Maurien glanced back toward the tunnel, eyes narrowing. âThe rest of what used to be the Empire splintered. Those regions became the countries beyond the rangeâthe academies, the city-states, the forges that mix magic and machinery. Each of them with its own pride and grudges. Each claiming theyâre the true heirs of civilization.â
Ludger absorbed the words silently, the flickering light from Maurienâs conjured flame reflecting in his eyes. âSo whatâs on the other side of this mountain isnât just another country,â he murmured. âItâs whatâs left of the Empireâs past.â
Maurien gave a single, solemn nod. âAnd the ghosts who learned to sell their legacy to anyone with enough gold.â
The mountain air turned colder then, and even Freyraâs usual bold stance softened as the weight of that history settled around them.
Ludger straightened, adjusting his scarf. âThen maybe itâs time we see how much those ghosts remember.â
Maurienâs mouth curved into a wry, knowing smile. âCareful what you dig up, boy. Some things under these mountains never stopped bleeding.â
Ludger walked slowly among the bodies, boots crunching over splintered crates and scattered brass casings. Most of the men were unconscious, breathing shallowly through broken noses and cracked ribsâhis work. He crouched beside one of the prisoners, studying the makeshift armor and insignia sewn into the manâs sleeveâa mark he didnât recognize. It wasnât military issue, but it had money behind it: fine stitching, imported dye, a half-scraped sigil that once belonged to someone important.
âWhat the hell is going on behind all thisâŠâ he muttered under his breath. His voice echoed faintly through the hollow chamber.
Maurien glanced up from where he was dismantling one of the grenade launchers, but didnât interrupt.
Ludger ran a hand through his hair and stood, exhaling slowly. âThis doesnât feel like simply bandit work,â he said. âItâs too clean. Too organized. The weapons, the tunnels, the silence in every villageâitâs like someoneâs cutting the threads holding this side of the border together.â
He looked over the unconscious men again. âAnd itâs not just coin,â he went on, tone turning harder. âIf I didnât know better, Iâd say some noble houses are trying to make the rest of the Empire collapse from the inside.â
Freyra raised an eyebrow. âWhy would nobles want that? Theyâd lose everythingâtheir lands, their titles.â
âMaybe,â Ludger said, âbut maybe theyâre betting theyâll earn
more
from what comes after. When the Empireâs weak and choking on its own politics, the first ones to rebuild get to rewrite the rules.â
Maurienâs voice came low and even from behind him. âYouâre not wrong. Some people think they can profit from a dying beast by carving it up before it hits the ground.â He turned the dismantled rune device in his hands, the carved channels still glowing faintly. âAnd theyâre not entirely mistaken. The only question is how many throats theyâll cut before they realize the bloodâs their own.â
Ludgerâs eyes swept the chamber one more time, landing on the tunnel that led deeper into the mountain. The faint draft that came from it smelled of cold air and smokeâlike something waiting.
âThen weâd better find out whoâs holding the knife,â he said quietly. âBefore they start carving.â
Ludger knelt beside the line of prisoners and began his work in silence.
He moved with precision, checking every bodyâhands, belts, boots, even under collarsâfor anything sharp enough to end a life. Hidden blades, poisoned pins, rune shards. Nothing escaped his inspection.
When he was sure they had nothing left to work with, he placed a palm on the ground. Mana pulsed downward, and the earth responded like a living thingâsoftening, swallowing, reshaping. One by one, the unconscious men sank into the floor until only their heads remained above the surface.
He hardened the soil around their necks, the texture shifting from loose dirt to compact stone. None of them would be digging themselves out without help.
âThey could still bite their tongues,â Maurien said behind him, watching the work with mild interest.
Ludger nodded once. âIf they do, Iâll feel it. All I have to do is touch their heads. Healing magic kicks in before they finish the job.â His tone was calm, detachedâlike he was describing a training exercise instead of a trap for menâs lives.
Maurien gave a low whistle. âMakes sense.â
Ludger stood, brushing off his gloves, eyes flicking over the row of half-buried captives. âItâs just obvious. Canât get information from corpses.â
Maurien tilted his head slightly. âEver interrogated anyone before?â
Ludger met his gaze and shook his head. âNo.â
âGood,â Maurien said, stepping forward and cracking his knuckles once. âThen leave this part to me.â
Ludger arched an eyebrow but didnât argue. He took a few steps back, folding his arms. âYouâve done this before.â
Maurienâs mouth curved into that thin, sharp smirk he wore when he stopped pretending to be a harmless old mage. âLetâs just say Iâve hadâŠ
practice
persuading people to talk.â
Ludgerâs gaze lingered on him for a moment, reading the calm in the older manâs eyesâthe kind that didnât come from theory or training but from long, ugly experience.
Tricks up his sleeve,
Ludger thought.
Of course he does.
