When the last few soldiers reached the top, Ludger and Cor dropped the barriers simultaneously. The combined impact of mana bullets and pressurized water struck the stairwell below, detonating in a blast that sent steam and stone fragments flying.
The entire passage trembled under the pressure, and for a brief, gut-twisting moment, Ludger thought the ceiling might collapse. But then, silence.
Only the faint sound of boiling water echoing below.
Lucius turned back, chest heaving slightly. âReport. Everyone still breathing?â
A few strained affirmatives followed. Kharnek grinned, wiping water from his beard. âHah! Thatâs one way to wake up in the morning.â
Ludger didnât reply. His eyes stayed fixed on the flooded stairwell below, where faint blue light still flickered in the depths.The labyrinth wasnât reacting to them by chance anymore. It was defending itself.
Arslan was the first to speak once the noise of the retreat faded and the echoes of the fight finally died down. His tone was steady, but there was a weight behind it, the voice of someone who had seen this kind of pattern before.
âItâs not unheard of for a labyrinth to spawn two different kinds of monsters,â he said, resting his sword against the wall. âBut theyâre usually
related
, same core element, same type of mana composition. Golems and sahuagins working together? Thatâs not normal.â
Rathen nodded grimly beside him, wringing the water out of his cloak. âAye. Iâve seen plenty of labyrinths across the coast, most monsters inside follow a theme, a shared element or hierarchy. This oneâŠâ He looked toward the stairwell still faintly glowing below. âThis oneâs mixing two ecosystems that shouldnât exist together.â
He paused, then added, âAnd if thatâs what happens every time we set foot down there, weâre going to bleed people fast.â
A quiet murmur went through the group. No one disagreed.
âExploring that second zone wonât be easy,â Rathen continued. âIf we keep getting swarmed by both types at once, golems from the structure and sahuagins from the water, weâll need a lot more firepower than we have now. Even with Ludgerâs support magic, we canât hold ground down there for long.â
Arslan folded his arms, jaw tight. âHeâs right. We go down like this again, weâre asking for corpses.â
No one argued. The truth hung there, heavy as the damp air around them. Freyra shifted uncomfortably, glancing toward the stairwell as if expecting more movement from below. Violaâs usual sharp confidence had dulled to a grim scowl, and even Kharnekâs easy grin had faded. If they werenât properly equipped, if they went back down just to test their luck â theyâd all be dead before reaching the next chamber.
Finally, Lucius broke the silence. âThen itâs decided.â His tone was calm, but his eyes betrayed a hint of frustration. âIt seems weâll need to do more than drain the second zone.â
Ludger looked at him. âMeaning?â
Lucius exhaled slowly, running a hand through his damp hair. âMeaning weâll need reinforcements, mages, engineers, proper heavy combat support. And that means sending word back to the continent.â
That drew a few uneasy glances.
âWhich brings a whole new set of problems,â Rathen muttered.
Lucius nodded grimly. âExactly. Weâll be trading one kind of danger for another.â
Arslan smirked humorlessly. âMonsters in armor instead of scales.â
Lucius almost smiled. âSomething like that.â
The group fell silent again. The only sound was the slow drip of water from the ceiling and the faint, distant pulse of mana still radiating from the depths below.
For now, retreat was the only sensible choice. But everyone there knew it, this labyrinth wasnât going to stay quiet forever. When they came back, it would be with an army, or not at all.
In the afternoon, as the sun dipped behind the horizon and the air cooled, the entire expedition gathered outside the labyrinth for a full council. This time, it wasnât just the core team,
everyone
whoâd come to the island was present: Lionsguard, Ironhand Syndicate, Silver Talon knights, engineers, and mages. The firelight flickered across their tired faces, the sound of waves filling the pauses between voices.
Lucius stood at the center, the map of the archipelago spread out on a broad table of carved stone. âAlright,â he began, his tone carrying over the quiet murmurs, âyou all saw what we found. The second zone isnât just flooded, itâs active. Golems and sahuagins working together. Whateverâs causing that, we canât handle it with what we have here.â
He turned to Varik, who had been silent until then, arms crossed and expression unreadable.
The Imperial commander exhaled slowly. âThen allow me to make a proposal,â he said, voice firm and deliberate. âThe Senate has resources far beyond what any of our houses can muster alone. If I bring them our findings, the mana cores, the runic schematics from the golems, and proof of the hybrid ecosystem, I can secure enough heavy equipment and reinforcements for a full dive expedition.â
Rathen raised an eyebrow. âAnd how long would that take?â
âA few months,â Varik admitted. âBetween bureaucracy, transport, and preparation. But with the data weâve gathered in just these first few days, Iâm confident theyâll see the value. This labyrinth isnât just another ruin. Itâs something new, something that could change the Empireâs understanding of the labyrinth itself.â
Lucius considered it for a moment, then gave a slow nod. âItâs risky. But heâs right.â
He turned to face the crowd. âWeâve already hoarded
far
more mana cores than we ever expected. Enough to fund the next expedition and still have reserves to spare. For now, it might be wiser to slow down on the labyrinth exploration and focus on whatâs sustainable.â
He tapped the map near the first island. âWeâll leave a small team behind to clear the first floor periodically. That will keep the sahuagins from multiplying and escaping into the sea again while also gathering mana cores. Now that we know where those creatures come from, containment has to be a priority.â
Kharnek grunted in agreement. âA steady cull, then. Makes sense. Keeps the monsters sharp and the men sharper.â
Lucius nodded. âExactly. The rest of our forces will redirect to bridge construction and coastal defenses. The faster we complete the southern span, the better our position will be once reinforcements arrive. And while the labyrinth waits, we focus on the other major threat.â
He glanced toward the sea, toward the dark horizon where the waves hid something massive beneath. âThat giant sea beast that destroyed our ships. If itâs still out there, it could tear apart the bridge the moment it senses movement. We canât afford that.â
Rathen folded his arms. âSo our goals are clear, hold the labyrinth, finish the bridge, hunt the beast.â
Arslan gave a small nod. âAnd live long enough to see all three done.â
A faint ripple of laughter broke the tension, but it didnât last long.
