Ludger looked back toward the forge, where Raukorâs silhouette passed by the window, broad shoulders filling half the frame.
âSo Torvares didnât just call him troublesome because of his attitude,â Ludger said quietly. âHe meant politically.â
âExactly.â Yvar nodded. âA beastman showing up in Lionfang? That will draw attention. Maybe not today. Maybe not tomorrow. But someone, somewhere, will hear about it.â
Ludger crossed his arms, processing it. Still⊠he didnât regret bringing Raukor here. If anything, the manâs presence only made Lionfang feel stronger, rougher, more alive.
âGood,â Ludger said. âLet them come.â
Yvar groaned. âNo, Ludger, that is
not
the takeaway.â
But Ludger was already thinking ahead. A rare beastman blacksmith. Froststeel stockpiles. A forging path to unlock. And a birthday gift to create. If trouble was coming, heâd be ready.
Yvar adjusted his glasses, clearly preparing to give another cautionary warning. âJust⊠be careful around him, Ludger. Beastmen may not all be spies, but history sticks. Donât reveal too much. Not about the guild, not about our politics, not aboutââ
Ludger cut him off. âReveal what, exactly?â
Yvar blinked. âWhat?â
Ludger stared at him, expression flat, deadpan. âYvar, we have
two
famous bandit hunters living
inside
the guild. Maurien and Kaela. They stroll in and out like they own the place.â
Yvar opened his mouth, but Ludger kept going.
âWe exposed an underworld smuggling network crossing between the Empire and the Velis League. We dragged Verk, a councilor with advanced runic armor, out of hiding. We survived his manor exploding so hard it registered on half the capitalâs seismometers.â
Yvar shifted his weight, uneasy.
âAnd,â Ludger added, voice steady and unamused, âwe forced the Rodericks, one of the wealthiest, most connected imperial families, to abandon their estate and flee like rats because they couldnât fight us openly.â
Yvar stared. Ludger continued, unfazed.
âAt this point, itâs pretty obvious weâre hunting down anyone who gets in our way. We donât exactly have a âmysterious peaceful guildâ reputation anymore.â
Silence hung for a long moment. Yvar blinked once. Twice. Then a third time, slower, as if the realization was sinking deeper with each repetition.
Finally, he let out a long, exhausted sigh. âActually⊠youâre right.â He removed his glasses, pinched the bridge of his nose, then put them back on. âWe
donât
have to hide it anymore.â
Ludger shrugged. âExactly.â
Yvar stared up at the sky, muttering, âTorvares is going to lose a decade of lifespan when he hears you say thatâŠâ
Ludger didnât deny it. And with Raukor Ironmane settling into Lionfang, things were only going to get louder from here.
Ludger let the topic hang for a moment, then shifted gears. âAlright. Enough about spies and trouble. What do you actually know about beastmen? Their land. Their people.â
Yvar perked up at the change, pushing his glasses up the bridge of his nose. âQuite a bit, actually. Theyâre a very diverse bunch. Their homeland stretches across a massive region south of the Velis League, mostly uncharted by imperial cartographers because they donât allow foreigners too deep. Itâs dominated by enormous forests, old, dense, magically rich. They call them the Primal Groves.â
Ludger nodded slowly, letting the image form in his mind: towering trees, hidden clans, mana running wild under the soil.
Yvar continued, warming to the subject. âBeastmen donât build cities like humans or the League. They donât have fortresses or academies. They have
forest clans
. Each clan is centered around its species type, lion clans, wolf clans, bear clans, serpent clans, and so on. Theyâre tribal, but not primitive. Their craftsmanship is excellent, their cultural traditions are ancient, and their hunters can track prey better than most imperial scouts.â
He paused, adjusting a scroll under his arm. âMixed beastmen exist too. Theyâre not common, but theyâre accepted. Their society is surprisingly stable when left alone. ButâŠâ
He sighed. âTheyâve been at odds with the Velis League for a very long time.â
Ludger tilted his head. âWhy?â
âPollution,â Yvar said simply. âThe Leagueâs city academies produce a lot of smoke, metal fumes, alchemical waste, magical discharge. When the wind shifts, dirty mist drifts south and reaches the forests close to the borders. It corrupts the mana there. Sickens the wildlife. Sometimes even sickens beastmen who breathe too much of it.â Yvar shook his head. âItâs a problem the League has never solved.â
Ludger held his chin, thoughtful. âThat matches something I heard in Coria. The prisoners we captured said the berserker draughts were being used on beastmen too.â
Yvar froze mid-step, eyes sharpening. âYouâre sure?â
âThatâs what they said.â
The scholar frowned deeply, thinking it through. âIf thatâs true⊠then itâs probably the work of rebel clans or splinter groups. Beastmen arenât a unified force. Some of them resent the League so much that theyâd use anything to fuel a war. Even something as dangerous as berserker draughts. They also are against those who are mainly pacifists.â
He exhaled slowly, frustration in his voice. âBut I donât know the details. The Empire has almost no formal contact with the clans, and the League only shares sanitized reports.â
Ludger crossed his arms, eyes narrowing. âSo someone might be arming beastmen rebels with berserker draughts. Someone who got them from Verk and the Rodericks.â
âAnd someone would profit from the chaos,â Yvar added. âWar is good business for certain people.â
Ludger didnât need to say it out loud. He already had suspects.
Roderick. Verk. And whoever else was hiding behind their shadows. He let out a slow breath, watching the cold air curl. This world kept getting uglier the deeper he dug. And he wasnât planning to stop digging.
