That evening, Ludger made his way home. The twins tackled his legs as usual, but today his mind wasnât on impromptu training drills or their excited chatter. He waited. Patiently. Quietly.
Arslan returned later than usual, shoulders slumped, eyes carrying the same tired determination of a man slowly drowning in paperwork. He dragged himself inside and groaned.
âBy the heaves⊠finding work for dozens of kids that
isnât
dangerous,
isnât
illegal, and
doesnât
put stupid amounts of responsibility on their shoulders is impossible.â He tossed a stack of papers onto the table. âYouâd think with a whole town and an entire guild, weâd have more options.â
Ludger didnât respond.
Arslan narrowed his eyes. ââŠWhat is that look?â
Ludger leaned back in his chair. âDid Torvares tell you anything about the new recruits?â
Arslan blinked, confused. Then frowned.
âNo. Not a word.â
That wasnât normal. Torvares informed Arslan about every batch of recruits, names, origins, training status, strengths, weaknesses. Always. Without exception. So why keep quiet this time?
Why bring them personally? And why hide details from both Ludger
and
Arslan? Ludgerâs gaze darkened slightly.Something was wrong. And Torvares knew it. But he wasnât talking.
Ludger didnât drop it. He leaned forward slightly, elbows on his knees, eyes fixed on his father with that calm, dissecting stare he used during interrogations.
âDid you notice anything odd about them?â he asked.
Arslan scratched his chin, thinking back. âOdd? Hm⊠they introduced themselves normally. Polite. Disciplined. Good posture. Good manners.â He shrugged. âNothing out of place.â
He paused a moment longer, then added, âThey looked fine to me, Luds.â
Ludger didnât respond right away. Fine? Fine how? The tall girlâs discipline was too perfect. The lean boyâs nerves were masked but sharp. And the final girl, she had avoided his eyes like looking at him would burn her. Fine wasnât the word heâd use.
Arslan raised an eyebrow at Ludgerâs silence. âAre you being paranoid? Seeing threats where there arenât any? Or⊠is this about politics?â He gestured vaguely toward the air. âBecause with the Lionsguardâs sudden fame and nobles crawling around like ants, I wouldnât blame you. Perhaps you are too tired, you never take breaks, after all.â
Ludger exhaled slowly. Was it paranoia? A side effect of handling nobles and underworld scum for months? Or was it instinct, the same instinct that kept him alive in labyrinths and bandit dens? He couldnât say for sure.
Arslan leaned forward. âSon, is something bothering you?â
For a brief second, Ludger considered telling him the truth, about the girlâs strange behavior, about Torvares coming personally instead of sending a guard, about the feeling that the trio werenât recruits but pieces in a larger game. But he stopped himself.
Speaking that aloud would plant seeds of suspicion. In Arslan. In the guild. In the recruits themselves. If Ludger was wrong, heâd risk paranoia spreading through Lionfang like wildfire. If he was right⊠those seeds needed to be planted carefully.
So he shook his head.
âNo,â he said. âNothingâs wrong. I just wanted to know what to expect from them. So I know how to deal with training.â
Arslan nodded slowly, accepting the answer without pushing further. âFair enough.â
Ludger leaned back as Arslan stood to sort papers, his thoughts swirling beneath a calm expression. He realized then that he should keep his suspicions quiet. At least for now.
The last thing he needed was panic, mistrust, or whispers among guild members, especially the newcomers. That was how factions formed. How problems grew. If Torvares was hiding something⊠he would find it out. But he would do it quietly. Carefully. Without stirring the waters. Because sometimes, loud problems could be crushed with earth and stone. But the quiet ones⊠Those required patience.
Ludger decided, reluctantly, to let a few days pass before making any moves. Observing the trio quietly would tell him more than any direct question. The tall girl with amber eyes, the runner boy, and especially the quiet one⊠if there was something Torvares hadnât said, it would surface eventually.
Heâd watch. Heâd wait. Heâd unravel it piece by piece. That was the plan.
And, of course, nothing in Ludgerâs life ever went according to plan. The very next day, chaos arrived early.
Ludger had just finished sorting through a stack of documents, logistics for shipments bound for the Velis League: mana cores sorted by grade, froststeel bars stacked by purity, delivery routes checked twice for bandit activity. Arslan had nearly passed out from relief when Ludger took the paperwork off his hands.
With the last seal stamped, Ludger pushed the chair back and stepped out of the guild office, just in time to hear a violent
CRACK
echo through the entire entrance hall.
Ludger froze. He knew that sound. Someone had kicked the guild door.
Not nudged. Not knocked. Kicked. Which was impressive, considering the door was
open.
He stepped forward just as the wooden frame finished rattling from the impact.
Every Lionsguard member present turned toward the entrance.
Standing there like he owned the place was a young man, late teens, maybe seventeen or eighteen, lean but muscular, carrying a long sword strapped across his back in a showy diagonal sheath. On his opposite side hung a small travelerâs backpack, patched but well-kept. He wore a confident smile that hovered somewhere between charming and punchable.
His boots were dusted from the long road, but his steps were light, controlled. He walked like heâd been trained. Head high. Shoulders relaxed. Eyes scanning the room with amusement, mischief, and challenge rolled into one expression.
He cracked his knuckles.
âWell,â the young man said, grin widening, âso this is the famous Lionsguard, huh?â
Several members stiffened immediately. A few recruits blinked in confusion. Darnell groaned under his breath.
Ludgerâs eye twitched. Of course. Of
course
trouble walked in kicking doors the very morning Ludger promised himself a quiet observational period.
