By late morning, the beach had turned into a flurry of controlled chaos. Lionsguard banners fluttered near the dunes. Ludger worked a little farther inland, past the reach of the salt wind, where the sand gave way to firmer ground.
He knelt, pressing one hand to the earth. The hum of mana spread outward in waves, slow and deep. The soil shiftedâfirst trembling, then rising, shaping itself under his control.
Within seconds, the outline of a foundation took form.
Within minutes, walls began to rise.
Before long, the air was thick with dust and faint earth hardened into stone, smooth and fitted as though cut by a masonâs hand.
The workers by the bridge had stopped pretending not to watch. Even the Ironhand guards nearby were stealing glances.
When Ludger finally stood, sweat streaked his face and arms, and a large two-story structure stood where there had been only grass and sand. Solid, wide, practicalâbuilt to weather wind, rain, or worse.
Elaine crossed her arms from a short distance away, a faint smile on her lips. âYou know,â she said, âmost people would have been content with a few tents.â
Ludger wiped his forehead with the back of his sleeve. âMost people donât have you and the twins here.â
âThatâs sweet,â she said, tone dry. âParanoid, but sweet. You are becoming like me, too.â
He shrugged, focusing on smoothing the doorway arch. âYou call it paranoia. I call it survival instincts.â
âSame difference.â
Elle gurgled happily in her arms, tiny hands waving toward the house as if approving. Even Arash made a curious noise from his sling.
Elaine chuckled softly. âSee? They like it.â
âGood,â Ludger said. âTheyâre the reason itâs this far from the coast. If the sahuagins come out again, they wonât reach this spot before we reach
them.
â
Elaine raised an eyebrow. âYou plan to fight the sea next?â
âOnly if it starts something,â he said simply.
She gave him that lookâhalf proud, half exasperatedâthat mothers reserve for children whoâve grown too pragmatic for their own good. âYou worry too much.â
âNot enough,â he said quietly. âNot when itâs you three.â
She didnât answer that. She just smiled faintly and shifted the twins in her arms, her eyes softening for a moment before she turned back toward the wagon.
By the time Ludger finished reinforcing the walls and shaping a chimney, the sun had started to dip. Orange light painted the new structure, throwing long shadows across the beach.
The rhythmic sound of hoofbeats drew near, and a moment later, Viola and Arslan returned from the bridge.
They dismounted near the camp, both dust-streaked from the inspection.
Arslan took one look at the building and let out a low whistle. âThatâs⊠not a cabin. As usual, you donât joke around with your magic.â
âItâs safer,â Ludger said.
Viola laughed under her breath. âYou really donât know how to take it easy, do you?â
âNot when the alternative is a funeral.â
That wiped the smile from her face. She glanced at Arslan, who nodded slowly.
âThe workers didnât protest,â Viola said after a pause. âWe explained the situationâyour concerns, the attacks. Most of them looked relieved. The Ironhand overseer just wanted to know if you planned to dig any deeper than this.â
âTell him Iâll stay out of his foundation,â Ludger said. âFor now.â
Arslan chuckled. âHeâll like that answer.â
The wind shifted, carrying the sharp scent of salt and distant metal from the bridge.
Ludger looked at his handiwork one more timeâa solid, unassuming house standing between his family and the sea. The first true foothold on this cursed coast.
âHome for now,â he said quietly.
Elaineâs voice came from behind him, warm but firm. âThen get inside and wash up before dinner. Hero or not, youâre tracking sand everywhere.â
Ludger sighed, but the corner of his mouth lifted. âYes, maâam.â
And as the last light of day faded into the surf, the Lionsguardâs newest outpostâborn of stone, sweat, and stubbornnessâstood ready against the sea.
By midmorning, the sea mist had burned away, leaving the air crisp and bright. The new Lionsguard house stood firm above the dunes, its stone walls catching the sunlight and gleaming faintly with traces of geomantic polish.
Ludger was underground.
He crouched in a narrow chamber beneath the structure, sleeves rolled up, the faint glow of mana flickering along the walls. It wasnât a full tunnel systemâjust reinforcement and fallback space, with enough room to store supplies or retreat if the sahuagins ever pushed this far inland.
He worked in silence, hands pressed to the soil, feeling its pulse through the mana field he spread beneath the foundation. The earth here was soft, full of salt and shell fragments, but dense enough to hold. Stable now.
