Chapter 181 (Thank you for your support, Shain Oleson!)
Added 2025-10-22 17:00:10 +0000 UTCLudger did not pretend he liked it. He had never pretended to be a saint; he was practical, efficient, and very careful with his moral arithmetic. The men theyâd captured were ankle-deep in other peopleâs miseryâmoving herbs that burned minds, hauling bodies, taking coin for lives. He pictured the traderâs face, the empty stalls, the mothers whoâd lit candles and gotten silence in return. Mercy here would be a liability.
Theyâd made no effort to cover their featuresâfaces scraped by travel, eyes weeds of fear and guiltâand that made the decision simpler. If anyone woke and recognized the investigators, if any of them were dragged into a tavern and told the wrong story, the Lionsguardâs name could be smeared like oil on a map. He would not give that to the prisoners.
His palm touched the cold stone, fingers flexing. The earth answered the command with the same economy he admired in a well-sharpened blade. A shard of compacted ground rose, dense as a hammerhead and warm with the aftertaste of buried things. He did not hesitate. One clean motionâaimed, private, without flourishâand the shard struck. It was clinical, immediate. They slumped without the long, noisy business of pleading. Their hearts were pierced.
When the last breath slid quiet, Ludger worked quickly. He sank the bodies into the ground and packed stone over them until the surface looked undisturbedâjust another patch of dark mountain earth. No ragged edges, no drift of scent for a scavenger to find.
Maurien watched without comment, the faintest shadow passing his face. Freyra spat once, hard, and said nothing; she had never been sentimental about this kind of work. Ludger kept his gaze even, not looking for praise. He wanted results, not theatre.
After that was done he returned to the tunnel mouth and moved down the other passage. It was kinder in a mechanical wayâno traps, no manic rune-workâjust a straightforward cut through the stone. The air here was colder, drier; the other side seemed closer than heâd expected. Another half-buried boulder sat like a lid at the throat, the sort of obvious camouflage meant to fool only those who did not look.
Freyra peered around his shoulder. âYou opening that?â she asked, eager and clearly impatient.
Ludger shook his head. âNo.â He crouched, running one hand along the rim of the rock, feeling the faint lines of wear. âIf we leave this open and walk out, we leave a trail. Tracks, displaced sod, signs in the mountain that someone was here. If the people who run this network have allies, theyâll find the route and patch it. Better to leave nothing.â
Ludger rubbed dust into his palms. âWith any luck their allies will check this place first,â he said. âTheyâve got a bunch like thisâwaypoints and caches. If they expect to move things the same way twice, theyâll come back. If we donât leave a trace, theyâll show up and bring their own signature. Then we know which houses or merchants touch it.â
Freyraâs grin was brutal and clear. âSo we wait with a rock on our tongues and catch them like fish.â
âExactly,â Ludger said. âWe donât chase ghosts blind. We make them walk into a trap of their own planning.â
They hardened the area lightlyâno grand sinkhole, nothing loudâand covered the mouth again so it read as collapsed rock rather than an obvious entry. Then they moved back to the chamber, gathered the launchers and the runic scraps Maurien wanted to examine, and prepared to return to the surface. There should be other tunnels, other waystationsâLudgerâs mind counted them like unpaid bills. He did not delude himself that this one action ended anything. It was a cut in a long string.
He accepted the cold in his chest as part of the job: a ledger item he would balance later, in private. For now, there was work to doâtracing metals, following names that might lead them from the mountainâs belly to the counting houses that bought those.
They retraced their steps through the death corridorânow quiet, the traps guttedâand climbed back to the shattered boulder on the Empireâs side. Night air rushed in, cold and clean. Maurien set the salvaged launchers on the rock, ran a thumb along its rune channels one last time, and let out a long, irritated sigh.
