her voice when she said, âI swear, between you and Ludger, Iâll never have a quiet dinner again.â
Ludger smiled, the kind of rare, genuine smile that softened the sharpness of his usual tone. âYou wouldnât want it any other way.â
The room settled into a peaceful quiet after that, filled only by the faint crackle of the fireplace and the soft breathing of the twins. And for the first time in a long while, Ludger felt like the world wasnât something he had to fight â it was something he could protect.
Elaine sat down gently on the edge of the couch, Arash still resting peacefully in her arms. The glow of the fire painted her face with that quiet warmth only mothers had â calm, patient, and impossible to argue with.
She looked up at Ludger, who was standing awkwardly near the door, unsure what to do with his hands.
âDo you want to hold one of them?â she asked softly.
Ludger blinked. âMe?â He scratched the back of his neck. âUh⊠Iâm way too clumsy for that, Mom. I might drop him.â
Elaine chuckled quietly. âYouâre not going to drop anyone.â
Before he could protest, she stood up and carefully passed
Arash
into his arms. Ludger stiffened instantly, his brain screaming at him not to move â not even breathe too hard.
The baby stirred slightly, then settled, tiny fingers curling around the edge of Ludgerâs sleeve.
For a second, all sound faded.
Ludgerâs usual guarded expression softened â his jaw unclenched, and that habitual smirk he wore like armor melted into something far quieter.
A real smile.
Elaineâs eyes sparkled with pride. âThere,â she said. âNow
thatâs
a genuine smile. Not that little smirk you use when youâre pretending to be clever.â
Ludger chuckled under his breath, still looking down at Arash. âYeah, well⊠I donât think I could smirk right now even if I tried.â
âGood,â Elaine said warmly. âYouâre a big brother now. That means you get to show the little ones how to behave properly.â
He glanced up at her, one eyebrow raised. âYou say that like Iâm qualified for it.â
Arslan laughed from the table. âYouâre more qualified than you think. Speaking of big brother dutiesââ
Elaine turned toward a side cabinet and picked up a small wooden box tied with a neat red ribbon. âYour sister sent something for your birthday.â
Ludger blinked. âViola?â
Arslan nodded, amusement flickering across his face. âShe came by yesterday to see the twins. Dropped this off but left before you could get here. Said she didnât want to deal with your teasing after you saw what she picked.â
âSounds about right,â Ludger muttered, smirking faintly again. âSo whatâs the mysterious gift?â
Elaine set the box on the table and opened it carefully. Inside, folded neatly, was a dark green scarf â simple, well-made, and surprisingly stylish.
âShe said it would suit you,â Elaine said, lifting it gently. âViola might act a bit boyish sometimes, but she has good taste. The color matches your eyes.â
Ludger blinked, then looked away with an embarrassed cough. âThatâs⊠actually not bad.â
Harold snorted from across the room. âCareful, kid. If you compliment her next time, she might die of shock.â
Ludger shot him a dry glare. âIâll save that for her next birthday, then.â
Elaine laughed, shaking her head. âYou two never change.â
Ludger looked back down at the baby in his arms â tiny, peaceful, completely unaware of the world heâd just been born into â and something in his chest tightened.
He smiled again, softer this time. âGuess being a big brother isnât that bad after all.â
Elaine reached over, brushing his hair lightly. âYouâll be a good one.â
â...Yeah,â Ludger said quietly, eyes on Arash. âIâll make sure of it.â
The room stayed warm and still, filled with the sound of faint laughter and the soft breathing of the twins â and for the first time in years, the family felt whole again.
Ludger sat down carefully, still holding Arash as the others laughed and talked around him. The warmth of the fire, the smell of home-cooked food, and the faint cooing of the twins made the whole scene feel almost unreal. For once, things actually
felt
right.
But that nagging thought in the back of his head refused to stay quiet.
He exhaled, glancing from his mother to his father. âChanging the topic a bit,â he said, his tone even, âbut⊠why are you here? Why
this
house, and why was I the last one to find out about it?â
The air in the room shifted. Arslanâs smile faded, replaced by something heavier, more deliberate. He exchanged a quick look with Elaine.
âBecause,â Arslan began, his voice calm but firm, âyou werenât supposed to know until everything was safe.â
Ludger frowned slightly. âSafe?â
Arslan nodded. âA few months back, Lord Torvares received a letter from the Imperial capital. An invitation for Viola â and for you.â
Ludger blinked. â...An invitation?â
Elaine added quietly, âTo the Imperial School.â
Ludgerâs brows furrowed. âThat same academy that expelled Viola years ago?â
âThe very same,â Arslan said. âAnd not just for her â the letter included your name too. The Empireâs trying to pull you closer, son. Closer to
them.
â
He leaned back. âLord Torvares and Viola didnât trust it for a second. The timing, the tone â none of it felt right. So, instead of responding, they contacted me. We agreed to move up here, to the north, before the Empire tried anything⊠persuasive.â
Ludgerâs grip on the baby tightened slightly â not out of anger, but from the effort of keeping calm.