Heâd just begun sealing the parts line when a sharp, rhythmic
knock
echoed from above. Three raps, firm and deliberate.
He froze, listening. Then came muffled voicesâViolaâs among them. Her tone was clipped and formal, the kind she reserved for situations that werenât just important, but
dangerous.
âYeah,â Ludger muttered under his breath. âThatâs the sound of trouble.â
He stood, dusted off his hands, and rose through the reinforced stairwell into the main room.
The moment he stepped into the light, he caught the atmosphereâtense, cautious, formal. Elaine stood near the twinsâ cradle, her posture relaxed but her eyes alert. Kharnek and Freyra lingered by the window, half-guarded, half-curious.
Viola was by the door, her hand resting casually on the hilt of her sword.
And in the doorway stood a man who radiated
authority.
Tall, broad-shouldered, dressed in travel-worn armor that bore the hammer insignia of Ironhand worked subtly into the chestplate. His spear rested upright beside himâplain steel shaft, runes etched along its base. His short black hair was streaked with gray near the temples, and a jagged scar cut down his left forearm.
He wasnât young, but he carried himself like a weapon that hadnât dulled with age.
When he spoke, his voice was steady, deep. âSo this is the infamous geomancer who decided to build a fortress beside my bridge.â
Viola stepped aside to let him in. âLudger, this is Rathen. Guildmaster of the Ironhand Syndicate.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed slightly as the man entered, his boots leaving faint prints on the stone floor heâd shaped the night before.
Rathen gave the house a slow, measured glance, taking in the craftsmanship, the thickness of the walls, the faint geomantic signature in the stone. Then his gaze found Ludger.
âYou work fast,â he said. âMost builders take a month to raise something this solid. You managed it overnight.â
Ludger met his gaze evenly. âItâs easier when you skip the paperwork.â
Rathen chuckled softly. âIâll bet.â
He turned his attention to the others, nodding politely to Elaine first. âLady Elaine.â
âGuildmaster,â she replied smoothly, her tone courteous but cold.
Then to Kharnek. âYou must be the northern chief.â
Kharnek grunted. âAnd you must be the man who canât keep the sea from eating his bridge.â
Rathen smiled faintly. âI see your reputation for bluntness is well-earned.â
He looked back to Ludger. âI didnât come here to make a scene. Just wanted to meet the people setting up a base near our project. I hope that we can start helping each other soon.â
âYour project,â Ludger echoed.
Rathenâs expression didnât change. âThe Ironhand Syndicate started building that bridge, but with our alliance, it can truly reach what we aim for.â
âThat might be true,â Viola said, her tone cool, âbut weâve seen the state of that âfoundation.â Youâre bleeding mana into the ocean. Whateverâs stirring the sahuagins isnât random.â
Rathenâs eyes flicked toward her. âI heard about your inspection. Youâre thorough. But donât mistake complexity for negligence.â
Elaine crossed her arms. âYouâre saying this is intentional?â
âIâm saying,â Rathen replied evenly, âthat weâre testing a containment method that channels mana away from the bridge into the sea floor. The creatures reacting to it are an unfortunate side effect. Weâre dealing with it.â
Ludger frowned. âBy paying for corpses and calling it a day?â
Rathenâs gaze sharpened slightly. âYouâve been busy.â
âJust curious,â Ludger said. âAnd I like to know what kind of disasters are coming before they start screaming.â
A long pause stretched between themâsilent tension thick enough to taste. Then Rathen smiled, slow and disarming.
âYouâre as sharp as they say. Good.â He turned toward Viola. âYouâll find no sabotage here, Lady Torvares. Just difficult work in a dangerous environment.â
âWeâll see,â she said.
Rathen gave a respectful nod to the group, his composure never cracking. âThen Iâll leave you to your⊠accommodations. But do let me know if your geomancer decides to remodel the seabed next.â
Ludger folded his arms. âIf I do, youâll be the first to know.â
Rathenâs smile widened by a fraction. âIâm counting on it.â
With that, he turned and strode out into the sunlight, the door closing behind him with a heavy thud.
The room stayed quiet for a moment, the air still humming faintly with the aftertaste of his presence.
Finally, Freyra muttered, âHe walks like someone whoâs hiding something.â
âBecause he is,â Viola said, eyes narrowing toward the window. âAnd now he knows we know.â
Ludger glanced toward the distant bridge, the light catching off the scaffolding in the distance. âGood,â he said quietly. âThat means heâll make a mistake trying to prove otherwise.â
Night settled over the new camp, and the sea wind carried the low hum of the waves. Lanterns burned along the porch of the stone house, their light glinting off the armor of the Lionsguard standing watch outside.
