Ludger didnât hesitate.
âIf it were just me,â he said, voice flat and utterly sincere, âIâd be fine with dropping a massive stone on the Roderick manor and ending this entire mess in one strike.â
Viola froze mid-movement, her quill hovering above a page. Maurien blinked once. Kaelaâs smile widened like sheâd just been given a new favorite hobby.
Ludger continued, expression unwavering. âBut Iâm not doing anything until I know my squad is safe. Iâm not risking a single move that could harm them.â
Viola leaned back slowly, raising an eyebrow in a mixture of disbelief and cautious curiosity. âYou do realize,â she said carefully, âthat dropping a boulder the size of a house on a noble estate would involve
a lot
of innocent people, right? Servants. Guards. Children. People who have nothing to do with the Rodericksâ schemes.â
Ludger didnât flinch.
âA lot of innocent people are
already
dead because of the Rodericks,â he replied, tone cooling to something sharper. âTheyâve been supporting an entire underworld operation across borders. Capturing Empire citizens. Selling them off to the Velis League like livestock. Filling the black market with addictive draughts. Feeding violence into the north and south to keep the Empire unstable.â
His fists tightened at his sides.
âAnd they didnât stop there.â
Violaâs eyes narrowed.
Ludger pressed on. âTheyâve been eliminating people behind the scenes. Anyone who could oppose them. Anyone with influence or information. Not fast enough to draw attention, but consistent enough to shift political balances. Every death looks isolated, but itâs not. Itâs coordinated.â
Kaela crossed her arms and nodded approvingly. âShadow politics at its finest. Disgusting. Effective. Boring.â
Maurienâs face remained calm, but Ludger saw the tension tightening his jaw.
Ludger continued, voice lowering. âSo no, Iâm not losing sleep over the idea of crushing their manor. Not after seeing what theyâre doing across both borders.â
He paused, then added with cold clarity:
âBut I wonât make that move until I know my guild members are alive.â
Viola held his gaze for a long, quiet momentâstudying not just his anger, but the conviction behind it.
Finally, she sighed and set her quill down.
ââŠThen finding them comes first,â she said softly. âBefore revenge. Before politics. Before everything else.â
Ludger nodded once. That, at least, they all agreed on.
Viola flipped through a few papers, then pulled out a sealed document and tapped it against her desk.
âWe have a meeting tomorrow morning,â she announced, âwith Varik. He requested it the moment your squad was detained.â
Ludgerâs expression soured immediately. Viola noticed.
âHeâs the one who helped us in the south,â she reminded him. âDuring the bridge construction, the mission to connect the archipelago labyrinth routes. He fought well. I had a good impression of him.â
Ludger grunted, noncommittal.
Viola narrowed her eyes slightly. âWhat? You didnât?â
Ludger shrugged. âI didnât have a bad impression. Or a good one. Just⊠neutral.â
Kaela snorted softly. âMeaning he didnât punch anyone memorable.â
Maurien hid a faint smile.
Ludgerâs attention shifted back to the table. âEither way, Iâm not waiting for political meetings. I want to go through the sewers tonight. I can use Geomancy to find the squad. Track heartbeats. Breathing. Mana signatures.â His jaw tightened. âIâll locate them faster that way.â
Violaâs expression immediately hardened in concern. âNo.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed. âWhy?â
âBecause the prison theyâre being held in,â Viola said, âis probably under heavy magical fortification. Several layers of barriers, all maintained by stationed mages. If you use geomancy to dig, crack, or even
brush
against those constructs, theyâll sense it instantly.â
She leaned forward.
âAnd theyâll connect it to you.â
The words hit him like a slap.
Ludgerâs jaw clenched. His back straightened. A tremor of fury ran up his spine, visible enough that Luna, standing quietly beside Viola, instinctively shifted, her hands drifting toward the hidden knives strapped under her sleeves. Not threatening Ludger, just reacting to the spike of killing intent that rolled off him like heat.
Maurien spoke softly, âLudger.â
The boy froze, breathing through his nose, trying to rein the anger back under control.
Viola lifted a hand gently, as if soothing a wild animal. âI know how badly you want to move now. I get it. But barging underground toward the prison will alert half the Imperial Court. It wonât save your squad, itâll guarantee theyâre moved, or worse.â
Ludger lowered his gaze, silently forcing himself to steady the fire burning up his throat.
Viola took a breath of her own and stepped back from the desk. âYou three have been through hell. Especially you,â she said, pointing at Ludger. âYour posture is awful, youâre still recovering, no matter how much you pretend youâre fine.â
Kaela nodded, smirking. âYeah, kid. You look like you lost a fight with a golem and then rolled down a mountain.â
Maurien added, âRest. Weâll be more effective tomorrow.â
Viola nodded firmly. âYou need sleep. All of you. Tomorrow is going to be ugly, and youâll need your strengthâespecially for dealing with Varik.â
Ludger didnât argue. He just exhaled slowly, unclenched his fist, and accepted, for now, that patience was the only weapon they had left tonight.
Morning settled over Torvaresâs capital estate with a slow, muted light. The air carried the scent of warm bread and herbal tea, and servants moved quietly in the halls, trying not to disturb the tense atmosphere hanging over the manor. Maurien and Kaela arrived first to the dining room, looking noticeably better after a full night in real beds. Maurienâs posture was steady again, every line of his body showing heâd regained the composure heâd lost during their sleepless rush through the League. Kaela, refreshed and humming under her breath, flipped a small knife between her fingers, her steps lighter than theyâd been in days.
