Ludger exhaled slowly through his nose as the pieces fell into place. Ragdar wasnât the architect of anything. He wasnât even a strategist. He was muscle, brutish, loud, easy to manipulate, and proud enough to think rebellion meant smashing something with his fists. Which meant someone else, someone with actual brains, had pulled his strings.
âLooks like your guild wasnât built on your idea,â Ludger said, more to himself than to Ragdar. âSomeone with a functioning brain got involved. Someone who knew exactly how to use people like you.â
Ragdarâs glare deepened, but he didnât speak. He didnât need to. The truth was obvious. Ludger stood and paced slowly across the chamber, his boots crunching over frozen dust and broken stone. His voice echoed faintly off the walls as he spoke, tone detached, almost instructional.
âUnderworld guilds are easy to control,â he said. âToo easy, honestly.â
He lifted his hand and let the stone orb float lazily above his palm.
âThey donât care about honor. They donât care about reputation. They donât even care about political alliances.â
He pointed at Ragdar with the sphere.
âThey only care about money. And desperation.â
Ragdarâs face tightened, not in disagreement, but in bitter acknowledgment. Ludger continued, his tone shifting into the calm cadence of someone explaining a dangerous system with uncomfortable insight.
âThrow enough coin at them, and theyâll kidnap nobles⊠or farmers. Theyâll steal letters⊠or children. Theyâll sabotage caravans, spy on estates, incite riots, smuggle draughts, destroy evidence. Whatever the person paying them wants.â
He shrugged, expression unreadable behind the mask.
âAnd because they act in the shadows, they donât get tracked. They donât get investigated. They donât get blamed. They become unofficial tools.â
He crouched again, staring Ragdar in the eyes.
âThatâs the smartest part. Someone out there is turning troublemakers into gears. Cogs in a machine. Disposable weapons.â
Ragdar swallowed hard, but kept silent. Ludger leaned in slightly, his voice dropping to a cold whisper.
âItâs a perfect setup to control the empire from the shadows. You take the rats, pay them, aim them, and watch them chew holes into your enemies. And if those rats get caught?â
He tapped Ragdarâs iron restraints with one finger.
âTheyâre just underworld scum. Nobody investigates deeper.â
A long pause. Only Ragdarâs breathing filled the space. Ludger stood again, dusting his hands.
âThe scary part? Someone wealthy enough, and probably patient enough, to build multiple guilds like yours⊠is already playing the long game.â
His tone didnât change. But the air in the chamber suddenly felt colder. And Ragdar finally looked terrified.
Ludger rose to his feet with a quiet exhale, brushing his hands together as if wiping off dust, or the last remnants of patience he had for this interrogation. The gesture was small, almost mundane, but it carried a certain finality. Ragdar recognized it immediately.
ââŠLetâs get this over with,â Ludger said, tone flat and clinical.
Ragdar didnât whine or scream or beg. He just let out a long breath. Not a broken one, not resignation or fear. It was the sigh of a man who simply understood the end had arrived, and accepted it.
Before Ludger could act, Ragdar spoke again, his voice low and oddly steady.
âI heard rumorsâŠâ he muttered. âSaid you couldâve joined the Imperial Magic Academy. With ease, eventually gained a noble title. With talent like yours, theyâd have thrown gold at your feet. Why didnât you go?â
Ludger paused.
His mask hid his face, but his posture changed just enough to show irritation. âNone of your business.â
But then he added, more slowly, âSince youâre a dead man⊠I guess you can die without that doubt.â
He folded his arms, voice still calm, but sharper around the edges.
âI wasnât interested in being lured in by the nobles in the capital.â
Ragdar snorted painfully. âSo you hate them too. Then why work with Torvares? Just because of your half sister?â
Ludgerâs eyebrow twitched behind the mask. âHalf of the reason, yes.â
He stepped closer until Ragdar had to crane his neck to meet his gaze.
âThe other half is simple,â Ludger continued. âThere are nobles whoâve wanted the Torvares family gone for years. The same ones who targeted Viola in the past. The same ones who helped spark wars in the north. The type who thrive on chaos and profit from suffering.â
His voice dropped, quiet, cold, and honest.