Inside, the air was calm but expectant. Dinner plates were pushed aside, the table cleared for maps and notes. Viola sat near the head, Arslan beside her, with Elaine, Kharnek, and Freyra taking places around the room. Ludger stood near the door, arms crossed, eyes half-closed in thought. The others were on the bridge site watching for the attacks of the monsters.
They were just about to begin.
Arslan leaned forward. âIf Ironhandâs leader is bluffing about containment, we need toââ
Ludger held up a hand.
Everyone fell silent.
He didnât move, but his attention sharpened, gaze flicking toward the door. The faint tremor beneath the ground wasnât from the seaâit was rhythmic, steady, heavy. Each step came with a pulse that resonated through the ground, faint but distinct.
That kind of signatureâŠ
Ludgerâs lips twitched. âWell, he took his time.â
He strode to the door and pulled it open.
A familiar silhouette stood against the lanternlight outsideâtall, broad, dust clinging to travel-worn robes, a short gray beard framing a smirk that hadnât changed in years.
Gaius Stonefist.
âHope Iâm not late for dinner,â the old mage said, his voice rough but warm.
Ludger exhaled, half a laugh, half relief. âYou always show up right after the problem arrives.â
âStory of my life.â Gaius stepped inside, the ground giving a faint rumble under his boots. His eyes swept across the interior, the people, the faint scent of sea salt and cooked food still hanging in the air.
Viola stood first, smiling in a way few people ever saw. âMaster Gaius.â
He grinned, reaching out to ruffle her hair like she was still a kid sneaking into his training yard. âYou still scowl when you think too hard, Viola. Good to see that hasnât changed.â
She rolled her eyes but didnât hide the smile. âYouâre supposed to look dignified when you arrive.â
âCanât, too much of a hassle.â he said.
Then his gaze moved to the othersâElaine, poised and composed; Arslan, who gave a short nod of respect; and the towering northerners in the corner, who straightened instinctively under his scrutiny.
âWell, this is new,â Gaius said, planting his staff by the wall. âLast time I saw a room this full, it was before a siege. And I donât think we were half as well-fed.â
Ludger motioned toward the table. âMight as well make it official. Youâre the last one we were waiting for.â
âThen letâs skip the pleasantries.â Gaius loosened his cloak, the faint sound of stone shifting under his boots as he did. âFor those who havenât met meâGaius Stonefist. Former guildmaster of Meiraâs, currently unemployed and sometimes drunk, and occasionally these guysâ teacher.â He nodded toward Ludger and Viola.
Kharnek gave a low grunt, amused. âYou trained them well, then.â
Gaius smirked. âDonât tell them that. Heâll start charging me rent for the lessons.â
Elaineâs expression softened slightly. âItâs good to meet you, Gaius. We owe you a great deal.â
âNot yet,â he said. âBut after what Iâve seen on that road, I suspect Iâll be earning my supper soon.â
He looked around again, taking in the maps and notes spread across the table. âSo. Ironhandâs bridge. Leaking mana like a cracked well. Sahuagins swarming the coast. And a guildmaster pretending heâs got it under control.â
Viola nodded. âYouâve been briefed.â
âBy the smell of the sea,â Gaius said. âCan taste the mana from a mile out. Whatever theyâve buried under that structure, itâs not containmentâitâs acceleration.â
Ludger met his eyes. âThen we stop it before the whole coast starts glowing.â
Gaius grinned. âNow
that
sounds like a plan worth missing dinner for.â
Gaius leaned back in his chair, folding his arms behind his head as the conversation about the bridge slowed. The old mageâs eyes drifted around the roomâmaps, faces, tension in every posture. Then, almost casually, he asked,
âSo whereâs the shadow girl? The quiet one with the knives. Luna, wasnât it?â
Viola looked up from her notes. âSheâs working.â
âAh,â Gaius said, his grin crooked. âSpying, then.â
âObserving,â Viola corrected, though her tone softened. âSheâs been out for the past few days. Keeping an eye on the most suspicious person around.â
âLucius Hakuen,â Elaine guessed immediately.
Viola nodded. âHeâs too composed. He left us the manor, vanished when we arrived, then came back the same day Rathen appeared. We thought that was worth watching.â
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