Torvares leaned back in his chair, the firelight from the wall lantern catching the faint lines on his face. âTheir timing is suspicious, yes,â he admitted, âbut I donât think the boy was
acting
âat least, not entirely. There was something genuine in his manner. Nervousness, maybe. Or shame that wasnât rehearsed.â
Arslan raised an eyebrow, crossing his arms. âYouâre telling me you bought it? You think a southern noble heir just decided to grow a conscience?â
Torvares chuckled softly, shaking his head. âNo, I havenât gone senile yet, Arslan. I can still tell when someoneâs wearing a mask. And thatâs what made it interestingâhe wasnât. Not all the way, at least.â
Ludger watched the old lord carefully. Torvares was many thingsâcalculating, shrewd, a man whoâd survived politics long enough to weaponize courtesyâbut naĂŻve wasnât one of them. If he said there was sincerity in the boyâs tone, it meant heâd seen something that didnât fit the usual script.
Arslan sighed, scratching at his beard. âIâd ask if youâre losing your keen eye for people, but knowing you⊠probably not.â
Torvares gave a faint grin. âIf I were, I wouldnât have lived this long. Still, sincerity or not, his visit changes the game. Theyâre reaching outâwith smiles and apologies this timeâand that usually means theyâre planning something bigger.â
The room went quiet for a heartbeat, the tension crawling back into the air.
Ludger exhaled slowly. âSo either the kid meant it, or heâs the perfect decoy. Either way⊠theyâre not finished with us yet.â
Ludger leaned back against the wall, arms crossed. âSo,â he said after a moment of silence, âyouâre considering their offer. Thatâs why you came all the way here.â
Torvares didnât answer right away. He stared at the table for a few seconds, his eyes distant, calculating. Then he nodded slowly. âI am. Not because I trust them, but because pretending to ignore them would send the wrong message.â
He straightened his posture, the weight of authority returning to his voice. âIn politics, boy, showing hesitation is worse than showing hostility. Fear is blood in the water. It tells your enemies that youâre corneredâor worse, that you
can
be cornered. And once they know that, every rival starts circling to take a bite.â
Ludger listened in silence as Torvares went on.
âThatâs why I came here in person. If theyâre playing a long game, theyâll expect us to act wary, defensive, maybe even insulted. Theyâll expect us to huddle up and whisper behind closed doors. But if we act like their little move doesnât concern us at allâif we treat it as nothing more than an odd courtesyâthen
they
have to question whether we see through them.â
Kharnek grunted in agreement. âShow fear, and you invite war. Show teeth, and they call you a beast. But stay calm? That drives them mad.â
Torvares nodded slightly. âExactly. We canât control how the south moves, but we
can
control the story they tell about us. Thatâs why Iâm hereânot to bend, not to accept, but to make sure our side looks untouchable.â
Ludger gave a slow nod. âSo we play the calm ones while they try to figure out which one of us is holding the knife.â
Torvaresâs mouth curved into a small, knowing smile. âPrecisely.â
Torvares let out a low sigh and rubbed his chin. âWhile I was still deciding how to handle the invitation,â he said, glancing toward Viola, â
she
made the decision for me.â
Viola straightened her posture, chin up, defiant as ever.
Torvares continued, âShe said she wanted to attend the birthday party.â
That drew a few surprised looks around the room. Ludger blinked, while Arslanâs brow furrowed like heâd just heard the setup to a bad joke.
Torvares went on, voice calm but edged with dry amusement. âItâs been close to four years since she defeated Lucius in the capitalâs tournament. The boy was whatâeleven then?â
âEleven and full of himself,â Viola muttered.
Torvares gave a small nod. âA lot can change in four years. Perhaps he grew up, perhaps not. But Viola wasnât interested in that.â
He shifted his gaze to her again, pride and exasperation mixing in his expression. âShe said she wanted to go simply to show that she wasnât afraid. That no matter what games the Hakuen family or their allies were playing, the Lionsguard and Torvares house wouldnât flinch.â
Ludger smirked faintly. âSounds like her. Pretty words hiding some insane logic.â
Torvares ignored him and continued. âShe also had a point. Attending would strengthen the guildâs reputation in the southern territories. Even if theyâre scheming, appearances matterâand a bold visit under their roof tells every noble watching that weâre not bowing to pressure.â
Kharnek chuckled. âBravery or stupidity. Hard to tell the difference sometimes.â
âTrue,â Torvares said, his tone half-approving. âBut in politics, the two often look the sameâuntil the dust settles.â
Viola crossed her arms, eyes gleaming. âThen let them watch. Iâll show them that Liosguard doesnât send apologies.â
Arslan nodded slowly, already seeing where this was going. âSo you want the Lionsguard to act as escorts for Viola,â he said, his tone matter-of-fact rather than surprised.
