Vorak didnât answer immediately.
For the first time since he regained consciousness, the beastman wasnât masking anything behind arrogance or battle-hard pride. He stared down at the deck, jaw clenched, breathing slow. His silence wasnât defiance this time.
It was calculation. And⊠concern. For his underlings. Ludger saw it. Rathen saw it. Maurienâs eyes softened just a fraction. Even Kaela tilted her head slightly.
Vorak finally exhaled through his nose, gaze rising again. âIf half my people will be freed,â he said quietly, âthen I need a guarantee.â
Rathen frowned. âWhat kind?â
Vorak straightened his back despite the chains pulling against his injuries. âHalf of my underlings⊠the ones you agree to release⊠must be dropped off immediately at the Primal Groves.â He paused. âThey wonât survive anywhere else.â
The deck stiffened. Primal Groves. Beastman territory. Borderland with Velis League. Neutral at best. Hostile by default. Rathen looked at Ludger. Ludger looked back at Rathen.
The request wasnât unreasonable, but it wasnât simple either.
Rathen sighed first. âWith this ship,â he said, pointing at the repaired railing, âthe trip would take at least seven days. Thatâs just the journey there.â He rubbed his forehead. âAnd another seven to come back. Two weeks minimum.â
Those two weeks would be spent sailing a pirate flagship, through international waters, toward a nation that wasnât fond of humans, and even less fond of pirates.
Ludger crossed his arms, thinking. âWeâre not wasting that time.â
Rathen raised an eyebrow.
Ludger continued, tone calm but decisive. âWe have the runic gear, cannons, shields, conduits. Linne and Dalan are the only ones in Lionsguard with proper runic engineering knowledge.â He gestured toward the cannons stacked on the deck. âIf weâre already sailing for two weeks, we might as well bring them along and have them analyze everything.â
Maurien nodded in agreement. âWeâd gain time instead of losing it. And theyâll need the oceanâs ambient mana to test the long-range conduits.â
Kaela grinned. âPlus, I want to see Dalan thrown around by sea wind. I bet he gets seasick immediately, should be hilarious.â
Rathen ignored her.
His jaw tightened, fingers massaging the bridge of his nose as he stared at Ludger. âYou want to sail a pirate flagship,â he said slowly, âthat hasnât even been rearranged for Lionsguard command yetâŠâ
Ludger nodded.
ââŠtoward the Primal GrovesâŠâ
Nod.
ââŠwhile transporting prisoners and two of your engineersâŠâ
Another nod.
ââŠand you want me to approve this because it âsaves timeâ?â
Ludger nodded again. Rathen stared at him like he was trying to determine whether Ludger was a genius or a disaster waiting to happen. Probably both.
Finally, he sighedâlong, exhausted, defeated. âI can agree to it.â He lifted a finger sharply. âBut only if the information Vorak provides is actually useful. If he wastes our time, then this plan dies immediately.â
Vorakâs eyes hardened. He understood the weight of that.
Ludger stepped closer. âYour conditions are fair,â he said. âBut remember, your peopleâs lives depend on your honesty.â
Vorak nodded once.
âThen ask your questions.â
And the deck grew very, very quiet. Rathen stepped closer again, arms crossed, voice rough but controlled.
âLetâs start from the beginning,â he said. âWho gave you this ship? And the runic equipment? Someone had to supply it. Someone wealthy. Someone with connections.â
Vorak grimaced, not from pain, but from the weight of the question. His ears twitched backward, a distinctly beastman sign of irritation or frustration. He sighed heavily, like dragging the words out of his chest physically hurt.
ââŠWe received it,â he said slowly, âfrom a certain underworld guild in the Primal Groves.â
Ludgerâs eyes sharpened. Maurien exhaled through his nose. Kaela muttered, âCalled it.â Renvar blinked, confused about how he had
not
called it.
