Ludger led the group a short distance from the house, stopping in the open yard where no building had been erected. The morning wind cut through the air, carrying that clean northern chill, and the five kids stood in a straight, uneasy line before him â backs stiff, eyes alert.
They looked nervous, though they tried hard not to show it. Ludger crossed his arms, sizing them up.
He was shorter than all three of the boys â barely came up to oneâs shoulder, actually â and about level with the two girls. Given his age and his calm, almost detached tone, his posture came off as oddly authoritative for someone who looked like
he
should be the recruit.
Still, none of them dared react. Either Violaâs grandfather had drilled the order into them
not
to question him, or theyâd already heard enough stories to keep their mouths shut.
âAlright,â Ludger began, his voice steady but firm. âIâm Ludger â founder of the Lionsguard Guild and vice guild leader.â
The title hung in the air. Even the wind seemed to pause for a second.
He continued, tone casual but edged with command. âYouâre here because Lord Torvares decided we need new recruits. That means youâll be working
for
the guild, and by extension, under my supervision.â
He gave them a brief smirk. âCongratulations.â
No one laughed.
He exhaled lightly. âNames. One at a time.â
The first to step forward was a dark-haired boy with broad shoulders and a soldierâs posture â probably the oldest of the group. He saluted briefly. âDerrin Alvo, sir. Former trainee of the Seventh Border Garrison. I was told my spearsmanship met your standards.â
Ludger studied him for a second. The kidâs grip on the weapon at his hand was clean â no fidgeting, no nervous twitch. Solid foundation. âWeâll see about that,â Ludger said simply.
Next was a shorter girl with pale blond hair tied back in a loose braid, bow strapped neatly across her back. Her expression was neutral, eyes sharp. âMira Voss. Hunter. Graduated from the Hunterâs Lodge in the southern marches.â
âHunterâs Lodge?â Ludger asked, mildly impressed.
He had heard a bit from Yvar, there was a hunterâs school as well, one that taught archery and tracking.
âYes, sir,â she said, not breaking eye contact.
Ludger gave a faint nod.
Disciplined. Calm. Sheâll last.
The third stepped forward â a wiry boy with reddish hair and ink stains on his sleeves. âTaron Elst. I specialize in field magic and alchemy. Mostly potions and ward runes.â
Ludger raised an eyebrow. âRunes? At your age?â
The boy adjusted his spectacles. â...Iâm not good with swords.â
Yvar, standing off to the side, looked almost proud. âAh. A scholar type. We could use more of those.â
Next came a girl with short black hair and striking amber eyes. She looked around thirteen, and there was something about her stance â coiled energy, like she was ready to move at any second. âRhea Cael,â she said. âMartial trainee. No family name, no sponsor. I fight barehanded.â
Ludgerâs brows rose slightly. âNo weapons?â
âDonât need them,â she said, blunt but not rude.
He gave a small, approving smile. âWeâll test that soon.â
Finally, the last recruit stepped up â a slim, silver-haired boy who looked far too calm for someone surrounded by strangers. His voice was even, polite. âCallen Vort. My familyâs been in Lord Torvaresâs service for three generations. Iâm proficient with short blades and water magic.â
Ludger studied him a moment longer than the rest. The boyâs tone was respectful, but his gaze had a quiet sharpness â like someone who noticed everything but said little. Besides, silver hair⊠That was extremely rare.
When the introductions were done, Ludger nodded slowly. âAlright. Derrin, Mira, Taron, Rhea, Callen.â He looked them over again, his tone cooling slightly. âYouâre a mixed bunch. Thatâs good â and a problem. Youâll learn to work as one, or youâll wash out fast.â
None of them flinched. That was a good start.
Ludger turned slightly toward Yvar. âWeâll run them through basic coordination drills tomorrow. I want to see what they can actually do, in the labyrinth.â
âUnderstood,â Yvar said, adjusting his notes.
Ludger looked back at the five new recruits, his green eyes gleaming faintly under the pale light. âWelcome to the north,â he said. âDonât disappoint me.â
Then, with that same sharp smirk that his father always teased him for, he turned away â the scarf Viola had given him fluttering behind him as the recruits exchanged wary glances.
Theyâd expected a child.
What they got instead was a commander.
When the recruits finally dispersed â following Yvar toward the training quarters â Ludger exhaled and rolled his shoulders. The whole âcommander routineâ drained him more than fighting frost skeletons. Still, it had to be done. First impressions mattered, especially when half your guild thought you were still a kid who couldnât reach the top shelf.
He made his way back home, scarf flicking lightly in the northern wind. The door creaked as he stepped inside â and there they were.
Arslan and Elaine, sitting side by side at the table.
Elaine had her arms crossed, her expression halfway between concern and lecture mode. Arslan, on the other hand, looked entirely too relaxed â smirking faintly, as if he already knew what conversation was about to happen.