âNothing I can hang a name on,â he said. âBasic latticework, borrowed sigils, cheap copper inlays. Any enchanter with a few winters under them could etch this. Thatâs the pointâgeneric on purpose. No makerâs hand, no workshop dialect.â He clicked his tongue. âAnother layer to blur the trail.â
Ludger studied the dull runes, then the older mage. âYou have friends across the border? And⌠what do they actually call that country?â
Maurienâs mouth thinned. âThe Velis League,â he said at last. âA tangle of academy-towns and city councils that pretend they agree more than they do.â He shook his head. âAnd noââfriendsâ is generous. I have a few contacts who wonât slam a door if I knock, but most of them hate the Empire and anyone who sounds like it. Old wounds. Old propaganda. Some of it earned.â
Freyra snorted. âCanât blame them.â
âDidnât say I did,â Maurien replied, weary. âI said theyâll make cooperation expensive.â
Ludger tugged his scarf a little tighter against the wind. âSo: generic runes, a league that sells to whoever pays, and a network that expects to be chased.â He glanced back at the black mouth of the tunnel. âThey built this to survive us.â
âMm,â Maurien grunted. âWhich means we donât oblige them by being predictable.â
âGood,â Ludger said, dry as stone. âI hate being predictable.â
He looked downslope, toward the dim smear of the village and the farther dark where their recruits were waiting with the horses. âWe regroup,â he said. âWe donât open the east exit; we donât stir the pond. We carry the toys home, let Yvar put names to crests, and decide which thread we pull first.â
Maurien lifted the dead launcher and slung it under his cloak. âAnd you get to write a very vague report for your guildmaster.â
Ludgerâs mouth twitched. âDad probably loves those.â
Freyra rolled her shoulders, the promise of more trouble already bright in her eyes. âNext time,â she said, âwe hunt the ones who send men like these.â
âWe will,â Ludger answered, turning from the wind. âBut first we teach our kids to keep their mouths shut, and we make sure the mountain forgets we were ever here.â
Ludger used his earth magic to fix the boulder that Maurien chopped off and then put it back on its place. He never did something like that before, but it was possible, but it cost a lot of mana. After that, he started down the path, the other two falling into step.
They linked up near a split in the road by midmorning, sun burning off the last of the mist. The recruits were trotting back from the third village with dust on their boots and the look of people whoâd asked careful questions and gotten carefully useless answers.
Rhea spotted them first. âBoss!â
Ludger raised a hand. Maurienâs cloak hid a bundled launcher. Freyra looked like she wanted an excuse to break something.
They dismounted in a shallow copse. Ludger didnât bother with ceremony.
âShort version,â he said. âHidden tunnel in the mountain. Old mine spurs turned into smuggling routes. A crew armed with foreign rune-weapons tried to stop us. They failed.â He tapped Maurienâs bundle. âWeapons are generic by designâno makerâs marks worth a damn.â
Mira blew out a breath. âSo⌠we found the nest. That is the only thing I got it.â
âAn entrance to the nest,â Ludger corrected. âAnd not the only one. Regardless, we are going back home.â
Derrin scratched his jaw. âWeâre heading back already? Isnât thatâuhâsoon? We havenât actually solved the problem.â
Ludger met his eyes. âThe problemâs bigger than a patrol and six trainees. Whoeverâs behind this expects to be found eventually. Theyâve layered the operation with cut-outs and throwaways. If we keep wandering around with a banner on our backs, we start rumorsâand the wrong ears will hear âLionsguard.ââ
Taron glanced toward the ridge. âSo what now?â
âNow we go home,â Ludger said. âWe hand the gear to Yvar, let him pull crests and coin trails. We brief Dad and Lord Torvares in private. Next time we come back with a tighter plan and fewer footprints.â
Callen frowned. âFewer footprints?â
âMore stealth,â Ludger said. âNo tavern speeches, no visible teams. Quiet entries, quiet exits, quiet questions. If weâre loud here again, theyâll salt the routes and we lose the thread.â
Freyra huffed, but nodded. âThen we come back to cut deeper.â
âWe will,â Maurien said, voice like gravel. âPerhaps not all of us, but some.â
Mira slung her bow. âWe did pick up one thingâtwo âinvestigatorâ groups passed through the village months apart with different house emblems. People noticed, but⌠nobody talks now.â
âMatches what we saw,â Ludger said. He mounted, adjusted his scarf. âKeep what you heard to yourselves. No camp gossip, no tavern retellings. From here on, this is need-to-know.â
The recruits noddedâuneasy but resolute.
âGood,â Ludger added, dry as ever. âBecause Iâm not paying hazard rates for people who canât shut up.â
That earned a few thin smiles. He turned his horse west.
âLine up. We ride. Weâll head home by dusk tomorrow if we keep pace. Then more work starts.â
Before riding it, Ludger eased his horse closer to Maurien.
