By the time the ship was stable enough to sail and the crew began the slow journey back toward port, the air on deck had shifted from excited chaos to wary quiet. The captured flagship cut through the waves with a heavy groan, its repaired hull humming faintly from the reconstructed mana channels. Rathenâs men kept a respectful distance from the prisoner chained at the center of the deck, the monkey beastman, bound in thick runic shackles that wrapped around his arms, legs, and torso like constricting metal vines. Ludger leaned against the railing, arms crossed, watching the scene unfold.
Rathen stood in front of the beastman, papers in hand, expression strained with equal parts frustration and duty. He asked questions, one after another, one after another. About their employer. Their backers. Their trade routes. Their expected shipment. Their long-term goals. The underworld connections. The man behind the runic cannons. The one who taught the beastman about Ludger.
The beastman barely blinked. He wasnât defiant. He wasnât afraid. He simply⊠didnât care.
He slumped lazily against the mast, one leg bound at an awkward angle, breathing slowly through half-healed ribs. Ludger had only healed him enough to stabilize his organs and bones, but beastman vitality did the rest. He wasnât in good shape, but he was alive and fully aware. And entirely uncooperative.
Rathen tried again. âIf you talk now, I can guaranteeââ
The monkey beastman yawned.
Wide. Lazy. Loud. It echoed across the deck like an insult. Rathenâs eye twitched. His men looked away, pretending not to see their leader slowly losing patience.
Ludger watched the exchange. Heâd expected the interrogation skill, the job related to extracting information. Interrogator. Inquisitor. Truth-Seeker. Something like that. But it was clear Rathen didnât know the proper methods or have the right techniques for this. He approached questioning like a bureaucrat, not a psychological specialist or combat interrogator.
Ludger sighed internally. Another skill heâd have to unlock on his own someday. But what puzzled him more was Kaela, standing a few meters away, pretending to be uninterested, watching the horizon with her arms crossed.
Kaela, who was very good at interrogation. Kaela, who could twist sound and air pressure to terrifying effect. Kaela, whose mere presence could make criminals talk.
And yet she wasnât stepping forward. The beastman yawned again, louder this time. Ludger turned his head, raising an eyebrow at her. A silent question.
Why arenât you helping?
Kaela met his gaze without missing a beat. She raised one hand, just enough so only Ludger could see, and pressed a finger gently to her lips.
Shhh.
Then she smiled. Not her playful grin. Not her mischievous smirk. A tight, knowing smile. The kind that meant:
I know how to do this. I could make him talk. But weâre not showing that to outsiders.
Her wind magic wasnât something she wanted spreading through Ironhand rumor mills either. Word of her⊠talents reached the wrong ears, and suddenly she was every nobleâs nightmare interrogator-for-hire.
Ludger understood immediately. She had power she didnât want Rathen or his underlings knowing she could apply so casually. He gave the faintest nod.
Which she returned, barely perceptible, before turning her gaze back to the sea, letting Rathen struggle through another round of pointless questions. Ludger pushed off the railing and walked a few steps closer, eyes narrowing. If the beastman wouldnât break from fear⊠or threats⊠or pain⊠then there were only a few remaining options. And Ludger was very good at exploring options.
Ludger finally stepped away from the railing and walked toward the center of the deck.
Rathenâs questioning sputtered to a stop as the boy approached. Maurien turned slightly. Kaela didnât turn her head, but her eyes flicked in their corners. Even Renvar straightened, sensing the shift in atmosphere.
The monkey beastman lifted his gaze. For the first time since they dug him out of the wreckage, he looked serious.
The lazy slouch faded from his posture. His half-lidded eyes sharpened. He straightened his shoulders as much as the runic chains allowed, meeting Ludgerâs stare head-on. It wasnât defiance exactly. It was something closer to pride.
He had lost to Ludger, fair and square, brutal and clean. Even broken, and bound, he refused to avert his gaze from a twelve-year-old kid. To him, looking away now would be more humiliating than the broken bones or the shattered weapon. Beastmen valued strength, and he acknowledged Ludgerâs openly.
