The tension in the room slowly eased after that, but the air wasnât so heavy anymore. Torvares leaned back in his chair, Luna relaxed a bit, and Viola, finally exhaling, leaned an elbow against the armrest.
âSo,â she said, her tone lighter now, âhow are the twins? Still screaming like theyâre possessed?â
Ludger gave a small smirk. âCausing plenty of work for my parents. Mostly my fatherâheâs still convinced you can intimidate babies into behaving.â
Luna snorted. Torvares chuckled under his breath.
âBut,â Ludger added, straightening a little, âIâm the only one who can calm them down a hundred percent of the time.â
That got Violaâs eyebrows up. âOh really?â
âEvery single time,â Ludger said, dead serious but clearly proud. âMotherâs second best, but she admits sheâs not great with them. Says itâs because I never made trouble when I was a baby.â
Viola snorted, unable to hold it in. âYou? Not causing trouble? Thatâs the biggest lie Iâve heard all week.â
Ludger frowned mildly. âYou think I was difficult?â
âI think you probably came out scowling and scheduling construction work,â she said, grinning. âYour poor mother never stood a chance.â
Even Torvares cracked a smile at that, while Luna covered a chuckle behind her hand. Ludger just sighedâthe long-suffering kindâbut didnât deny it.
âMaybe,â he admitted. âBut at least Iâm good with the next generation.â
âThat,â Viola said, still smiling, âis the only miracle Iâll believe in today.â
The laughter that followed wasnât loud, but it filled the old room better than any fire couldâbrief warmth before the next storm inevitably found them.
Lord Torvares let the laughter fade before speaking again, his tone returning to something lighter but edged with curiosity.
âAnd what about Freyra?â he asked. âWill she be difficult to manage? The northerners donât exactly have a reputation for taking orders.â
Ludger leaned back slightly, the hint of a smirk crossing his face. âIâve had plenty of experience managing difficult kidsâthanks to Violaâso it shouldnât be much of an issue.â
Viola narrowed her eyes immediately. âExcuse me?â
âFreyraâs not that different from you,â Ludger continued, ignoring her. âJust imagine if youâd been raised in the north. Among dire wolves. With less impulse control.â
Torvares chuckled quietly. Luna chuckled a bit. Viola groaned, burying her face in her hands.
âSo sheâs as charming as the
current
Viola,â Ludger finished dryly.
Viola glared at him over her fingers. âYouâre enjoying this far too much.â
âLittle bit,â he admitted.
Torvaresâs grin widened, his amusement barely hidden. âWell, if sheâs anything like my granddaughter, then at least sheâll be interesting. Difficult, but interesting.â
Ludger nodded. âThatâs one word for it.â
The room filled with quiet chuckles again, the tension from earlier long gone. For a few moments, it almost felt like family instead of politics.
Once the talk wound down, Ludger decided to head back before night settled.
The path from the Torvares estate to Lionfang wasnât long by horse, but he chose to run. It was good exerciseâand it helped level his
Courier
job. Still, as his boots hit the dirt road in steady rhythm, he couldnât help thinking it was a bit much. Running tens of kilometers just to deliver or receive information made sense in a world without proper communication magic, but it was starting to feel archaic.
The wind bit cold at his face, and his thoughts wandered. The image of the rune-grenade launchers came back to himâcompact, precise, frighteningly efficient. That kind of craftsmanship required more than simple mana control; it meant someone had cracked the problem of stable mana transmission through sealed circuits.
âIf they can make that,â he muttered under his breath, âwhy not something smaller? A way to talk across distance.â
Maybe it wasnât impossible. With the right rune latticeâcommunication through sound or even thoughtâit could be done. A mana-based network, or message conduits keyed to specific frequencies. It would take absurd precision, but the concept wasnât far from the launchersâ rune-link triggers.
He kicked up a small burst of dust as he ran, lips tightening in a half-smile. âA cellphone in a world like this,â he mused. âNow thatâd make courier work boring.â
Then again, maybe somewhere out thereâacross the mountains, in one of those mage-ruled nations with deeper magical infrastructureâit already existed.
The thought lingered as Lionfangâs torchlights appeared ahead. The town was quiet, the walls steady, the night cold. Ludger slowed his pace, catching his breath, already running plans through his head. If no one else had built that kind of tool yet⊠maybe he would.
The next morning, Ludger found Yvar exactly where he always wasâburied behind a wall of scrolls and ledgers, quill scratching fast enough to qualify as combat training. The man looked up as soon as Ludger stepped into the office of the guild.
âWelcome back, Vice Guildmaster,â Yvar said, voice clipped but genuinely pleased. âNothing catastrophic happened while you were goneâunless you count Freyraâs people trying to turn the labyrinth into a brawl pit.â
Ludger raised a brow. âDefine
brawl pit.
