Gaius tilted his head. âYouâre thinking of claiming more of the labyrinth?â
Ludger nodded. âOriginally, the split was fifty-fiftyâLionsguard and Ironhand. But if weâre doing the heavy lifting and protecting their people, that balance is gone. If Lucius canât keep his end running, then the Lionsguard will take a bigger cut. Thatâs how guild work goes.â
Gaius smirked. âYou sound more like a guild master every day.â
Ludger gave a faint shrug. âI have my moments. If one side stops carrying weight, the other takes control. Itâs the only way things get done.â
The two of them waded out of the shallows and stood at the edge of the structure, looking down at what theyâd builtâthe coral base, the layered stone, the interlocking supports branching beneath and above the surface like veins through the seabed.
It wasnât elegant. It wasnât refined. But it would
hold.
âGood,â Gaius said. âThatâs how it should be. A bridge isnât just stoneâitâs connection. Between land, between people.â
Ludger gave him a sidelong glance. âYouâre sounding philosophical again.â
âComes with age,â Gaius said with a dry chuckle. âAnd too much mana.â
Ludger snorted but didnât argue. He turned back toward the workers still on siteâthose who had chosen to stay despite everything. A few of them were watching, wide-eyed, after seeing what heâd done to the supports.
âStart securing the outer layer,â Ludger called out. âWeâll reinforce the rest by the end of the day.â
They scrambled into motion, voices rising with a little more energy now that the ground wasnât shifting under their feet.
Gaius stepped beside him. âYou realize youâre setting a dangerous precedent, right?â
Ludger arched a brow. âHow so?â
âYouâre making miracles look easy,â Gaius said with a smirk. âNext thing you know, theyâll think you can build an entire harbor by yourself. You should be careful, or other people will try to force all kinds of jobs on you. Start learning how to say no already.â
Ludger rolled his shoulders. âIf I have to.â
Four days later, the westward team returned.
The sun had already begun to sink when the first riders appeared over the ridgeâdust trails behind them, armor dulled from dust and travel. Ludger and Gaius were still working near the bridge when they saw the familiar crest of Torvares fluttering.
âLooks like the huntâs back,â Gaius said.
When they reached the base, Viola was the first to dismount. Her cloak was torn at the edges, boots splattered with mud and blood, but her posture still had that same stubborn confidence. Kharnek followed behind, carrying what looked like a broken trident slung over his shoulder. Freyra and Luna came next, looking no betterâdusty, scraped, exhausted, but alive.
Elaine came out from the shelter with the twins in her arms, smiling softly as the group approached. âBack already?â
ââAlready,â she says,â Viola muttered, brushing her hair back. âWeâve been hunting for days.â
Arslan stepped forward, scanning their faces. âReport.â
Viola exhaled and rolled her shoulders. âWe got all of themâthe sahuagins that went inland. Every single one. Some villages took damage before we arrived, though. Nothing total, but theyâll need rebuilding.â
Kharnek grunted in agreement. âThey were organized. Three of âem⊠big ones. Like the bastard your boy fought on the bridge.â He gestured toward Ludger, who was leaning against a rock with his arms crossed. âTook a while for me to drop the first one.â
Freyra scowled. âThey fought harder than the last wave. Like they
knew
we were coming.â
Luna, standing beside her, nodded quietly. âTheyâre not random beasts anymore.â
Ludger frowned. âThen theyâre improving faster than expected.â
âOr someoneâs training them,â Gaius added darkly.
Viola huffed, waving her hand. âDoesnât matter. Theyâre dead now.â
Kharnek gave a short laugh. âYou can thank Luna for that. Your little noble girl tried to solo one of the big ones.â
âI
had it
under control,â Viola snapped, glaring at him.
Luna arched a brow, her tone dry as ever. âYou were breathing hard and limping, and trying to duel something twice your size with half a sword.â
Viola crossed her arms. âI was baiting it.â
âYou were
dying,
â Luna corrected.
Freyra smirked, tryingâand failingâto hide her amusement. âYou shouldâve seen it. Luna cut its neck before the thing could finish its lunge. Viola started shouting about stealing her kill before she even stopped bleeding.â
âBecause I had the monster figured out!â Viola protested. âI was about to finish it off when
someone
decided to end my fun.â
Ludger sighed. âYou call almost being impaled âfun.ââ
âThatâs
experience!
â Viola shot back.
Arslan pinched the bridge of his nose, muttering something about âTorvares prideâ under his breath.
