The next morning, Ludger walked toward the guild with the kind of cautious optimism only a fool would entertain, hoping, praying,
begging
the universe for a quiet start to the day. His cup of hot tea steamed in his hand. The streets were calm. The sun hadnât fully risen yet. For a brief moment, he let himself imagine a peaceful morning of literacy lessons and water control drills.
Then he reached the guildâs training yard. Noise slammed into him like a physical force. The chaotic rhythm of wooden swords smacking against shields, the shuffle of uncertain footwork, and, most damning of all, an overly dramatic voice barking corrections with the confidence of a seasoned instructor and the competence of a shoe.
âNOâNOâELBOWS IN! Why are you bending like that?! Stand straight! STRAIGHT! Your stance looks like a drunk chicken trying to squat!â
Ludger stopped dead. His eye twitched. He knew
exactly
whose voice that was. Peering around the corner, Ludgerâs hopes of a peaceful morning died a gruesome death.
Renvar stood in the middle of the yard like a captain commanding his troops, waving a practice sword as though conducting an orchestra made of confused, terrified children. Around him, almost a dozen new students stumbled through footwork drills using the Lionsguardâs official training gear, the heavy wooden swords, reinforced practice shields, and padded gauntlets that were definitely not meant to be taken out without permission.
The same gear Ludger kept locked away. The same gear only the second squad was ever allowed to touch unsupervised. The same gear Renvar apparently decided belonged to him now.
Renvar strutted between them, tapping ankles with the flat of his sword, correcting stances with obnoxious enthusiasm, and shouting commands loud enough for half the town to hear.
âTo the left! Noâyour OTHER left!âwho taught you people to hold a spear backwards?!â
The newcomers looked exhausted, confused, and miserable. Renvar looked thrilled. Ludger inhaled slowly. Then marched forward. He didnât announce himself. He didnât clear his throat. He didnât warn anyone. He simply approached Renvar from behind, lifted a hand, And brought it down in a sharp, precise
chop
to the top of his skull.
The impact echoed across the yard. Despite being taller, Renvar crumpled immediately, dropping to one knee and clutching his head like someone had dropped a boulder on it.
âOWâOWâWHATâWHY?!â he yelped, eyes watering.
Ludger looked down at him with the flat expression of a man rapidly losing faith in humanity. âYouâre loud. And stupid.â
Renvar blinked up at him, wounded both physically and emotionally. âI was helping!â
âNo,â Ludger corrected, âyou were making noise.â
He then turned to the group of newcomers, who froze mid-motion the moment his attention shifted to them. Some still held their stances in awkward angles, their bodies trembling. Others held weapons upside-down. A few looked ready to drop dead just to escape the situation. Ludgerâs voice dropped into the dangerously calm register that made even seasoned Lionsguard members straighten.
âWho,â he asked, âdecided it was a good idea to take guild training equipment without permission?â
As one, the kids all avoided his gaze. One stared so intently at the sky it was like divine revelation might descend. Another stared at her shoes, pretending the scuffed leather contained the secrets of mana theory. A third simply turned around as if he could hide behind his own shadow. Silence.
Then Renvar, still crouched and rubbing his head, raised a timid hand.
âUhh⊠It was me?â
Ludger stared at him. Just stared.
Renvar swallowed. ââŠOr it might have been me.â
The newcomers trembled.
Ludgerâs eyebrow twitched. âWhy?â
Renvar puffed up his chest again, confidence returning like a cockroach crawling out from under a boot. âBecause! They need training! And Iâm good at teaching!â
Ludger glanced at the crooked stances, reversed grips, and the one girl somehow holding a shield backwards like a turtle shell. He turned back to Renvar.
âYouâre not good at teaching,â he said flatly. âYouâre good at annoying me.â
Renvar deflated like a punctured wineskin. The students stood frozen, terrified that another chop might be incoming. Ludger rubbed the bridge of his nose. Another morning. Another headache. Another disaster courtesy of the new idiot who refused to behave like a normal human being. And Ludger knew, deep in his bones, that this was just the beginning.
Ludger drew in a slow breath, letting his irritation simmer just long enough to stay sharp but not enough to explode. He stared down at Renvar, who was still kneeling and clutching his head like a wounded animal. âDid the kids ask for this?â Ludger asked, his voice deceptively calm.
Renvar blinked rapidly, clearly scrambling for an answer. His gaze flicked from Ludger to the children and back to the open sky, as if hoping divine inspiration would drop into his skull. After several painful seconds, he let out a defeated sigh. ââŠThe idea was mine,â he admitted, almost whispering it. To his credit, he didnât try to shift the blame onto the newcomers, if he had, Ludger would have buried him waist-deep in the ground before anyone could blink. Even if they had asked for it.
Ludger turned his attention back to the group of kids, who suddenly became collectively fascinated by everything except his face. Some stared at their feet. Others stared at clouds. One boy seemed intensely interested in a pebble he nudged with his shoe. They all radiated guilt and nervousness.
He stepped forward, letting silence press down on them like a physical weight before he finally spoke. âListen carefully. You are not allowed to use Lionsguard equipment without permission. Ever.â His tone was firm, not angry, just absolute. âAnd you do not train with weapons or fight each other unless a proper guild member is supervising.â
Their heads lowered even further.