Ludger stopped in front of him. Silence settled over the deck like a blanket. He didnât speak immediately. Instead, he tilted the beastmanâs chin upward with a single finger and studied him. Calmly. Methodically. As though he were trying to understand the structure of the manâs soul rather than his body.
Internally, Ludger weighed his options. He wasnât above inflicting pain. A broken finger here, a compressed fracture there, he had seen much worse in the labyrinths, dealt much worse in the underworld bindings. But torture⊠the kind done for cruelty⊠the kind done for entertainment⊠the kind that crossed the line from necessity into sadismâŠ
That wasnât him. Not now. Not ever. He would do what needed to be done, but he would not enjoy it. That was where Ludger drew his line.
He didnât have to hurt the beastman physically. Breaking his spirit, his pride, could be far more effective. Beastmen werenât like humans. Their honor, their physical capacity, their social structure⊠it all fed into dominance and hierarchy. The right pressure, the right words, the right posture could shatter even the most stubborn mercenary. But he also wasnât alone.
They were standing on a ship belonging to Ironhand, surrounded by Rathenâs crew. Ludger may not have cared about politics, but he cared about
what the Lionsguard looked like to their allies.
He had become the face, however unwilling, of the guildâs growing influence.
He couldnât publicly humiliate or brutalize a prisoner in broad daylight. Not unless he wanted the Ironhand Guild to field complaints and investigations from the Empire, Velis League, or the beastman clans.
So he held the beastmanâs chin and stared into his eyes. Long enough for the pirates watching to swallow nervously. Long enough for the beastman to feel the shift in power again. Long enough for Rathen to realize Ludger wasnât approaching as a child, but as the vice guildmaster of a rising force.
Then, very quietly, Ludger spoke.
âWhatâs your name?â
The beastmanâs jaw clenched. But he answered.
Not out of fear. Not out of pressure. Out of the simple, undeniable truth:
He had already acknowledged Ludger as stronger. And Ludger Graves was about to use that acknowledgment to get what he wanted.
The beastman held Ludgerâs gaze for several long seconds before finally answering.
ââŠVorak,â he muttered, voice hoarse but steady. âVorak of the Iron-Claw clan.â
Ludger nodded once, acknowledging the name, the tribal pride behind it, and the defeated dignity the man still clung to. He lowered his hand but didnât step back.
âVorak,â Ludger said quietly, âyou and your people are in our hands now. Lionsguard and Ironhand.â
Rathenâs men stiffened, watching the exchange with growing unease.
âRight now, you still have options,â Ludger continued. âCooperate, give us the information we need, and youâll be treated like prisoners. Fed, guarded, questioned, but not harmed.â
Vorakâs jaw tightened.
Ludger leaned in slightly, not threatening, simply closer. âRefuse⊠and you wonât stay with us.â
He let the words sink in.
âYouâll be handed over to the Empire.â
Rathen inhaled sharply. Maurienâs eyebrow rose. Kaelaâs faint smile sharpened at the edges. Even Renvar swallowed audibly. Vorakâs pupils constricted.
Ludger spoke evenly, calm, cold, and matter-of-fact. âAnd the Empire doesnât interrogate pirates in daylight on the deck of a ship. They donât ask polite questions. They donât give second chances.â
He raised one finger.
âYour trial, if they bother with one, will be public.â
Another finger.
âYour sentence will be drafted long before that.â
A third.
âAnd your interrogations⊠theyâll happen underground, in stone corridors with no windows. A place where the guards donât stop. Ever.â
Vorakâs breathing hitched, but he didnât look away.
Ludger continued. âBeastmen arenât exactly cherished worldwide. Not with how some clans raid caravans.â He gestured lightly to the ruined ships around them. âAnd now? Now some of your people just delivered a massive blow to the Empireâs economy. Trade, security, taxation, merchant confidence, this incident damages all of it.â
Rathen winced. Kaela nodded approvingly.