The young man looked around, sizing up every single person he saw⊠then his gaze landed squarely on Ludger. And the confident smile sharpened, like heâd just found exactly who he was looking for.
A low, exasperated groan rolled across the guild hall, one Ludger recognized instantly. Kaela.
She was sitting at her usual table with Harold and Kharnek, nursing a drink and a sour mood sheâd been carrying ever since Violaâs birthday party, for reasons that Ludger still didnât understand and wasnât sure he wanted to. The moment the new arrival kicked the door, her whole posture screamed:
Oh no. Not him.
The young manâs smile brightened the instant he heard her. He pivoted smoothly, eyes lighting up.
âWell, well, well, Kaela,â he said, voice full of smug familiarity. âLong time no see.â
Kaela didnât bother standing. Didnât bother smiling. Didnât even bother acknowledging him properly.
She just took a long sip from her mug and muttered, âUnfortunately.â
The young man only laughed, clearly delighted by her irritation. âI didnât think you were actually serious about joining a guild. But then I heard the rumors. Lionsguard. New border town. Strong members. Some kid vice guildmaster terrorizing nobles.â
His grin widened.
âOh, and you know how I love rumors.â
Ludger turned slowly toward Kaela, one eyebrow raised.
Explanation? Now.
Kaela felt the weight of his stare but didnât give him anything useful. She just clicked her tongue and tossed her hair behind her shoulder.
For weeks she had been oddly moody. Ever since the birthday party, sheâd been snappier, drinking more, and shooting Ludger occasional glares whenever someone mentioned his sculptures. He had suspected it was related to him not making a sculpture of her, but Kaela being Kaela, she refused to confirm or deny anything.
Now she snorted at the newcomer, making it clear she was not about to start explaining anything today either. The young man, completely oblivious or simply bold, strode into the hall like it belonged to him and plopped himself down right on the table where Kaela, Harold, and Kharnek were drinking.
Harold raised an eyebrow but didnât move. Kharnek glanced at the kid once, judged him as ânot prey,â and returned to his drink. Kaelaâs eye twitched, but she didnât kick him off⊠which meant she knew him well enough not to break his ribs.
Probably. The newcomer grinned around the table.
âSo this is where you ended up,â he said, gesturing lazily at the guild hall. âDrinking with northerners, veterans, and apparently teaching kids. Quite the downgrade from hunting bandits, donât you think?â
Kaela deadpanned, âSit properly or Iâll break your legs.â
He held up both hands, unbothered. âAh, thereâs the Kaela I remember.â
Ludger watched all of this with a growing sense of annoyance, and curiosity. The room was buzzing. New kids leaned forward. Recruits exchanged looks. Even Yvar peeked out from behind the ledger room, adjusting his glasses like a nervous owl.
Whoever this guy was⊠Kaela tolerated him. Kharnek didnât crush him. Harold didnât throw him out. That alone was unusual. But what mattered most was the way he kept glancing at Ludger, evaluating him, measuring him, as if already deciding something important. And Ludger could already tell: This wasnât a random traveler. This was another complication dropped in his lap. A complication with history attached to Kaela.
Ludger finally had enough of watching from a distance.
He walked toward the table, steps slow, controlled, and carrying just enough weight that the guild hall subtly quieted. Harold glanced up. Kharnek lifted an eyebrow. Kaela pretended not to notice him approaching even though her shoulders tensed like a cornered cat. Ludger stopped beside the table.
âKaela,â he said flatly, âwho is this guy? Or should I throw him outside first and ask questions later?â
Kaela didnât even look at him.
She just snorted, loudly, like an annoyed child whose toy had been taken away. The newcomer laughed.
âOh, come on, thatâs rude. At least let me introduce myself before you punt me through the door.â
He swung one leg down from the table and gave Ludger a casual salute.
âNameâs Renvar. Random adventurer, occasional scout, impressive flirt, depending on who you askâŠâ Kaela groaned at that part, which he ignored completely. âI ran into Kaela a few times on the road. Usually when she was⊠uh, what was it?â
He snapped his fingers.
âRight. Exterminating kidnappers. Lots and
lots
of kidnappers.â
Kaela muttered, âIdiots always scream too much.â
Renvar nodded enthusiastically. âYeah, it was impressive. And terrifying. Mostly terrifying.â
Ludger stared at him without blinking. Renvar kept smiling, though the smile got slightly more nervous.
âAnyway,â Renvar continued, âI heard rumors about this place. The Lionsguard. New rising guild. Strong fighters. And apparently,â he leaned back with a grin, âthey terrorize nobles across the empire.â
The guild hall collectively turned toward Ludger. Including Kaela, who raised an eyebrow like she wanted to see how heâd respond. Ludger crossed his arms.
âWe donât terrorize anyone.â
Renvar blinked. âReally? Thatâs not what the rumors saââ
âI,â Ludger said, tapping his own chest with one finger, âterrorize anyone who gets on
my
nerves.â
Silence. Then Harold choked on his drink. Kharnek smirked like heâd just found a new favorite line. Kaela broke into a tiny, traitorous snicker before catching herself. Renvarâs confident grin wavered for a moment.
ââŠRight. Good to know.â
Ludger looked him up and down again, assessing, calculating.
Renvar wasn't just some bragging idiot. He had the look of someone who could actually fight, someone whoâd survived more than his stories let on. And someone dumb enough, or bold enough, to walk into the Lionsguard uninvited.
Ludger wasnât sure yet if that was good or bad. But one thing was certain:
This guy wasnât here by accident.
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