Torvares returned the nod. âExactly. If sheâs to attend that birthday, Iâd rather she be surrounded by people I trust, not the capitalâs peacocks in armor.â
He paused, fingers tapping lightly on the desk. âIâd go myself, but⊠well, you know how it is. The froststeel tradeâs keeping our coffers steady and our allies fed. Finding new buyers while keeping the price from dropping takes timeâand walking away from that now would weaken everything weâve built.â
Arslanâs expression softened; he understood all too well the kind of balancing act Torvares lived by.
Torvares sighed, the weight in his voice genuine. âStill, I owe both of you an apology. I know you had every intention of turning down that southern guildmasterâs offer out of respect for my family. And now, by asking this, Iâm dragging you back into their orbit anyway.â
Ludger shrugged lightly. âItâs not the first time politics has done that.â
Torvares allowed himself a small, tired smile. âNo. But it doesnât make it sit any easier on my conscience.â
The room fell quiet again, the air thick with the mix of duty, trust, and inevitability that always hung around the Lionsguardâs business with Torvares.
Ludger tilted his head slightly. âLet me guess,â he said. âYou also want us to take the bridge job as wellâto show that we donât care about the noblesâ little schemes.â
Torvares gave a slow nod. âYes⊠but only under one condition.â
Ludger raised an eyebrow.
âYouâll take it
only
if you can convince
Gaius Stonefist
to join you,â Torvares said. âWithout him, that project will take you months, maybe longer. Even with the southern guild and the Hakuen family supplying manpower, the sheer scope would eat your timeâand your health.â
Ludgerâs lips curved into a sharp grin. âSo itâs a challenge, then. My geomancy against the impossible.â
Torvaresâs gaze softened, though his tone stayed firm. âItâs not a challenge, boy. Itâs a trap disguised as an opportunity.â He paused, then added more quietly, âAnd I wonât have you spending half a year away from homeâmissing your siblings growing upâjust to prove you can move a mountain faster than the rest of us.â
Ludgerâs smirk faltered.
He hadnât thought about it that way. The twins had only just started recognizing faces; by the time heâd return, they might be walking, maybe even talking. The thought sat heavy on his chest, heavier than any stone he could lift with magic.
Torvares caught that silence and gave a faint, understanding smile. âPower means nothing if you forget what youâre protecting with it.â
Ludger exhaled slowly and looked away. The grin didnât return.
The room went quiet. The kind of quiet that stretched, heavy and thoughtful, while everyone weighed what had just been said.
Arslan was the first to lean back, his hand rubbing at his jaw. He didnât speak, but Ludger knew that look â the one his father wore when he wanted to say
yes
to a challenge but had to think like a leader instead. He was torn between pride and practicality. Sending his son south for months didnât sit right with him, but neither did turning down a chance to strengthen their standing.
Torvares stood steady, the silence not bothering him. Heâd already made his decision â he just needed to see how the others would respond. To him, this wasnât about money or even politics anymore. It was about presence. About showing every noble in the south that Lionfang and the Lionsguard werenât some provincial fluke that could be ignored.
Viola crossed her arms, her jaw set. She was ready to go to that birthday, ready to face whatever snakes the southern families wanted to throw at her. But Ludger could see something else in her eyes â concern. She didnât want him buried under another impossible task while she was being paraded through the noblesâ games.
Kharnek simply grunted, leaning against the wall with his arms crossed, his expression unreadable. He respected strength â physical, political, didnât matter â but even he could see this wasnât a fight that could be won with muscle. His gaze flicked toward Ludger and Arslan. The chieftain of the north understood what it meant to carry too much on oneâs shoulders.
Luna stood behind Viola, motionless, but her sharp eyes flicked between everyone in the room, quietly analyzing. She was the only one thinking in pure logistics â routes, timing, escorts, contingencies. Her mind was already assembling how this trip could happen without bloodshed.
And Ludger⊠he felt the weight of all of it. The offer, the politics, the expectations. A part of him still burned with the urge to take the bridge job â to prove he could do the impossible, just like his old master. But another part, the quieter and heavier one, kept reminding him that his world had changed. He wasnât just a geomancer anymore. He was a brother, a teacher, a cornerstone of Lionsguard.
