Gaius let out a quiet grunt. âWouldnât matter much if they did. You expose one leak, and two more crawl out of the floorboards.â
Ludger leaned back in his chair, eyes half-lidded. âSounds like someoneâs testing how deep they can dig before we notice. They are using disposable lackeys and waiting for us to do something big.â
Luna nodded slowly. âThatâs what it feels like. Small leaks first. Just enough to see who reacts.â
Viola drummed her fingers against the table, thinking. âThen we donât react. Not yet. If they want to watch, let them. Weâll feed them something worth watching.â
A faint smirk tugged at Ludgerâs mouth. âYou mean bait.â
âThat is right,â Viola said. âLet them think the Lionsguardâs distracted with construction and sea monsters. Meanwhile, Lunaâkeep tracing those leaks. Find who theyâre sending to, not just from.â
Luna inclined her head. âAlready started.â
âGood,â Viola said.
Gaius stretched his shoulders with a low sigh. âWell, at least the day wasnât wasted. The bridge stands, the seaâs calm, and we know whoâs been whispering behind our backs.â
Ludger pushed away from the table, the exhaustion finally showing beneath the calm. âYeah,â he muttered, âjust another normal day at work.â
Lunaâs lip twitched. âNormal for
you
, maybe.â
He shrugged. âYou get used to it.â
The room settled into a weary quiet after thatâthe sound of waves outside mixing with the faint creak of the wooden beams. For now, at least, they had progress. Pillars in the water. Plans on the table. And the faint, uneasy sense that every move they made was being watched from somewhere just beyond the tide.
After Lunaâs report, the others gradually drifted off to rest or clean their gear. The house quietedâonly the wind tapping faintly against the shutters and the low hiss of the nearby waves.
Ludger stayed by the table with Gaius, both of them nursing half-empty mugs of tea that had gone cold. The lantern light flickered across the older mageâs face, catching the deep lines around his eyes.
âSo,â Ludger said finally, âwhat do you think about that labyrinth in the archipelago?â
Gaius raised an eyebrow. âWhy ask me?â
âYouâre the golem expert,â Ludger replied, voice dry but curious. âLucius said the things they found there use mana cores. Youâve worked with constructs all your lifeâwhat kind of thing needs that much energy just to move?â
Gaius gave a low hum, leaning back in his chair. âIâm an expert in
iron
golems, boy. Big difference. Those cores we used arenât true mana coresâtheyâre catalysts. They channel power, but they donât
produce
it.â
He rubbed his beard thoughtfully. âWhat Ironhand found, though⊠thatâs something else. If those creatures have independent mana coresâones that act like energy sources instead of heartsâit means they were made to operate without a master.â
âAutonomous?â Ludger asked.
Gaius nodded slowly. âExactly. And not the kind thatâs bound by simple directives like guard or mine. These could adapt, react, maybe even learn. The worst part?â He took a sip of the cold tea, grimacing. âThereâs no way to tell what kind of cores theyâre using. Defensive, offensive, stealth-basedâhell, maybe some of them even manipulate mana the way we do. When a constructâs components arenât aligned to any natural element, their potentialâs unpredictable.â
âSo they could do
anything
,â Ludger muttered.
âPretty much,â Gaius said. âWhich makes them someone elseâs problem for now.â
He set his mug down with a faint clink. âWeâll worry about the labyrinth when we can actually see the archipelago. Until then, weâve got pillars to build and a bridge to keep from sinking.â
Ludger nodded, eyes drifting toward the window where the moonlight stretched across the sand. âFair enough. Just hope whateverâs down there stays asleep until weâre ready for it.â
Gaius chuckled, low and tired. âThatâs the thing about labyrinths, kid. They only sleep long enough for you to get comfortable.â
Ludger smirked faintly, standing up. âComfortâs overrated anyway.â
âYou donât say,â Gaius said.
The two mages left the lantern burning as they headed toward their rooms. For now, the sea was quiet. But far beyond the horizon, under the dark waters of the archipelago, something stirred. As it was listening.
The next morning came with the smell of roasted grain and sea salt drifting through the open windows. Inside the dining room, the Lionsguard sat scattered around the long table, half awake.
Ludger sat across from Gaius, a bowl of porridge cooling in front of him, stirring it absently with his spoon. His mind wasnât on breakfast.
