They advanced carefully at firstâthree shadows moving in tense silence. The air inside the tunnel felt heavier with every step, carrying the stale weight of mana left to rot. Dust motes drifted in the faint glow of Maurienâs wind-light, and even Freyraâs breathing sounded too loud.
Ludger kept his hand hovering just above the ground, feeling the rhythm of the earth like a heartbeat beneath his palm. Every few meters, a faint echo pinged through his sensesâpressure plates, hidden runes, tripwires. He disarmed them one by one, the soft rumble of shifting stone the only sound breaking the stillness.
Then the air changed.
A subtle vibration ran through the wallsâa faint hum, as if the mountain itself had just exhaled. Ludgerâs head snapped up. Maurienâs eyes narrowed, and in the next heartbeat, he hissed, âRun.â
They didnât need to be told twice.
Ludger surged forward, boots striking hard stone. Freyraâs heavier steps thundered behind him, while Maurienâs magic stirred the air in their wake, bending wind to smother sound and deflect any traps they missed.
The corridor wasnât long, but it twisted sharplyâeach turn close and claustrophobic. Ludger took the front, his focus locked on the path ahead. With every step, he sent small seismic pulses through the ground, feeling for the faint vibrations of hidden mechanisms. Each time he found one, he struck back instantlyâstones folding, metal bending, wires snapping apart.
A faint chain of
clicks
echoed behind them as traps deactivated in sequence. The sound followed them like a quiet applause of failure.
Ludgerâs jaw clenched. âWhoever designed this damn place,â he muttered between breaths, âhad too much time on their hands.â
A section of the ceiling trembled as another trap triggered and immediately crushed itself under his counterpulse. âThey couldâve just built a door,â he growled.
Maurien smirked faintly, even as he twisted his wrist to redirect a gust of wind that snuffed out a runeâs activation spark. âBe grateful. Their obsessionâs saving us the trouble of fighting.â
Freyra barked a laugh mid-sprint. âThen weâll fight whoeverâs dumb enough to build this maze instead!â
âFocus,â Ludger snapped, though a hint of dry amusement colored his tone.
The faint glow of open space appeared aheadâthe end of the corridor. The last traps disarmed themselves in a muffled crunch of earth, and Ludger exhaled sharply, sweat running down his temple.
âFinally,â he muttered. âIf the next roomâs full of more traps, Iâm burying the architect alive.â
Maurienâs voice echoed behind him, calm but edged with readiness. âLetâs hope heâs still breathing, then.â
The tunnel opened abruptly into a wide chamberâand hell greeted them the instant they crossed the threshold.
A blinding flash seared across Ludgerâs vision, followed by the thunder of explosions. Fireballs roared through the dark like a dozen miniature suns, tearing through the air in a storm of heat and smoke. The sheer pressure made the stone floor quake.
âDown!â Ludger barked, already dropping into a crouch, one hand slamming toward the ground to raise an earthen wallâ
âbut Maurien was faster.
With a sharp flick of his wrist, the air in front of them howled into motion. A wall of compressed wind unfurled across the chamber like a rippling sheet of glass, the rushing current bending each fireball away in spiraling bursts of flame and shrapnel. The impacts shook the air, the detonations echoing like drums in a canyon, but none of the blasts reached them.
Ludger blinked through the glare, his eyes struggling to adjust. Before he could ask anything, Maurien snapped his other hand upward, muttering an incantation. A small orb of fire flared near the ceiling, bursting into a steady flame that cast harsh light over the cavern.
The sight that followed hit harder than the explosions.
It
was
an old mineâwalls ribbed with rotted timber supports, veins of blackened rock streaked with rust. But the structure didnât matter. What mattered were the people standing within it.
At least ten figures in mismatched gear lined the far side of the chamber, faces covered by bandanas and goggles, their silhouettes half-hidden by the smoke. Each one gripped a strange, bulky object braced against their shouldersâmetal tubes reinforced with runes and copper channels.
Recognition hit Ludger immediately, a sick twist in his gut.
âThose arenât staves,â he muttered. âTheyâreââ
One of the figures pulled a trigger. The device spat a bright orb of fire that screamed through the air before exploding against Maurienâs barrier in a flash of orange and pressure.
ââgrenade launchers,â Ludger finished grimly, squinting through the smoke.
More triggers clicked in rapid succession, each one followed by a concussive blast. Dozens of fireballs slammed against the wind wall, each impact distorting the barrier like ripples on a lake. The tunnel behind them filled with heat and echoing thunder.
Freyra gritted her teeth, raising her arm to shield her face. âWhat kind of magic is
that?
