Ludger turned toward the cell, his gaze landing on the still-twitching man sprawled across the floor. The prisonerâs breath came in shallow gasps now, sweat dripping down his temple, the aftershocks of Kaelaâs magic still making his muscles spasm every few seconds.
âKaela,â Ludger said quietly.
She looked up, tilting her head with a faint grin. âYes, Luds?â
âI need you to ask him a few
specific
questions.â
Her grin widened. âOh? What kind of questions?â
Ludger didnât answer right away. He stepped closer to the cell, shadows tracing his sharp features as the dim runelight flickered against his face. When he finally smiled, it was the kind that wasnât supposed to be reassuring, the slow, deliberate kind that seemed to tighten the air in the room. Even Maurien raised an eyebrow.
Kaela blinked, then chuckled softly. âThat smile is bad news,â she said. âYouâre starting to look like trouble.â
Dalan, standing a few steps back, exhaled sharply. âGods above,â he muttered, rubbing his face. âLudger, if youâre planning on diplomacy, donât do it with
that
smile. Youâll start a war before you finish a sentence.â
That earned him a sideways glance and a flicker of amusement from Ludger. âWho said anything about diplomacy?â
Kaela clapped her hands once, practically glowing now. âNow
thatâs
more like it. All right, Vice Guildmaster, what are we asking?â
Ludger leaned in slightly, lowering his voice just enough that only she and Maurien could hear. He outlined a few pointed questions, names, locations, trading routes, and most importantly,
who collected the payments
from the League side. The man in the cell wouldnât survive another full interrogation, but Ludger didnât need him to. He just needed confirmation.
When Kaela straightened again, her expression turned sharp, her playful tone gone. âUnderstood,â she said.
Maurien watched the exchange and smirked faintly. âYou know,â he murmured, âI used to think Arslan was the dangerous one in your family.â
Ludger didnât look away from the cell. âHe still is,â he said calmly. âI just learned from the best.â
Kaela grinned at that, cracking her knuckles before stepping back into the glow of the rune circle. The prisoner tried to crawl away from her, but the air around him shimmered as invisible currents of wind pinned him down.
Dalan muttered under his breath, âAnd now heâs sending the devil to ask questionsâŠâ
Maurien chuckled. âYouâre just realizing that?â
When night finally fell, the city academy of Coria dimmed into a haze of green and blue runelight. The air still smelled of steel and smoke, but the streets were quieter now, workers gone, furnaces cooling. It was the kind of quiet Ludger liked best: the kind that hid movement.
He stood in the roomâs shadowed corner, fastening the last clasp of his dark traveling coat. The faint gleam of a rune-sealed pouch hung at his side, filled with the gear heâd stripped from the captured smugglers earlier that day.
Maurien leaned against the table nearby, arms crossed. âYouâre really going through with this?â
Ludger nodded, checking the mirrored edge of his gauntlet to study his reflection. His brown hair had darkened to a muted gray from a mana dye charm, and faint illusionary marks now crossed his jaw. His eyes, once sharp and steady, now glimmered with a faint dull red glow, just enough to pass for someone whoâd spent too long under unstable draught fumes.
âThatâs the plan,â he said. âThey lost their middlemen, but the other buyers are still waiting for a delivery. Iâll take the prisonersâ place, deliver the goods myself.â
Kaela frowned from where she sat perched on a table, her wind-tousled hair swaying slightly. âYou mean youâll act like them? Walk straight into their den with their own cargo?â
âExactly.â
Maurien exhaled. âThatâs not a plan, itâs a gamble.â
Ludger glanced at him. âI donât gamble. I calculate.â
He buckled his satchel, sealing it with a pulse of mana. âIf I do it right, theyâll think Iâm part of their trade network. That gives me a direct line to the buyers, and once I confirm whoâs in charge, Iâll crush them before they can react. Quietly. No survivors, no witnesses, no messages getting out to the Empire or the League.â
The calm in his voice made both of them pause. Kaela swung her legs idly, watching him with an unreadable look. âYouâre starting to sound more like a bad guy,â she said lightly. âJust⊠more surgical about it.â
Ludger didnât respond.
Maurien pushed off the table. âThen Iâm coming with you.â
âNo,â Ludger said immediately.
Maurien raised an eyebrow. âNo?â
Ludger shook his head. âYou and Kaela are too recognizable. Youâve both made names here already here. If the League or the council are watching, three of us moving together would scream Lionsguard. I canât risk that.â
Kaela hopped down from the table, eyes narrowing slightly. âSo what, you go alone and hope they donât notice youâre twelve?â
âI am almost thirteen,â Ludger corrected automatically. âAnd yes. Theyâll see what they expect to see, until they donât.â
Maurien sighed, muttering under his breath, âAnd I thought I was the reckless one.â
Kaela crossed her arms, biting back the urge to argue further. She could tell by his tone that his mind was already made up.
Ludger adjusted his gloves and stepped toward the door. âStay here. Keep the local councilor under observation. If something goes wrong, seal the routes and burn the evidence.â
Kaela let out a long breath. âYouâre really going to walk into a den of smugglers and nobles alone.â
Ludger gave her a small, sharp smirk as he pulled up his hood. âNo,â he said quietly. âIâm going to walk in as one of them.â
Just as Ludger reached for the door handle, a sharp knock echoed from the other side. He tensed for a fraction of a second before Maurien flicked a finger, letting a thin wisp of wind slide under the door. The breeze returned a moment later carrying familiar voices.
âItâs us.â
Maurien opened the door, and Dalan and Linne stepped in, both looking worn, their coats smudged with soot and their arms full of metal-reinforced crates. They set them down with a clatter on the floor.