Vorak continued, tone lower now. âTheyâre part of a faction, one that wants to push the clans to strike back against some of the Velis Leagueâs city academies.â
Rathen frowned. âWhy the academies specifically? Why not the cities or ports?â
Vorak let out a tired laugh, shaking his head. âBecause of their damn smoke and mist. Their magical exhausts. Their factories. The smog from their experiments. All of it creeps toward our land. Toward the Groves. Toward our forests. Our hunting grounds.â He gave a bitter grin. âSome beastmen are tired of watching the east choke the edges of our home.â
Ludger understood immediately, this wasnât about piracy. It was about leverage. And revenge.
Vorak continued. âThe guild master didnât tell us who supplied the ships or the runic gear. Weâre not high enough in the chain for that.â He tilted his head back against the mast, wincing as the chains bit into his skin. âBut he said once enough âresourcesâ were collected, our job was simple, attack certain locations in the Velis League when the time came.â
âWhich locations?â Ludger asked quietly.
Vorak shook his head. âWe werenât told. Just that theyâd give orders later, through intermediaries.â
Rathen growled under his breath. âSo the guild master was using you as muscle.â
Vorakâs lips curled. âUsing us? No. He was using the greed of the Velis League and the anger of our tribes to spark conflict. Beastmen rage. Velis arrogance. He planned to profit from the chaos.â
Kaela squatted next to Vorak, eyes narrowed. âAnd you were okay with that?â
Vorak snorted. âI was okay with defending our territory. Not with becoming a puppet.â
Ludger watched him closely. Vorak wasnât lying, not in posture, not in scent, not in micro-expression. Beastmen rarely lied well; their instincts betrayed them. But this⊠this came from exhaustion and a bone-deep resentment.
Ludger glanced at Rathen. The Ironhand leaderâs expression had gone tight with calculation.
An underworld guild in the Primal Groves. Anti-Velis factions. Runic technology distributed without oversight. And a plan to strike multiple academies, each one full of elite engineers, master craftsmen, and influential people. It was a perfect storm. Vorak wasnât done.
âThereâs more,â he said, eyes narrowing with unpleasant memory. âOur guild master mentioned working with, howâd he put itâŠ? âExiles seeking return.â Someone with a grudge against Velis leadership.â
Ludgerâs eyes sharpened like glass under pressure. Verk. It lined up too perfectly. Rathen cursed under his breath. Maurienâs expression turned cold.
Kaela clicked her tongue. âTheyâre building an international powder keg.â
Vorak nodded once. âAnd they wanted us to light the fuse.â
Ludgerâs mind raced, quiet, efficient, already assembling the next piece of the puzzle.
This was larger than piracy. This was a war someone was trying to forge in the shadows. And Ludger had just grabbed the first real thread.
Rathen took a slow breath, visibly processing the implications. âHold on,â he said, leveling a steady stare at the beastman. âThereâs still the moderate faction in the Primal Groves. The council elders. The clan leaders who negotiate with and keep the peace with Velis league. They wouldnât allow a war that easily.â
Vorak gave a bitter, humorless huff. âOf course they wouldnât. Thatâs why the fanatics in the underworld guild needed pawns like us. Needed smaller groups to act as the spark. Needed⊠plausible deniability.â His fingers twitched against the runic chains. âOur attacks werenât meant to start the war. They were meant to gather resources. Build leverage. Win the support of the desperate and angry tribes.â
Rathen frowned deeper, but Vorak wasnât finished.