â
âNot magic,â Maurien said, his tone cold, eyes narrowing as the last wave of fire splashed harmlessly against the shimmering barrier. âEngineering. Runic work. Someoneâs arming bandits with magitechâ
Maurienâs expression was stone. His wind wall pulsed once, absorbing another explosion before settling again. âLetâs disarm them,â he said quietly, the air around him vibrating with restrained power.
Ludgerâs hands clenched, mana already flowing through his fingers. âGladly.â
And in the light of the burning ceiling, the three of them prepared to return fire.
Maurienâs eyes narrowed. The faint hum of wind around him deepened, growing from a low whisper to a roar. He flicked his fingers onceâalmost lazilyâand the wind wall that had been holding back the barrage suddenly folded inward, then surged forward like an invisible tidal wave.
The compressed air detonated across the chamber.
The bandits staggered as the shockfront slammed into them, hurling fire-slingers off balance. Their strange launchers clattered against stone, and several men hit the ground hard, gasping for breath.
That was all the opening Ludger needed.
âMove!â he shouted, already sprinting into the chaos. Freyra followed with a savage grin, her boots pounding the stone.
They hit the disoriented line like a hammer strike.
Freyraâs first blow shattered a manâs ribs before he even raised his weapon. She pivoted, elbowed another in the jaw, and drove her knee into a thirdâs stomach, sending him sprawling into a pile of broken crates.
Ludgerâs movements were sharperâquieter. He flowed between lunges, his strikes short, efficient, merciless. One punch caved in a banditâs cheekbone; an elbow shattered anotherâs jaw. His hands were a blurâredirecting blades, cracking bones, disarming in silence. Every motion was measured to disable, not to killâquick precision over brutality.
Steel flashed as the surviving bandits pulled curved knives, shouting incoherently over the ringing chaos. The flickering firelight caught the runes on their bladesâpoison, or maybe something else. Ludger barely registered it; he was already inside their reach.
Three men lunged for him at once. He shifted his weight, sidestepped, and felt the earth beneath their boots. A pulse of mana through his feet tripped their balance, and before they could recoverâ
Thwump!
Small, dense balls of wind shot across the chamber, striking their skulls in rapid succession. Each impact was clean, precise, and brutally efficientâlike being struck by invisible hammers. The menâs heads snapped sideways from the force, staggering them in dazed confusion.
Maurien stood a few meters behind, his hand raised, eyes cold. âYouâre welcome,â he muttered.
Ludger didnât waste the gift. He drove an elbow into the first manâs temple, pivoted, and palm-struck the second under the chin, snapping his head back before catching him mid-fall to ease him down. The third went down with a sharp crack as Ludger swept his legs and struck him across the side of the neck.
Freyra, meanwhile, fought like a living avalancheâevery punching smashing a skull and breaking bones, every strike smashing armor. She laughed once, low and wild, as a manâs blade shattered against her bracer.
Within moments, the chamber was filled with the sounds of groans, scattered weapons, and the dull rhythm of collapsing bodies.
Ludger stood at the center, breathing steadily, his fists lowering as he surveyed the survivors. âI didnât think Iâd have to
thank
such engineering for making you idiots stand still long enough to get beaten,â he muttered.
Maurien smirked faintly. âSee? Collaborationâs already paying off.â
Freyra cracked her knuckles and kicked one of the fallen launchers aside. âIf this is what the Empire arms their dogs with,â she said, voice thick with disdain, âthen maybe I should start hunting them, too.â
Ludgerâs gaze hardened, the gears already turning behind his eyes. âNo,â he said quietly. âWeâll find whoâs training them first. Then weâll decide who needs burying.â
The chamber stilled again, filled only by the faint sound of dripping waterâand the lingering scent of gunpowder and blood.
Ludger crouched by the nearest fallen launcher, fingertips skimming the rune-etched metal. It hummed faintly, a dead thing still warm from use. The design wasnât something he had seen aroundâtoo precise, too neat.
âMaurien,â he said, voice flat, âtheseâwhere do they come from?â
The older mage moved among the bodies with the languid confidence of someone whoâd seen worse. He plucked a ruined bandolier free of a manâs clutched fingers and held the launcher up to the flickering ceiling-firelight. His brow tightened as he traced the lines with a gloved thumb.
âPast the border,â Maurien said. âThe next country over. Thereâs a stretch of academy-towns and private forgesâmagic researchers and engineers trading ideas for coin. Iâve seen crude versions before, made by desperate smiths and hungry alchemists. These are better. More rune integration, cleaner channeling. Whoever supplied these had access to real workshops.â
Ludger looked at the ruined men around them. Their breathing was ragged. Faces slack. Bones at impossible angles where his strikes had done what they needed to do. He closed his eyes for a second and tasted iron on the air.