âTheyâre the exact kind of people I hate most.â
Ragdar stared into Ludgerâs visible eye, dark, steady, unflinching. There was no righteousness there. No heroic glow. Just the sharp focus of a boy who had already killed more monsters and criminals than most grown warriors. After a long moment, Ragdarâs shoulders sagged. His gaze slipped downward.
ââŠI see,â he muttered.
Not defiant. Not angry. Just⊠accepting. He finally understood that the boy in front of him wasnât a watchdog. He wasnât a nobleâs pawn. He wasnât a hero or a villain. He was a force of nature with his own war to fight. And Ragdar had been standing in the wrong place when that force arrived.
Ludger stepped fully into Ragdarâs shadow, the weight of his presence settling like a cold stone across the broken chamber. This was the part he normally didnât bother withâthe part where people begged or cursed or tried a last-minute bargain. But Ragdar had fought hard, and more importantly, he had fought honestly in his own twisted way.
So Ludger gave him something he rarely offered.
âAny last words?â he asked quietly. âI donât give much leeway to enemies. But Iâm feeling⊠charitable.â
Ragdar didnât raise his head immediately. For a moment, he simply breathed, slow, rough, rattling breaths through damaged lungs. Then he nodded once.
ââŠI accept it,â Ragdar muttered. âMy death. I earned it.â His voice wasnât bitter anymore. Just tired. âI fought the only way I knew. Lost. So⊠thatâs it.â
He exhaled again, but this one wasnât the calm acceptance from earlier. It trembled slightly, revealing hesitation, something unspoken weighing on him.
âThereâs one thingâŠâ Ragdar said, voice rough. âOne last thing.â
Ludgerâs eyes narrowed behind the mask. âWhat?â
Ragdar hesitated, as if uncertain whether he even had the right to ask. âI heard rumors. Said youâve been training some kids in your Lionsguard.â
Ludger frowned. âWhat about it?â
Ragdar looked up, meeting Ludgerâs gaze head-on for the first time since heâd been tied up. The madness from earlier was gone. The bravado, the rage, the fanaticism, stripped away by defeat, replaced by something almost⊠sober.
âYou train them proper,â Ragdar said. âTeach. Discipline. Strength. Respect.â His jaw clenched. âBut not everyone grows up with that. There are a lot of people like me out there. People who never had guidance. Never had choices. Easy to use. Easy to turn into pawns.â
He swallowed hard.
âIf you want to stop more underworld guilds from forming⊠you should watch for people like that. The ones no one else bothered to look after.â
Ludgerâs stare sharpened.
It was rare, very rare, for dying men to care about anything other than themselves. Ragdarâs words were rough, imperfect, but genuine in the rawest way. Ludgerâs fingers twitched slightly, not in pity, but in recognition of something deeper.
âYouâre talking like you have someone specific in mind,â Ludger said slowly. âDo you?â
Silence stretched, long enough that Ludger considered the possibility Ragdar would die without answering.
But finally, the big man let out one last weary sigh.
ââŠMy village,â Ragdar whispered. âTwo days south of here. Someone there might⊠go down the path I did. If no one stops them.â
His voice faded. His shoulders sagged. And for the first time, he looked small. He said nothing more.
Ludger didnât draw out the ending. He lifted a hand, summoned a smooth sphere of earth, and flicked it forward with casual precision. The stone struck Ragdar square in the forehead with a blunt
thock
, not hard enough to crush bone, just enough to knock him senseless.
Ragdarâs eyes rolled back. His head slumped forward. Silence swallowed the chamber.
Ludger stepped closer, raised his right hand, and formed a narrow stream of mana, controlled, cold, razor-thin. A compressed arrow of water. He pressed two fingers to Ragdarâs chest, right over the heart. And fired.
Pssht.
The water sliced through skin, muscle, and bone in an instant, piercing the heart from point-blank range. No explosion. No scream. Just a brief shudder through the big manâs body as life left him.
Ragdar Ironthorn, guildmaster of the Iron Moth Brotherhood, died with far fewer regrets than most criminals Ludger had met. Probably the closest thing to redemption the man would ever get.
