Later that afternoon, after the horses had settled into their long, steady rhythm, Ludger decided to test what Taron had shown him.
He lifted one hand from the reins, index finger cutting slow arcs through the air. Mana pulsed faintly at his fingertipâa dim, golden-brown glow, like sunlight trapped in dust.
The idea was simple: keep the flow precise, equal from start to finish. In practice, it was anything but. The horse shifted beneath him, the road rolled uneven, and his first attempt looked more like a crushed egg than a circle. The rune sputtered and dissolved.
Taron glanced back from his saddle. âYouâre drawing like the horse owes you money.â
Ludger grunted. âThe horse keeps changing altitude.â
âWelcome to runecrafting on the move,â Taron said, smirking. âNot that I recommend.â
Ludger tried again. Focus on the pulse. Breathe even. Guide the flow, donât shove it. He steadied his wrist, let his mana slide rather than push. The line came smoother this timeâround, clean, and closed perfectly on itself. A thin shimmer hung in the air for half a second before fading.
Taron whistled. âYou actually did it. Took me two weeks to get a circle that clean.â
Ludger flexed his hand, testing the lingering tingle in his fingers. âIâve been using magic since I was three,â he said simply. âControlâs the one thing Iâve never had to relearn.â
He traced another, faster this time, a smaller ring nested inside the first. The pattern held without wobbling. Easy nowâmuscle memory clicking into place.
Taron shook his head, half proud, half irritated. âRemind me to stop feeling good about my progress next time.â
Ludger smirked faintly. âThatâs part of your training too.â
The next hour passed quietly. The road hummed beneath the horses, and the air filled with faint, vanishing circles of earthen lightâeach one a little sharper than the last.
Taron glanced at Ludgerâs armguards as another faint rune shimmered and dissolved in the air. âYou know,â he said, âthose armguards of yours could probably handle real etching.â
Ludger raised a brow. âTheyâre good metal, yeah.â
âBetter than good,â Taron replied. âHigh-quality alloy, tight mana grain. Theyâd endure rune crafting for quite a while before warping.â He reached into his satchel, pulled out the small slate again, and drew a simple designâa compact circle crossed by two vertical lines and a downward curve. âYou could practice on those. Start small. This oneâs the most basic:
Heaviness.
â
Ludger studied the symbol. âUseful for what?â
âShields,â Taron said. âMakes them anchor harder when they take a hit. The rune redirects part of your mana into the objectâs weight field. Doesnât actually make it heavier to carryâonly when it resists impact.â
He tapped the diagram. âEasy to test, too. You etch the outline shallow, channel mana in a slow, steady pulse, and feel the change. If it buzzes like a bee in a jar, flowâs uneven. If it sinks, you nailed it.â
Ludger flexed his fingers, looking at the plain metal curve on his forearm. âHeaviness,â he murmured. âGood lesson for the day.â
Taron smiled faintly. âJust donât try it while riding. If it works, youâll pull yourself off the horse.â
Ludger gave him a sidelong look, dry as gravel. âThen Iâll wait until camp. Iâd hate to disappoint the horse.â
Taron chuckled, shaking his head. âYouâll get it right. Youâve already got the control. Itâs just geometry and patience now.â
Ludger turned the idea over in his mind as the road stretched aheadâweight, control, endurance. Things he already understood all too well.
Ludger looked down at his armguards when Taron suggested using them. The metal gleamed faintly under the sunâsolid work, but snug now. Heâd grown again. The straps bit a little at the edges of his forearms.
âTheyâre good pieces,â he admitted, turning one wrist. âMaybe too good to burn up learning.â
Taron tilted his head. âSentimental?â
Ludger gave a small shrug. âGift from Lord Torvares. Iâm not that fond of the man, but I respect what he isâhonest, at least.â
He let the thought sit a moment, then clicked his tongue. âIâll practice on something else first.â
He focused on the path beside them. The earth stirred, mana whispering through it like breath through lungs. A chunk of packed soil rose, grains sliding together until it hung just above the ground. Ludger pulled it to his hand with a flick of his wrist. It floated obediently, spinning slowly as he smoothed its edges into a round, compact sphere.
He traced the
heaviness
rune Taron had shown himâcareful lines, even flow, circle closed clean. Mana seeped into the mark, the faint hum of pressure building inside the earthen orb.
When he released it, the rune pulsed once. The sphere dropped like a stone.
Thunk.
It hit the dirt and sank almost a fifth of its shape into the ground, as if the soil had softened just to swallow it.
[New Class Unlocked: Rune Crafter Lv. 1]
Bonus per Level:
+4 INT, +4 WIS, +4 DEX.
