The next morning, Ludger stood with his hands clasped behind his back, watching the second squad guide the younger children through their writing drills. The yard buzzed with activity, kids tracing letters older recruits correcting them, and the occasional argument breaking out about whether a crooked âEâ still counted as an âE.â
Ludgerâs attention drifted, not to the noise in front of him, but to the quiet behind him.
Two presences approached, light, careful, weightless. Not stepping on the ground but
gliding
just above it. Overdrive in the legs, controlled bursts of mana to carry them forward in long, silent stretches.
It was a trick
he
had invented by copying Maurien, and only a handful of people even knew it existed. But these two? He recognized them instantly.
The first presence was steady, composed, trying very hard to mask her breathing. A rhythm that matched disciplined training. The second⊠tripped halfway through a glide somehow, barely recovered, then stumbled again.
Ludger didnât even need Seismic Sense further to identify them. He waited until they were barely two meters behind him, until they thought they had actually pulled it off.
Then he turned around. Viola froze mid-step, one foot still hovering a handâs width above the ground. Lunaâs momentum betrayed her, she yelped, flailed her arms, and landed on both feet with a loud
thump
that defeated the entire purpose of sneaking.
Viola groaned, face twisting. âLuna! I
told
you that I couldnât land softly!â
Ludger stared at them flatly. ââŠYou two are terrible at hiding.â
The second squad and half the kids had stopped to watch, wide-eyed, whispering behind hands.
Ludger sighed and raised an eyebrow. âWhat exactly was the plan?â
Viola straightened, composure snapping back into place. âTo sneak up on you.â
Ludger blinked. âWhy?â
Viola opened her mouth, closed it, opened it again, And said the least convincing line of her life:
âNo reason.â
Ludgerâs stare didnât move.
Luna nudged Viola, whispering loudly, âJust tell him, itâs fineââ
Viola whirled on her with a hiss. âLuna!â
The yard fell into awkward silence as Viola tried to regain whatever scraps of intimidation she had left.
She failed.
Spectacularly.
Finally, with shoulders stiff and cheeks faintly red, she looked back at Ludger and muttered:
ââŠGrandfather sent me.â
Ludger nodded once, unsurprised.
âOf course he did.â
Viola deflated. The ambush was ruined, Luna was mortified, and Ludger had spotted them effortlessly. But at least one thing was clear:
Whatever Torvares wanted⊠it wasnât something he trusted anyone else to deliver. And Viola was only just getting started.
Viola cleared her throat, straightened her posture, and tried to regain whatever dignity she had left after the failed ambush. Luna stood behind her like a guilty shadow, fidgeting with her sleeves.
âAlright,â Viola said, exhaling sharply. âLet me explain before this becomes⊠worse.â
Ludger crossed his arms. âGo on.â
Viola held up a finger, slipping into the tone she used when delivering political news she
really
didnât want to deliver.
âGrandfather has been receiving⊠complaints.â
Ludger didnât react, but internally he wasnât surprised.
âComplaints,â he repeated blandly.
âYes,â Viola confirmed, irritation creeping into her voice. âFrom nobles. From nearby territories. From minor lords.â She took a breath. âTheyâre angry because a lot of children from their lands are suddenly leaving.â
Ludger tilted his head. âTo come here?â
âTo come to
Lionfang
,â Viola corrected, emphasizing the name. âMore specifically, to you.â
Behind her, Luna stepped up. â⊠actually, theyâre leaving in groups sometimes. Some caravans mentioned seeing entire families guiding the children toward Torvares landsâŠâ
Viola nodded. âExactly. Itâs becoming noticeable. And nobles hate when something happens that they canât explain or control.â
Ludger stayed quiet, waiting for the rest. Viola took in another steadying breath and continued, voice low and serious:
âThey think the sudden⊠immigration is suspicious. Too coordinated. Too fast. Too concentrated here.â
Ludger understood the problem immediately.