â
Yvar sighed. âHer underlings thought the frost skeletons were âtoo slow,â so they tried dragging a few into the deeper zones. Got themselves boxed in by paladins. We had to pull them out before they joined the dead.â
âAnyone dead?â
âNo, just bruised and terrified. Lesson learnedâhopefully.â
Ludger leaned against the desk, quiet for a moment. His gaze drifted toward the window, unfocused. Yvar noticed immediately. âYouâre thinking too hard. Whatâs bothering you this time?â
Ludger glanced back. âSomething I discussed with Lord Torvares and Luna yesterday. Weâre forming an information networkâcovert, small-scale. Luna suggested using a team of traveling healers to collect intel while disguised as medics.â
Yvar hummed, intrigued. âThatâs new. And risky.â
âEverything worth doing is,â Ludger said simply. âTorvares agreed to find the right people. But Iâm thinking aheadâhow to make it sustainable.â
Yvar set his quill down. âWhy not start nearby? Plenty of kids in the local villages looking for work beyond farming. Especially after the wars hereâtoo many orphans with nowhere to go. Train them early, build loyalty.â
Ludger shook his head immediately. âNo. That wonât work.â
âWhy not?â
He crossed his arms, expression cooling into the tone Yvar recognized from strategy briefings. âBecause Iâm working with the northerners now. The guildâs mixedâimperial men and Kharnekâs warriors under the same banner. Given that they became orphans because of the northerners, they might cause trouble or try to infiltrate to make things complicated from inside.â
Yvar frowned slightly. âSo youâd rather train from within the existing alliance?â
âExactly,â Ludger said. âWe use northerners, Lionsguard, and a few Torvares hands already trusted on both sides. Fewer people, but cleaner lines. No gossip. No suspicion.â
Yvar leaned back in his chair, considering. âComplicated.â
âEverything here is,â Ludger said dryly. âBut Iâll take complicated over bleeding the alliance to death with politics.â
Yvar smirked faintly. âYouâre starting to sound like Torvares.â
Ludger gave a small, humorless smile. âThen the old bullâs been a bad influence.â
Yvar watched Ludger as the boy left the office, the door clicking softly behind him. For a while, he just sat there, quill tapping absently against the table.
It was strange, he thought. Ludger had always been the type to stay clear of troubleâto observe from the edges, fix what was broken, and walk away before the flames spread. Yet the more problems that found him, the deeper he waded in. He didnât just survive chaos; he
organized
it. Every time the frontier threw him a storm, Ludger tried to build a dam.
And the pattern worried Yvar. The kid couldnât stop fixing things. He didnât know how.
He looked down at the scattered reportsânortherner integration, labyrinth runs, political movements, draught shipmentsâand sighed. âMuddier waters every week,â he murmured.
Pretending nothing was wrong wasnât an option anymore. The Empireâs reach, the hidden trade networks, the fragile alliancesâall of it demanded someone who could think three steps ahead. And somehow, that someone had ended up being a ten-year-old with too much mana and too little childhood.
Yvar rubbed his temples, exhaustion seeping into his voice. âHeâs doing the right thing,â he muttered, âbut gods, thatâs too much work for a kid.â
Then he picked up his quill again. If Ludger insisted on diving into the mud, the least he could do was make sure there were fewer knives waiting under the surface.
About an hour later, Yvar found Arslan in the guildâs training yard, overseeing a few soldiers as they sparred. When the last pair finished, Arslan gave them a nod and turned toward Yvar, reading the look on the scholarâs face instantly.
âSomething on your mind,â Arslan said.
Yvar hesitated, then sighed. âItâs Ludger.â
That earned no visible reactionâArslan just crossed his arms, waiting. Yvar pressed on. âHeâs taking on too much again. Every problem that lands near him, he tries to solve it. Heâs building networks, juggling politics, managing both sides of the allianceâheâs ten, Arslan.â
The swordsman didnât answer right away. His gaze lingered on the practice grounds, on the blades catching light. Finally, he said, voice calm but firm, âThatâs just how he is.â
Yvar frowned. âYouâre not worried?â
âOf course Iâm worried,â Arslan said, quiet now. âBut telling him to stop wouldnât change a thing. Ludger doesnât move because he wants praise or powerâhe moves because someone has to. Heâs too young for it, but thatâs never stopped him before.â
He paused, rubbing a hand over his jaw, expression turning distant. âIâve thought about telling him not to carry it all. To let me protect the family, to stop thinking so far ahead. But my sword only reaches so far, Yvar. It canât cut through politics or spies or the Empireâs games. He sees that, and he fills the gap I canât.â
Yvar looked down, voice low. âYou could rein him in. Force him to rest, stay put for once.â
Arslan shook his head slowly. âThat wouldnât solve anything. Itâd be easier, sureâkeep him close, safe, small. But thatâs just clipping his wings so I donât have to worry about him flying too high.â
He gave a tired smile that didnât quite reach his eyes. âAnd thatâs not protection. Thatâs just fear dressed as love.â
The two men stood there in silence for a whileâthe clang of steel echoing around them, the smell of dust and sweat filling the air. Both knew Ludger wasnât slowing down anytime soon. And neither of them could decide whether that was admirable⊠or tragic.
Arslanâs expression softened a little, the faintest smile tugging at the corner of his mouth.