Ludger let Yvarâs explanation sit for a moment, then rolled his shoulders as if physically shifting back into the realm of logistics. âAlright. First thing,â he said, voice settling into that practical cadence everyone in the guild recognized. âSend a daily amount of froststeel to Raukor. Not the entire stockpile at once, heâll need time to sort through it, test the purity, decide what he wants to work with. But make sure itâs steady. He asked for it âas soon as possible,â and Iâm not going to argue with a two-meter lion who pulls iron carriages across frozen roads because he feels like it.â
Yvarâs eyebrows shot up, and he clutched his scrolls a little tighter. âDaily? Ludger, thatâs⊠thatâs a substantial amount of froststeel.â
âIâll be learning from him for a while,â Ludger continued, completely unfazed by Yvarâs shock. âForging is complicated and time-consuming. If I want to get anywhere near making Violaâs mountain-destroying sword, I need to focus.â
Yvar stopped dead in his tracks and stared at him. It wasnât a subtle stare. It was the kind of stare that screamed
please tell me youâre joking before I start crying.
âI sincerely, deeply hope youâre joking.â
Ludger tilted his head, genuinely confused by the reaction. âWhy would I be?â
That question alone made Yvar let out a slow, soul-drained sigh. He pinched the bridge of his nose, the way scholars did when dealing with particularly stubborn historical errors, or Ludger. âBecause giving Lady Viola a
mountain-obliterating magical sword
as a birthday present might send the wrong political message. Or the wrong personal message. Or the wrong âdonât worry, my grandson wonât start a small warâ message to Lord Torvares.â
âIt would be practical,â Ludger argued, completely serious. âSheâd use it.â
âThatâs exactly the problem!â Yvar sputtered, sounding more like a panicked tutor than a guild strategist. He took a moment to compose himself, adjusting his glasses with a resigned exhale. âListen. It would be better to give Lady Viola a gift that reflects the positive image you have of her, not something that could flatten a mountain range. Something personal. Something meaningful. Something that doesnât require the Empire to rewrite its border maps if she gets annoyed at someone.â
Ludger crossed his arms, unimpressed with the argument. âLike what? What does she even like that isnât related to swords or beating people up?â
Yvar inhaled, as though preparing to explain something delicate. âLady Viola has always cherished the portraits of her mother.â His tone softened, respectful, carrying that unspoken understanding that her late mother was a topic treated gently by everyone close to the Torvares family. âShe keeps all the portraits in her room now. She⊠brought them there herself. From the hallways, from the old sitting rooms, from everywhere. Lord Torvares lets her keep them. He pretends he doesnât notice, but he does.â
Ludger paused. Hard. Heat and frost swirled together in his breath. He had not expected that answer. âIâm not a painter,â he said after a moment, the dryness of his tone bordering on absurdity. âIâve never seen those portraits. I donât even know what they look like.â
âThatâs because she took all of them,â Yvar said with a small, tired smile. âEvery last one in the house. Lord Torvares might still have a single portrait hidden away in his office, he keeps a few things from the past sealed up where she wonât accidentally find them.â
Ludger stared toward the manor, mind spinning in a direction he had not anticipated today. Portraits. Her mother. A memory Viola kept close enough to gather into her room and guard like treasure. That was a clue. A meaningful one. But it didnât solve the problem that Ludger had never painted anything, sculpted stone not canvas, and had absolutely no visual reference for Violaâs mother.
So now he had a new series of tasks added to the pile: learn forging, master the basics under Raukor, continue training the second squad, prepare Overdrive lessons, and somehow craft a gift worthy of Viola, one that wasnât a mountain-destroying sword or a badly drawn stick figure.
Ludger inhaled slowly, then exhaled into the cold air, watching the fog swirl. âOne problem at a time,â he muttered.
But he already knew, deep down: Violaâs birthday gift had just become far more complicated than forging a sword capable of erasing a mountain.
The next morning arrived with the usual Lionfang chill, a biting wind that cut across the northern district and carried the scent of froststeel, pine, and distant cookfires. Ludger made his way toward Raukorâs forge just after sunrise, expecting to find the blacksmith asleep or maybe warming up for the day.
Instead, he saw smoke rising from the buildingâs ventilation shafts, a thick, steady plume that meant the forge had been burning for hours. Raukor had clearly started working well before dawn. Ludger wasnât surprised. Beastmen didnât exactly strike him as creatures who enjoyed sleeping in. Maybe they did in the winter, but Ludger frowned wondering if that was a rude thought.
At least the noise was minimal. Just a low, rhythmic
thunk
barely audible through the thick stone walls. Good. The last thing he wanted was some idiot villager complaining about the sound of hammering, turning it into a rumor about âthe dangerous beastman making war machines,â and escalating it into an unnecessary political headache. Lionfang had enough chaos without building a new one.
But as Ludger approached the front of the workshop, something else grabbed his attention.
A pile. A big pile. A chaotic mountain of twisted, malformed, utterly ruined metal. He stopped walking. His eye twitched.
Because every single warped fragment, bent blade, melted lump, and unrecognizable chunk of scrap metal in that pile was made of froststeel.
Not cheap iron. Not practice alloy. Not junk metal from old caravans. No, Raukor had apparently spent the night turning perfectly good froststeel into⊠this.
Ludger picked up a piece from the top, a blade that looked like it had tried to curl itself into a pretzel before giving up. The color was off too. Froststeel normally had a faint blue sheen. This one⊠didnât. It looked burned.
Something cold prickled down Ludgerâs spine. He narrowed his eyes at the workshop door, a bad feeling settling in his gut. Very bad.
Because nothing about this pile said ânormal blacksmithing.âAnd everything about it said: This man was experimenting. Hard. And he didnât care how much froststeel he destroyed in the process. Ludger exhaled slowly, staring at the disaster of expensive scrap.
â...This might be worse than I expected.â
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