âWhat about you?â he asked. âYou staying or riding back with us?â
Maurien watched the mountain a beat longer, then shook his head. âIâll stay on this side a while. Circle the passes, test a few things, see if any of our ghosts have patterns. If I turn up anything solid, Iâll send word.â
He paused, then added, almost an afterthought, âAnd you can consider me Lionsguard from here on. Iâll sign whatever Arslan wants when I come in.â
Ludger nodded once. Mission done. Not clean, not prettyâbut done. âGood. That was the job.â
The recruits traded quick, satisfied looks; Freyra pretended she didnât care and failed at it.
âStill leaves a mystery the size of a mountain,â Ludger said, dry again. âWe have threads and a mess of layers. No clean names.â
Maurienâs mouth twitched. âWelcome to real work.â
âIâll speak with Lord Torvares when weâre back,â Ludger went on. âQuiet channels. If anyone can grease wheels behind curtains and not tip the bowl, itâs him. At least from the people that I know. Maybe he can lean on a ledger or two without making a scene.â
Maurien grunted approval. âThe old bull? Not making a scene? Use the Bullâs shadow wisely. Youâll need it.â
Ludger turned in the saddle, raising his voice just enough for the group. âWe move. Keep it steady. No chatter about the mission.â
Freyra snorted. âAnd me?â
âYouâll not start fights along the way,â Ludger said, stone-flat. âThat would be a start.â
She rolled her eyes, but the corner of her mouth tugged upward.
They set off, the line stretching west. Behind them, the mountain kept its mouth shut; ahead, Lionfang and politics waited. Ludger tightened his scarf against the wind and filed the day under victories that didnât feel like itâone new ally, a dozen new questions, and the quiet promise that the next time they came east, they wouldnât be walking in with their names on display.
The road home would take at least a week if they kept a steady pace and didnât stop to be clever. That suited Ludger. Long miles meant long thoughts, and he needed the space, which threads to tug first without yanking the whole mess down on Lionsguard.
They made camp the first night in a shallow windbreak of scrub pines. Horses cropped at cold grass; a small fire snapped; stew did its best to taste like something other than boiled road. Ludger ate in silence and let the others talk. The recruits circled the same points. turning fear into humor and back again.
Freyra stared into the fire a long time, then said, too casually, âI wonât mind joining your guild.â
The conversation stumbled. Three spoons paused midair. Ludger looked up, studied her face like he was waiting for the punchline.
She met his stare head-on. âAs long as I can punch assholes,â she added, as if clarifying an item on a contract, âIâll work for the Lionsguard.â
There it was.
Ludger wiped his spoon, set it down. âWe donât focus on punching assholes,â he said. âThatâs a side effect. Occasionally a perk. Not a job description.â
Freyra scowled. âWhat else is there?â
âLogistics,â he said. âContracts. Escorts. Training schedules. Supply chains. Politics you canât solve with an punch. We need people who follow orders and use their heads.â He gave her a pointed once-over. âAside from headbutts.â
Mira snorted. Derrin coughed into his sleeve.
Freyra folded her arms, chin lifting. âI can follow orders.â
âYou can follow impulses,â Ludger said, dry as tinder. âDifferent skills.â
She bristled, then hesitated. âIf it helps me break the people behind those tunnels, Iâll learn your⌠logistics.â
âGood start,â Ludger said. âYouâll also learn to keep your voice down, your fists, and your temper on a leash until itâs time. If you canât do that, youâll be a liability and Iâll send you home. Actually, I am pretty sure I am being too lenient here.â
Her jaw worked. The firelight threw stubborn gold across her eyes. âFine,â she said at last. âLeash. Orders. Thinking.â A beat. âAnd punching, when permitted.â
âWhen permitted,â Ludger agreed.
The tension cracked into a few quiet laughs. Talk drifted back to lighter things: whose stew was worst (Callen took offense), who snored (everyone accused Freyra; she accused the horses), whether Mira could really hit a sapling from two hundred paces in the dark (she could).
Ludger rolled onto his bedroll at the edge of the firelight, scarf pulled high against the chill. Above the treeline the stars were hard and bright. He worried about the work for tomorrowâand the next six tomorrows after that.
Behind him, Freyra muttered, âPermitted,â like she was testing the shape of the word with her teeth.
âGood,â Ludger said without turning. âYouâre learning vocabulary. Weâll get to numbers next.â
âPipsqueak,â she growled.
âVice Guildmaster,â he corrected, and let the fire do the rest of the talking.
Comments
Tftc!
dkpfrog
2025-10-23 04:06:17 +0000 UTC