The group was still reeling. Ludger had conjured water out of thin air, nailed the spell in one shot, and even triggered a whole new job in the process. Callen was still staring at his sleeves like the laws of magic had personally betrayed him.
Then, before anyone could say another word, Ludger swung one leg over his horse and jumped down. The motion was smooth but wearyâlike someone running on pure instinct. He pressed a hand to the ground, and the earth trembled lightly. In seconds, stone rose from the dirt and shaped itself into a solid, boxy cart, complete with short walls and crude wheels.
âUhâŠâ Rhea blinked. âIs he⊠building another house?â
Freyra tilted her head. âNo, smaller. Like a coffin on wheels.â
Ludger ignored both comments. He guided his horse closer, untied the saddle straps, and fastened them to the front of the new cart with practiced efficiency. Then, without ceremony, he climbed inside, lay down flat on his back, and shut his eyes.
The recruits stared.
ââŠIs this his way of saying we should keep moving?â Taron asked.
Mira shrugged. âHe didnât
say
stop.â
Freyraâs grin twitched wider. âGuess weâre the drivers now. The pipsqueak finally ran out of fuel.â
Rhea glanced toward the cart, where only the top of Ludgerâs scarf was visible. âHeâs really out?â
âPretty sure,â Callen said. âMaybe not mana exhaustion, but sleep deprivation, divine stubbornnessâall caught up.â
They looked at one another, then at the faintly snoring vice guildmaster lying in his self-made cart, and for the first time in days, everyone laughedâquietly, but sincerely.
âHardworking and insane to a fault,â Rhea muttered, shaking her head.
Still, they mounted up and started moving again, leading the cart along the road toward the mountains. Ludger didnât stir once.
It was the clearest message he couldâve given:
Keep going. Iâll catch up when I wake.
Ludger woke with a jolt, the cart wheels still turning under him. Two hours of sleepâthat was all heâd allowed himself. His limbs were still heavy, mind dulled, but the quiet guilt of letting the recruits lead alone tugged him upright. He rubbed his eyes, exhaled through his nose, and swung himself out of the stone cart before anyone could stop him.
âVice Guildmaster?â Derrin called, guiding his horse closer. âEverythingâs fine. You couldâve rested longerâroads are clear.â
âI know,â Ludger muttered, already climbing back into the saddle. âBut I canât let a pack of kids lead the expedition while I nap.â
âArenât you the youngest kid here?â Freyra asked.
He pulled out Yvarâs map and gave it a quick glance. The terrain around them hadnât changed muchârolling hills, sparse trees, the mountains still distant but larger on the horizon. A single glance was enough for him to orient himself.
âWe can go another two hours before stopping for lunch,â he said, folding the parchment and tucking it away.
The group nodded, relieved to have him awake again, though Rhea whispered to Taron, âPretty sure heâs still half asleep.â
Callen rode up beside him, his expression equal parts awe and curiosity. âHey, Captain⊠can I ask something?â
âIf I say no, youâll ask anyway,â Ludger said.
âFair.â Callen leaned forward slightly. âHow did you
pick up
that spell? I mean, I tried to teach you something basic, and instead you just⊠learned my first offensive spell. Instantly.â
Ludger adjusted his scarf, thinking for a moment before answering. âBecause you werenât wrong. You just didnât explain it the way I needed.â
Callen blinked. âMeaning?â
He turned the reins idly in his fingers, eyes on the horizon. âAt first, I thought water magic was just manipulation and creationâforce and form. But when you mentioned your masterâs title,
Rain Sorcerer,
something clicked. Rain isnât just water being moved. Itâs
every part
of the cycle. Vapor condensing, droplets forming, freezing into snow, melting again.â
He gestured lazily toward the sky. âYou donât control water by brute force. You understand itâhow it moves, how it
changes.
Itâs alive in its own way. The moment I thought of it like that, it responded.â
Callen stared, stunned. âYou mean you figured that out while half-dead from exhaustion?â
âApparently, yes.â
Rhea chuckled from the back. âOf course he did. He probably dreams in elemental theory.â
âWould explain a lot,â Freyra added, smirking. âMaybe thatâs why heâs always so moodyâhis brain never shuts up.â
Ludger didnât answer. He just gave a faint, tired grin and kept his eyes on the road ahead.
In truth, he was still exhausted. His body ached, his mind buzzed with the quiet hum of residual mana from the night before, but the explanation had been worth the effort. The logic of water, its transitions and fluidity, felt
right
nowâan echo of how he worked with earth, but softer, subtler, alive.
