An hour later, the group finally stumbled out of the labyrinthâs mouth.
The morning light hit their faces like salvation â pale gold against a landscape of ice and snow. The recruits were breathing hard, their boots dragging through frost, every one of them looking like theyâd just crawled out of a blizzard and wrestled it for good measure.
Their cloaks were torn in places, their cheeks raw from the cold. Miraâs braid was stiff with frost. Rheaâs gloves were ripped at the knuckles. Derrinâs spear hung low, trembling. The two mages â Taron and Callen â were pale and glassy-eyed, like theyâd aged five years in sixty minutes.
Ludger walked out last, calm as ever, brushing some snow from his sleeve.
He gave the group a once-over. âNot bad,â he said simply. âYou all made it back in one piece. Thatâs already more than most do on their first run.â
The recruits didnât exactly
beam
with pride. They looked miserable â bruised, exhausted, and quietly humiliated. Theyâd thought the first floor would be easy. After all, their commander could clear it alone.
Reality had hit harder than the monsters.
Even the weaker frost skeletons moved fast â unnaturally fast â and their strikes were heavy enough to numb an arm through leather and steel. The ice floor didnât help either; half the group spent more time sliding than standing.
Rhea kicked at a patch of snow, muttering, âThey were just bones⊠how the hell do bones hit that hard?â
âDense mana,â Ludger said absently, already healing a gash on her forearm with a faint green glow. âAnd bad assumptions. You all thought theyâd be slower.â
Callen grimaced as Ludger moved next to him, healing a cracked rib with a faint pulse of light. âYou couldâve warned us.â
âI did,â Ludger said dryly. âYou just didnât believe me.â
He moved between them methodically, closing wounds one by one â nothing flashy, just clean and efficient. His healing magic was warm; it felt like liquid sunlight running through their veins, numbing the pain but leaving the fatigue intact.
He hadnât helped much inside â only when a wound clearly crippled movement. Otherwise, theyâd been forced to adapt, fight smarter, and take the hits that came with inexperience.
Now, though, with the frost skeletons behind them and the air no longer biting through armor, he let them breathe.
When the last cut closed and the glow faded from his hands, Ludger straightened. âThatâll do for today.â
The recruits stood in silence, panting, sweat and frost mixing on their skin.
âYou all did well,â Ludger said after a pause. âFirst runs arenât about winning â theyâre about surviving. You did that.â
Derrin looked up, still grimacing. âBarely.â
Ludgerâs lips twitched. âBarely counts.â
The recruits exchanged tired looks, half-smiles breaking through the frustration. It wasnât much, but the sting of failure dulled a little.
Behind them, the labyrinthâs frozen maw shimmered faintly in the sun â a silent reminder of what waited for their next run. They had survived. Next time, maybe theyâd
fight.
Ludger crouched near a campfire, sorting through the froststeel shards theyâd brought back â ten in total, each one glimmering faintly with that familiar blue-white sheen. They were roughly the size of a manâs finger , jagged and sharp-edged like frozen glass, still humming faintly with mana.
The recruits gathered around, still bandaged and shivering slightly, curiosity pushing through their exhaustion.
âSo,â Rhea asked, rubbing her hands together for warmth, âwhatâs the haul worth?â
Ludger held one shard up to the light, watching it catch the sunrise. âTen shards total,â he said. âNot bad for an hourâs work.â
Mira leaned forward. âAnd how much does that go for?â
âTwenty silver coins,â Ludger said simply. âFroststeel prices fluctuate, but thatâs the average. Forty percent goes to you â the ones who fought for it.â
The group straightened slightly at that, surprise flickering across their faces.
âAnother forty goes to the guild,â Ludger continued, âsince Lionsguard officially owns the labyrinth. The last twenty percent goes to the local lord â in this case, Lord Torvares.â
Yvar, standing nearby and taking notes, gave a small approving nod. âThe standard imperial breakdown. Fair enough.â
Ludger smirked faintly. âWhich means your share comes to eight silver total â split five ways, thatâs about one point six silver coins each.â
The recruits blinked. Callen frowned, doing quick math in his head. âWait, thatâs⊠actually not bad.â
âFor one hour,â Derrin said, eyes widening a bit. âWe made more than most guards earn in a day.â
Even Taron, still drained from mana exhaustion, cracked a small smile. âGuess this job pays better than we thought.â
Their fatigue seemed to melt away a little â a rare flicker of pride lighting up their faces.
But then Ludger spoke again, tone perfectly even. âOf course, my healing isnât free.â
They all froze.