âSo the rumors started.â
âOf course they did,â Viola said, throwing up her hands. âAnd theyâre spreading like wildfire. Some nobles are claiming youâre teaching kids to cast advanced attack spells. Others say youâre building an underground mage army. Thereâs even a rumor about you creating⊠âsuperchildren.ââ
Ludger blinked. ââŠSuperchildren?â
Viola rubbed her face. âItâs ridiculous, I know. But nobles donât care about accuracy,they care about anything that could threaten their political standing.â
She paced a short circle, frustration simmering beneath her composed exterior.
âAnd because they canât get answers, they complain to my grandfather. Loudly. Repeatedly. Aggressively.â
Ludger nodded once. He had seen this coming the moment the orphans from other territories started showing up. Sooner or later, someone with too much free time and too few brain cells was going to make an issue out of it. Viola finally stopped pacing and faced him squarely.
âWe can control the situation before it grows into something national,â she said firmly. âBut only if you shut them up long enough for Grandfather to settle the matter.â
Ludger raised an eyebrow. âAnd let me guess, I do that, byâŠâ
Violaâs expression tightened, half annoyance, half reluctant admiration.
âBy making the sculptures they keep demanding.â
Luna winced. âTheyâre offering a lot of money⊠and a lot of noise if you refuse.â
Viola nodded. âIf you accept their commissions, even slowly, one at a time, itâll silence them long enough for us to redirect attention and calm the paranoia. Nobles only yell when they feel ignored. Feed them some art, and theyâll have something shiny to distract themselves with.â
Ludger exhaled through his nose. Politics. The one enemy he couldnât punch. But she wasnât wrong. And heâd known he couldnât dodge noble attention forever, not after creating a monument that blessed an entire territory with stat boosts.
Viola stepped closer, lowering her voice.
âThis isnât about bowing to them,â she said. âThis is about preventing them from stirring trouble. Grandfather can handle the political angle. But only
you
can shut up their egos.â
She held out the folded parchment Torvares had given her.
âAnd unfortunately⊠this time, we need you to cooperate, Ludger.â
Ludger stared at the parchment in Violaâs hand for a long, quiet moment before he finally spoke.
âI donât like,â he said slowly, âwhen people try to push me into doing things I have no interest in.â
Viola didnât flinch. She nodded once, firmly, like sheâd been expecting that answer.
âI know,â she said. âBelieve me, I understand. Nobles are demanding, entitled, and think everyone exists to serve their whims. If someone tried to force me into doing their work for them, Iâd set their curtains on fire.â
Luna whispered, âYouâve actually done that.â
Viola hissed, âLuna, quiet.â
But then she sighed and turned back to Ludger with a more composed expression.
âThatâs why I think⊠maybe itâs fine if you show a little force.â
Ludgerâs eyebrow rose. âShow force?â
Viola nodded. âEnough to make them hesitate. Enough to remind them why they should be
polite
and patient while asking you for favors.â
Ludger blinked. âWhat, exactly, do you expect me to do? Destroy their buildings? Collapse the walls around their towns? Crater their fields?â
Luna took a step back, just in case.
Viola lifted both hands defensively. âWhoa, no, no, not that far! Well⊠not usually.â
Ludger stared at her.
Viola cleared her throat. âJust a
demonstration.
Controlled. Small. Something that makes the nobles think before they try to threaten or pressure you. Youâre strong, Ludger. Even nobles understand force better than diplomacy.â
She paused, tapping her chin thoughtfully.
âAnd if you can repair any damage afterward, then, technically, no one should complain. Right?â
Ludgerâs eye twitched. ââŠYou want me to show up, break something important, then fix it?â
Viola hesitated. âIn a manner of speaking.â
Luna whispered, âViola, thatâs⊠insane.â
âItâs practical,â Viola shot back. âIf he shakes the ground under their feet a couple of times, theyâll realize heâs not someone to push around. Then he can accept their sculpture requests at his own pace. No pressure. No threats. Just favors exchanged under the understanding that Ludger is not a servant.â
Ludger exhaled slowly, not entirely sure if she was joking or dead serious. Knowing Viola? Probably dead serious. She stepped closer, expression earnest now, a mix of noble confidence and protective instinct.