Ludger was already at the table, but he didnât look improved at all.
He sat stiffly, shoulders rigid, eyes shadowed with the same burning anger that had kept him awake most of the night. A plate of food rested in front of him, eggs, bread, fruit, tea, but he hadnât touched a single piece. His jaw remained clenched, and the tension around him was thick enough to choke on. Even Kaela hesitated before sliding into the seat across from him.
No one asked why.Ludgerâs ideals were straightforward.
He wanted a guild that welcomed people, that treated members like humans instead of disposable tools. A guild where training mattered, where every member was taught to grow, where no one felt like dead weight. He didnât demand loyalty through fear or intimidation, he built trust, earned respect, and expected effort in return.
And his people gave him that effort. Day after day. Fight after fight. They werenât his family, nothing would ever matter more to him than Elaine, Arslan, and the twins, but they were his responsibility. His creation. His choice. And he protected what he built. He always had.
Which was why his food sat untouched and cold, and why rage simmered behind his eyes. Five of his guild members were imprisoned. For nothing. Used as shields in a political game. And Ludger was genuinely considering going to war over it.
He knew it was reckless. He knew one wrong move could tear apart alliances, disrupt the Empire, and drag Lionfang into the crossfire. But he also knew that if he didnât fight for them, if he didnât move heaven and earth for his people, then every promise heâd made while building the Lionsguard would be hollow.
Kaela finally broke the silence with a dry snort. âYou look like youâre plotting mass murder on an empty stomach.â
Maurien cut her a sharp look, but Ludger didnât react. His eyes stayed on the plate, though the frustration twisting inside him was far heavier than the breakfast he couldnât bring himself to eat.
âIf someone hurts my peopleâŠâ he said quietly, gripping the edge of the table. ââŠthen I donât care who they are. Or what title they hide behind.â
Maurien nodded, calm but firm. âWeâll find them. And weâll do it smartly. Charging in blind helps no one, not you, not them.â
Kaelaâs grin widened. âWe can always turn the Empire upside down after we save them.â
Ludger didnât answer. He simply filled his empty stomach since he would need all the energy he could get. Whatever the Rodericks were planning, whatever trap theyâd set. He was done waiting.
When breakfast finally ended, Maurien finishing his tea, Kaela stealing the last piece of fruit, the three of them followed Viola out of the estate and onto the streets of the capital. Carriages rolled by, guards marched in formation, and the morning bells echoed across marble avenues. It was a world waking up⊠but Ludger felt none of its rhythm.
Viola led the way, keeping her pace quick and purposeful. âWeâre heading to the Senate complex. Varik is waiting there. Heâll explain exactly what âevidenceâ they used to capture your squad.â
Maurien nodded silently. Kaela cracked her knuckles as they walked. Ludger stayed a step behind Viola, listening but still simmering.
Viola continued, her voice dipping just enough to show how serious she was. âIâve already sent messages to my grandfather and to Lucius.â
That made Ludger lift an eyebrow. âLucius Hakuen?â
He remembered the man from the southern expedition, the one helping build the bridge toward the archipelago labyrinth. Lucius was competent, strong, and irritatingly charismatic⊠but Ludger had never decided if he trusted him.
Viola caught the shift in his expression immediately.
âI know what youâre thinking,â she said. âBut we need support for this. As much as we can get. Especially from factions that wonât immediately side with House Roderick.â
Ludgerâs voice was flat. âYou trust him far too easily.â
Viola stopped walking just long enough to give him a sharp glare over her shoulder. The kind of glare that wouldâve shut up any normal twelve-year-old.
Ludger didnât shut up. He added, completely deadpan and with zero humor, âIs it because you like his face? Even after you broke his nose?â
Kaela choked on her own spit. Maurien exhaled through his nose, fighting a smile.
Viola, however, did
not
laugh. She turned fully toward Ludger, expression narrowed and dangerous for a moment.
He sighed. âSorry.â
She huffed, waving a hand dismissively as she resumed walking. âI always knew you werenât cut out for politics. Or diplomacy. Youâre barely cut out for talking.â
Kaela snorted. âSheâs not wrong.â
Ludger didnât respond, but he didnât deny it either.
As they continued toward the Senateâs towering buildings, something heavier hung in the air around them. It wasnât just Ludgerâs anger, it was the way that anger had
shifted
him. He normally carried an undercurrent of dry humor, quiet amusement, or a faint smirk even in dangerous situations. He always found something to be wry about, even if only in his own head. But now? There was none of that. No sarcasm. No mocking comments. No half-smile. Just a hard, quiet tension radiating off him like heat from stone. Even his movements were different, tighter, sharper, as if he were ready to strike at the next bad piece of news.
Maurien noticed first. He kept glancing at Ludger from the corner of his eye, posture raised slightly as if ready to intervene if the boy acted rashly. Kaela, usually thrilled by chaos, wasnât teasing him anymore. She watched him carefully, eyes narrowed, sensing the dangerous edge beneath the surface. Even Viola, who had seen Ludger fight, seen him bleed, seen him reckless, walked a bit closer than usual, as if she wanted to keep him anchored.
This version of Ludger was rare. He wasnât reckless. He wasnât unstable. He was furious. And for the people who knew him, even lightly, that was terrifying.Because Ludger was always the calm one. Always the pragmatic one. Always the one who could smile after a fight or shrug off a setback.
Seeing him like this⊠with his usual levity stripped away⊠with his gaze dark and his mana coiled tight beneath his skinâŠit worried everyone. It meant something had been pushed too far. And the capital was about to find out what that meant.
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