Rhea turned slowly. â...What?â
Ludger started stacking the shards neatly in a small pouch. âHealing magicâs expensive. Takes mana, stamina, focus. And I healed each of you a few dozen times in there.â
Taronâs face went pale. âYouâyouâre joking, right?â
Ludger looked up with the straightest expression imaginable. âNope.â
The recruits blanched. Mira visibly reached for her coin pouch, and Derrin muttered under his breath, âWeâre doomed.â
Then Ludgerâs lips twitched â the smirk theyâd all come to dread. âRelax,â he said finally. âI donât charge guild members for basic healing.â
There was a collective sigh of relief so loud it couldâve blown the fire out.
âYouâre still recruits,â Ludger added, standing up and tightening his gloves. âBut you earned that much at least.â
Rhea exhaled, muttering, âYouâve got a dark sense of humor, vice guild leader.â
Ludger shrugged. âYouâll get used to it. Or quit.â
He slung the pouch of froststeel shards over his shoulder, his tone returning to that calm, pragmatic edge. âGet some rest. Next run, we aim for fifteen shards. You should get used to it fast, though. I canât babysit you everyday.â
The recruits groaned â but they were smiling this time. Even if their muscles ached and their pride still stung, theyâd survived, earned coin, and learned the first rule of the Lionsguard.
If Ludger laughed after saying something terrifying⊠It was usually too late to relax.
After the recruits settled down to rest and Yvar left to log the froststeel haul, Ludger made his way through the camp, hands in his coat pockets, boots crunching against the frozen dirt. The morning light was sharp now, cutting through the mist and reflecting off the walls of ice that surrounded the northern fields.
He stopped at one of the open lots â a wide, snow-covered patch of ground near the southern edge of the town. No buildings stood there yet, just a layer of untouched white. It was quiet, and that was exactly what he needed.
Ludger exhaled, then raised his hand. A faint brown glow pulsed around his fingers as the snow began to slide away in neat, circular ripples â revealing hard earth beneath. He pressed his palm down, and the soil trembled in response.
With a deep
rumble,
the ground began to rise and shift. Blocks of compacted stone surfaced like the skeleton of a new structure, shaping into clean lines and solid foundations. Walls formed, smoothed by a second wave of mana. Within minutes, the empty lot had transformed into a sturdy stone building â rectangular, single-story, but wide enough for a small team to live in comfortably.
Ludger let the mana fade and crossed his arms, studying his work. The new dormitory stood steady against the cold, steam rising faintly from its surface where his magic still radiated heat.
It wasnât fancy â he didnât have time for fancy â but it was functional.
Theyâll need their own place to rest,
he thought.
Running back and forth between the border town and here wastes too much time. I could be training them instead.
He was still calculating floor space in his head when a heavy voice came from behind him.
âWhat in the frost are you doing now, boy?â
Ludger turned slightly to see Kharnek approaching, the chieftainâs huge frame cutting through the mist like a moving wall. His arms were bare as usual despite the cold, his breath forming thick clouds.
Ludger nodded toward the new building. âHousing.â
Kharnek stopped beside him, tilting his head as he studied the fresh structure. âYouâre building them a home already? Thought Imperials made recruits sleep in the mud first.â
Ludger smirked faintly. âI could. But thatâd just make them slower. If I want them to get stronger, and making me money. I need them running and fighting, not freezing half to death.â
The northerner grunted, crossing his arms. âHeh. Youâve got a strange way of training. No yelling, no beatings, no drinking contests.â
âNot my style,â Ludger said simply. âDisciplineâs one thing. Efficiencyâs another. Every hour they waste walking from the camp to town is an hour they could spend learning how not to die.â
Kharnek barked a laugh. âHah! Thatâs one way to put it.â
He walked around the new building, inspecting it like a smith checking a new weapon. âSturdy work. You raised this in minutes?â
Ludger shrugged. âFive, maybe. Iâve been practicing.â
âShow-off.â
âIt is my modus operandi.â
The chieftain chuckled again, clapping a hand on Ludgerâs shoulder â carefully, for once. âYouâre a strange one, kid. Not quite a noble, not quite a Northerner. But Iâll give you thisâyou build fast, and you think ahead.â
Ludgerâs smirk returned. âThatâs why things work.â
Kharnek grinned wide, showing teeth. âKeep thinking like that, and these kids might actually survive you.â
Ludger looked back at the dormitory, eyes narrowing slightly in thought. âThatâs the idea.â
The two stood there for a moment â the young strategist and the northern chieftain â as the cold wind swept across the fields. The new building stood firm against the frost, a small but tangible sign that Ludgerâs guild was growing roots in the north.