âLook⊠I donât want them treating you like a tool. Or like a child they can push. If you give them a reason to fear you just a little, they wonât dare to demand anything ever again. And then, while theyâre still shocked, you give them a beautiful sculpture and suddenly youâre a terrifying artist they
respect.
â
Luna muttered, âThat is⊠somehow the most noble and most unhinged plan Iâve ever heard.â
Viola ignored her.
âJust a few demonstrations,â Viola insisted. âCrack a courtyard, shake a tower, raise a wall from the ground, something flashy, something you can undo in seconds. Youâre a geomancer. You can terrify and impress people simultaneously.â
Ludger rubbed a hand over his face. He really didnât like politics. But⊠He also knew she wasnât wrong. Fear made nobles cautious. Respect made them cooperative. And a repaired demonstration left no lasting damage.
âFine,â Ludger said finally. âA few demonstrations. No collapsing towns.â
Viola grinned victoriously. âPerfect. Thatâs all we need.â
Luna whispered, âI can already hear the nobles screamingâŠâ
Ludger exhaled again. Looks like the next few weeks just got louder.
Viola hesitated for a moment, her earlier confidence cooling into something more cautious. She glanced at Lunaâwho made a tiny âdonât drag me into thisâ gestureâthen looked back at Ludger with the expression of someone about to open a box labeled
Guaranteed Problems Inside.
ââŠThere is another option,â she said.
Ludger immediately narrowed his eyes. âWhat kind of option?â
Viola shifted her weight, fingers brushing her braid. âYouâre not going to like it.â
âI already donât,â Ludger replied flatly. âSay it.â
She drew a long breath, as if preparing him for an impact spell.
âReceive a noble title.â
Ludgerâs expression didnât change.
It
darkened.
Viola continued quickly, before he could interrupt. âGrandfatherâs influence is strong enough. If he pushes the right strings, you could become a baron. Maybe even the baron of Lionfang itself.â
Lunaâs eyes widened slightly at the idea, but she said nothing.
Viola stepped closer, tone firm and surprisingly logical. âThink about it. You already have everything they look for: support from the northerners, international connections through Dalan and Linne, respect from powerful mages like Maurien and Gaius, and influence over an entire generation of students. Nobles already treat you like a political actor. A title would⊠formalize that.â
Ludger didnât move.
She went on. âThey wouldnât be able to complain about you teaching kids. They wouldnât question your sculptures. They couldnât accuse you of disrupting territories because youâd
be
a recognized force. Youâd outrank half the people sending letters.â
Silence.
She held up one fingered hand. âButâthereâs one problem.â
Ludgerâs eyebrow twitched. âOnly one?â
âYouâd have to actually deal with politics,â Viola admitted. âAttend councils, manage land, handle disputes, sign papers⊠listen to nobles whine in person. Youâd have to play the game instead of breaking the board.â
Luna, gently: âYouâd need a desk. A real one.â
Ludger stared at them both for several long seconds, long enough that the second squad paused their lessons behind him, sensing danger. Finally he inhaled. Then said, with perfect clarity:
ââŠhell.
Fucking.
No.â
Viola burst into a grin, bright and victorious. âThought so.â
Luna exhaled in relief. âOh thank the godsâŠâ
Viola added, âI only mentioned it because Grandfather said youâd refuse before he even finished the sentence.â
âThatâs because I have a brain,â Ludger muttered.
Viola shrugged, still smiling. âWell⊠now you definitely have to make a few nobles scream and then sculpture their halls to shut them up.â
She patted his shoulder.
âWelcome to politics, Ludger. You canât escape it⊠but you
can
terrify it.â
Thank you for reading!
Don't forget to follow, favorite, and rate. If you want to read 300 chapters ahead, you can check my patreon:Â /Comedian0