Skill Acquired: [Mana Inscription Lv. 1]
Allows user to imprint basic runic structures onto solid materials using controlled mana flow.
Precision and durability scale with Intelligence and Wisdom.
Cost: 40 Mana per stack.
Taron blinked. âWellâŠâ he said, impressed. â... Looks like it works.â
Ludger watched the half-buried orb, expression unreadable. âGuess it does.â He brushed his hand off, dust and mana glow fading from his fingers.
A working rune, a clean test, and a reminder: even small things could carry weight when done right.
Taron waited until Ludger finished brushing the dirt off his hands, then spoke up again. âI was going to explain how to engrave runes permanently,â he said, âbut Iâm guessing you already know the core of it. Judging from those weapons you brought back from the mountains.â
Ludger nodded slightly. âMake the mana denser so it holds more energy. Force it to bind into the metal instead of hovering around it.â
âRight,â Taron said, âthatâs the foundationâbut itâs not everything.â
He drew another quick pattern on the air, this one surrounded by smaller marks. âWhen you engrave a rune permanently, youâre setting rules for
activation.
Thatâs what separates a pretty symbol from an actual enchantment.â He held up two fingers. âManual and automatic.â
He pointed to the first mark. âManual activation means the user channels mana directly into the engraving when they want to use it. Itâs safer, cheaper, and easy to control. Youâll feel the flow shift when it connects. Most adventurers use that setup for weaponsâsimple, responsive.â
He tapped the second mark. âAutomatic activation is different. The rune senses mana in its environment, or in the item itself, and triggers on its own. Dangerous if tuned wrong, but with the right runes, it eases the strain on the use since it is easier to activate, or is always active..â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed slightly, mind turning gears. âSo the engraver sets a condition loop?â
âExactly,â Taron said, pleased. âThe mana circuit listens for a specific resonanceâimpact, touch, surge, sometimes even heartbeat. Once it hears it, it pulls power from the storage lines and fires the effect. Thatâs why permanent runes need balance between density and flow. Too much density, and they burn out early. Too little, and they fizzle when triggered.â
He flipped the slate again, sketching a small spiral. âThereâs one more trick. You can design a rune with a recharge lineâsomething the user can refill with their own mana when it starts running low. Itâs like a pocket reservoir. The pattern just needs an open conduit marked with a simple feeding sigil. You channel mana in through that, and it fills the lines evenly.â
Ludger studied the drawing for a long moment. âSo thatâs how they kept their gear active for months.â
âExactly,â Taron said. âThey werenât reforging, just recharging. Good design lasts longer than the craftsman who made it.â
Ludger nodded, gaze distant again, as if already planning how to test it. âUseful lesson.â
Taron smiled faintly. âGlad it stuck. Just donât start engraving while riding.â
âNoted,â Ludger said. âThe horse would complain.â
The sun was already starting to dip by the time Ludger finally noticed the quiet. No chatter. No hoof rhythm out of sync. No smart remarks from Freyra. Just the sound of wind brushing across the fields.
He blinked, glancing over his shoulder.
All of themâRhea, Taron, Mira, Derrin, Callen, and even Freyraâwere staring at him like heâd just started juggling lightning bolts. Half their reins hung loose, horses plodding on autopilot.
Ludger frowned. âWhat?â
Rhea leaned forward on her saddle, smirking. âYouâve been at it for hours, Vice Guildmaster. Talking runes, carving dirt, floating rocks. We kind of lost track of time watching the show.â
Taron cleared his throat. âEducational show,â he corrected. âMostly.â
Rhea snorted. âWe made bets, you know.â
Ludger raised an eyebrow. âBets.â
âYeah,â she said, grinning. âOn how long itâd take you to learn rune magic. Mira said three days. I said a full week. Darnell went with two, which I thought was generous. No one guessed youâd just⊠figure it out in an hour.â
Ludger stared at her for a beat, unimpressed. âNext time, bet on something useful.â
Rhea grinned wider. âOh, we did. Loser cleans the camp.â
âWho lost?â
âEveryone,â Mira said dryly.
Freyraâs laugh echoed off the trees. Even the horses seemed lighter, as if the tension had finally cracked.
Ludger shook his head, facing forward again. âYou shouldâve bet on when Iâd notice.â
Rhea grinned. âThat was the tie-breaker.â
He sighed, half amused despite himself. âYou people need better hobbies.â
âTeach us more tricks,â Rhea shot back. âWeâll get some.â
Ludger didnât answer. He just flicked the reins lightly and let the horses pick up pace againâpretending he didnât hear Taron mutter something about starting a betting pool on
that
, too.