The others chatted quietly behind him, but Ludgerâs thoughts drifted again, this time not to fatigue or hunger, but to what he could do with this new understanding. Earth for shaping the world. Water for adapting to it.
Maybe, he thought, that balance was worth losing a little sleep over.
When night fell, the group made camp at the base of a ridge, where the trees grew close enough to break the wind. The recruits moved with the comfortable rhythm of routineâunpacking gear, starting the fire, tending to the horses. Ludger, for once, didnât micromanage any of it.
He sat down beside the flames, scarf still on, and said flatly, âIâm taking a nap. Try not to burn anything or each other.â
That earned a few surprised looks.
âWaitâyouâre sleeping first?â Rhea asked.
âVice Guildmasterâs orders,â Ludger muttered, already closing his eyes. âDonât question authority.â
Even Freyra looked amused. âFinally realized youâre human, huh?â
âTemporarily,â he replied, voice already fading.
To everyoneâs surprise, he actually fell asleep almost immediately. The steady rhythm of his breathing blended with the crackling fire. The recruits exchanged uncertain glances but carried on with their tasks. Freyra, perhaps inspired by the rare sight of him resting, volunteered to keep watch. âIf anything shows up, Iâll handle it,â she said proudly.
But rest didnât last long.
Less than an hour later, Ludgerâs eyes opened again. The quiet hum of conversation, the sound of weapons being cleaned, and the faint off-beat rhythm of Freyraâs humming by the perimeter all grated at his half-awake instincts. His stomach told him heâd slept enough; his nerves told him heâd slept
too long.
He stood, brushing dirt from his coat. âAll right. Move over.â
Freyra looked back from her watch post. âYou just woke up.â
âThatâs what makes me qualified to stay awake now,â Ludger said dryly.
He began making rounds, checking the area with Seismic Sense, subtle waves of mana brushing through the soil. Everything was still quiet. Satisfied, he redirected his focus to something more productive: training.
The recruits had been quietly trying to refine their Overdrive ever since their last session, and Ludger decided to push them a little further tonight.
âAll right,â he said, clapping his hands once. âThose of you still awakeâletâs see if you remember how to make your mana burn without passing out.â
There was an almost collective groan, but they gathered nonetheless.
Rhea was the first to step forward, rolling her shoulders and bracing her stance. The air around her shimmered faintly as she focused, veins in her arms tensing with effort. Thenâthere it was: a faint pulse of golden glow flickering under her skin, steady and bright.
Ludgerâs eyebrow lifted slightly. âGood. Youâre catching on faster than before.â
She exhaled hard, sweat beading along her temple. âGuess it helps that I fight with my body more than my brain.â
âExactly,â Ludger said. âYou understand how to push muscles without breaking them. Mana works the same way. Itâs still part of youâdonât try to control it like a tool. Sync with it like itâs a limb.â
She grinned faintly. âYou really donât sleep, huh, Captain?â
âEnough when I donât have to worry about too many people.,â he admitted.
Rhea laughed, but her focus didnât waver. The faint light in her hands grew more stable, the rhythm of her breathing syncing with the flicker of mana. Ludger watched quietly, satisfied.
Maybe sheâd been right earlierâhis problem wasnât that he didnât rest. It was that he didnât know
how.
Still, as long as they were improving, he could live with that.
Ludger stood with his arms crossed, watching as Rheaâs Overdrive flicker steadied into a faint, rhythmic glow beneath her skin. The others were trying tooâsome with decent control, some looking like they were about to pull something.
âNot bad,â he said, scanning the group. âBut youâre all still thinking too much. Youâre trying to
command
your mana instead of giving it something to push against.â
He motioned toward the open patch of ground near the fire. âAll right. Everyoneâhandstands.â
There was a collective pause, followed by several incredulous stares.
âExcuse me?â Mira asked flatly.
âHandstands,â Ludger repeated, deadpan. âYou heard me. If you want better control, start by focusing mana into your arms. Balancing your body forces precision. Youâll burn mana faster and more efficiently trying not to fall on your faces. You will think less and focus more as well.â
Rhea grinned immediately. âOh, Iâm
in.
â
Taron looked less certain. âIs this⊠really part of the technique?â
âIt is now,â Ludger said.
Before anyone could protest, he dropped to the ground and kicked up into a handstand with the casual precision of someone who clearly had no right being that steady after several sleepless nights. His coat hung loose around him, scarf brushing the dirt.
âSee?â he said, voice completely calm. âSimple. Now focus mana into your arms. Youâll feel the burn faster. Taron, Callen, youâll have an easier time channeling since youâre used to keeping your mana flow steady. Derrin, Mira, youâll be forced to
use
it to stay upright. Either way, youâll learn something.â
The recruits exchanged glances, muttered a few words, and began trying.
