Without another word, Ludger nodded and motioned to Gaius, Kharnek, and Freyra. The group began to make their way through the crowdâslow, casual, polite enough not to raise suspicion.
To the nobles, it probably looked like they were simply leaving early with the twinsâperhaps tired of the noise, perhaps just being courteous.
But under the surface, every movement was measured.
Elaine kept the twins close, Kharnek took the rear, and Ludger led from the front, eyes sweeping the room for any sign of panic or pursuit. Nothing yet.
The music hadnât stopped. The laughter hadnât died. The nobles danced on, blissfully unaware that something had shifted beneath the surface of their celebration.
As they stepped out of the grand hall and into the dimly lit corridor beyond, the air felt differentâcooler, sharper, the way it did right before something went wrong.
Ludger exhaled slowly. âLetâs find out what this is about before the whole manor figures it out.â
Arslan nodded grimly. âAgreed. But rememberâwhatever Rathen brought with him, it was urgent enough to interrupt an Earlâs heir in front of half the Empire.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed. âThen itâs not good news.â
And as they disappeared down the corridor, the music behind them played on, bright and obliviousâmasking the fact that the party had just ended for them.
The night air hit colder than expected when they stepped out of the Hakuen manor. The laughter and music from inside dulled behind the heavy doors, replaced by the distant soft clatter of hooves on cobblestone.
Outside, the manor courtyard was alive with motion.
A line of horses stood near the gate, their breath steaming in the chill air. Several riders from the Ironhand Syndicate were dismountingâmen and women still in their riding cloaks, the insignia of the guild half-covered in dust. Their faces were tight with exhaustion, their eyes darting toward the manor windows as if weighing whether to rush in or not.
Even without words, Ludger could tell theyâd ridden hard.
Viola stepped forward, her presence snapping them to attention. âWhat happened?â
One of the riders hesitated, glancing toward the manor guards stationed at the gate. The Hakuen men were watching closelyâtoo closely. A few curious civilians loitered near the carriages as well, pretending to check the horses but clearly eavesdropping.
The guild rider swallowed. âLady Torvares⊠we shouldââ
âSpeak,â Viola pressed, lowering her tone but keeping her posture firm. âNow.â
The manâs jaw tightened, but he still hesitated, his eyes flicking between her and the guards. Whatever the news was, it wasnât something he could say openly.
Ludger stepped closer, scanning the riders. Mud streaked their boots, and sea salt crusted their cloaksâsigns theyâd come straight from the coast. His gut tightened.
Before he could say anything, a shadow flickered at the edge of his vision.
A faint movement behind Violaâso subtle he almost missed it.
Then a voice whispered directly into Violaâs ear.
Luna.
Sheâd appeared out of nowhere, silent as a ghost, her hood low and eyes sharp under the dim lantern light. Her sudden presence barely disturbed the air, but Ludger felt itâa subtle ripple in the mana flow, a chill that brushed past his neck like a breeze.
Viola tensed, then listened.
Ludger caught only a few words carried on the whisper, but they were enough.
â...sahuagins⊠on the coast.â
Ludgerâs stomach sank. He turned slightly, eyes narrowing at Luna as she straightened beside Viola.
Luna gave the faintest nodâconfirmation, no theatrics, no elaboration.
That alone was enough to make the air heavier.
Arslanâs expression hardened immediately. âThey attacked again.â
âMore than that,â Ludger said quietly. âRathen wouldnât come running to a nobleâs birthday over a few fishmen. This has to be big.â
Violaâs eyes flicked toward the manor doors. âThen Lucius is probably being briefed right now.â
âWhich means,â Gaius added grimly, âwe need to move before this turns into panic.â
Kharnek grunted, his hand already resting on the haft of his axe. âLetâs get to the coast and see whatâs left standing.â
Arslan nodded once. âAgreed. We leave through the side roadâquietly. No alarms.â
Ludger looked to Luna. âDetails?â
Her voice was soft, almost a breath. âThey hit the southern stretch near the bridge. Heavy numbers. Too organized.â
Ludgerâs jaw clenched. âThen itâs not random anymore.â
He adjusted his coat, eyes glinting under the moonlight. âAlright. Time to find out whoâs feeding these things cores.â
As the group moved quickly toward their own carriage, the music inside the manor carried faintly into the nightâstill bright, still oblivious.
