Maurien stepped closer to the cell, his sharp eyes taking in the restrained man twitching on the floor before turning back to Ludger.
âIâve been coming here pretty often,â he said. âAt least once a month, sometimes more. Usually with the Lionsguard delivery teams, froststeel, mana cores, the usual. Gives me a good excuse to move around the League without drawing attention.â
Ludger folded his arms. âAnd Linne and Dalan? Have they done anything about the underworld activity?â
Maurien gave a dry, humorless laugh. âNot much. Theyâre engineers, not hunters. I think theyâd rather believe their cityâs clean than dig in the mud and find out it isnât.â
Kaela made a small sound, half amusement, half annoyance, still watching the prisoner. âCanât blame them. Too many people up there rely on that mud staying buried.â
Ludgerâs gaze flicked to her briefly before turning back to Maurien. âThen what changed? You wouldnât have called me just to tell me that the Leagueâs still rotten.â
Maurien nodded once. âTwo weeks ago, some rumors started circulating. Nothing official, just whispers in the taverns and supply markets, about a group buying up every stock of purple mushrooms from the herbalists in the region.â
Ludgerâs brow furrowed. âPurple mushroomsâŠâ He thought for a moment before saying quietly, âTheyâre a base ingredient in the berserker draughts.â
Maurienâs eyes met his. âThatâs what I figured too. Hallucinogenic when brewed raw, but if refined right and mixed with some powders, it amplifies aggression and stamina output. Dangerous stuff. Kaelaâs little friend hereâ,he gestured to the prisonerâwas part of one of the shipment chains.â
Ludger exhaled through his nose. âSo they do have production lines inside the League now.â
Maurien nodded grimly. âLooks that way. Which means someone importantâs funding it. Someone who can move ingredients and cores across borders without getting flagged.â
Ludgerâs expression tightened. âNobles again.â
Kaela finally turned from the cell, brushing dust from her gloves, her tone dry. âYou catch on fast, Luds. Seems like your Empireâs bad habits spread farther than you thought.â
Ludger didnât rise to the bait. His eyes were already cold and calculating, the gears in his head turning. âThen weâll follow the trail from the source,â he said simply. âIf theyâre buying in bulk, someoneâs doing the selling.â
Maurien smirked faintly. âAlready ahead of you. Weâve got a name. The mushrooms are moving through an herbal supplier in the outer district. Youâre going to like this one.â
Ludger arched an eyebrow. âWhy?â
Maurienâs grin widened slightly. âBecause heâs on the city council of researchers.â
Ludgerâs eyebrows rose slightly at Maurienâs last words, but before he could respond, the sound of footsteps echoed down the corridor. Rhythmic, deliberate, two pairs.
Moments later, Linne and Dalan appeared at the end of the hall, both wearing their usual engineer coats but looking less confident than usual. The faint sheen of fatigue around their eyes said enough, theyâd been busy, and not with academic work.
âLudger,â Linne greeted, forcing a polite smile as she stepped into the lamplight. âYouâre earlier than expected.â
Ludgerâs expression didnât shift. âYou could say the same about your timing.â
Dalan chuckled weakly, rubbing the back of his neck. âYeah, well⊠word spreads fast when one of our guests decides to visit the lower floors.â His eyes flicked briefly toward the still-convulsing prisoner before settling back on Ludger. âI see Kaelaâs been⊠productive.â
âSheâs efficient,â Maurien said dryly.
Linne sighed. âEfficient is one word for it.â
Ludger crossed his arms, gaze steady. âYou both knew some troublesome people were involved, didnât you?â
Linne hesitated before answering. âWe suspected.â
Dalan stepped forward, his voice lower, tone edged with frustration. âWe didnât have proof until recently. You think itâs easy to dig into the councilâs dealings? The manâs untouchable here. He funds half the academies and pays for the cityâs runic infrastructure.â
âSo you decided not to investigate,â Ludger said flatly.
Dalan winced slightly. âItâs not that simple. Heâs a councilor of Coria, a senior one. Touch him, and the League Council starts breathing down everyoneâs neck. Heâs the kind of man who smiles in public and owns everything in private.â
Linne folded her arms, looking conflicted. âAnd yet, all signs point back to his estate. The mushroom trades, the sealed shipments, the missing imperials⊠it all threads through him somehow.â
Ludgerâs jaw tightened as he processed that. âThen thatâs where we start.â
Dalan frowned. âYou canât justââ
âI can,â Ludger interrupted, tone quiet but final. âAnd I will. If this councilorâs tied to the draught trade, then heâs a liability to both the Empire and the League. You donât stop a rot by studying it. You cut it out.â
The engineers exchanged uneasy glances. They both knew he was right, but the look in his eyes told them he wasnât bluffing.
Maurien leaned against the wall, arms folded. âTold you heâd take it well.â
Linne sighed softly, pushing a lock of hair behind her ear. âYou donât understand. If you go after him, the entire city will notice. The council protects its own.â
Ludger met her gaze evenly. âThen theyâd better protect him fast.â
The silence that followed was heavy, the kind that made everyone realize the point of no return had just been crossed.
Ludgerâs expression didnât change, but the air around him seemed to cool. His voice was calm, too calm.
âHow did you even find this group?â he asked, turning his gaze from Linne to Maurien. âAnd more importantly⊠who in the capital is tied to them?â
The question hung in the air like a weight. Linne looked toward Dalan, but he was staring at the floor, jaw tight. Maurien didnât answer right away either. His usual sharp smile was gone; instead, he rubbed at his temple, exhaling through his nose as if trying to find a way to soften what he was about to say.