Maurien knelt beside the nearest of Ludgerâs captives, checked pulse, jaw, the way a bone lay oddly where it should not. He didnât bother to sugarcoat anything. âYou left them alive,â he said. âIntentionally. Their limbs are so broken theyâll curse you when they wake up. Wonât be pretty.â
Ludger let the word sit. Heâd aimed to disable, to keep speech possible. Information was worth more than bodiesâmost of the time.
Maurienâs hand moved over to Freyraâs spread of victims. He felt for a pulse, and the brief shake through his shoulders told the story. âThese,â he said quietly, âare gone. You didnât leave them anything to talk about.â
Freyraâs chest rose, a flash of somethingâdefiance, maybe regretâcrossing her face. âThey drew blades,â she said, voice rough. âThey wouldâve killed us.â
âThey wouldâve bled us of time and answers,â Ludger shot back, sharper than he meant. He looked Freyra in the eye. âWe needed names. We needed directions. Dead men donât tell us who bought these or where they came from. You know that.â
She bristled, lips pressed, then dropped her gaze. âI donât like being soft,â she said, quiet. âI donât like letting people live to stab you in the dark.â
âI get that,â Ludger said. âBut letting them
live
long enough to hate you is better than killing the only lead.â He folded his arms. âIf we had gotten enough names, we could have traced these to a buyer. We could have found a workshop, a patronâsomething that points at whoâs paying for rifles and grenades instead of herbs and coin.â
Maurien stepped between them, hands up in a small neutral gesture. âBoth approaches work when used together,â he said. âLudgerâs way gets answers. Freyraâs way makes sure the trail stays clean. Tonight we used both, because we had to.â
Ludger let his jaw relax a fraction. âFine. But next timeâif thereâs a choiceâask me before you start collecting skulls.â He sounded weary, not angry.
Freyra snorted, but there was no fire in it. âDonât lecture me about discretion, kid.â
âAnd we will,â Maurien said, voice low and steady. âGather the weapons, the scraps. Iâll see what I can read from the patterns. We take the weapons, we follow the metalsmiths, and we follow the money. Thatâs how you find whoâs buying these for mountain thieves.â
Ludger nodded once and began workingâbinding wrists, stacking broken weapons, pressing his Seismic Sense in small, careful probes around the chamber to make sure there were no hidden survivors and no alarm nodes left to trip. The implications settled in his chest like a cold stone: foreign-made war-gear in the hands of traffickers. That wasnât just banditry. That was a line that, if followed, would reach people with names and shelters and pockets too deep to ignore.
When the last of the work was finishedâbodies checked, weapons gathered, and Maurien marking the runes for studyâLudgerâs attention drifted to the far wall of the chamber.
A faint draft brushed against his cheek, cool and constant. He followed it to a seam in the stone behind a half-collapsed support beam. With a little help from his magic, the rocks shifted, revealing the mouth of another tunnelânarrow, steady, and sloping downward before curling out of sight.
Ludger crouched near the entrance, peering into the dark. âThereâs another one,â he said. âOpposite direction from where we came. Judging by the air, it probably leads through the mountain⊠maybe out the other side.â
Maurien walked over, rubbing his long beard thoughtfully. The motion carried that familiar weightâhis habit when deciding how much truth to share.
Ludger tilted his head. âIf it really goes to the other side, that means weâre close to the border, right? How far is this other country anyway?â
Maurienâs eyes drifted toward the tunnelâs faint darkness. âDepends where you measure from,â he said at last. âBut since you askedâŠâ He sighed, as if resigning himself to a lecture. âYou might as well learn some history.â
He crouched beside Ludger, tapping a finger against the ground. âA long time ago, the Empire was much bigger than what you see now. Not just one people or one cultureâdozens of them, stitched together by trade, conquest, and the illusion of order. The imperial family claimed divine right, and for a while, everyone played along.â
He rubbed his beard again, eyes distant. âThen they got too strong. Too proud. Too
certain
they could keep the whole continent in a chokehold. Thatâs when the cracks started showing. Provinces rebelled, old kingdoms resurfaced, and mages who hated the capitalâs leash took their knowledge and left.â
Freyra listened quietly from a few paces back, her expression unreadable.
Maurien continued, voice lower now. âThe ones who fled the longest and farthest went beyond these mountains. When the last of the surviving imperial bloodline and their loyalists realized they couldnât hold the heartlands, they ran hereâto this side. They built new fortresses, new names, new excuses. Whatâs left of the âEmpireâ today is just the remnant of those who survived the purge.â
Thank you for reading!
Don't forget to follow, favorite, and rate. If you want to read 120 chapters ahead, you can check my patreon:Â /Comedian0