No one inside knew that while they danced and toasted to the Empireâs future, the sea outside was already boiling with monsters.
The carriage jolted down the dirt road, its wheels grinding against the uneven path. The night had swallowed the coast wholeâno moon, no starlight, only the faint glow of distant lanterns trembling in the wind.
Inside, the air was thick with tension.
Arslan held the reins up front beside Kharnek, urging the horses faster. Viola and Elaine sat opposite Ludger, each trying to peer through the curtained windows, but the dark outside was near absolute. Only the sound of wavesâfaint and irregularâbroke the silence.
âAnything?â Viola asked, her voice low but steady.
âNothing yet,â Arslan called back. âToo far from the shoreline.â
Ludger sat still for a moment, then exhaled through his nose. âItâs too quiet.â
He leaned forward and started unbuttoning his coat, shrugging it off before pulling his shirt over his head. Elaine gave him a questioning glance, but he didnât explain. He didnât need to.
The carriage lantern flickered briefly, just enough to reveal the dull gleam of reinforced metal beneath his sleevesâhis forearm guards, strapped tight with worn leather. He adjusted them methodically, the clinking of buckles cutting through the silence. Then he rolled up his pant legs, revealing the matching shin guards beneath.
He was already dressed for battle. Always was.
While everyone else had come to the manor unarmed for the sake of appearances, Ludger had learned his lesson a long time ago. You didnât
ever
walk into another manâs territory empty-handed.
The cold metal against his skin steadied him.
Viola arched a brow. âYou came to a noble ball wearing armor under your clothes?â
âHabit,â he said simply.
Luna, sitting quietly near the door, gave a small smirk. âA good one.â
Ludger shot her a look. âSpeaking of whichâplease tell me you brought something useful.â
Without a word, Lunaâs hand dipped beneath her skirt. A faint metallic whisper followed as she produced a slim, curved bladeâits edge faintly catching what little light filled the cabin.
Viola blinked. â...You had that the entire night?â
Lunaâs lips curved faintly. âYouâd be surprised what I can hide.â
Ludger raised a hand. âIâll take your word for it.â He really didnât want to think too hard about the logistics.
The carriage hit a bump, jolting them all slightly. Ludger steadied himself, glancing toward the window again. Still nothing but blackness. No flickers of fire, no shadows of movement, no light from their coastal base in the distance.
A dull knot formed in his gut.
âGaius should be there,â he murmured. âIf something hit the coast, heâll hold them back.â
Arslan nodded grimly from the front. âAye, but even Gaius canât fight off a tide alone.â
Ludgerâs fingers drummed against his knee, his mana pulsing faintly under his skin like a caged current. The urge to jump off the moving carriage and sprint ahead was strongâbut reckless.
He forced himself to breathe, to focus.
The sea breeze grew stronger the closer they came to the coast. The faint smell of salt mixed with something elseâburnt wood.
âAlmost there,â Kharnek said, his eyes narrowing toward the faint orange haze on the horizon.
Ludger followed his gaze and caught the first flicker of firelight far aheadâlow and scattered, not from torches.
âDamn it,â he muttered. âThe base.â
Arslan tightened his grip on the reins. âBrace yourselves. Weâre riding straight in.â
The carriage surged forward, wheels biting deep into the dirt.
Ludger reached out, steadying the twinsâ cradle beside Elaine, then drew a slow, steady breath. The night outside was burning nowâorange, black, and alive with chaos. And somewhere within that inferno, Gaius was still fighting.
Moments later, shapes began emerging from the darkâKharnek first, his massive frame brushing the ceiling as he climbed out, followed by Freyra and Luna, each already carrying bundles of weapons wrapped in cloth. Viola and Arslan took them quickly, distributing gear in practiced silence.
Within a minute, everyone was armed and ready. The old rhythm kicked inâthe Lionsguard way of doing things. No shouting. No panic. Just motion.
Ludger tightened his gauntlets and glanced toward the coast. The air smelled faintly of salt and blood, and he could already feel the distant hum of clashing. âGood. Stay tight and move fast.â
The moment he said it, he was already gone.