âSo,â he started, âabout those golems.â
Gaius grunted, not looking up from his bread. âYouâre still thinking about that?â
âYou said the ones from labyrinths are autonomous,â Ludger said. â How are these different from other golems?â
âTheyâre not the same creatures at all,â Gaius said, tearing the bread in half. âThe ones made by human handsâthose are crafted shells. Empty until someone gives them orders. But labyrinth golems?â He shook his head. âTheyâre
born
, not built. Their cores generate mana on their own. They donât need a master. They
are
their own master.â
âSo theyâre closer to monsters,â Viola said from the end of the table, sipping her tea.
âIn a sense,â Gaius said. âMonsters with structure. With rules.â
Ludger leaned back, frowning slightly. âThen who in the world could make one? I mean a real golemâa functioning, obedient one.â
Gaius smirked faintly. âYou wonât find that in the Empire. Not anymore.â
Ludger raised an eyebrow. âMeaning?â
âThe knowledge exists,â Gaius said. âBut not here. The craft was abandoned after some issues, too risky, too costly, too tempting for idiots who think they can replace soldiers with stone. These days, you might find tinkerers or artificers who play around with enchantments, but a
true
golemancer? Forget it.â
He took another bite, chewing thoughtfully. âIf you really want to meet someone who can build and control one properly, youâd have to go east. Past the mountains.â
âThe Velis League,â Viola guessed.
Gaius nodded. âExactly. They donât fear constructs the way the Empire does. They use them for mining, guard work, even engines. Half their cities are powered by golems pulling levers underground.â
Ludger exhaled slowly, rubbing the bridge of his nose. âEast of the mountainsâŠâ
He frowned deeper, the spoon in his hand forgotten. âThat complicates things.â
âEverything worth finding usually does,â Gaius said, washing down his meal with a sip of water. âBut itâs better than nothing. If these labyrinth golems share design with League models, that might give us a clue.â
âLudger,â Elaine said sharply, âif youâre going to talk about monsters, do it
after
breakfast.â
The room went silent.
Even Gaius froze mid-bite, a piece of bread halfway to his mouth. Ludger blinked, caught mid-sentence about mana core compatibility and ocean predators. He straightened a little, the faintest twitch crossing his jaw.
â...Sorry, Mom.â
Elaine gave him a look that could bend iron. âYou have little siblings in this house, and Iâd like them to grow up without learning how to describe dismemberment before they can walk.â
Across the table, Viola smirked behind her cup of tea. âWow. The great Vice Guildmaster, scolded before finishing his oatmeal.â
Ludger didnât even hesitate. âSays the girl who still hasnât won a single spar in her life.â
Viola raised an eyebrow. âExcuse me?â
âIâm just saying,â Ludger said calmly, stirring his porridge, âif you ever want to feel what victoryâs like, maybe challenge a turtle next time. They move at your speed.â
Gaius snorted into his cup. Kharnek barked out a laugh that Selene triedâand failedâto hide behind her plate.
Viola leaned forward, eyes narrowing dangerously. âYou know, for someone half my height, you talk like you have a death wish.â
âHalf your height, twice your skill,â Ludger said without missing a beat. âI am like ten centimeters shorter, and three years younger.â
Elaine sighed and pinched the bridge of her nose. âEvery meal. Every
single
meal.â
Arslan finally spoke, tone half amused, half resigned. âEnough. If you two start throwing insults before noon, the dayâs doomed already.â
Viola leaned back, crossing her arms with exaggerated calm. âFine. Iâll let him liveâtoday.â
Ludger gave a faint shrug. âAppreciate it.â
âChildren,â Elaine muttered under her breath, standing to pour more tea.