During the ride home, Ludger didnât stop practicing. Every time the road straightened, his fingers movedâtracing faint runes in the air or carving temporary ones into pebbles, testing the flow. He only had one working pattern so far,
Heaviness,
but it leveled quickly. Having a mana pool that deep made the repetition almost trivial. Where most wouldâve needed hours of recovery, he just kept burning mana and letting it refill like breathing.
The runeâs glow grew steadier each timeâedges sharper, hum cleaner. Taron rode beside him most of the way, half-teaching, half-watching. They talked rune theory between stretches of silence: energy conservation, flow efficiency, overlapping arrays.
At one point, Taron said, âI found some old books on the subjectâreal rune codices, not beginner scrolls. Problem is, theyâre absurdly expensive. Probably locked away because nobles think âresearchâ means hoarding.â
Ludger nodded. He understood what that meant. âHow expensive?â
âA few diamond coins,â Taron muttered. âEach.â
Ludger hummed, eyes forward. âIâll get them sometime. You can borrow them after Iâm done reading.â
Taron blinked, surprised. âSeriously?â
âKnowledgeâs a better investment than walls,â Ludger said flatly. âJust donât wreck the pages.â
That was that. The conversation drifted off into easy quiet, hooves thudding rhythmically against the frozen ground. Behind them, faint imprints appeared where Ludgerâs mana had pressed the earth smooth againâa moving trail of erased evidence.
By the time Lionfangâs towers came into view, the
Heaviness
rune floated off his fingertips without effort. It pulsed once, perfect and clean, before dissolving like dust in sunlight.
By the time they reached the outskirts of Lionfang, the horizon already fading gold, Derrin rode up beside Ludger. The kid had that tired-but-alert look of someone waiting for orders.
âSo,â Derrin asked, âwhatâs the plan now, Vice Guildmaster?â
Ludger slowed his horse, scanning the familiar fields aheadâthe half-built sheds, the distant sound of hammering, the smell of earth and smoke. âYou all can rest,â he said finally. âIâll handle the rest of the report.â
He glanced toward Freyra, who was still riding tall, arms crossed, glaring at the wind like it had personally offended her. âJust make sure to drop our guest off at the northerner camp without letting her pick a fight with the breeze.â
Freyra shot him a sharp glare, jaw tightening, but she didnât answer. The silence was as good as a promise.
âYvar will handle payment tomorrow morning,â Ludger added, voice calm. âDonât be late.â
That earned a few nodsâbut also an awkward shift in the groupâs mood. Rhea rubbed the back of her neck. Callen looked down at his reins. Even Taron went quiet.
Theyâd all learned something big on this tripâOverdrive, field discipline. Actual growth. Being
paid
on top of that almost felt wrong.
Rhea broke the silence first. âWe got a little too much out of this job, didnât we?â
Ludger gave her a faint, knowing look. âThen use it well. Thatâs how you earn it.â
He tapped his reins and rode on toward the guildhall, the recruits following behindâquiet, thoughtful, and a little heavier with the kind of experience coin couldnât really buy.
Ludger let them ride close, then glanced over his shoulder, voice carrying just enough for all to hear. âBy the way,â he said, tone dry as dust, âdonât get too sentimental about learning Overdrive. I only taught you that so you could go deeper into the frost skeleton labyrinth.â
They blinked, half in disbelief. Rhea frowned. âSeriously?â
Ludgerâs mouth tugged upward at one cornerâa sharp smirk. That was all it took. They got it. He wasnât fooling anyone. Honesty wasnât something he allowed himself too often, and sarcasm was easier than admitting he cared.
Taron shook his head. âRight. Youâre a real saint, Vice Guildmaster.â
âDonât blaspheme,â Ludger said, deadpan. âIf you want to make me happy, hunt frost skeletons. Fill the guild coffers. Thatâll do.â
Mira snorted. âSo money
is
the key to your heart.â
âIt keeps the walls up,â Ludger said. âAnd keeps you lot in one piece.â
That earned a few chuckles and one exaggerated eye roll from Rhea. Freyra just smirked back, silent for once.
At the fork in the road, they peeled off one by oneâRhea and Taron toward the barracks, Mira and Derrin guiding Freyra north toward the northerner camp, Callen trailing behind with a wave. Ludger stayed until the last of them disappeared into the streets.
Then he turned his horse toward home.
By the time he reached the familiar path, the sky had dimmed to violet. He could already hear itâthe twins crying, their tiny voices cutting through the evening. He sighed, but it wasnât a tired sound. Not like the kind politics and the Empire drew out of him.
He dismounted slowly, rubbing his neck.
Crying twins,
he thought,
still better than Imperial problems.
And for the first time all day, he let himself smile.
Thank you for reading!
Don't forget to follow, favorite, and rate. If you want to read 140 chapters ahead, you can check my patreon: /Comedian0