Finally, he spoke. âIt wasnât easy. The trailâs a mess, split across half a dozen places, fake merchants, and puppet trade intermediaries. But the more Kaela⊠encouraged our guest here to talkââhe gestured toward the trembling prisonerââthe clearer the pattern became.â
Ludger waited in silence.
Maurien met his eyes, and for the first time in a while, his tone was flat, serious. âThe buyers in the League are middlemen. Their funding doesnât stop here. The money moves west, through a chain of fronts that lead back to the Empireâs own noble registries.â
Linneâs voice dropped almost to a whisper. âNot minor nobles either.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed slightly. âThen who?â
Maurien hesitated again, gaze flicking briefly toward the floor before returning to Ludger. âOne of the old families,â he said quietly. âHouse
Roderick
. Theyâve got old blood ties to the Imperial line, cousins to the throne, technically.â
The room went still. Even Kaela, who had been leaning casually against the cell wall, straightened slightly at that.
Ludgerâs frown deepened. âYouâre sure?â
Maurien nodded once. âToo many connections for it to be a coincidence. Besides, this guy spoke. Whoeverâs behind this isnât just some corrupt merchant. Itâs someone with authority, someone who can move illegal goods between nations without raising a single red flag.â
Dalan muttered, âWhich means even the Empireâs own customs officers wouldnât dare question the shipments or wouldnât be aware of it.â
Linne folded her arms, her earlier forced composure beginning to crack. âIf thatâs true, then this isnât just smuggling. Itâs state-level corruption.â
Ludger didnât say anything for several seconds. His eyes lowered, expression shadowed in thought.
House Roderick.
The name carried weight even he couldnât ignore. One of the oldest bloodlines, a relic of the royal familyâs expansionist past. And now, knee-deep in the trade of berserker draughts and cross-border corruption.
When he finally looked up, his tone was quiet but edged like a blade.
âThen we deal with this carefully,â he said. âIf theyâre that high up, the wrong move will bring the Empire down on us before we can even name them.â
Maurien nodded. âAgreed. But at least now, we know whoâs hiding behind the curtain.â
Ludgerâs gaze turned cold, almost distant. âGood,â he said. âThen itâs time we start pulling strings of our own.â
Dalan exhaled and rubbed the back of his neck, his nerves finally showing through the usual easy grin. âThereâs one more thing you should know,â he said. âEventually, both sides, the Empire and the League, are going to realize somethingâs off. The underlings weâve captured will stop reporting, and when that happens, the people above them will start asking questions.â
Linne nodded grimly beside him. âAnd when that happens, theyâll either prepare for a conflict or try to erase any trace that leads back to them. Including us.â
Maurien gave a short grunt. âWouldnât put it past them.â
Dalan leaned forward, lowering his voice. âWhich means we have to move
fast
. before they can get ahead of us. If they get desperate, they might even try to blame
you
and the Lionsguard for this whole mess. Smuggling, bribery, corruption, it wouldnât take much for them to twist it.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed slightly. âSo theyâd rather burn a few scapegoats than risk exposure.â
âIndeed,â Dalan said. âAnd if it comes to that, youâre the perfect target. A frontier guild running cross-border tunnels? The Empireâs bureaucrats would eat that up.â
Ludgerâs expression hardened, but he nodded slowly. âThen we donât give them the chance. We move before they do.â
He exhaled quietly, then added, âWhich means Iâll have to deal with House Roderick while Iâm at it. According to what I heard from Yvar, they have been quiet lately, and that usually means theyâre waiting to pick a side when trouble arises.â
Linne frowned, crossing her arms. âThatâs dangerous. The Rodericks are opportunists, theyâll back whoever seems stronger at the moment if things goes south⊠I know some people who do business with them..â
âExactly,â Ludger said. âWhich is why they need to see strength.â
He turned his attention back to the League pair. âAnd you two, what about the councilor? The one tied to this mess. What can you actually do about him?â
Dalan and Linne exchanged a heavy look. Linne sighed first, pressing a hand to her forehead. âNot much,â she admitted. âBlaming him directly would be suicide. Heâs too well protected, and any accusation we make would vanish under âprocedural review.ââ
âMeaning,â Maurien added dryly, âtheyâll bury it under a mountain of paperwork until everyone forgets it existed.â
Linne nodded, frustration slipping through her composure. âEven if we brought proof, theyâd say our information came from⊠letâs just say
questionably interrogated
prisoners.â Her eyes flicked toward Kaela, who was humming idly while cleaning some dust on the table.
Kaela looked up and blinked innocently. âWhat?â
Ludger ignored that. âSo in short,â he said, âwe canât accuse him, canât trust the Leagueâs bureaucracy, and canât wait for the Empire to get involved.â
âPretty much,â Dalan said. âWe can keep him under observation, maybe gather something more substantial. But acting now? Itâd blow up in our faces.â
Ludger stood silent for a moment, his expression unreadable. Then he finally spoke, voice low and measured.
âThen we donât accuse him. We isolate him.â
Linne tilted her head. âMeaning?â
âCut off his routes. His buyers. His coin. The nobles can hide behind their titles all they want, but even the powerful choke when their gold stops moving.â
Maurienâs smirk returned, faint and approving. âThat is Ludgerâs way of thinking.â
Ludger glanced toward the prisoner still twitching faintly in the cell, then back at the others. âIf they want to play a game of power,â he said quietly, âthen letâs remind them whoâs better at digging holes.â
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