Arslan turned the topic before it could spiral further. âSpeaking of schedulesâViola, whatâs the plan for our group? Lucius and his birthday celebration next week. Are you staying that long, or returning home sooner?â
Viola exhaled slowly, some of her earlier fire fading. âHonestly? I wanted to stay and see the bridgeâs first phase completed. ButâŠâ She hesitated, her expression softening slightly. âGrandfatherâs alone at the estate. After everything thatâs been happening, I doubt heâll sit still if Iâm gone for months.â
Arslan nodded. âUnderstandable. Duty comes first.â
âLuciusâs birthday might be the last chance for diplomacy for a while,â Viola added. âIf half the rumors about Imperial agents and smuggling are true, we will need all the allies it can get.â
Gaius leaned back in his chair, looking at the map pinned on the nearby wall. âYou can handle the politics,â he said. âLudger and I will handle the work. The bridge wonât build itself.â
Ludger nodded, resigned. âYeah. Looks like Iâm stuck here for the next few months.â
Viola smirked faintly. âGood. Gives me time to practice. When I come back, maybe Iâll win that spar.â
âSure,â Ludger said dryly. âAnd maybe the sea will stop being wet.â
Elaine just sighed, sipping her tea as the twins babbled from their cradle in the corner. âIf the Empire doesnât break from corruption,â she said quietly, âthis familyâs bickering might.â
The room filled with light laughterâworn, tired, but real.
For a moment, even with talk of monsters, conspiracies, and poisoned nobles hanging over them, it felt almost normal. Almost.
When breakfast was done and the last of the dishes were cleared, Ludger slung his satchel over one shoulder and headed for the door. Gaius followed behind him, adjusting his cloak and muttering something about âcurrents and coral density.â
The air outside was sharp with sea salt and sun. Workers in the distance were already trudging down toward the beach, their shouts carrying over the waves.
Ludger was halfway down the steps when he caught sight of movement inside the house againâhis mother.
Elaine was standing by the table, calm as always, wrapping a light shawl around her shoulders. The twins were in her arms, one on each side, both cooing happily as she adjusted their blankets.
Ludger frowned. â...What are you doing?â
âGetting ready,â Elaine said casually, as if she were about to take a short walk to the market. âI thought Iâd see the ocean for myself.â
Ludger blinked. â
See the ocean?
â
âYes,â she said, entirely unbothered. âItâs been ages since I saw the coast up close. Besides, the twins have never seen the sea.â
She said it with the same tone someone might use for
going to buy bread
.
Ludger stared at her, then pinched the bridge of his nose. âMom, there are monsters in the ocean. The twins wonât even remember the ocean in an year.â
âMonsters,â Elaine repeated, shifting Elle to her other arm as if weighing the word. âYes, Iâve heard. Youâre building a bridge over them, dear.â
âThatâs
exactly
why itâs not a place for a stroll.â
She smiled faintly, not rising to the bait. âRelax. Weâll stay near the workers, and Iâll have Harol, Selene, Cor and Aleia with me. Iâd rather not have everyone cooped up just because the sea growls sometimes.â
âGrowls,â Ludger muttered. âIt eats people, Mom.â
Gaius chuckled behind him, leaning on his walking staff. âYouâre wasting your breath, boy. When a woman decides to visit the ocean, the ocean can only pray for its safety.â
Elaine gave him a small nod of agreement. âExactly. And Iâd feel guilty if everyone stayed behind to keep watch instead of getting some air. You all have enough weight on your shoulders already.â
Ludger sighed, dragging a hand down his face. âYou sound just like Viola when she wants something dangerous to sound reasonable.â
Elaine adjusted Arashâs blanket, her tone perfectly composed. âThen Iâll take that as a compliment.â
Ludger gave up. âFine. But stay close to everyone. If something happensââ
âIâll scream very loudly,â she said, already walking toward the door. âUntil my voice makes the head of the monsters explode.â
He exhaled through his nose, muttering under his breath. âThis familyâs going to kill me before the monsters do.â
Gaius chuckled as they followed her out. âYouâll live. Probably. Besides,â he added, smirking slightly, âif the monsters show up, your mother will probably scold them into retreating.â
âDonât joke,â Ludger said, rubbing the back of his neck as the group headed down toward the shimmering beach. âSheâd actually try that.â
The ocean glimmered under the morning light, the very imcomplete bridge casting long shadows over the surf. Workers were already moving timber into place, calling to one another. And among them, Elaine walked calmly with the twins, like it was the safest place in the world.
Ludger just sighed again. âUnbelievable.â
âWelcome to parenthood in reverse,â Gaius said, patting his shoulder. âNow you know how she felt raising
you
.â
Ludger didnât answerâmostly because he couldnât argue.
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