Ludger stepped back and exhaled, letting the tension drain from his shoulders. He wasnât in the business of rehabilitating underworld guilds. He wasnât naĂŻve enough to think he could turn thieves and cutthroats into honorable adventurers. He would never allow people like Ragdar to live anywhere near his family or his guild.
But the manâs last words still sat uneasily in Ludgerâs mind. His way of thinking had a flaw. Only crushing threats wasnât enough. Ignoring the roots of those threats was how more would grow, stronger, smarter, and harder to track. Ragdar was proof of that. Someone with actual intelligence had noticed the instability in the Empire and used men like him as disposable tools. If Ludger continued to ignore the broken pieces of society, someone else might gather them, shape them, and weaponize them again.
He clicked his tongue softly. He didnât want Lionsguard to become a charity. He didnât want to babysit half the Empire. But⊠Leaving obvious problems unattended was an invitation for disaster down the line.
Another sigh escaped him, long, tired, and irritated. He extended his arms, mana pooling and rising in controlled bursts. One by one, he pulled every body, frozen, shattered, or intact, into the dirt. The earth swallowed them noiselessly, sealing shut with the finality of a grave.
Then Ludger conjured a series of fireballs and hurled them around the chamber. Crates burst into flames. Scrolls, maps, and illegal equipment caught fire in seconds. Walls blackened. The underground room filled with smoke and heat until every last trace of the Iron Moth Brotherhood began to burn away.
The flames roared violently, then settled into a steady blaze, consuming the underworldâs remnants. Ludger turned away, walking toward the exit tunnel with quiet steps, the orange glow behind him dancing across the stone walls.
Another problem eliminated. Another mess buried. But his thoughts lingered on Ragdarâs last warning, and the village two days south that might harbor the next threat.
ââŠMore work,â Ludger muttered under his breath, annoyance creeping in. âAs if I needed that.â
He kept walking, leaving the underground inferno to finish the job.
By sunset of the next day, Ludger was already moving through the tunnels beneath the borderlands. The route he carved before made the trip absurdly efficient; what should have been a two-day journey on horseback turned into a few hours of steady running and mana-assisted pacing. When he finally surfaced, it was at the outskirts of a small village Ragdar had pointed him toward.
It was exactly what he expected. Another half-forgotten place rotting in the far corner of someone elseâs territory. A village technically under a nobleâs jurisdiction, yet clearly abandoned by any sense of responsibility. Dirt roads cracked with neglect. Houses with broken roofs. Smoke trickling from only a few chimneys. The kind of place where problems festered quietly because no one with power ever bothered to look.
He didnât bother hiding his face this time. Nobody here knew him. Nobody cared enough to ask questions. He walked openly through the main path, taking everything in with that analytical calm of his. The deeper he moved, the more obvious the poverty became.
Thin silhouettes shuffled between houses. Women washed rags instead of clothes. Men carried baskets of firewood that looked lighter than they should be. Even the air felt heavy with resignation. And then Ludger noticed the building near the center of the village. Or what remained of it.
A half-abandoned house, paint peeling, windows shattered, roof sagging. Old toys, wooden animals, broken dolls, lay scattered near the steps. For a moment Ludger wondered if it had been an orphanage. It certainly looked like one. The type that collapsed when its funding dried up and more mouths needed feeding than anyone could afford.
In front of those broken steps sat a group of children. Seven? Eight? Hard to tell. All of them skinny, pale, clothes patched with whatever scraps someone could find. Dirty faces. Hollow eyes. The kind of tiredness that didnât come from lack of sleep, but from lack of options.
Ludger felt his jaw tighten, just a fraction. Ragdarâs warning made more sense now. Among that cluster of exhausted kids, one figure stood out.
A boy. Tall, shockingly tall.
He couldnât have been older than ten, yet he already matched Ludgerâs height and had broader shoulders. His posture wasnât slouched like the others; he stood with an instinctive readiness, scanning the street with a natural predatory awareness that no child his age should have.
Dark hair. Brown eyes with sharp northern focus. Half northerner. Just like Ragdar.
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