âIâll stop him when the time comes,â he said quietly. âIf his choices start wearing him down too much, if I see him breaking under the weightâthen Iâll step in. I wonât let him fall apart carrying all that alone.â
He crossed his arms, gaze drifting toward the open window and the distant rooftops of Lionfang. âHeâs strong, but even stone cracks under its own pressure. When that happens, itâll be my turn to carry the load for a while.â
For a few seconds, silence hung between him and Yvar. Then Arslan let out a short laugh, the sound dry but not unkind.
âThough honestly, the only thing that could wear Ludger down is his own sharp tongue. That boy could cut himself with it before anyone else gets close.â
Yvar couldnât help but grin at that. âThatâs one way to put it.â
Arslan chuckled again, shaking his head. âHe got that from his mother, I swear. Is she hearing this somehow? I can feel her wrathâŠâ
The laughter faded, replaced by a quieter determination in his eyes. âStill,â he added, voice steady again, âif the world tries to crush him, itâll have to go through me first.â
And for all his humor, there was no doubt in Yvarâs mindâArslan meant every word.
When Yvar finally left the training yard, the quiet that followed sat heavy on Arslanâs shoulders. He stood there for a moment, arms crossed, watching the dust settle where the recruits had been sparring earlier.
He could go home nowâthe dayâs guild business was done, reports filed. Elaine would probably have dinner ready, the twins half-asleep by the time he arrived. The idea of a quiet evening was tempting.
But just as he turned to leave, he caught sight of a familiar group entering through the gate. The recruitsâLudgerâs groupâcarrying a heavy burlap sack between them, the dull clink of metal inside giving it away. It would be a good idea to train them to make sure that Ludgerâs burden would decrease.
Arslan paused. âBack from the labyrinth already?â
Rhea straightened up, wiping frost from her gauntlets. âYes, sir. We brought the froststeel haul to deliver.â
She hefted the bag higher, and Arslan saw it bulge with shardsâmore than he expected. Thick, clean cuts of ore that shimmered faintly even in the afternoon light. He whistled low. âThatâs a good dayâs work.â
Taron rubbed the back of his neck. â Captain, Ludger taught us a few tricks for dealing with the skeleton knights. Worked better than expected.â
Arslan walked over, taking the bag himself to test the weight. Solid. Heavy enough that his arms adjusted automatically. âYouâve all come a long way.â
The recruits exchanged glances, a mix of pride and exhaustion. Arslan smiled faintlyâhe saw the spark Ludger had been nurturing in them. Rough edges, sure, but real potential.
He could go home. Or he could make sure that spark didnât fade.
âHold on,â he said, setting the sack down. âSince youâre here, I might as well polish you a little more before Ludger gets the chance to scold you again. I will teach you one amazing technique called Overdrive.â
Rhea groaned softly. âSir, with all respectââ
âRelax,â Arslan said with a smirk. âNo shouting. Just a little training. Youâve proven you can fight frost skeletons. Now letâs see if you can fight
properly.
â
The recruits straightened instinctively. Arslanâs calm, commanding tone had that effect.
He gestured to the training ring, drawing his sword with a smooth motion. âLetâs see what the Vice Guildmasterâs prodigies have learned.â
The recruits glanced at each other, unsure what Arslan expected. Rhea scratched her cheek. âUh⊠right now, sir?â
Arslan just nodded once, resting the flat of his sword on his shoulder. âUnless youâre saving your energy for bedtime stories.â
That got a nervous laugh. Eventually, Rhea stepped forward, squared her stance, and clenched her fists. A faint hum filled the airâmana condensing, limbs tightening with focus. Blue light rippled under her skin, subtle but controlled.
Arslanâs brows furrowed. âThatâs⊠Overdrive?â
The others followed her lead. Taron ignited his right arm; a shimmer of mana pulsed faintly under the glove. Miraâs bow arm flexed, mana flowing steady and smooth. Even Derrin, had that focused look of someone channeling energy through every tendon.
Arslan lowered his sword slightly. âWhere did you learn that?â
âVice Guildmaster taught us,â Rhea said, almost proudly. âSaid itâd help us stay alive longer.â
âVice GuildmasterâŠâ Arslan echoed, still processing. He blinked. âYou mean Ludger?â
Taron nodded. âYes, sir. He ran us through it a few nights ago. Said itâd take a few weeks to master, but weâre getting there.â
Arslan just stared for a moment. Less than two weeks. He hadnât even known Ludger was teaching them Overdriveâlet alone that they were this far along.
His son was too many steps ahead of him. Again.
Arslan exhaled, almost a laugh, half pride and half disbelief. âHe taught you that in under two weeks.â He sheathed his sword slowly, shaking his head. âWhen I was your age, I could barely use mana at all.â
Rhea smiled sheepishly. âHeâs a good teacher.â
âIâll say,â Arslan muttered. âIf he keeps this up, Iâll be the one asking him for lessons.â
He crossed his arms, still watching the faint glows fade from their limbs. Pride warmed his chest, but underneath it was something elseâa quiet reminder that his son was growing into something far bigger than heâd ever planned for.
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