âAnd since the Empire made business agreements with the Velis League, trade deals, magical material exchanges, our guild master said theyâd be the perfect soft targets.â Vorak met Rathenâs gaze, then Ludgerâs. âEvery shipment you protected, every route you cleared, Velis counted on those.â
Maurienâs jaw tightened. âYou mean you werenât attacking Ironhand for profit.â
âNo,â Vorak said. âWe attacked because we were told the shipments you were guarding were meant for Velis traders. We hit what your Empire wanted to protect. Your losses weaken their confidence. Make them blame Ironhand. Make Velis look exploitable.â He exhaled sharply. âAnd every shipment that never reached Velis⊠was one less asset their academies could use to develop defenses.â
Kaela raised a brow. âResources that wouldâve made war harder?â
Vorak nodded. âExactly. If materials donât reach the academies, their weapon development slows down. Their runecrafters work blind. Their air quality worsens. Their trading alliances strain.â He gave a bleak smile. âOur guild master said the more chaos there is between the Empire and Velis⊠the easier a real war becomes.â
Rathen cursed under his breath. âThey were trying to isolate Velis?â
âAnd force the Primal Groves into a corner,â Vorak added. âAnti-Velis clans gain influence. Moderate clans lose power. When war finally comes, the fanatics get to sayââsee? They poisoned our lands, stole our forests, ignored our warnings. We warned you. Now we must fight.ââ His shoulders sagged slightly. âAnd weaker tribes like mine? Weâd be forced to join, or slowly die.â
Ludgerâs expression didnât change, but his eyes sharpened. âYou were one piece in a political trap.â
Vorak laughed bitterly. âOne of many.â
Kaela crossed her arms. âAnd letting the shipments be robbed was part of it.â
Vorak nodded again. âThe guild master told us, every crate we stole, every export we sank, every supply we intercepted, was a step toward weakening Velis defenses.â He looked up, tired and resigned. âWe didnât even know what half the cargo was for. Just that it controlled the mana smog and powered the shield grids around the border academies.â
Rathen looked sick. âYou were making sure Velis couldnât protect their own cities.â
âAnd making sure the Empire blamed Ironhand for failing to protect shipments,â Vorak finished. âTwo birds with one stone.â
Ludger stepped back slightly, mind already racing ahead.
This wasnât piracy. This wasnât smuggling. This wasnât even sabotage. It was deliberate destabilization. A long game to ignite a three-way conflict:
Velis â Empire â Primal Groves.
And someone was forcing all three toward the brink. Vorak lowered his head.
âYou wanted truth,â he said softly. âThere it is.â
Ludger listened to Vorakâs explanation without flinching, his expression carved from something still and cold. Every detail slotted neatly into place, too neatly. When Vorak finally finished, Ludger didnât immediately respond. He only tilted his head back and looked at the sky, the repaired mast creaking lightly beneath the rolling wind.
He had suspected it for a long time now. Someone wanted to destabilize the Empire. Someone wanted chaos.
And someone was willing to use anyone, pirates, smugglers, beastmen tribes, rogue nobles, and probably a few idiots in between, to get it done. He already knew who the first culprit was. The Rodericks.
Their pattern had been obvious in hindsight: Funding draught distribution. Supporting Ragdar indirectly. Leaking shipments. Smuggling illegal gear. Stirring unrest wherever coin could flow.
But now⊠Now it wasnât just them. Two more nations, two more entire factions, had stepped onto the board.
Velis League splinters, acting through exile networks. Verk, the deranged former councillor who sought vengeance or power or both. And now the Primal Groves, well,
a faction
of them, seeking to push the clans into a war they couldnât win.
Foreign gears turning in sync. All pushing the same direction. Weaken the Empire. Weaken Velis. Destabilize the Groves. Profit from the chaos.
Ludgerâs jaw tightened. He exhaled through his nose.
âGreat,â he muttered under his breath. âOne group destabilizing the Empire wasnât enough.â
Kaela glanced over, amused despite the situation. Maurien folded his arms. Rathen looked tired.
Ludger continued softly, voice flat but edged with weary annoyance. âNow two more countries joined in.â
He tilted his head a bit more, squinting at the sky as if the clouds might offer an explanation. âVerk is insane enough to weaken his own country just to get revenge or that was already his plan to begin with,â he muttered. âAnd someone in the Primal Groves has the same brilliant idea.â
He let the thoughts settle, then sighed, the long, exhausted kind that belonged to someone far older than twelve.
ââŠThere are a lot of insane people in the world.â
Kaela chuckled. âWelcome to politics.â
Rathen didnât laugh. Maurien didnât either. Because Ludger wasnât wrong. And if the world was this unstable nowâŠit meant Ludger and the Lionsguard were going to be very,
very
busy.
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