âThere are reasons for this,â Ludger continued, pacing in front of them with his hands behind his back. âIf you get hurt on these grounds, then the guild is responsible for it. Not you. Not your parents. Us
.
â He saw a few flinches and pressed on. âAnd if there isnât a healer nearby? If no one can mend broken bones or stop bleeding? Then the injury can be permanent. A leg that never heals right. A hand that wonât grip anymore. A spine that never straightens again.â
That silenced even the ones who usually fidgeted. He could practically feel their fear and realization crackling in the air, and for once, the quiet was welcome.
âYou want that?â Ludger asked, voice low and blunt. âYou want to risk your future over unsupervised training? At your age?â
A wave of frantic head-shaking swept through the group.
âGood,â Ludger said with a nod. âBecause there will be a time when youâll learn to defend yourselves properly. With actual instruction. With someone making sure you donât break your own skull swinging a sword like an idiot.â His eyes narrowed slightly. âBut learning to swing a blade wonât guarantee you food. It wonât get you work. It wonât protect you from poverty.â
He let that sink in.
âUnless,â he added, voice tightening just a fraction, âyouâre planning on becoming bandits. Or joining an underworld guild.â
Several kids went pale as milk. Ludger took a step forward, letting his mana pulse subtly beneath their feet. The ground trembled just enough to remind them exactly who they were standing in front of.
âAnd if thatâs your goal,â he said, eyes sweeping over all of them, âthen maybe you shouldnât learn from the Lionsguard at all.â
No one dared breathe.
âBecause the vice guildmaster,â Ludger said, tapping his chest with one finger, âhas a long, well-documented history of destroying underworld guilds and hunting down bandits. Thoroughly.â
That did it. The entire group erupted with frantic âNO, VICE GUILDMASTER!â and âWE WONâT!â and desperate, overlapping promises that they would never think about banditry again.
Only then did Ludger nod, satisfied. âGood. Then follow the rules. No equipment without permission. No training without supervision. No exceptions.â
The kids chorused another unanimous, terrified agreement. Finally, Ludger looked back down at Renvar.
âYou. Never do this again.â
Renvar saluted from one knee, looking both pained and ashamed. âYesâyesâunderstoodânever againâmaybeâow.â
Ludger exhaled slowly. Morning ruined. Headache rising. Idiot contained, for now. But at least the lesson landed where it needed to.
Ludger began the morning lessons with the same routine as always, letters, mana control, basic water shaping. He expected Renvar to wander off eventually, to grow bored, drift toward the tavern, or find some other disaster to cause somewhere else in Lionfang. But no. The idiot stayed.
Renvar lingered at the edge of the training grounds like a particularly stubborn mosquito, observing the entire lesson with an expression that suggested equal parts curiosity and mischief. Every time Ludger glanced over, Renvar stood there with his hands behind his head, whistling innocently,
too
innocently, like he enjoyed how irritated Ludger became.
By the time the final handwriting drill ended and the last cup of summoned water splashed into a bucket, Ludger felt his patience thinning. The moment the kids dispersed for lunch, Renvar marched over with the confidence of someone who absolutely lacked self-preservation.
âSoâŠâ Renvar began, scratching his cheek, âif directly teaching them how to fight is a bad idea⊠what about indirectly?â
Ludger stared at him. Long. Hard. Unblinking.
âAre you incapable,â Ludger asked slowly, âof learning anything in your life without experiencing large amounts of pain first?â
Renvar forced a laugh that cracked halfway through. âC-Come on, thatâs harsh. I was thinking of something simple. Helpful. A friendly spar, maybe? The kids could learn a lot from watching.â
Ludger tilted his head. âBy âfriendly,â do you mean âyou getting folded like wet laundryâ?â
Renvar coughed. âUh, no? I mean, Iâm decent! And if the kids see me fight someone strong, it might motivate them! And I can show my value to the Lionsguard.â
Ludger crossed his arms. âThe Lionsguard doesnât recruit people just because theyâre strong.â
âRight, right,â Renvar said quickly, âbut strength helps!â
Ludger conceded that point with a grunt. The truth was⊠Renvar accidentally had a decent idea buried under all the stupidity. A demonstration
would
help the kids. Show them the difference between flailing around with wooden swords and real combat.
Show them why calm, controlled decision-making mattered. Show them why people like Renvarâboisterous, loud, overconfident, usually ended up face-first in the dirt. And Ludger could put Renvar in his place in front of witnesses. That alone was almost worth it. He exhaled, tapping his foot lightly against the ground.
ââŠFine,â Ludger said. âA demonstration might be useful.â
Renvar brightened immediately. âReallyâ?â
âBut,â Ludger continued, giving him the look of a predator studying prey, âyouâre the demonstration. Not the instructor. Iâm going to use you to teach them the value of being calm and collected instead of shouting like a lunatic.â
Renvar blinked. Realization dawned.
âOh.â
Ludger smiled. Not kindly.
âItâll be a great learning experience,â he added.
Renvar swallowed. âFor⊠them?â
âFor you,â Ludger said.
Renvarâs face paled. And Ludger felt, just slightly, his headache fading.