The merchantās breath hitched as the shadow loomed over him.
He opened his mouth, maybe to plead, maybe to bargain.
CRACK.
Ludgerās boot slammed into the manās shin with surgical precision. The bone snapped like dry wood.
The merchant screamed, clutching his leg, only for Ludger to kick the other one before the sound even finished echoing.
CRACK.
Another clean break.
The merchant collapsed fully, writhing, his voice echoing off the stone walls. āSTOPāSTOPā! IāIāLL TALK! IāLL TELL YOU EVERYTHING! JUST PLEASEāLET ME SPEAāā
Ludger stepped forward.
CRUNCH.
His heel came down on the manās hand, grinding the bones into the floor. The merchant shrieked, veins bulging in his neck.
āWHY!? WHY ARENāT YOU LETTING ME TALK!?ā he howled, voice cracking with panic and disbelief. āIāI CAN TELL YOU EVERYTHING! Iāā
He reached up instinctively with his uninjured arm. Ludger grabbed the wrist. And with a cold, mechanical twist.
SNAP.
The arm bent the wrong way. The merchant choked on his scream, convulsing as he curled around the ruined limb. Tears and snot streamed down his face. He looked up through blurry vision at the hooded figure towering over him.
āWāWhāwhyā¦? I⦠I can talk⦠I can tell you whoās paying⦠whoās in the capital⦠IāI canāā
Ludger didnāt answer. He didnāt speak. He didnāt even acknowledge the words. He stepped to the other side. And before the merchant could beg againā¦
SNAP.
The second arm broke just as cleanly.
The merchant collapsed into a trembling, broken heap, legs twisted, arms ruined, hand crushed, lying spread-eagled like a discarded puppet. He sobbed, coughing, trembling.
āPā¦Please⦠why⦠wonāt⦠you⦠let me⦠talkā¦?ā
Ludger finally crouched beside him, silent, mask reflecting the faint light of the fallen lanterns. And the merchant realized, far too late, that this wasnāt an interrogation. It was an execution taking its time.
The merchant tried to crawl. He didnāt even know
where
, his shattered limbs dragged uselessly across the floor, leaving streaks of blood and sweat. His breath hitched, body convulsing with every movement. He could barely see, tears blurred everything into a trembling haze, but he knew one thing: He had to get away.
He had to. A shadow dropped in front of him. Ludger crouched silently, blocking his escape.
The merchant froze.
Slowly, terrifyingly slowly, the cloaked figure lifted his head and looked straight into the merchantās eyes. And in that moment, every ounce of pain vanished. Not because he healed. Not because of shock. But because pure, primal terror overwhelmed everything else.
Those eyes⦠Those cold, steady, unblinking eyesā¦
They werenāt angry. They werenāt excited. They werenāt even hungry for answers. They were done. Done with lies. Done with scum. Done with this entire operation.
And the merchant understood, down to the marrow of his broken bones, that the person crouching in front of him wasnāt here to bargain.
He wasnāt here for leverage. He wasnāt here for threats. He wasnāt here for deals. He was here to end things. The manās voice broke into a whimper.
āHāHelp⦠help meā¦ā
No answer.
Ludgerās mask revealed nothing, but his eyes were enough. Those eyes told the merchant exactly what was coming.
More pain. More breaking. More punishment. And absolutely no escape.
The merchant burst into sobs, body shaking uncontrollably. He understood now. He was going to die here. Slowly, unless he did something. His voice cracked as he tried to speak fast enough to outrun death:
āIāIāll talk! EVERYTHING! IāI swear! No lies! No lies, please! IāIāll tell you all of itāEVERY NAME, EVERY ROUTE, EVERY COIN, PLEASE, just, just donāt, donāt hurt me againā!ā
He gasped, choking on his own breath.
āIf I lieāi-if I even
stutter
āyou canācan do whatever you wantāj-justājust let me speakāpleaseāpleaseā!ā
Ludger didnāt move.Didnāt blink. Didnāt even breathe loudly.
But the merchant could tell, could feel, that the figure in front of him was listening. Judging. Measuring whether the truth was worth granting a quick death⦠or whether heād be forced to peel the truth out piece by piece.
The merchant sobbed harder, his entire body shaking. There was no negotiation here.
There was only confession, and the faint, fading hope that answering quickly enough might buy him mercy. A mercy Ludger did not look inclined to give.
The merchant gulped, throat bobbing as he forced the words out through tears and broken breath. His voice trembled, not just from pain, but from the raw, suffocating pressure of Ludgerās silent presence.
āVāVerkā¦!ā he blurted, almost choking on the name. āItās Verkāthe head of everything! Verk Delvran⦠o-one of the most respected councilors in the Velis League!ā
He paused to suck in a shaky breath, tears streaming down his cheeks.
āHeāheās the one who started this network. The mushrooms, the trade routes, the buyers, every contact, every shipment, every bribe, it all leads back to him!ā
Ludger didnāt react. Not a twitch. Not a sigh. Not even a blink.
The merchant swallowed hard and continued, rushing to fill the silence before pain returned.
āHeās working with House Roderick⦠th-the nobles in the Imperial Capital. They, they want to weaken the Empire, sāshatter its influence piece by piece!ā
His voice cracked, but he kept speaking, desperate.
āThe plan is to undermine the imperial family⦠cripple their authority⦠and let the Senate take over little by little. But the Senateāth-the Senate is already under Roderickās control! Them and three other houses, theyāre moving pieces everywhere!ā
He coughed violently, blood dripping from his lips as he dragged himself backward an inch.