He stayed where he was, watching in silence as Maurien crouched beside the first prisoner, the air around him shifting with a faint pressure that didnât quite feel like windâsomething heavier, more deliberate. Whatever method the mage used, it wasnât going to be gentle.
Ludger exhaled quietly, half to himself. âGuess Iâll just observe and take notes.â
Maurien didnât bother with pleasantries. He stepped close to the first prisoner, the manâs face still slack with pain, and slapped him hard across the cheek.
The prisonerâs eyes snapped open, pupils blown wide, confusion turning to raw fear as he registered the cloaked figure looming above him.
âWake up,â Maurien said, voice low and even. The words had no cruelty in themâonly a promise of consequences if ignored.
The man gagged, spat blood, tried to push himself upright but the earth around his neck held him immobile. His eyes found Maurien, then Ludger, then Freyra, and landed on the nearest broken weapon half-buried in the muck. Recognition and terror mixed into a single, animal expression.
Maurien crouched so his face was level with the prisonerâs. The Tinder-flame at his shoulder painted the old mageâs features in a cruel yellow light. âListen close,â he said, almost conversational. âYouâre going to answer the questions I ask. You can suffer a little and tell me what I want, or you can suffer a lot and still tell me what I want. Either way, the answers are coming. Do you understand?â
The prisonerâs lips trembled. He managed a nod that looked like it might tear his throat open.
âThere are others who can talk,â Maurien added softly, eyes cold as flint. âSo if you decide to make a noble little martyr of yourself, youâre only making it worse for the men who come after. Trying anything funny will only make things more painful. Save us both the time.â
The manâs breathing hitched. âIâ Iââ he croaked, voice raw.
Maurienâs hand lifted, a slow, patient motion. âWhatâs your route? Who gave you these weapons ? Names. Places. Donât screw around. We donât have time to be polite tonight.â
The prisoner swallowed, the noise like a stone grinding. He looked from Maurienâs face to Ludgerâs, as if measuring which threat to heed. Outside, the mountain wind moaned through the mouth of the tunnel; inside, the room felt suddenly small, full of the kind of hush that makes answers fall out of the air like rain.
Maurienâs patience was a blade honed to a hairline. He leaned in so close the prisoner could see the tired, practiced calm in the mageâs eyesâno theatrics, only a consequence waiting to happen.
âI asked you for names,â Maurien said, voice flat. âRoutes. Buyers. Anything that points to whoâs paying you to run fire to the passes. Donât spin me a story about orders.â
The prisonerâs throat worked. He swallowed and spat a small, bitter glob of blood. âI donât know,â he croaked. âI swear. I follow the leader. We get the boxes, we bring them through, we hand them over at the pass. We never meet them. Weââ His voice broke. âWe never talk with no one. Weââ
Maurienâs eyes narrowed. âBullshit,â he said softly. He reached out and pinched the manâs jaw. Not hard enough to break boneâthis wasnât an execution; it was a calibrated instrument. The mageâs other hand drew a tiny sigil in the air, and the room filled with a thin pressure, like wind pressing into the lungs. The effect was immediate: the prisonerâs pupils dilated, his breath came short and fast, and a thin sheen of sweat broke across his forehead.
âListen,â Maurien said, quieter now. âLies make you survive a little while longer. Truth makes the pain smaller and useful. I donât want you to suffer more than necessary. You can tell me now, or I expand the pressure and make your memories feel like a thing that happens again and again.â
The manâs eyes flicked to Ludger, pleading for some mercy in the boyâs face. Ludger didnât move an inch.
âWe never met them,â the prisoner repeated, but the words had the thinness of a reed. Maurien tightened the air a fraction moreâenough to make the manâs jaw clenchâand then, in a voice that mixed promise and threat: âThere are always contacts. Give me
one
name. Give me a town. Give me anything.â
The prisonerâs lips finally parted. It came out as a broken list, butchered by fear: âVeshmar⊠the caravans⊠sometimes a merchant called Kadrin.â
Maurienâs face didnât change, but his fingers relaxed. He let the pressure ease like water off skin. The prisoner fell back on the dirt, coughing as oxygen came rushing back into his lungs.
Maurien gave Ludger one look. Then, without warning, Ludger flicked his hand toward the manâs face.
A chunk of earth rose from the ground, compact and fast as a thrown brick. It struck the prisoner squarely in the jaw with a dull
thud
. The manâs head snapped sideways, and he went limpâout cold, but alive.
Ludger blinked once. âThatâs one way to say weâre done,â he muttered dryly.
