Back home, the atmosphere was quieterâbut no less heavy.
Elaine sat at the kitchen table, her hands wrapped around a still-warm cup of tea. Sheâd already heard the gist of the meeting from Arslan, and though he wore that familiar half-smileâthe one that meant
he had a plan
âit did little to ease her worry. She could tell by the way he avoided her gaze that his âplanâ involved risk. But instead of pressing him, she turned her attention to Ludger, who was crouched near the doorway, methodically packing a travel bag.
His movements were quick, efficient: rations, spare shirts, a few empty vials, and a neatly folded map. Elaine watched for a moment before speaking.
âSo,â she said softly, âyouâre going alone this time?â
Ludger glanced up, pausing mid-fold. âItâll be faster that way,â he replied simply. âAnd⊠the more people that travel with Viola, the better. Itâll make a stronger impressionâshow that the Lionsguard and the Torvares family are moving together.â
Elaine tilted her head, her expression thoughtful. âAnd you? Youâll be fine on your own?â
Ludger gave a faint, tired smile. âItâs not the first time. Actually, it is, right? But I have a plan, no one will notice me leaving, when they notice, I will be pretty far away.â
That much was true, but Elaineâs eyes lingered on him all the sameâquietly, knowingly. Sheâd seen the look in her sonâs eyes before he left for missions like this: calm on the surface, but with something heavier stirring underneath.
She didnât scold him or ask him to stay. Instead, she just sighed and reached for another cup, pouring him tea before he leftâher small way of saying
be careful
, without needing to say it aloud.
Ludger caught the worry in his motherâs eyes. He hesitated for a moment, then sighed and straightened up. âAlright,â he said, lowering his voice. âCome with me. Both of you.â
Arslan raised an eyebrow but followed without question. Elaine set her cup down, curious and a little uneasy. Ludger led them down the hall to his room and quietly shut the door behind them.
He stepped into the middle of the floor, tapped his heel twice, and let mana flow through his leg. The wooden boards trembled, then parted with a soft grinding sound as the packed earth beneath shifted and sank awayârevealing a dark, man-sized tunnel spiraling downward.
Elaine blinked. âLudger⊠what in the worldââ
âThat,â Ludger said, motioning to the hole, âis whatâs been causing the shaking you two keep hearing from my room.â
Arslan crouched beside it, peering into the shadowed opening. The air that rose from below was cool, carrying the faint scent of stone and torch oil. âYou built this yourself?â
Ludger nodded. âFor a while. Itâs a secret exitâa backup route in case the town ever falls under siege or something worse happens. It branches into four tunnels that come out beyond the walls. No one knows of this.â
Elaine stared at him, half impressed, half horrified. âYou built four tunnels under our home without telling us?â
Ludger gave a small shrug. âIf I told you, it wouldnât be much of a secret, would it?â
He crouched beside the opening and continued calmly, âIf anything happens while Iâm goneâImperials, beasts, raidersâyou can take the twins and slip out unnoticed. The passages are reinforced with geomancy; they wonât collapse. I am expanding it a little bit at a time, but it would be too easy If I could focus on this.â
Arslan looked down into the dark again, then gave a quiet, approving hum. âYou really thought of everything.â
Ludger smiled faintly. âI just want to make sure you both have a way out. The guild can handle itself, but you guys⊠thatâs on me.â
Elaine shook her head, equal parts exasperated and touched. âYouâre ten,â she murmured.
Ludger smirked. âYeah. And apparently, Iâm the familyâs emergency exit plan.â
Ludger glanced down into the tunnel, then back at his parents. âIâll be using this to leave,â he said. âNo need to make a scene or have half the guild asking where Iâm going. Iâll travel mostly at nightâitâll keep things quiet and faster.â
Elaineâs brow furrowed. âYouâre sneaking out of town like a thief?â
Ludger gave a small smirk. âMore like a courier who doesnât want to be interrupted.â He tightened the straps on his travel bag and slung it over his shoulder. âBesides, itâll be more fun to
surprise
them.â
âSurprise who?â Arslan asked, though he already suspected the answer.