Elaine chuckled softly from behind them. âAt least you all came back in one piece.â
Viola straightened, brushing imaginary dust off her cloak. âOf course. I donât break that easily.â
Ludger stepped forward, expression calm but with that dry edge in his tone. âYou sure? Because I can already tell Lunaâs been counting how many times she had to save you.â
Luna gave a faint, knowing smile. âTwice.â
Viola glared at both of them. âYou two can shut up any time now.â
Kharnek laughed heartily, clapping her on the shoulder. âRelax, girl. You fought well. We all did.â
The mood lightened after that, exhaustion mixing with the quiet satisfaction of survival. The smell of cooked rations drifted from the campfires, and soon the group settled down along the shore as the sun dipped into the horizon.
Ludger watched them from the sideâViola boasting, Freyra rolling her eyes, Luna cleaning her blade with silent precision as if she wanted to turn it into a mirror. Despite the rough trip, the west was safe again.
Still, he couldnât shake the thought.
Three commanders. All showing up inland.
That wasnât random.
The sahuagins werenât just fightingâthey were testing boundaries.
And whatever sent them had only just started playing its hand.
By nightfall, the campfireâs glow cast long shadows over the base.
The teams were finally restingâtending their wounds, cleaning armor, or dozing off beside the sound of waves. The air smelled faintly of salt, smoke, and dried blood.
Ludger sat on a low rock with Gaius, watching the ocean. Viola and the others were scattered nearby, talking quietly. It was one of the few moments of calm theyâd had since the first attack.
Then a carriage appeared at the ridgeâdark horses, silver trim, and the silver falcon crest of House Hakuen glinting under torchlight.
Lucius Hakuen had returned.
He looked as though he hadnât slept since they last saw him. His usually neat hair was windblown, and his cloak was thrown over one shoulder, as if he hadnât bothered with proper formality. When he stepped down, Rathen followed close behind, his expression equally grim.
The moment Lucius entered the circle of firelight, conversation died.
He didnât waste time. âThe Empireâs responded.â
That alone was enough to make the air tighten. Viola straightened immediately, her tone sharp. âResponded how?â
Lucius sighed, rubbing the bridge of his nose. âTheyâre sending guilds. Not aidâ
guilds.
âSpecialized detachmentsâ to reinforce the region and contain the coastal threat.â
Ludgerâs brows furrowed. âContain, huh. Meaning they plan to
take over
if things get worse.â
Lucius gave a slow nod. âExactly. If the attacks spread, they can invoke martial jurisdiction under the banner of âimperial coordination.â That would give them control of the coast, the bridge project, and every shipment passing through it.â
Arslanâs expression hardened. âTheyâre cutting your authority.â
âNot just mine,â Lucius said. âThe moment they seize the logistics network, every noble house tied to this coast, loses their influence. Theyâll call it âstabilization,â.â
Viola clenched her fists. âSo they waited for a crisis to take everything we built.â
Gaius snorted softly. âClassic imperial strategy. Let someone else bleed fixing the problem, then show up to âsuperviseâ once itâs safe.â
âIndeed,â Lucius said. âOnce the Empireâs official guilds occupy the region, theyâll write off this whole operation as a âreclamation effort.â All resources, all trade routes, all mana coresâregistered under the capitalâs authority.â
Silence settled again. Only the crackle of the fire and the distant crash of waves filled the air.
Elaine, who had been listening quietly with the twins in her arms, finally spoke. âThat sounds like more than bureaucracy. It sounds
personal.
â
Lucius met her gaze and nodded slowly. âIt is. Thereâs intent behind it. The timingâs too perfectâthe sahuagin attacks, the worker panic, the Empireâs sudden âinterest.â Someoneâs orchestrating this, and theyâre sitting close to the Senateâs center.â
Viola frowned. âBut why go this far just to cut down one noble house?â
âItâs not about me,â Lucius said quietly. âItâs about the coast. The bridge is more than a construction projectâitâs a route to the archipelago labyrinth. Whoever controls that, controls access to resources the Empire doesnât want anyone else touching. They are afraid of the influence that we might get from this. At least some people are.â
Gaius rubbed his chin thoughtfully. âSo theyâre using monsters to justify a political land grab. Bold. Insane, but bold.â
âYes.â Lucius looked around at the groupâtired soldiers, seasoned warriors, nobles, and mercenaries all thrown together by circumstance. âTheyâre betting weâll collapse under pressure. If we stop the attacks and finish this bridge, we take that narrative away from them.â
Ludgerâs voice was steady but cold. âThen we donât give them an excuse. We keep building. And if those guilds come, theyâll find weâve already done their job better.â
Lucius managed a tired smile. âThatâs what I was hoping to hear.â
Arslan stood, brushing sand from his gloves. âWeâve fought off monsters, bandits, and worse. We can handle a few politicians.â
âPoliticians are slipperier,â Gaius muttered.
