Dinner had gone quietly enough. The twins had spent half of it trying to steal bites off Ludgerâs plate while Elaine pretended not to notice.
Now, the house was still. Elaine was upstairs, softly singing as she put the twins to bed. Their muffled giggles faded behind a closing door.
Downstairs, Ludger and Arslan remained at the table. The fire had burned low, throwing long shadows across the wooden floor.
Arslan leaned back in his chair, the faint creak breaking the silence. âAll right,â he said finally, reaching into his coat pocket. âNow that the house is quiet.â
He placed a small folded parchment on the table between them. The seal bore the Torvares crest, pressed deep into the wax.
Ludger frowned slightly. âAnother message?â
âCame this morning,â Arslan said. âI waited for you.â
Ludger nodded once and broke the seal. The smell of wax and dust filled the air as he unfolded the letter, his eyes scanning the page quickly, lips pressing into a thin line as he read.
Maurien located a hideout belonging to the organization we suspected.
Information came from Dalan and Linne, apparently through captured League smugglers.
Kaela assisted on-site, employing⊠unconventional methods to extract details from the prisoners.
Theyâve confirmed the group is tied to the same network from the eastern mountains.
Ludgerâs brow rose slightly. He lowered the parchment and looked at his father. âKaela helped interrogate?â
Arslan gave a quiet grunt of confirmation, his tone dry. âThatâs what Maurien reported. He says sheâs been useful.â
âUseful,â Ludger repeated, one eyebrow twitching. âHow exactly?â
Arslanâs mouth curved into that restrained half-smile he used when trying not to laugh. âApparently, she combined her wind magic with some hallucinogenic herbs. Used the airflow to make the target
breathe it in.
â
Ludger blinked, unimpressed. âSo she made them high enough to talk. Pretty close to brain washingâŠâ
âHigh enough to sing, from what Iâve read,â Arslan said, chuckling. âMaurien claims the smugglers confessed everything from their routes to their favorite foods.â
Ludger leaned back slightly, rubbing his temple. âSheâs becoming more terrifying by the day.â
âScary,â Arslan agreed, âbut effective.â
He poured himself a bit of tea, the faint clink of ceramic echoing in the quiet kitchen. âMaurien says the two of them are handling things for now, but the hideout wasnât small. Thereâs a good chance itâs part of something larger.â
Ludger folded the parchment again, thoughtful. âThen weâll need to prepare the next shipment carefully.â
Arslan nodded. âDo what you have to. Torvares trusts your judgment.â
Ludger placed the letter beside his empty plate, his gaze distant but sharp. âMaurienâs handling the enemy. Kaelaâs⊠improvising. Linne and Dalan are feeding information.â
His fingers drummed once on the table. âAnd Iâll keep the ground moving.â
Arslan smirked faintly. âThe three of you make quite the team.â
âMore like a hazard,â Ludger muttered. âBut it works.â
The two sat in companionable silence after that, the faint sound of rain tapping the roof above them and the crackling of dying embers the only noise left in the house.
For now, the twins were asleep, the tunnels were stable, and the Lionsguardâs quiet war beneath the surface continued, just as planned.
The next morning, Ludger was already up before sunrise. Heâd reread Torvaresâs letter three times over breakfast, each pass leaving him with the same faint irritation. It wasnât the contents that bothered him, it was what
wasnât
there.
Maurienâs brief report, Kaelaâs âmethods,â and the confirmation of a League-based smuggler cell⊠that was all. Too clean. Too short.
Heâd known Torvares long enough to recognize when the old man was being
deliberately vague.
Which meant one thing: the message was bait for a personal visit. So he went.
The trip to the estate was quick. The roads were clear, and for once, Viola and Luna were nowhere to be seen, no sword practice, no mock duels, no ambush hugs from the twinsâ honorary âbig sisters.â Just the quiet hum of morning and the muffled sounds of the manor staff already at work.
A servant guided him to the study. Torvares was there, as always, behind his desk, a steaming cup of dark tea beside a half-finished report. He looked up immediately, and the faint smirk that crossed his face said heâd been expecting this visit.
âVice Guildmaster,â Torvares said smoothly. âYou didnât waste any time.â
Ludger crossed the room and stopped in front of the desk. âI read the report three times,â he said simply. âThereâs not enough information.â
Torvares leaned back slightly in his chair, the old wood creaking. âThatâs because there isnât any more.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed a fraction. âMaurienâs not the type to send empty lines. And Kaela doesnât stop questioning people until they talk. So either they didnât write everything downâŠâ He paused. âOr youâre not supposed to have all of it.â
The old lord studied him for a moment over the rim of his cup. His expression didnât shift, but the silence itself was an answer. Finally, he sighed softly and set the cup down. âYouâve grown too sharp for your own good.â
âThatâs not a denial,â Ludger said dryly.