Kharnek stayed quiet for a moment, his gaze drifting from the new stone building to the horizon, where the faint shimmer of the labyrinthâs frozen entrance cut through the mist. His breath came out in a heavy sigh before he spoke again.
âSo,â he rumbled, âhow many of my people do you plan to take into this guild of yours?â
Ludger looked at him from the corner of his eye. âFor now? Just you and the five I already approved. You know how it worksâlimited licenses, limited pay, limited oversight. The Empire doesnât like it when we expand too fast.â
Kharnekâs brow furrowed, the scar across his nose tightening. âHmph. Five, huh?â
âFiveâs enough to bring back froststeel daily without raising attention,â Ludger said, tone even. âThey know the labyrinth, they know how to handle themselves. Any more, and the southern merchants start whispering that the âsavagesâ are taking their jobs.â
The northerner grunted in annoyance. âSavages,â he echoed, the word like gravel in his throat. âIf only they knew how many of us die keeping that cursed ice from spreading.â
Ludger didnât argue â there was nothing to argue. The Empire would always fear what it didnât control.
Kharnek crossed his arms, muscles flexing beneath the froststeel ornaments. âStill, Iâve been thinking. I want to send more of my people to join your guild. The young ones.â
Ludger blinked. âThe young ones?â
âAye.â Kharnekâs tone softened slightly, though the edge never left his voice. âTheyâre strong, but theyâve got no direction. No sense of what comes after fighting. All they know is blood and frost.â
He looked toward the new recruitsâ quarters, still steaming faintly from Ludgerâs earth magic. âYou Imperials have orderâranks, pay, order. The young ones need to learn that. Learn how to build something, not just swing a weapon.â
Ludger frowned slightly, his analytical mind already calculating. âYou want to send them south.â
Kharnek nodded. âLet them see how the Empire runs things. Have them work under your banner. Hunt, guard, tradeâwhatever it is your guild does. They donât have to fight frost skeletons all day.â
Ludger thought about it for a moment, his breath misting in the cold air. The idea had merit â heâd seen what Kharnekâs people could do. Hardy, disciplined when commanded right, and fearless in a fight. Integrating them would strengthen Lionsguard⊠and prove that the alliance wasnât just words.
Still, his expression stayed serious. âItâs a good idea,â he said finally. âBut if we send them south, theyâll need a leader.â
Kharnek raised a brow. âYou doubt my warriors?â
âI doubt
anyone
without authority,â Ludger said bluntly. âIf theyâre not trained or guided properly, the Imperial guards will treat them like outsiders â or worse. Theyâll need someone strong. Someone who can command respect and remind them who they represent.â
Kharnek grinned, sharp and wolfish. âYou mean someone like me?â
Ludger met his gaze evenly. âYou canât leave the north. Youâre the chieftain. But if youâve got someone who can stand in your place â someone your people respect â send them to me.â
The chieftainâs grin faded into a thoughtful hum. â...I might have someone in mind.â
âGood,â Ludger said, brushing frost from his gloves. âWeâll start with a dozen, then expand once they settle in. The Empire needs to get used to seeing Northerners in orderâ the sooner, the better.â
Kharnekâs grin returned, broader this time. âYou talk like a general already, boy.â
Ludger smirked faintly. âJust someone whoâs tired of stupidity.â
The chieftain laughed, deep and booming, echoing through the camp. âHah! Youâll fit in with us more than you think.â
âAlready do,â Ludger said quietly, turning back toward the building â and in that moment, between frost and fire, both men knew this was no longer just an alliance. It was the start of something larger â the foundation of a shared future neither the Empire nor the North could ignore.
Ludger crossed his arms, eyeing Kharnek with that usual skeptical calm. âYou said you had someone in mind. Who?â
Kharnekâs grin widened immediately, which was never a good sign. âMy daughter.â
Ludger blinked. ââŠYour what?â
âMy daughter,â the chieftain repeated, like it was the most obvious thing in the world. âSheâs fifteen. Strong-willed, sharp tongue, and hits harder than most of my warriors when sheâs angry.â
Ludger frowned. âYou never mentioned having a kid.â
Kharnekâs booming laugh rolled out over the cold air. âHa! Thatâs because she and her mother are both
too stubborn
to come near me. They live further north â said they wouldnât waste their time on some fool chasing Imperial alliances.â
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