Rhea and Derrin kicked up almost immediately, though Derrin overbalanced and crashed down with a solid
thud.
Mira tried next, lasting two seconds before laughing and collapsing onto her back.
Taron and Callen, were a different story. They werenât used to using their bodies like this. Their first attempts ended with them toppling over in opposite directions, Callen muttering something about âunnecessary physical labor.â
But Ludger didnât let them off easy. âAgain. Stop relying on finesse. You canât cast if you canât stabilize.â
So they tried again. And again. Eventually, their arms began to trembleânot just from effort, but from the mana flow they were starting to
feel
instead of merely direct.
Taronâs fingers glowed faintly as his palms pressed into the ground. Callenâs aura shimmered faint blue up to his elbows, droplets of sweat running down his face.
Rhea laughed upside down. âHey, theyâre getting it!â
âBarely,â Ludger said, though there was a hint of approval in his tone. âHold it for another thirty seconds, then release the mana slowly. If you crash now, youâll bruise your pride more than your body.â
Despite the exhaustion and awkwardness, something clicked for them all. The instability of the handstand forced focusâevery twitch of muscle demanded mana to compensate, every shift of balance became a lesson in control.
When they finally dropped back onto their feet, panting, Ludger gave a short nod. âGood. Thatâs the point. Youâre not just channeling manaâyouâre
syncing
with it. You need to feel what itâs doing, not just push it around.â
Callen shook out his arms, wincing but grinning. âThis is insane, but⊠that actually worked.â
âMost good ideas sound insane first,â Ludger said, brushing dust from his sleeves. âNow drink water and donât pass out. Weâll keep refining that tomorrow.â
Rhea groaned. âYouâre enjoying this, arenât you?â
Ludger smirked faintly. âOf course. Itâs the only time I get to watch all of you fall over without getting blamed for it. Besides, you will be able to work more and cause less trouble, it is stress management for the future me.â
Their laughter rippled through the camp, light and tired, but real. For a brief moment, even in the flicker of cold mountain firelight, the training didnât feel like workâit felt like progress.
Ludger was sitting near the fire again, the night deep and still around them. The recruits were recovering from their last round of training, sipping water or nursing sore arms. Taron, still rubbing the lingering ache from his hands, sat cross-legged in front of him.
âAll right,â Ludger said, leaning forward. âYouâve been patient. Letâs trade. Show me the basics of rune constructionâmana flow first, theory later.â
Taronâs eyes brightened a little. âFinally. I thought youâd forgotten.â
âI donât forget. I just reprioritize,â Ludger replied dryly, reaching for a stick to start sketching on the dirt.
But before Taron could begin, Ludgerâs hand froze midair. His expression shiftedâeyes narrowing slightly, the faintest flicker of focus settling over his features.
He exhaled quietly. â...Somethingâs moving.â
The tone of his voice changed everything. The recruits immediately straightened, reaching for weapons, their bodies tensing instinctively. The light of the fire threw long shadows over their faces as they followed Ludgerâs gaze toward the treeline.
His
Seismic Sense
pulsed outward through the ground, invisible ripples radiating in every direction. The response came back fastâtoo fast.
âTwo hundred meters,â he said softly, standing in one smooth motion. âHeavy step pattern. One person, moving straight toward us.â
That was enough. The recruits scrambled into motionâMira and Derrin getting ready to attack, Rhea tightening her gloves, Taron and Callen drinking mana potions. Even Freyraâs annoyed face had disappeared, replaced by that sharp northern readiness that always surfaced when things got serious.
Ludgerâs aura flaredânot bright, but heavy. The kind of pressure that made the air feel thicker, steadier. The recruits felt it and froze in place, adrenaline spiking.
Then, a faint light appeared in the distance.
At first it was just a flicker between the trees, but it grew brighter, warmer, until Ludger could make out the rhythmic movement of itâa flame, steady and clear. He squinted, focusing.
The firelight wasnât wild or uneven. It was too controlled. A Tinder flameâmage-grade, shaped through precise mana use.
He raised a hand. âRelax. Lower your weapons.â
The tension in the camp eased slightly, though no one quite sheathed their blades yet.
A few more seconds passed, and the figure emerged from the dark. The Tinder flame illuminated a tall man wrapped in a tattered cloak, long hair streaked with silver, eyes sharp beneath heavy brows. His boots were scuffed, his coat singed at the edgesâbut his stride was steady, purposeful.
As the light caught his face fully, Ludgerâs lips twitched into something halfway between relief and dry amusement.
â...Maurien.â
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