âDidnât expect you two back this soon,â Ludger said.
Dalan exhaled hard, running a hand through his hair. âYeah, well⊠this whole situationâs a damn mess. And part of itâs our fault for not realizing what was happening right under our noses.â
Linne nodded beside him, her tone quieter but resolute. âIf we hadnât been so focused on our research, maybe we wouldâve seen the pattern sooner. So, consider this an apology. Or maybe⊠insurance.â
Ludger tilted his head. âInsurance?â
Dalan pried open the top crate, the hinges squealing faintly as a faint blue glow spilled into the room. âYouâre heading out alone, right? Then youâll need something better than a hood and luck.â
Inside, neatly folded, was a set of black leather armor, sleek, segmented, and reinforced with subtle layers of runic lining. Unlike typical assassin garb, the runes werenât hidden; they were etched in faint green along the seams, pulsing gently like veins of light.
Linne crouched beside the crate, running a hand along the material. âMade from smoke-tanned wyvern hide. Resistant to mana burns and alchemical residue. The runes are for more than decoration, self-repair, impact absorption, even minor concealment when you channel mana through it.â
Maurien gave a low whistle. âThatâs not cheapâŠ.â
Dalan smirked faintly. âItâs an old prototype. We abandoned it because it required constant mana regulation. Too unstable for most users.â He looked at Ludger. âBut youâre not
most users
, are you?â
Ludger studied the outfit carefully, eyes tracing each rune pattern, each connecting thread. The design was precise, almost surgical. âYouâre giving this to me?â
Linne stood, brushing dust from her gloves. âNot giving. Lending. You make it back in one piece, you return it. If you keep it with you, then people might connect the dots when they find this with you as the cause of whatever is about to happen.â
Kaela peeked over Ludgerâs shoulder, grinning. âBlack leather, green runes⊠very dramatic. Youâll fit right in with the underworld crowd.â
Ludger ignored her, still examining the armor. âAnd if someone asks where it came from?â
Dalan shrugged. âSay you took it off a corpse, or we say that we had it stolen. Anyway, only both of us knows of this.â
That earned him a faint smirk from Ludger, one that carried just enough sharpness to make Dalan reconsider his own joke.
Linne smiled thinly. âJust⊠donât burn it. Itâs one of a kind.â
Ludger lifted the armor, feeling the faint pulse of mana through the fabric as the runes flickered alive under his touch. It was light, too light for something so dense. It adjusted almost instantly to the warmth of his skin.
âThisâll do,â he said simply.
Ludger tightened the last strap on the leather suit, the runes dimming to a subtle green glow as they synced with his mana. But he wasnât finished. Not even close.
He reached into one of the crates Dalan had brought and pulled out a long, dark cloak, lightweight, but made to mute movement and muffle sound. He swung it over his shoulders, fastening it beneath the collarbone. Then came the hood, broad, shadow-casting, and finally a matte black mask covering the entire lower half of his face.
The mask was featureless, smooth, and faintly reflective under the lamplight. Combined with the hood, it made him look less like a boy and more like a silhouette with intent.
Kaela blinked. ââŠOkay,
thatâs
unsettling.â
Maurien nodded slowly. âIf I didnât know better, Iâd think someone hired a ghost.â
Ludger pulsed mana into the runes on the suit.
Fwoom.
The symbols drank in his mana like starving beasts. A ripple spread over his body, weight decreasing, muscles feeling looser, reaction time sharpening. Another pulse and the runes along his ribs and forearms flared softly, thickening the air around him like a thin second skin.
He rolled a shoulder, testing the movement.
ââŠGood. Lightweight but reinforced. Almost as good as overdrive.â
Dalan raised both eyebrows. âYou already did the calculations?â
Ludger ignored him. He turned instead toward the far corner of the room. Fighting bare-handed, even with Hard Fists, didnât feel right for this mission. Anyone whoâd fought alongside the Lionsguard, or against them, knew exactly which twelve-year-old was fond of breaking ribs with his fists.
He needed something new, something silent, efficient, and untraceable. So he lifted one hand and summoned a dense ball of earth mana. The air hummed as the sphere condensed, shrinking into a compact, perfectly smooth stone. Then Ludger split it in half.
Crack.
He shaped each piece with precision, earth flowing like clay beneath his fingertips. First into rough blades, then into short sickle-like daggers. Then he molded the bases into thick, curved handles, more like reinforced knuckle dusters than standard grips.
With another pulse of mana, he hardened both weapons, compressing the stone until it was nearly black, denser than most metals, the edges faintly serrated with layered mineral patterns.
Maurien let out a low whistle. âThose arenât daggers⊠those are skull-breakers.â
Ludger inspected the first blade, tested its balance, then slid his fingers through the knuckle-guard grip. The weapon locked into place seamlessly, quiet, close-range, brutal. Perfect for subterranean work.
âThey wonât break,â Ludger said. âNot unless I want them to.â
Kaela raised a hand. âSo⊠let me get this straight. Dark cloak, assassin armor, mask, new weapons⊠Youâre basically crafting a whole new identity.â
âExactly,â Ludger replied, sliding the second blade into his belt. âIf Iâm going to move through their network, I canât look like myself. I canât move like myself. I canât fight like myself.â
Maurienâs eyes sharpened. âAnd what do we call this version of you?â
Ludger lowered the hood a little further, hiding most of his face in shadow.
ââŠNo one. A nobody.â
He turned toward the door, blades in place, runes primed, presence vanishing into the dimness.
âIâll be back in a few days,â he said. âPrepare to move when I send word.â
And with that, the disguised Vice Guildmaster slipped into the nightâno footsteps, no sound, nothing but a brief flicker of mana before he disappeared from sight entirely.
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