The following morning dawned clear. The ocean shimmered like tempered steel beneath the rising sun, and the bridge stretched farther than ever before.
Ludger stood knee-deep in the shallows again, his hand resting against one of the new pillars. The
Core Amplifier
around his neck pulsed faintly in rhythm with his breathing. Each inhalation brought a wash of cool energy through his body â smooth, refined, and efficient. His mana didnât just recover faster; it
flowed
differently, steadier, more complete.
He focused, channeling [Earth Manipulation]. The seabed answered immediately, stone and sand sliding together like fluid. Normally, he wouldâve felt the drain bite into his core after ten seconds â now it barely scratched the surface.
Half the cost⊠double the return.
He almost smiled.
By noon, the progress was undeniable. His mana capacity had increased, and the pillars grew like forest trunks rising from the waves. Every completed section added not just structure but experience â raw, and constant. His Geomancer level ticked upward faster than it ever had before.
When Gaius finally came to join him, the older man stood on the shoreline, arms folded and the brown-glowing gloves still wrapped around his hands. He watched Ludger work for a while before shaking his head and pulling them off.
âTake these,â Gaius said, tossing them lightly toward him.
Ludger caught them, frowning. âYouâre giving them up already? You barely used them.â
Gaius smirked. âAnd I already know what I can do. Youâre the one still figuring it out.â
âThatâs not logical,â Ludger replied, slipping one glove halfway on and feeling the hum of the runes along the seams. âItâd be more efficient if
you
used them. You can shape the ocean floor faster, reinforce the supports, save us both time.â
Gaius chuckled, his voice gravelly but steady. âYou still donât get it. Iâve hit my limit, kid. My mana poolâs carved into shape already â same as my bones and scars. These things would only make the same tricks cheaper.â
He turned, glancing toward the half-built bridge with a quiet pride. âYou, on the other hand⊠youâre still growing. Every pulse, every refinement, every layer you add â youâre building something new. Tools like those arenât meant for old mages like me. Theyâre meant for the ones who still
climb.
â
Ludger stared at him for a moment, the sound of waves filling the pause. âYou make it sound like youâre retiring again.â
âNot quite,â Gaius said with a faint grin. âJust passing the torch before I get too stubborn to let go.â
Ludger exhaled through his nose. ââŠFine. But Iâm not letting you drop all the work on me.â
âDidnât ask you to.â Gaiusâ grin widened. âJust make sure you break something impressive with them.â
Ludger slipped the glove on. Instantly, the resonance between it and his core synced â the ambient mana around him bending faster to his will, like gravity pulling inward. He clenched his fist, and the sand beneath his feet hardened to stone.
The pulse of energy didnât even cost him a fourth of what it should have.
âNot bad,â Gaius said, shielding his eyes against the sun. âNow stop staring at the water and get back to building. The Empireâs not going to wait for your morning epiphany.â
Ludger gave a dry snort. âNeither are you.â
He turned toward the sea again, extending both hands. The glovesâ runes ignited, a faint earthen glow rippling out through the waves.
And the seabed answered.
Pillars rose like awakening giants, coral and limestone fusing seamlessly into hardened spires. Each one locked into place with the weight of a continent behind it, the sound echoing like thunder across the shore.
Mana flowed clean and sharp â efficient, controlled, and powerful. Ludger didnât just feel stronger. He felt
aligned.
For the first time since theyâd started this project, the bridge looked less like a struggle⊠and more like a statement.
Ludgerâs pace had become something close to mechanical.
His mana flowed like a current through sand and stone â smooth, efficient, relentless. The
Core Amplifier
pulsed faintly beneath his collarbone, syncing perfectly with every breath, while the
Earthen Channeler
gloves shimmered in pale brown lines along his forearms.
The results spoke for themselves.
A new pillar rose every ten minutes or so â coral, rock, and compacted sediment shaping themselves into perfect cylinders beneath his will. Each formation rumbled through the sea like the heartbeat of the earth itself, steady and controlled. He no longer had to stop between spells to rest or focus; his mana regenerated faster than he could spend it.
Even Gaius had stopped giving instructions. The old mage just stood nearby, arms crossed, half-grinning as he watched the ocean floor bend to Ludgerâs rhythm.