The silence stretched on a moment longer before anyone dared to breathe.
The silence in the room was broken by a low rumble of laughter.
Kharnek leaned forward from where heâd been lounging against the wall, his grin wide and disarming. âWell,â he said, voice carrying like rolling thunder, âif no one else is eager to cross that much land, Iâll go south.â
Every head turned his way.
He shrugged as if it were the simplest thing in the world. âNever seen the ocean before. Might as well take the chance. If you donât mind,â he added, jerking his thumb toward the back of the room, âIâll bring Freyra too. She could use the travel.â
The words hung in the air for a beat.
Arslan blinked. Torvares raised an eyebrow. Violaâs face tightened slightly, as if she wasnât sure whether to laugh or protest. Even Lunaâs expression flickered for a fraction of a secondâsomething between confusion and faint horror at the logistics of dragging a northern warlord and his daughter to a noble banquet.
Ludger just rubbed his temples.
Of course heâd say that.
The silence that followed wasnât comfortable. It wasnât tense, eitherâit was the collective sound of everyone trying to figure out whether Kharnek was joking or dead serious.
Judging by the prideful glint in his eye, he was absolutely serious.
Torvares was the first to speak, his tone carrying that careful balance between pragmatism and warning.
âKharnek,â he began, âyour presence would certainlyâŠ
discourage
anyone from trying anything foolish. No noble or guildmaster with half a brain would risk provoking a northern warlord under my banner. Your reputation alone would make most of them think twice before stirring trouble.â
The chieftainâs grin widened. âThen itâs settled.â
Torvares, however, didnât smile. He lifted a hand, halting Kharnekâs enthusiasm before it got momentum. âBut it could also backfire. Severely.â
That sobered the room.
Torvares continued, his voice low and precise. âYour strength might keep small schemers quietâbut it will
provoke
the bigger ones. The kind who measure status in bloodlines, not achievements. To them, seeing a northern warlord standing beside my granddaughter would be an open challenge. Theyâll whisper that weâve brought raiders to the empire, that weâre flaunting the Empireâs authority by placing a foreign power at our side.â
He looked directly at Kharnek now, his gaze as sharp as a drawn blade. âAnd once that rumor starts, youâll become a target for every self-important fool looking to make a name. The brash, the reckless, the ones desperate for prestigeâtheyâll see you as the perfect opponent to prove their worth.â
Kharnekâs grin faded into a more thoughtful expression. He wasnât insulted; if anything, he looked intrigued.
âSo,â Torvares said, finishing his thought, âyes, your presence could prevent trouble⊠or it could light a different kind of fire. One we canât easily put out.â
The room fell silent again, the weight of the words settling over everyone. Even Kharnekâs easy confidence dimmed slightly under the reminder: power and presence were double-edged blades, especially in a world that thrived on perception.
Kharnek let out a deep, amused chuckle that rolled through the room like thunder. âThen itâs decided,â he said. âIâll go. Been too long since Iâve met anyone south of the mountains who can actually swing a weapon. My bones are starting to feel stiff, and only my
foolish daughter
keeps challenging me. I could use a proper warm-up.â
Freyra scowled. âYou didnât have to call me foolish.â
Kharnek just grinned wider. âYouâd rather I call you weak?â
Arslan exhaled, somewhere between resigned and thoughtful. âIf youâre going, then so am I,â he said. âI wonât send Viola into the south aloneânot with nobles, schemes, and whatever else waiting there.â His voice dropped a little as he rubbed the back of his neck. âBut⊠Iâll need to talk to Elaine first. Someone has to stay and keep the twins from turning the house into rubble with the cries⊠perhaps⊠not, I canât say yet.â
That earned him a knowing look from Ludger, who could already imagine his motherâs reaction.
Arslan continued, more decisively this time. âWeâll take the job. Iâll start making preparations and look for other hands we can trust to cover things here.â
Ludger nodded, his expression steady. âThen that settles it.â He pushed off from the wall, dusting his gloves. âIf this is certain, Iâll head out to find Gaius.â
Torvaresâs gaze lingered on him. âYouâll have to convince him. And that wonât be easy.â
Ludgerâs mouth curved into a small, sharp smile. âIt never is.â
The tension in the room began to ease, replaced by the cold hum of purpose. Plans were forming, alliances tightening, and paths already diverging. Whatever waited in the south, the Lionsguard wouldnât be walking into it blind.
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