Ludgerâs grin turned sharp. âThe southern guildâand the Hakuen family. Theyâre expecting formal letters, polite arrivals, all the usual noble pageantry.â He crouched beside the tunnelâs edge, the faint glow of his geomancy lighting the way down. âLetâs see how they handle a reunion they didnât plan for.â
Elaine sighed, rubbing her temples. âYou sound far too pleased about this.â
âGotta take the small victories where I can,â Ludger said, stepping into the tunnel. He looked back once, meeting their eyes. âDonât worry. And if anything happens, use the tunnels. Donât wait for me.â
Arslan nodded once, pride and concern mingling in his expression. âGo show them what you can build, Luds.â
Before heading into the tunnel, Ludger paused, resting a hand on the edge of the opening. âOne last thing,â he said, glancing back at his father. âWhat do you know about that guildmaster and his peopleâthe ones from the south? I want everything youâve heard.â
Arslan crossed his arms, thinking for a moment before speaking.
âThe manâs name is Rathen Vellmar,â he began. âGuildmaster of the
Ironhand Syndicate.
Old southern guild, older than most houses in the Empire. Started as miners and engineers, turned mercenary during the wars hundred of years ago, and then shifted to infrastructureâbridges, tunnels, fortresses. They sell construction, not soldiers, but the line blurs sometimes. Their mages build things that can kill armies just as easily as they can hold one.â
He walked closer, lowering his voice. âTheyâre based in the port city of Farlen, on the southern coast. Itâs a trade hub crawling with noble agents and foreign merchants. The Syndicate sits right in the middle of itâuntouchable because everyone owes them a favor. Theyâve built half the docks, the sea walls, and probably a few secret keeps for nobles who pretend to hate them.â
Ludger listened quietly, committing each word to memory.
Arslan continued, his tone turning sharper. âAs for Rathen himselfâheâs known for keeping his hands clean. He doesnât fight, doesnât duel, doesnât raise his voice. But people say his contracts never fail, and anyone who breaks one disappears. Heâs smart, tooâclever enough to make alliances with the kind of nobles who use money like a blade. Thatâs how he got close to House Hakuen in the first place.â
Ludger frowned. âSo, heâs more merchant than mage.â
Ludger frowned, his fingers drumming lightly against the edge of his pack. âSomething doesnât add up,â he said. âIf this
Ironhand Syndicate
is famous for building things, why do they need me and Gaius in the first place? You donât call two geomancers across half the country just to dig trenches.â
Arslan nodded, already expecting that question. âThey
do
have earth mages,â he explained. âA fair number of them, actually. But none on your or Gaiusâs level. Most of theirs are practical workersâfoundation shapers, terrain smoothers, reinforcement casters. Useful, but limited in control and scale.â
He crossed his arms, his expression turning thoughtful. âFrom what Iâve heard, the Syndicateâs been trying to build that bridge for a while now. Quietly, without outside help. If theyâre asking for geomancers like you two, it means somethingâs blocking themâand not just technically.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed. âSo itâs not a matter of skill.â
âIndeed,â Arslan said. âMaybe thereâs a problem with the terrain, old ruins, buried wards, something magical or political. Could be sabotage, could be something in the sea itself. Hard to say.â
He gave Ludger a steady look. âThatâs why you need to keep your guard up. If theyâve already failed with their own mages, and now theyâre dragging you and Gaius into it, it means theyâre hiding somethingâor someone is hiding it from them.â
Ludger nodded slowly, his mind already shifting into planning mode. âSo Iâm walking into a job they couldnât finish, surrounded by people who donât want to admit why. Perfect.â
Arslan chuckled dryly. âJust another day for the Lionsguard, huh?â
Ludger smirked faintly. âPretty much.â
Arslan leaned against the wall, arms crossed. âHow exactly are you planning to convince Gaius to help with this? The old man isnât known for playing nice with politicsâor people.â
Ludger shrugged, cinching the strap on his pack. âIâll just ask once. If he says no, thatâs the end of it.â
Arslan blinked. âThatâs your whole plan?â
âPretty much.â Ludgerâs tone was calm, almost casual. âHe already did a lot for us. I canât keep bothering him every time someone wants a mountain moved. If heâs not interested, Iâll handle it myself.â
Arslan frowned. âEven if that slows everything down?â
Ludger nodded. âThen it slows down. Iâm not dragging him into a political mess just because we could use his power. Unless Gaius already knows about whatâs going on and
chooses
to step in, forcing the issue would just turn it into drama.â
He adjusted the buckle on his armguard and added, quieter, âThe old man hates politics. He said sometimes that earth doesnât lie, but people do. Iâm not about to prove him right by trying to manipulate him into this.â
Arslan studied his son for a moment, then gave a small, wry smile. âYou really did learn something from him after all.â
Ludger smirked faintly. âYeah. Mostly how to dig my own holesâliterally and figuratively.â
When night fell, the house was quiet except for the steady breathing of the twins. Their soft, uneven snores filled the room as Ludger stood by the crib, tucking the blanket a little tighter around them. He lingered there for a few seconds longer than he meant to, then turned toward his parents waiting by the doorway.