Ludger sighed. â...You two look like youâre about to start a war council.â
Elaine tilted her head, eyes narrowing slightly. âWe heard about your little meeting with the recruits.â
Of course they did. News traveled fast in a small town full of bored northerners and nosy soldiers. Well, they probably heard the meeting since it happened fifty meters away from home.
âI didnât yell at anyone,â Ludger said defensively, holding up his hands.
Elaine sighed softly. âThatâs not the issue. You couldâve been a little
nicer,
you know? Theyâre children, Ludger. Around your age. You finally have people near you who arenât adults or soldiers â maybe try making friends instead of scaring them.â
Ludger blinked. âFriends?â He rubbed the back of his neck. âMom, theyâre recruits, not classmates.â
âThatâs exactly my point!â she said, her tone soft but firm. âYouâre always surrounded by adults and fighters. Those kids came all the way from the south â theyâre nervous, and they probably admire you already. You could at least try to make them feel welcome.â
Before Ludger could answer, Arslan cleared his throat, the faintest grin tugging at his mouth. âHe did fine.â
Elaine shot him a look. âFine? He intimidated them.â
Arslan shrugged. âGood. Keeps them sharp.â
âArslanââ
He raised a hand calmly. âListen. Youâre not wrong, but neither is he. This isnât a classroom, itâs a guild. If Ludger starts treating them like friends before theyâve proven anything, itâll mess with the chain of command. Respect has to come before familiarity â otherwise you get a mess when orders start flying.â
Elaine frowned slightly but didnât argue right away.
Arslan continued, his tone more measured now. âOnce theyâve earned their place, then he can treat them like comrades. But until then, itâs better to keep a line. The northâs harsh, and if theyâre going to survive here, they need to learn that discipline early. You shouldnât think that I decided to give my life to protect Harold, Selene, Aleia, and Cor the very moment I met them.â
Ludger smirked faintly. âDidnât think youâd defend me, Dad.â
Arslan snorted. âDonât get used to it. Iâm just saying youâre not wrong â this time.â
Elaine sighed again, softer now, brushing a strand of hair from her face. âI understand that, but it doesnât change the fact that you could show a little more warmth. You donât have to be cold to earn respect.â
Ludger rubbed the back of his head, trying not to smile. âIâll⊠try not to scare them too much. Happy?â
âModerately,â Elaine said, but she smiled anyway.
Arslan chuckled, standing up and clapping Ludger lightly on the shoulder. âYou did good, kid. Keep your edge sharp â just remember what your mother said too. Discipline without heart makes soldiers, not comrades. We are making a guild, not an army.â
Ludger nodded slowly, filing that away. âGot it.â
Elaine leaned in, kissing her sonâs forehead despite his immediate groan. âGood. And maybe next time, invite them for dinner. You could use some friends your own age.â
âMom,â Ludger muttered, exasperated. âIâm literally building a guild, not a social club.â
Arslan grinned. âSame thing, really.â
Ludger sighed, defeated. â...Iâm going to train for a bit.â
Elaine chuckled softly, and as he retreated toward his room, he could still hear his fatherâs teasing voice echo behind him:
âWork on your leadership
and
your people skills, Commander.â
Ludger smirked faintly, closing the door behind him. âYeah, yeahâŠâ
For all their differences, his parents made one hell of a balance â and as much as heâd never admit it out loud, he was lucky to have both voices keeping him grounded.
After breakfast, Ludger slipped on his boots, tugged his scarf into place, and headed out toward the southern wall. The spring air still had a bite to it, but the wind was calm, and the town was already stirring awake â smiths hammering at dawn, merchants unpacking crates, and soldiers trading shifts at the gates.
The southern wall stretched ahead, sturdy and lined with new timber and stone. Heâd been meaning to remake it with magic once things quieted down, but as he got closer, he realized someone had beaten him to it.
The repairs were already done.
Not with mana-carved perfection, but by hand â rough-hewn planks, stone mortar, and visible sweat marks where men had worked through the cold. The craftsmanship wasnât flawless, but it held solid, even stubbornly so.
Ludger ran his palm along the wall, feeling the grit of the mortar. âHuh,â he murmured, a small smirk tugging at his lips. âGuess they didnât need me this time.â
He could tell just by the uneven pattern that this wasnât Yvarâs organization â this was pure imperial handiwork.
Muscle over magic.
Maybe heâd picked up some of that attitude himself. That blunt, uncompromising edge that valued results over polish from the northerners. It would explain why the meeting with the recruits had gone the way it did â less charm, more command.
He exhaled lightly through his nose. âYeah⊠maybe Iâve been up here too long.â
Still, the wall held strong, and with that checked off his list, there was one thing left heâd been putting off. His
other
project.
The one no one knew about.