Torvares chuckled. âNo, it isnât.â He clasped his hands on the desk. âIf I were to guess, and I assure you, this is purely conjecture, they probably
do
have more. But they donât want to share it with me.â
Ludger frowned, crossing his arms. âWhy?â
âBecause the names that they had heard.â
Ludger tilted his head slightly, unimpressed. âNobles.â
Torvares smiled thinly. âAlways. My guess? Maurien and Kaela uncovered something tied to the Leagueâs contacts, maybe even connections stretching into the Empireâs side. That would explain why theyâre keeping details between themselves and you.â
He leaned forward, voice dropping slightly. âTheyâre keeping me clean, Ludger. You, on the other hand⊠they trust you to handle what I shouldnât be seen touching.â
Ludgerâs jaw tensed for a moment, but he didnât argue. âConvenient.â
âPractical,â Torvares corrected with a faint grin. âIf this involves certain families, itâs better that an old man like me isnât seen pulling strings. You, however, well, youâre just a diligent young guild officer doing trade work.â
Ludger exhaled slowly, gaze dropping to the letter on the desk. âSo theyâre calling me in.â
âI imagine so,â Torvares said. âMaurien wouldnât leave a lead like that unresolved, and KaelaâŠâ His grin widened slightly. âLetâs just say she prefers when youâre around to clean up the mess afterward.â
Ludgerâs brow twitched. âFigures.â
Torvares chuckled again, sipping his tea. âIf I were you, Iâd prepare to travel soon. You wonât get much more out of me than that.â
Ludger nodded slowly, slipping the parchment back into his coat. âThen Iâll start preparing. If they found something tied to nobles, this wouldn't be simple.â
Torvaresâs smile thinned into something thoughtful. âNothing ever is when gold and bloodlines are involved.â
Ludger turned to leave, his voice level. âIâll handle it.â
âI know,â Torvares said.
Ludger was halfway to the door when he paused, one hand resting on the handle. Something tugged at himâcuriosity more than concern. He turned slightly, glancing back at Torvares over his shoulder.
âWhereâs Viola?â he asked.
Torvares blinked, then exhaled through his nose with something halfway between amusement and exasperation. âDancing classes,â he said, the words sounding almost foreign coming from him.
Ludgerâs brow arched. âDancing classes? As in,
learning not to step on peopleâs feet while moving in circles?
â
The old lord shot him a sharp glare over the rim of his teacup. âCareful, boy.â
Ludgerâs expression stayed flat, but there was a faint glint of humor behind his eyes.
Torvares sighed, setting the cup down with a quiet clink. âDonât make fun of your sister. Sheâs about to turn fifteen in a few months. Her coming-of-age celebration will draw half the capitalâs young nobility, and dancing will be unavoidable.â
âUnavoidable, huh,â Ludger said, crossing his arms. âSo the nobles are already lining up to try their luck.â
âThey will,â Torvares said, sounding more resigned than proud. âThey always do. Half of them will see her as a political bridge; the other half will simply be dazzled by the Torvares name and Violaâs fame. Either way, sheâll have to endure the usual parade of suitors.â
Ludger chuckled under his breath, the sound dry and short. âEndure, sure. Iâm just wondering how many of them will leave the party with broken noses, and broken hearts.â
Torvares couldnât quite hold back the faint smile that crept across his face. âYou underestimate how vicious she can be when provoked.â
âOh, I donât,â Ludger said lightly. âThatâs why Iâm laughing.â
For a moment, both of them stood there, the tension from their earlier conversation replaced by a shared, unspoken amusement.
Finally, Torvares waved a hand. âGo. Before you tempt fate and she decides to practice her footwork on
you.
â
Ludger gave a faint, mock salute. âNoted. Good luck surviving her dance rehearsals.â
And with that, he left, the door closing softly behind him, his quiet laughter lingering just long enough to make the old lord shake his head and mutter, âThat boyâs got his motherâs humor⊠and his fatherâs timing.â
From his study window, Torvares watched as Ludger crossed the garden belowâsteady steps, posture straight, the usual air of purpose radiating off him like armor. Even from that distance, the old lord could tell there wasnât a wasted movement. The boy moved through the estateâs trimmed paths like heâd built them himself, and in a way, he had.
By the time Ludger reached the outer gate, the faint shimmer of geomantic mana rolled under his boots, and then he was goneâcutting through the streets of Meronia like a whisper of wind and dust.
Torvares leaned slightly on his cane, following his silhouette until it vanished behind the cityâs copper rooftops.
âTwelve,â he murmured, shaking his head softly. âJust twelve.â
For someone that young, Ludger carried himself like a man twice his age. Calm, deliberate, always calculating. Most children his age were still fumbling between arrogance and curiosity, but Ludger⊠Ludger already walked like someone whoâd seen the cost of hesitation.
A faint, amused sigh escaped him. âHis father was infamous even younger,â Torvares said to the empty room.
He glanced down at the cane in his hand, tapping it idly against the floor. âAnd yet, somehow, I thought letting my daughter meet that man was a good idea.â
The thought brought a crooked smile to his face, half fond, half resigned. Violette had been fascinated by adventurers back then, fiery-eyed and restless, always asking questions about swords and glory. Heâd humored her curiosity by introducing her to one of the more disciplined young mercenaries in the area, a certain Arslan.
A few years later, the result had been Viola herself. Torvaresâs eyes softened as he looked out at the empty path. âThe blood of both worlds,â he said quietly. âToo sharp for one, too stubborn for the other.â
He wondered, not for the first time, whether Ludger had inherited his fatherâs reckless streak, or if Elaineâs quiet severity had buried it deep enough to make him believe he didnât have one. Either way, the balance wouldnât last forever.
The old lord chuckled under his breath. âNo one stays that serious at twelve,â he mused. âNot forever.â
He imagined the inevitable, Violaâs fifteenth celebration, the flood of noble daughters and merchant heiresses whoâd come to meet her and Lionsguardâs prodigy, her little brother.
Torvares smirked faintly to himself. âA ticking time bomb, that one,â he muttered. âOnce he realizes what kind of attention he drawsâŠâ
He took another sip of his tea, eyes narrowing with the wry glint of a man whoâd seen too many generations repeat themselves.
âLetâs hope his parents are preparing,â he said softly. âBecause when that boy finally cracks⊠the Empire might just feel it.â
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