âSo⊠this houseââ
âBuilt in secret,â Arslan said. âUnder Violaâs grandfatherâs orders. No records, no names. Even the builders didnât know who it was for. He wanted your family close, but hidden. Safer here, under the protection of your guild and your allies, than anywhere near the capital.â
Elaine nodded softly. âWe couldnât risk sending word through letters either. If anyone was watching, even from afar, it wouldâve drawn suspicion.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed faintly. âSo you all thought I was being
watched
?â
Arslan met his gaze evenly. âNot thought,
knew
it was possible. Youâve made enough waves up here to catch attention. If they wanted leverage over you, the family wouldâve been the easiest target.â
For a moment, silence filled the room â just the faint crackling of the fire and the sound of Arash breathing softly in Ludgerâs arms.
He wanted to feel angry. He really did. Angry that people were still playing political games with his life like it was a piece on a board.
But as he looked around â at his parents alive and well, at the twins safe and sleeping, at the friends whoâd gone through the trouble of keeping it quiet â the anger melted before it could even form.
He sighed deeply, closing his eyes for a moment as he rubbed his temple with one hand. â...I didnât see that one coming.â
Arslan chuckled quietly. âGood. It means we did our job right.â
Elaine smiled gently. âYou can be mad later. For now, just enjoy the moment.â
Ludger exhaled through his nose, a wry half-smile tugging at his lips. âYou realize youâre asking a lot from someone with my self-control, right?â
Arslan grinned. âYouâve improved. You didnât punch the table â Iâll take that as progress.â
Ludger let out a quiet laugh, shaking his head. âYeah, I guess I really have.â
He glanced back down at the twins, still sleeping soundly, and the tension in his shoulders finally eased. Whatever frustration lingered could wait. Right now, they were safe.
Ludger forced the tension from his shoulders and took a slow breath. There would be time later to worry about the Empire, the school, and whatever schemes were hiding behind that letter. For nowâjust for tonightâhe wanted to enjoy what he had.
He stayed with his family through the afternoon, letting the warmth of the house wash over him. The sound of laughter, clinking cups, and the twinsâ soft breathing drowned out everything else. Eventually, Elaine nudged him again, holding out the other baby.
âYour turn,â she said gently. âElle wants to meet her big brother too.â
Ludger hesitated, but took the bundle carefully. Elleâs tiny face peeked out from the blanketâdelicate, calm, and impossibly small. The moment his hands steadied, her eyelids fluttered open, revealing soft green eyes that mirrored his own.
For an instant, she just
looked
at himâlike she recognized him somehow. Then, just as quickly, her eyes drooped shut again, and she fell asleep.
Ludgerâs chest tightened. Heâd felt countless things since waking up in this worldâfear, anger, exhaustion, fleeting satisfaction. But this⊠this was different.
Warm. Steady.
Pure.
Holding the twins like this, surrounded by people who mattered, he felt something that even victory or power couldnât give him. It wasnât just happinessâit was purpose.
That night, after dinner, after everyone had eaten and talked until they were too tired to laugh anymore, Ludger quietly slipped outside.
The air hit him sharp and cold. The moon hung low over the borderlands, silver light glinting off the roofs and frost patches. He walked slowly through the quiet streets, nodding to the guards who stood their posts.
âSir?â one of them called. âHeading out this late?â
âJust walking,â Ludger replied. âKeep your posts. I wonât be long.â
They hesitated, but didnât stop him. Everyone here knew better than to question him when he had that look in his eyes. In fact, it looked like the eyes of someone they never had seen before.
He walked beyond the walls until the lights of the town faded behind him. The night stretched wide and open, and the northern wind cut against his skin like knives.
Up on a small hill, he stoppedâbefore a massive boulder, three times his size.
He stared at it for a long moment, his breath steady, the scarf Viola had given him fluttering around his neck. It kept the wind off his skin, soft and warmâjust enough to anchor him in the present.
Then, slowly, his expression changed.
The calm vanished. His aura flared, rippling through the air like heat distortion. The ground beneath him quivered, as raw mana pulsed outward. His skin reddened, veins and muscles bulging as the Rage Flow ignited inside him.
Steam began to rise from his shoulders as he drew back his right arm.
He didnât roar, didnât grunt, didnât say a word. He just punched.
The world shook.
The impact tore through the air with a dull, thunderous crackâthe kind that traveled for miles. The boulder shattered, exploding into shards and dust that rained across the terrain like molten glass.
For a second, there was only silence. Then the steam pouring from his body began to fade, his aura settling until the night air felt still again.
Ludger looked down at his armâswollen, bruised, completely fractured. His fingers trembled faintly from the backlash. But the pain barely registered. It wasnât physical.
It was the fury heâd been holding back since hearing his fatherâs explanation.
He moved his injured hand slowly, voice low and steady.
âIf they ever try anything against my familyâŠâ
His eyes hardened, gleaming like tempered steel under the moonlight.
âThe Empire will sink to the bottom of the damn ocean.â
The words hung in the air like a vowâcold, unbreakable, absolute.
Then he turned, wrapped the green scarf tighter around his neck, and started back toward the sleeping town.