āVerk and the Rodericks, theyāre orchestrating assassinations. Not big, loud ones⦠n-no⦠strategic ones. Advisors, suppliers, officers⦠people tāthat keep rival families stable. When they die, thātheir houses stagger. Lose funds. Lose backing. Lose power.ā
His entire body shuddered.
āItās been going on for yearsā¦ā
Ludger tilted his head slightly, just enough to show he was processing every detail.
The merchant felt his heart hammer harder.
āAnd the draughts!ā he cried. āThe berserker draughts, theyāre handling them too! Thāthey supplied the northern tribes⦠on purpose! To make them addicts! To keep raids frequent enough that the Empire wastes soldiers and resources dealing with ābarbarian problemsā!ā
Ludgerās eyes narrowed faintly behind the mask.
āAnd now, now theyāre planning the same for the southern beastmen!ā the merchant continued, voice strained. āTheyāve been stocking up the mushrooms here, in Coria⦠loading the caravans little by little. They want the beastmen addicted too! Chaos on both sides, north and south!ā
Spittle flew from his mouth as he cried harder.
āWith the Empire dealing with two addictive-driven fronts⦠their economy weakens⦠their military depletes⦠the Emperor loses authority⦠and the Senate steps in!ā
He sobbed, shaking from the effort.
āItāitās a slow coup⦠a shadow coup⦠spanning yearsā¦ā
Another shaky breath. His voice lowered to a whisper, trembling like a leaf.
āThey⦠they think no one will see it until itās too late.ā
The merchant dared to lift his head, pleading through his tears.
āT-Thatās everything⦠I swear it⦠I swear⦠n-no lies⦠pleaseā¦ā
He trembled violently.
āPlease⦠just end it⦠quicklyā¦ā
Ludger didnāt answerānot with words, not with breath.
He simply tilted his head.
Slowly.
Softly.
Like a predator examining the last twitch of cornered prey.
The motion was small, subtle⦠but it carried something profoundly wrong. A quiet, curious sadismāthe expression of someone who had seen far too much bloodshed for his age and was now deciding how much more to spill.
The merchant froze. His pupils dilated. And then his eyes rolled back as his mind shut down entirely. He dropped limply to the floor, unconscious from pure, animal terror. Ludger exhaled sharply through his nose.
āā¦I went too far.ā
His voice was a whisper, too soft to be amusement, too controlled to be guilty. Just an acknowledgment that heād slipped. He crouched again, grabbed the man by the collar, and slapped him. Once. Twice. A third timeāhard enough to rattle bone.
The merchant jolted awake with a strangled gasp, shaking violently.
Before he could speak, Ludger gathered a thin coil of wind as quietly as a breath and pressed it to his own throat. It vibrated his vocal cords, warping his childish voice into a deeper, gravelly rumble, a manās voice. A terrifying manās voice.
āWhere is Verk,ā Ludger asked, no tone, no warmth, no hesitation, ātonight?ā
The effect was immediate. The prisoner gulped so loudly Ludger could nearly hear his esophagus pop.
āIn⦠in the north side of Coria,ā the man stammered. āA-at his personal estateāno, fortress! Itās practically a fortress!ā
āDetails.ā
āIt, itās huge! A manor reinforced with runic walls, and, and the guardsā¦ā His voice cracked. āDozens of them. All elite. All equipped with top-grade runic armor and weapons,the kind money canāt normally buy!ā
Ludger waited.
āAnd⦠and the golemsā¦ā The merchantās voice dipped to a defeated whimper. āRunic golems, fortress models. Heavy plating. Shields. The kind made to fight mages, knights, armiesā¦ā
He trembled so hard his teeth clattered.
āNo one can sneak in there. Not without being seen. Not without being killed.ā
The statement hung in the air. Ludgerās eyes, cold, unreadable behind the mask, did not shift.
He simply stood up. As silent and smooth as a shadow. The merchant dared one last look at him and felt the chill of those void-black eyes boring into him. He whimpered.
āY-youāre⦠youāre not thinking of going there⦠are you?ā
Ludger didnāt answer. He didnāt need to. The way the candles flickered as a draft followed him out of the room was answer enough.
Ludgerās palm cracked across the manās face with a sharp, wet smack. The merchant didnāt even scream, his eyes just rolled, body going limp as he slumped onto the warehouse floor like a sack of rotten grain. A tooth skittered across the stone. Blood dribbled from his lip.
Unconscious. Finally. Ludger exhaled once, slow and steady, then crouched beside the body and grabbed the manās chin with two fingers to tilt his head, making sure he was truly out. No faking. No twitching.
Good. He released him and stood, the mist around him thinning into nothing. Then he placed a hand on his hip and tapped his masked jaw with one gloved finger.
āā¦Now what.ā
The question wasnāt spoken with frustration, it was pure calculation.
This idiot was one cog in a much larger machine. A mushroom buyer. A middleman. Someone trusted only because he was too cowardly to betray anyone important.
Which meantā¦
āThere are more like him.ā
Many more. People who handled transport. Bribes. Falsified ledgers. Enchanted seals. People who bought materials for the draught. People who sold it. People who hid the cartels under the Leagueās nose. Picking them off one by one would destabilize the entire networkā¦but it would also take time.
Time he didnāt have. Verk, on the other hand?
āCouncilor⦠fortress⦠dozens of golemsā¦ā Ludger muttered under his breath, staring blankly at the wall. āTch.ā
Even through the mask, his frown was obvious. A frontal assault would be suicide.
Too many eyes. Too many sensors. Too many patrols. And runic fortresses werenāt like normal estates, they had their own mana fields, layered traps, internal alarms that could detect even slight disturbances.
Even with his best stealth, even with his earth magic⦠getting in and out unseen would be almost impossible. Almost.
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