âNot bad,â he muttered under his breath. âYouâre turning the sea into your workshop.â
Ludger didnât respond â too focused. His hands were already focusing on th threads of mana cutting through the water like ribbons of smoke. Beneath the water, the ground rippled. Then, in a deep, resonant
boom
, another pillar breached the surface, spraying foam and brine into the sky.
That made twenty in less than four hours.
And he wasnât just stacking them anymore. Between the upper sections of the pillars, he started to shape narrow paths of compacted stone â like bridges connecting the pillars.
At first, they were simple walkways. But then Ludger began reinforcing them, layering compressed sand between the slabs so they would hold even under heavy weight. By the time the afternoon sun hit the water, the whole structure had begun to resemble a vast, segmented platform â a foundation not only for wood, but for something that could last generations.
Ludger nodded, still channeling. âIt saves timber. And if we get another attack, theyâll have escape routes that donât rely on boats.â
Gaius let out a low whistle. âEfficient
and
defensive. It will save time in case of an attack too far away from the land.â
Ludger smirked faintly but didnât look up. Another tremor rippled underfoot, followed by a column of rock bursting upward, water exploding around it in a spray of white foam. The footing connected seamlessly to the others, the geometric pattern spreading outward like an intricate rune circle visible from above.
He stepped back, watching the waves crash against the freshly risen foundations. âThatâs enough for today. The groundâs stabilized. Any more and weâll risk drawing attention from further offshore.â
âThey always come,â Gaius replied simply, turning his gaze toward the horizon. âBut next time, weâll make sure they find solid ground waiting for them.â
The sea wind whipped through his hair, carrying the scent of salt and earth. Behind him, the bridge now stretched farther than anyone had imagined it would this early â a growing monument of coral and stone that was slowly defying both nature and the Empireâs timetable.
And Ludger knew one thing for certain.
At this pace, the coast would belong to them long before anyone from the Empire could even arrive.
The next few days passed quietly.
No attacks, no sabotageâjust the rhythmic grind of progress.
The sun rose, the waves rolled, and the bridge kept growing outward, one pillar at a time. Workers had regained some of their confidence, the Lionsguard presence gave them security, and the Ironhand Syndicate resumed their patrols along the coast. For once, the project felt stable.
Ludger didnât trust it. But he wasnât going to complain.
He and Gaius kept a steady pace, alternating shifts of geomancy and reinforcement, their mana working in seamless rhythm. When the days ended, theyâd rest at the base with the othersâElaine reading softly to the twins, Viola training with Luna, Kharnek laughing too loudly while Freyra tried to look unimpressed. It was almost peaceful.
Almost.
Because Lucius Hakuen had started visiting more often.
At first, Ludger didnât pay it much mind. The nobleman always brought newsâreports from inland, shipments, or updated maps from the Senate. But lately, whenever Ludger saw him, Lucius was standing near Viola. Talking. Smiling. Too close.
It wasnât hard to notice.
One afternoon, as Ludger worked with Gaius on a new support section, he glanced up to see them againâLucius leaning on a railing, Viola tilting her head slightly as she listened. The way her expression softened was enough to make Ludger click his tongue.
Gaius followed his gaze and grinned. âYouâre glaring.â
âIâm concentrating,â Ludger said flatly. âWe are working here while a guy is hitting on my half sister.â
âOn
them
,â Gaius corrected.
Ludger smirked faintly. âShe broke his nose once. Probably going to break his heart next.â
Gaius barked a short laugh. âSo you did notice.â
âHard not to.â Ludgerâs tone was dry, his eyes still on the horizon.
âThen whatâll you do,â Gaius asked, voice casual, âif she isnât against the idea? If sheâs⊠open to it?â
Ludger frowned, lowering his hands. The mana trail heâd been channeling faded into the sand. âSheâs my half-sister. Itâs not my job to protect her from
that
kind of trouble.â
Gaius arched a brow. âNo? Couldâve fooled me with how you watch every man within twenty meters of her.â
Ludger sighed. âThatâs just self-preservation. The last thing I need is an idiot thinking they can impress her by picking a fight with me.â
The older mage chuckled. âFair point.â
Ludger wiped a bead of sweat from his temple, the faint glow of his amulet dimming as he cut off his mana flow. âBesides,â he added dryly, âeveryone knows women like attentionâespecially from good-looking guys. Itâs not exactly a surprise.â
Gaius laughed again, deep and genuine this time. âPragmatic to the bone.â
âSomeone has to be,â Ludger muttered.