âThen weâll just use rougher hands,â Ludger said, standing as well.
That drew a few faint smiles despite the tension. Even Elaine couldnât help but shake her head at her sonâs tone.
Lucius exhaled slowly, relief flickering across his face. âThen itâs settled. We hold the coast and finish the bridge before the Empire arrives. If we succeed, theyâll have to recognize this territory as
ours.
â
He looked out toward the sea, where the moonlight glinted off the half-built structure stretching into the horizon. âThis isnât just about survival anymore. Itâs about ownership.â
The group nodded in silent agreement. They were no longer just building a bridge.
They were building a claimâone that the Empire would have to fight to take.
Luciusâ carriage still stood at the edge of the camp when he motioned to Rathen, who carried a small chest bound with brass clasps. He set it down beside the fire, and when Lucius opened it, the contents caught the lightâsubtle, but unmistakably magical.
Inside rested a pair of gloves that emitted a faint brown glow, and a small amulet with a blue gem that pulsed with a soft, steady blue light.
âIâve been⊠falling behind on my end of the bargain,â Lucius admitted, his tone calm but heavy. âSo I brought something to even that out.â
Ludger and Gaius exchanged a glance.
Lucius lifted the gloves first. The fabric looked like treated leather, but the faint runes etched along the knuckles made it clear it was far more than that. âThese are
Earthen Channelers.
Rare pieces. They halve the mana cost of all earth-based spells. They take years to craft because the runes have to be bonded to a geomancerâs natural resonance.â
He then held up the amuletâa blue stone encased in silver filigree, shimmering faintly like calm ocean light. âAnd this⊠this is a
Core Amplifier.
It doubles the efficiency of your Spiritual Core. Every pulse, every recovery, every transformation of ambient manaâit will hit twice as hard.â
Even Gaiusâ usual composure slipped. âYouâre handing those over?â
Lucius nodded. âI canât find workers anymore, not enough willing to stay after the last attack. So instead of hiring more bodies, I invested everything meant for them into these. I figured if the bridge depends on two men holding the world up, they should at least have the strength to do it.â
Ludger frowned, arms crossed. âYouâre giving us such rare artifacts. For free.â
Lucius smiled faintly. âTheyâre not borrowed. Theyâre gifts. I trust youâll put them to better use than any noble collector ever could.â
The glovesâ light reflected faintly in Ludgerâs eyes. âWhy us?â
âBecause youâre the only ones still building while the rest of the coast panics,â Lucius said simply. âAnd because if this bridge stands, the Empire wonât be able to claim it was their work.â
Gaius picked up one of the gloves, turning it in his hands. âThese are master-crafted. Iâve seen their kind once beforeâVelis League workmanship, no doubt.â
Ludger accepted the amulet, feeling the pulse of its mana sync with his core almost immediately. A faint surge of warmth spread through his chest, steady and deep, as if his mana was breathing cleaner air for the first time.
He exhaled slowly. âFeels pretty good. Still, receiving a gift from a guy is a bit..,â
âLudgerâŠâ Elaine coldly said.
Lucius smiled. âThen theyâve chosen their owner.â
The group stayed silent for a moment, the crackle of the campfire the only sound. Viola was watching, her expression torn between awe and pride. Arslan gave a slow nod of approval, while Elaine simply smiled softly, her gaze flicking between Lucius and her son.
Lucius stepped back toward his carriage. âIâll leave you to it. The Empire may send their guilds, but I trust in whatâs already here. Keep the bridge alive. Iâll handle the politics.â
Ludger closed his fist around the amulet, its glow reflecting faintly across his scarf. âWe will.â
Lucius smiled faintly. âI know.â
He turned and left with Rathen, the sound of hooves fading into the night.
When silence settled again, Gaius glanced at Ludger with a half-smile. âWell, you heard the man. Time to make sure these gifts donât go to waste.â
Ludger nodded, the faint blue light still pulsing against his chest. âThen tomorrow, we push twice as fast.â
Gaius chuckled. âGood. Because now youâve got no excuse to slow down.â
Ludger smirked. âWasnât planning to.â
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