He turned and walked back toward home, boots crunching over the frostbitten dirt. When he reached his room, he closed the door quietly behind him and activated the lock. The air around him shifted as mana hummed faintly in the walls.
Outside, the world stayed calm for exactly three seconds.
Then the ground rumbled.
The house shuddered once â a deep, low quake that rattled plates in the kitchen and sent a few toys rolling across the twinsâ cradle.
In the main room, Elaine froze mid-lullaby, her eyes flicking toward the ceiling. â...Arslan.â
Arslan didnât even look up from the cup of tea he was pouring. âYeah?â
âDid you feel that?â
He took a slow sip. âYep.â
She gave him a pointed look. âShould we⊠check?â
Arslan thought about it for a second, then exhaled through his nose. âNope.â
Elaine frowned. âYouâre not even curious what heâs doing?â
âOh, I
am,
â he said, leaning back in his chair. âJust not that much curious. Letâs give the kid some privacy and I feel like it would be more fun to learn it by surprise.â
The house gave another faint shake, followed by what sounded suspiciously like a mana discharge â a soft thrum that vibrated through the floorboards.
Elaine sighed, cradling one of the twins as they stirred. âYour sonâs going to blow the roof off one of these days.â
âProbably,â Arslan said casually. âAs long as he doesnât blow
us
off with it, Iâll let him work.â
There was a pause.
â...You really trust him that much?â
Arslan chuckled. âNo. Iâm just old enough to know better than to interrupt whatever that boy calls âexperimentation.ââ
Outside the door, another faint
boom
echoed, followed by the soft hiss of mana fading.
Elaine shook her head with a small, tired smile. âYouâre both hopeless.â
Arslan grinned over his cup. âAnd you loves us anyway.â
âBarely.â
The rumbling subsided soon after, and the house grew quiet again â though a faint blue light still pulsed under Ludgerâs door, as if whatever he was building was only just beginning to take shape.
The next morning, the sky was still caught between night and dawn â pale streaks of gold and gray stretching over the horizon â when Ludger stepped out of his house, scarf fluttering behind him.
He didnât expect anyone to be up yet. Training was supposed to start
today
, but he hadnât told the recruits when. That detail had been intentional. He wanted to see who showed initiative.
As he approached the guildhall, he stopped short.
There they were.
All five of the new recruits â Derrin, Mira, Taron, Rhea, and Callen â standing in a neat line in front of the guild gates. Their faces were pale from the cold, but their stances were firm, their eyes clear.
Ludger tilted his head slightly, a faint smile tugging at one corner of his mouth.
Sunrise. Not bad.
He crossed his arms as he approached. âYouâre early.â
Derrin straightened immediately. âSir, you didnât specify a time, so we assumed dawn was safest.â
âGood assumption,â Ludger said, letting his gaze pass over each of them. Frost clung to their clothes, and he could tell by their shivering hands that theyâd been waiting for a while. âShows youâve got some discipline. But if you go to the labyrinth dressed like that, youâll turn into ice sculptures before you draw a weapon.â
Rhea frowned, blowing into her hands. âWe didnât expect the cold to be
much
worse.â
âWelcome to the north,â Ludger said dryly. âIf you canât feel your fingers, you canât fight. Go get something thicker â cloaks, gloves, boots. Whatever you can find that doesnât fall apart in a blizzard.â
They didnât hesitate. The five dashed off in different directions â Mira toward the market stalls, Derrin to the supply depot.
Ludger leaned back against the gate, hands in his pockets, watching the town slowly wake up. The smell of smoke and bread rolled out from nearby homes. Yvar arrived a few minutes later, notebook in hand, looking entirely too awake for this hour.
âTesting punctuality?â he asked, amused.
âMore like common sense,â Ludger said. âThey passed. Mostly.â
When the recruits returned, their appearance was much improved â heavy cloaks, fur-lined gloves, proper boots. Rhea had even managed to find a scarf, though she wore it like she was preparing for battle.
âBetter,â Ludger said, pushing off the gate. âYou look less like tourists.â
He turned toward the northern road. Beyond the fields, the labyrinthâs frozen entrance shimmered faintly in the distance, half-buried in mist.
âAlright,â he said, tightening his own gloves. âWeâll start with the basics â movement, awareness, coordination. Youâll learn to fight
and
survive out there.â
The recruits nodded in unison.
Ludger smirked faintly. âGood. Then keep up.â
And without another word, he broke into a run.
The recruits followed, their boots pounding against the frozen dirt as they raced after him toward the labyrinth â their first real test as members of the Lionsguard. The wind howled, the cold bit at their faces, and ahead of them, the rising sun lit the horizon like fire on ice.
Thank you for reading!
Don't forget to follow, favorite, and rate. If you want to read 80 chapters ahead, you can check my patreon:Â /Comedian0