The two stood in silence for a moment, watching the waves lap against the stone base below. Lucius was still talking with Viola in the distance, his gestures animated, her eyes bright despite the late afternoon sun.
Gaius gave a quiet hum. âYou think heâs serious about her?â
âProbably,â Ludger said. âHeâs got the type. Too earnest for his own good. At least for now....â
âAnd she?â
Ludger shrugged. âSheâs Viola. If she wanted him gone, heâd already be limping.â
That earned another low chuckle from Gaius. âFair enough.â
They went back to work, the oceanâs steady roar filling the silence between them. But as the next pillar rose from the depths and the sun began to set, Ludger caught himself glancing toward the shore one last time.
Lucius was still thereâsmiling, hands clasped behind his backâwhile Viola said something that made him laugh.
Ludger exhaled slowly through his nose, the faintest trace of a smirk curling at the edge of his mouth. âWell,â he murmured, âat least sheâs breaking something in the right order this time.â
Gaius didnât ask what he meant.
He just laughed again and let the sound roll out across the waves.
The ocean had been quiet lately.
Too quiet.
For two full weeks, the sahuagins hadnât attacked in force. Patrols still spotted small groups drifting near the reefs, but they always pulled backâwatching, waiting. It didnât feel like retreat. It felt like preparation.
Ludger could sense it in the airâthe stillness before the next storm. The ocean carried weight again, like something beneath was holding its breath.
But in the meantime, work continued. The bridge now reached farther than any of them had expected, stretching past the shallow reefs and into deeper water. Each morning brought new deliveries of timber and tools, and each evening ended with the quiet exhaustion of progress.
One afternoon, while inspecting the latest section of support beams, Ludger found Viola standing by the rail overlooking the sea. The breeze played with her hair as she watched the waves break against the coral below. She had that calm look she always wore when she was thinking too muchâand trying not to show it.
Ludger stepped beside her, his usual quiet presence breaking the rhythm of the wind. âYouâre still here,â he said simply.
She glanced at him, brow raised. âWas I supposed to vanish?â
He leaned against the railing. âThe birthday party ended two weeks ago. You were invited to thatânot to supervise a construction site.â
Viola grinned, crossing her arms. âOh, youâre worried Iâll outshine you, Vice Guildmaster?â
âHardly,â Ludger said dryly. âJust reminding you that nobles usually return home after parties. Unless you plan to become a bridge inspector full-time. I was also expecting that I could use that as a chance to send mother and the twins back home as an excuse.â
She reached into her coat pocket and pulled out a folded letter, waving it lazily in front of him. âActually, I received permission to stay.â
He frowned. âPermission?â
âOfficial one.â Violaâs grin widened. âIâm now here as the
representative of House Torvares.
Your guildâs biggest sponsor, in case you forgot.â
Ludger blinked once, unimpressed. âConvenient title.â
âItâs legitimate,â she said, feigning offense. âSigned by my grandfather himself.â
âSo youâre basically here to make my life harder.â
âExactly.â
He sighed, shaking his head. âJust try not to set anything on fire.â
â
I never did
,â she shot back, glaring.
âSure.â
They stood there in silence for a while, the wind filling the gap between their words. Viola leaned against the railing, watching the waves below again.
Then Ludger spoke, his tone casual but honest. âI wasnât trying to chase you off, you know. Just making sure you hadnât forgotten that youâve got a home to return to.â
Viola tilted her head, her expression softening for a moment. âI know.â
He nodded faintly. âGood. Because if you stay too long, youâll start picking up some bad habits.â
She smirked. âToo late.â
Ludger gave her a side glance. âGreat.â
She laughed, the sound light but genuine, carried off by the ocean wind.
For a moment, it felt almost normal againâthe tension, the banter, the strange calm before whatever storm waited beneath the waves.
But as Ludger looked out over the horizon, where the bridgeâs last pillar vanished into mist, that unease didnât leave him.
The sahuagins werenât gone.
They were gathering. And when they came back, they wouldnât just be testing the bridge.
Theyâd be testing everything theyâd built to protect it.
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