Maurien exhaled through his nose. âBetter than letting him think heâs earned a break.â
Ludger folded his arms. âDo the names ring any bells? Veshmar, Kadrin, red stag?â
Maurien rubbed his beard, eyes narrowing in thought. âVeshmar, yesâheard it before. Itâs an academy city beyond the eastern border, near the river passes. But Kadrin? The red stag patch? No. Either aliases or middlemen. I donât like it.â He shook his head slowly. âToo many layers for a smuggling ring. Someoneâs buying silence as much as weapons.â
Without another word, he stepped toward the next buried man and crouched. The prisonerâs eyelids fluttered, his breathing shallow from fear and pain. Maurien snapped his fingers once, and a faint current of wind hit the manâs face, waking him instantly.
The manâs eyes went wide when he saw the cloaked mage kneeling over him.
Maurien didnât bother repeating his warning. âYouâve heard the screams,â he said softly. âYou know how this goes. Iâm asking onceânames, routes, buyers. Who gives the orders?â
The man shook his head violently. âIâ I donât know names! We just move the cargo. Boxes, always sealed. We take them to a man named Toris near the crossingâheâs the one who pays! We never meet the client!â
Maurien leaned closer, voice lowering to a tone that made the air itself tense. âAnd who pays
him
?â
The prisonerâs lips trembled. âHeâhe gets the gold from a merchant house⊠said theyâre from Farlen Port, east of the mountains. The mark on the bagsâit was a golden wolf!â
Maurienâs eyes flicked briefly toward Ludger. The gesture was small, but it said enough:
new lead
.
The old mage straightened, expression darkening again. âGolden wolf,â he repeated. âThatâs a noble crest. Not one I recognize, but it fits your guessâthis goes higher than smugglers.â
Ludger nodded grimly, his voice dry. âPerfect. Nobles, academies, weapon traders. Just what we neededâa conspiracy with a budget.â
Then, with the same efficient motion as before, he summoned another small ball of earth and sent it flying. The second prisoner slumped instantly, unconscious before he hit the end of his breath.
Maurien clicked his tongue, a small, irritated sound that cut through the damp air. He crouched and flicked a finger over the lip of a launcher, the motion lazy but precise. âUseless grunts,â he said finally. âTheyâve given us noise, not real names. Either they heard wrong from their leader, or they were fed nonsense on purpose.â
He straightened, beard rubbed between two fingers. âItâs how you run something that has to survive a bad shipment. Use throwaway men whoâll talk nothing of value or lie so wildly the trail goes cold. Layers upon layersâmiddlemen, brokers, aliases. If the operation sniffs trouble, you burn the contract men and leave no paper trail.â
Ludger felt the cold logic settle like ash in his chest. It made the whole thing smell worse: not just bandits with better toys, but an organization that expected to be traced and planned for it. âSo the names we gotâmaybe nothing,â he said. His voice was flat, the frustration quietly organizing itself into strategy. âThey fed us whatever kept them safe.â
Maurien nodded. âExactly. They hired mouths they didnât care about. They made sure the mouths were disposable.â He tapped the ruined launcher with his boot. âAnd they kept the good names further up the chain. Brokers hide behind merchants; merchants hide behind houses; houses hide behind ledgers and lords.â
Freyra spat onto the floor once, hard. âThen we gut out their lungs and see what bleeds.â
âMaybe,â Maurien replied, but there was no fire in itâonly the fatigue of a man whoâd seen the shape of such plans before. âMaybe not. Itâs built to be slow work. Not everything you pull will point at a head you can lop off.â
Ludger let that sink in. The map of their problem rearranged itself: Veshmar and Farlen Port were threads, but likely tugged through many hands. The launcher runes and metals might trace to a forge; a brokerâs ledger might show payment routes; a merchant markâgolden wolfâcould tie to a house. Each led to another hedge to cut through.
âWhat do you want to do?â he asked finallyâless a question than a passing of the baton.
Maurien looked toward the tunnel mouth, then back at the pile of ruined weapons. âYou map the tunnel,â he said. âMake sure it leads where we think. Donât rushâmark everything. Iâll take these launchers and study the runes and metal. If theyâre lab-made, thereâll be signatures: alloys, channel patterns, runic dialects. Those are traceable.â
âAnd the prisoners?â Ludger asked.
âKeep them where they are,â Maurien said. âNo more questions for now. If they wake and blabber, we deal with them. If someone comes looking, weâll hear it.â
Freyraâs hand tightened on her axe. âIâll hold them. Let them wake hungry and dumbâmaybe theyâll remember real names before they hurt.â
Ludger nodded. âFine. Two of you cover the horses and watch the campârotate. I will check the other tunnel. If anything goes sideways, we pull back and burn everything down. No heroes.â
Maurien gave a short, almost amused sound. âLook at youâdiscipline and paranoia. A delightful combination.â
Ludger did not smile. He only checked the way the light struck the runes once more, feeling the shape of the problem under his skin. Layers. Money. Nobles with too much patience.
They had work to do, and it would be the kind that wore you down. He breathed, tasted iron and rain, and set his jaw. âThen letâs get to work.â