Luciusâs voice lowered, resolute. âThis is no longer just about exploration. Itâs about survival, and preparation. If weâre going to face whateverâs at the bottom of that labyrinth, weâll need more than courage. Weâll need the full strength of the Empire behind us.â
The firelight flickered as the meeting ended, casting long shadows across the gathered soldiers.
As the sun sank toward the horizon, Ludger stood alone on the beach, his boots half-buried in cool sand. The ocean stretched before him in endless gray-blue ripples, each wave tinted gold by the dying light. The faint crash of the tide was the only sound, steady, rhythmic, indifferent to everything humans built or lost.
He didnât move for a long while. His eyes stayed fixed on the horizon, on that dark line where sea met sky.
There was a quiet irritation simmering under his calm expression. Not the hot kind that burned out fast, but the deep, coiled kind that stayed in the chest, the kind born from unfinished business.
Theyâd come so far. Built bridges, fought through swarms, faced storms and monsters and labyrinth traps. And yet, they had to retreat before reaching the truth buried below.
He clenched his fists lightly. âTch.â
Heâd known from the start that clearing a new labyrinth wouldnât be simple, but the reality still left a bitter taste. Even with Gaius, Arslan, Lucius, Rathen, and all the other specialists, it hadnât been enough. Theyâd barely scratched the surface.
That was what a real labyrinth was. A test designed to break strength, patience, and pride alike. He sighed, his breath fogging in the evening air. âSo thatâs the difficulty level, huhâŠâ
It wasnât frustration with the others, not really. It was with himself. Heâd gotten stronger than most adults already, learned techniques that people older than him would kill for. But it still wasnât enough. Not even close.
A faint
whoosh
echoed nearby, the sound of air splitting under a blade.
Ludger turned his head slightly. Down the shoreline, a figure moved against the sunset, cutting through the glow like a flicker of gold and steel. Viola.
She was barefoot in the surf, her hair whipping with the wind as she practiced alone. Each swing of her sword split the incoming waves apart, her earth-attuned mana hardening the air around the blade until it sliced the water cleanly in two.
Every strike was precise, angry, and beautiful, the sea itself responding to her rhythm.
Ludger watched for a moment, recognizing the same emotion in her movements that heâd been feeling in silence, restless annoyance, the need to push past their limits.
Theyâd both faced the same realization today. That talent and preparation only went so far.
That the labyrinth wasnât a test of skill â it was a wall. One that would only fall before overwhelming strength. He let out a quiet breath and looked back toward the horizon. The water reflected streaks of crimson and gold, like molten glass.
âSheâs annoyed too,â he murmured.
And she was. But like him, she wouldnât complain. Sheâd train, fight, and adapt until she was ready to strike back at the labyrinth, just like he would.
The tide came in and washed over his boots, cold and grounding. Ludger didnât move.
They both knew what came next. They just needed to get stronger, strong enough to force the labyrinth to reveal what it was hiding.
Arslanâs heavy hand landed on Ludgerâs shoulder with a solid
thump
, snapping him out of his thoughts.
âCareful there, Luds,â the older man said, voice carrying that familiar mix of teasing and warmth. âYou keep staring at the sunset like that, and people will start thinking youâre trying to look as cool and mysterious as your father.â
Ludger gave him a sidelong glance, frown immediate and unimpressed. âThatâs not exactly something I aim for.â
Arslan grinned, teeth flashing under the fading light. âGood. Iâve already filled the quota for brooding warriors in this family anyway.â
Ludger snorted faintly, the closest thing to a laugh Arslan usually got from him, before his gaze drifted back toward the horizon. The sea rolled quietly under streaks of amber and violet light, but the weight in his chest hadnât gone anywhere.
Arslan noticed, of course. He always did. He folded his arms, his expression softening slightly. âListen. I get it. We didnât come all this way just to turn around halfway through. But thatâs how these things go sometimes. You donât always win your fights in one swing.â
Ludger didnât respond right away, and Arslan continued, tone more even now. âWeâve got to pull back, regroup, and let Gaius finish his work. We canât keep everyone camped here for months. The guild needs to stabilize, the bridgeâs still half-built, andâŠâ
He tilted his head toward Ludger, smiling faintly. âYour mother will probably want proof that weâre still alive before she turns half the coast upside down looking for us.â
That earned him a quiet sigh from Ludger. â...Yeah. That sounds like her.â
âExactly. So we head home, reassure Elaine that her husband and son didnât drown in a hole full of fish-men, and then we come back smarter.â
Ludger nodded slowly, the weight in his shoulders easing a little. âIronia and Yvar are probably drowning in paperwork by now too.â
Arslan laughed, the sound booming over the soft crash of waves. âHah! Iâd pay good coin to see Yvarâs face when he realizes how many reports he has to file for this mess.â
Ludger couldnât help but smirk at that. The two stood there a moment longer, father and son, the ocean reflecting streaks of fire and silver before them.
Arslan clapped him on the back once more, this time gentler. âCome on, lad. Youâll have plenty of time to look stoic and annoyed on the way back. Letâs not keep everyone waiting.â
Ludger exhaled, one last glance toward the fading horizon. âYeah. Letâs go.â
As they walked back toward the camp, the tide came in, erasing their footprints in the sand â the sea reclaiming what little trace theyâd left behind on that long, unfinished day.
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