âThe higher-ups wonât risk looking weak,â Ludger said. âThey wonât hand out mercy. They wonât tolerate silence.â
The boyâs voice didnât rise. It didnât gain venom or threat. It stayed calm, too calm for someone his age.
âSo decide carefully. Because what you choose right nowâŠâ Ludger tilted his head, eyes narrow but steady, âdetermines whether you spend the next few years behind a locked doorâŠâ
A pause.
ââŠor the next few hours wishing you talked sooner.â
The deck went silent.
Vorak finally looked away. Not out of shame, out of calculation. Out of survival instinct. Out of the realization that Ludger wasnât making threats. He was explaining reality. And reality was something even beastmen couldnât fight their way out of.
Ludger didnât let the silence linger for long. He stepped back just enough for Vorak and the surrounding pirates to see him clearly, then spoke againâthis time with a colder edge threading through the calm.
âYour group killed a lot of Ironhand members,â Ludger said. âYour operation burned their ships, sabotaged their routes, ambushed their patrols. Families lost fathers. Crews lost captains. Merchants lost everything.â
Vorakâs jaw twitched.
âBut I also know,â Ludger continued, âthat
you
and your crew suffered losses today that are far greater.â
He gestured at the ruined fleet. At the kneeling pirates. At the shattered cannons and the broken runic cores.
âYour allies kept you in the dark. They used you. Fed you incomplete intel. Threw you at the front line. And now theyâre nowhere to be found while you bleed for their greed.â
Vorakâs nostrils flared, his instincts tugging between loyalty and rage. Ludger leaned in just slightly, voice dropping into something colder.
âIf you give us what we need,â he said, âthen
they
, the ones truly responsible for all these deaths, will suffer the consequences.â
He straightened.
âUnless you want to suffer for them instead.â
A ripple of tension spread across the deck. Several pirates swallowed. A few others looked away, shame or fear flickering through their eyes. Vorak didnât respond. But his breathing shifted, slow, measured, like he was evaluating the weight of every consequence laid before him.
Ludger turned then, facing Rathen. âYou said you canât risk Ironhandâs reputation,â he said. âSo if they give us the information we want⊠what are you willing to do?â
Rathen blinked, caught off guard by being pulled into the negotiation directly. His crew paused mid-task, waiting for his response. Even Maurien turned his head slightly, recognizing the gravity of the question.
Rathen exhaled through his nose, folding his arms. He wasnât impulsive, he never made promises lightly. So he stood still for several seconds, weighing the cost and the potential gain.
The information Vorak could provide wasnât simple gossip. It wasnât a list of pirate hideouts. It was intel involving underworld guilds, Velis-run engineering, rogue nobles, and international smuggling networks connected to both the Rodericks and Verk.
Information worth armies. Worth money. Worth political leverage. Finally, Rathen looked at Ludger.
ââŠHalf,â he said.
Ludger raised an eyebrow.
âIf the information comes out,â Rathen clarified, voice steady, âIâm willing to let go
half
of the prisoners.â
A murmur spread through the captured pirates, shock, disbelief, hope, fear.
Rathen continued, expression turning stern. âWeâll report them as deceased. Lost in the battle. Bodies unrecoverable after the explosions.â
He repeated it so there was no misunderstanding.
âHalf of your people,â he said to Vorak, âwalk free.â
Ludger watched Vorak closely. He wasnât done.
Rathen added, âThe other half will be released once we confirm the information is accurate. But I promise,â he met Vorakâs eyes, â, no executions if you cooperate.â
The deck fell silent again. This time, the silence was very different. Hope. Fear. The smell of shifting loyalties. The beastmanâs gaze dropped, not in submission, but in thought. The chains clinked softly as he exhaled.
Ludger didnât push. Didnât threaten. Didnât force. He simply waited. Because Vorak now understood something very clearly: The next words out of his mouth would decide whether half his men lived⊠or whether all of them died underground with no graves.
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