He kept his voice low. âIâm heading out. Just keep things normal. If anyone asks, tell them Iâm buried in another manual.â
Elaine nodded, though her eyes stayed fixed on him, her worry barely hidden behind her calm face. Arslan, arms folded, gave a simple grunt that carried the weight of a hundred unspoken warnings.
âBe careful out there,â his father said finally.
Ludger smirked, slinging his pack over his shoulder. âYouâre the one who needs to be careful. Traveling with
Viola
and
Freyra
at the same time?â He gave a quiet, dry laugh. âThatâs not a mission. Thatâs working with someone hammering two hammers in your head. A person can prepare for trouble, but when someone makes it double?â
Arslan chuckled under his breath. âSays the kid heading south through the night alone.â
Ludger shrugged. âYeah, but at least the monsters Iâll meet canât argue.â
He gave them both one last look, his expression softening briefly. Then, with a faint hum of earth magic, the floor under his feet shifted openâhis secret tunnel yawning silently below.
âStay safe,â Elaine whispered.
âAlways,â Ludger replied, and with that, he slipped into the dark passage, sealing it quietly behind him as the house returned to silence.
The tunnel was darkâpitch black, the kind of black that pressed against the eyesâbut Ludger moved through it with practiced ease. He didnât need light down here; every twist, every junction was already mapped in his head.
His boots struck the packed earth in a steady rhythm as he let a faint pulse of geomancy ripple ahead of him, reading the tunnel like a bat senses air currents. The walls whispered his mana back in perfect alignment. No cracks, no cave-ins. Solid work.
A few minutes later, he broke into a light sprint. The ground seemed to move with him, softening and reshaping to smooth his path. It was a few kilometers to the southern exitâbarely a jog by his standardsâand he crossed the distance in minutes.
When he reached the end, he placed his hand on the earthen wall and willed it open. The packed soil split soundlessly, revealing a slope of grass and moonlight. Ludger climbed out behind a low hill, the night wind brushing his face.
He took a deep breath of the open air, then turned and sealed the exit behind him. A quick twist of mana smoothed the disturbed dirt, erasing every trace that anyone had ever been there.
Satisfied, Ludger smirked. âAlright,â he murmured to himself. âTime to play the secret agent.â
He adjusted his scarf, checked the direction of the stars, and started runnin southâquiet, unseen, and grinning at the thought of the surprise waiting for the guild and the Hakuen family.
Back home, the house felt heavier without Ludgerâs quiet presence.
Arslan and Elaine returned to their room in silence, the faint creak of the floorboards the only sound between them.
Arslan sat on the edge of the bed, unbuckling his boots, when he noticed something offâElaine wasnât scolding, fretting, or pacing the room like she usually did whenever their son went off on another dangerous errand. Instead, she was calmly brushing her hair by the window, her expression unreadable.
He frowned. âYouâre taking this awfully well,â he said.
Elaine gave a small smile, though it didnât quite reach her eyes. âHeâll be fine,â she said softly. âLudgerâs already stronger than you.â
Arslan blinked. âThatâs not true,â he said automatically.
Elaine glanced over her shoulder, raising an eyebrow. âIsnât it?â
A bead of sweat slid down Arslanâs temple. â...No. Iâm still stronger.â
She didnât answerâjust turned back to the window, the faintest curve of amusement tugging at her lips.
For a long moment, the room stayed quiet. The air between them held a strange mix of affection, pride, and that quiet realization all parents reached eventuallyâthat their child had long since outgrown their shadow.
Arslan stood up suddenly and grabbed his sword from the rack. âIâm going to train outside for a bit,â he muttered.
Elaine hummed, still calm. âTry not to break the fence this time.â
He grunted something that mightâve been agreement as he stepped out into the cool night air. The moon hung high over Lionfang, and the faint sounds of the sleeping town echoed in the distance.
Arslan tightened his grip on his blade, exhaled, and began to practice his swings under the pale lightâeach one sharp, measured, and just a little faster than the last. He didnât want to lose to his son yet⊠he was quite sure that he thought about that a bunch of times already.
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