Ludger broke into a sprint through the area leading toward the shoreline, mana pulsing faintly under his skin. His boots hit the ground hard, sand scattering with each step.
He could hear it nowâ
the fight.
The hiss of spells, the guttural cries of sahuagins, and the sharp thunder of Gaiusâs geomancy tearing through the earth.
They didnât need to protect the base itself; that was just stone and walls. But the coastâ
the coast mattered.
If the sahuagins pushed inland, theyâd wreck the supply routes, the workers, and the bridge. That would stall the entire operation and make the Empireâs vultures start asking questions.
And Ludger hated answering to nobles more than monsters.
He crested the final dune, the salty wind whipping against his face. Ahead, he saw itâa chaotic scene lit by scattered fires. Dozens of sahuagins clawed their way up from the surf, their scaled bodies glistening under the starlight.
But before any could breach the sand, the ground itself rebelled.
Dozens of stone shards burst upward in sequence, firing like a barrage of heavy bolts. Each projectile slammed through a sahuaginâs torso, sending sprays of dark blood across the shore.
At the center of it all stood Gaius.
Arms crossed, posture unshaken, his eyes glowed faintly. Every time his heel tapped the ground, the sand rippled outward and spat another volley of stone bullets, cutting through the attacking line like a reloading siege engine.
Ludger slowed, taking in the scene as another wave of sahuagins broke against the storm of geomancy.
âCame fast,â Gaius said without looking back, his voice carrying easily through the chaos. âDidnât think youâd run here half-dressed.â
âDidnât plan to, either,â Ludger said, stopping beside him. âStatus?â
Gaiusâs next step sent a fresh burst of bullets screaming through the air. âTideâs thinning. Theyâre not aiming for the baseâtheyâre heading for the bridge. Big swarm further down the coast. I decided to protect this place instead and let the ironhand syndicate do their job there, but it might not be enough.â
Ludger frowned. âFigures. The bridgeâs mana cores must be drawing them in. They are boxes filled with them thereâŠâ
Gaius finally turned his head, smirking faintly under the faint glow of residual magic. âIâve got this area covered. Go help the others. The buildersâll be caught between the surf and the structure if nobody intervenes.â
Ludger nodded once. âUnderstood.â
He didnât waste another word. Turning toward the south, he broke into a run again, the sand exploding under his boots.
The roar of waves grew louder the closer he got to the bridge. In the distance, the faint orange light of burning torches and collapsing scaffolds flickeredâa warning.
The sahuagins werenât just raiding anymore.
They were coming in waves.
And if the workers fell, the bridgeâand everything theyâd built with itâwould go down with them.
Ludger clenched his fists, mana rising like pressure in his veins. âNot tonight.â
And then he sprinted faster, heading straight for the fight that waited on the waterâs edge.
While Ludger sprinted toward the bridge, the rest of the group emerged and stepped into the chaos of the coastal wind.
The air was thick with the smell of salt and mana, the dull
thud
of Gaiusâs geomancy echoing through the dunes. Even from here, the rhythmic pulse of his magic was unmistakableâsharp bursts that made the ground hum underfoot.
They hurried toward the sound, weapons ready.
By the time they reached the shoreline, the battle was already half-won. Broken sahuagin bodies littered the sand, riddled with stone shards. The tide pulled dark water back and forth, washing over the corpses like it was trying to reclaim them.
At the center stood Gaius, arms folded, a faint heat still radiating from his skin. He looked as though he hadnât moved an inch since the fight started.
Viola was the first to approach. âStill breathing, Gaius?â
Gaius cracked a grin. âBarely. Thought Iâd leave some for the rest of you, but they kept coming.â
Violaâs eyes scanned the coast. âThey hit hard?â
âNot as hard as they couldâve,â Gaius said, nodding toward the distant waves. âBut theyâre spreading. Some groups veered eastâlikely toward the fishing villages. The guardsâll be tied up at the bridge, and if those creatures reach the smaller settlements, itâll turn into a slaughter.â
The mood shifted immediately.
Lunaâs expression darkened. âThere are half a dozen villages in the area.â
âSeven,â Gaius corrected. âClosest two within a mile. No walls, barely any soldiers.â
Freyra spat to the side. âThen theyâll die before dawn if no one moves.â
Viola didnât hesitate. âThen we split up.â
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