Chapter 223
Chapter 223
During a short break that afternoon, Ludger sat down on one of the lower stone platforms near the bridge’s edge. The waves brushed quietly against the coral foundations, leaving a salty mist in the air.
He took off his gloves—the Earthen Channelers—and turned them over in his hands. The faint brown glow along the seams pulsed softly, each rune etched into the leather like veins of molten gold.
He’d been using them for days now, but this was the first real chance he’d had to study them.
The craftsmanship was unlike anything he’d seen before. Each sigil wasn’t carved or stitched—it grew out of the material itself, as if the leather had been shaped by mana instead of tools. When he focused, he could feel a low hum running through the runes, a constant circulation of energy layered so precisely it bordered on impossible.
“Velis League work for sure,” he murmured under his breath.
He closed his eyes and extended his mana toward the glove, probing gently at the pattern. The moment his energy touched the rune, he felt it—dense, refined, and old. Not aged in time, but seasoned by use.
Dozens, maybe hundreds, of mages had channeled power through these gloves before him. Each time left a trace of mana, and over years those traces had compressed together, growing heavier, more stable. It wasn’t just craftsmanship—it was memory.
Ludger smirked faintly. “So that’s why they burn through mana like a leech if you’re not careful.”
He turned them again, tracing the smallest rune near the wrist with his thumb. It was a geometric lattice of lines so fine they could barely be seen without mana sight—yet each one pulsed in sync with his own breathing.
The sheer density of the mana sealed within the pattern was staggering. He could sense at least four layers: a foundation rune to anchor the effect, a resonance rune to link it to the wearer’s core, an amplification lattice to halve the cost of earth spells, and a stabilizing grid that probably prevented feedback from killing the user outright.
Every part of it had to be balanced perfectly—or the whole structure would collapse.
“Yeah,” he muttered, leaning back against the pillar, “reproducing this would take… years.”
He could already imagine the challenge of trying to inscribe something like it himself.
Not just the precision, but the endurance it would take to feed mana into it over time. Runes like these weren’t made in hours—they were grown, layer by layer, fed like plants until the structure became self-sustaining.
Still, the thought made him grin.
If he could learn how to make runes like this, the experience alone would be worth it. And maybe—just maybe—he could forge something that wasn’t just a tool from the old world, but something of his own making.
He slipped the gloves back on, flexing his fingers as the faint warmth of the enchantment flared back to life.
“Not easy,” he said to himself, “but nothing worth doing ever is.”
The ground beneath him thrummed faintly in response, as if agreeing.
And for a moment, Ludger wondered if the gloves themselves approved of his ambition.
That afternoon, the horizon shimmered with heat as the tide began to pull back. Ludger and Gaius were just finishing their short break when they returned to the work site—boots sinking slightly into wet sand as they resumed shaping the next line of support paths.
The air trembled faintly with the hum of earth magic. Dust rose, the ground shifting beneath Ludger’s control as another section of coral and stone settled neatly into place. He was halfway through reinforcing the joint when Gaius’ gaze drifted toward the mainland.
“...We’ve got visitors,” he said, his tone dropping.
Ludger followed his eyes.
A formation of armored riders was crossing the slope toward the beach. Their silver-plated cuirasses reflected sunlight like a sheet of mirrors, each polished to parade standard. Every rider bore the same insignia—a talon gripping a sword, etched in black against a white banner.
At their head rode a tall man whose presence carried farther than his voice. He wasn’t massive like Kharnek or commanding like Arslan, but there was a sharpness to him—a deliberate precision, like every movement was practiced a hundred times before he made it.
Ser Varik Darran.
He wore dark steel armor with faint silver runic veins running along the edges, less decorative and more functional—mana channels, meant to enhance strength and speed. His hair was jet-black, cut short and neat, his face clean-shaven, and his eyes… they were the color of polished obsidian, unreadable and still.
Even from a distance, Ludger could tell the man didn’t waste gestures. The kind of soldier who’d been through enough wars to stop treating conflict as anything more than a calculation.
Behind him, two dozen Silver Talon knights dismounted in unison, securing their mounts and forming ranks before following their commander toward the bridge. Their discipline was almost eerie—no shouting, no wasted steps. Just the sound of armor and boots striking in rhythm.
Gaius clicked his tongue. “Guess that’s him.”
“Yeah,” Ludger muttered, wiping his hands on his cloak.
“You think we should wait for the noble introduction?”
Ludger glanced at the approaching group, then turned back to the sea and raised his hands again, focusing on the pillar’s foundation. “Nah. We can play dumb later.”
Gaius grinned. “Good plan.”
They got back to work.
The ground shook slightly as Ludger’s mana rippled through the seabed again, stone shifting and locking in place beneath the waves. Gaius followed suit, extending the foundation lines outward to create additional reinforcement.
By the time they were halfway through another section, the Silver Talon commander had already reached the bridge.
And that was when Ludger’s meticulous craftsmanship betrayed them.
The path of compacted earth and stone he’d built as a secondary walkway—originally meant for workers and supply carts—stretched straight from the shoreline to the active site. Smooth, solid, and wide enough for armored boots.
Varik took it without hesitation, walking across it with the kind of stride that belonged to someone inspecting a battlefield, not a construction zone. The rest of his soldiers followed, keeping their distance but staying close enough to look intimidating.
Ludger sighed under his breath. “Of course he’d use the one shortcut I actually made.”
Gaius chuckled. “You can’t blame him. If I were him, I’d want a front-row seat too.”
“Yeah,” Ludger muttered, straightening as Varik drew closer, “but I was hoping to finish this section before the official performance review.”
Varik reached the edge of the working platform and stopped. The waves crashed against the lower supports, spraying his greaves with saltwater. He stood there for a moment, taking in the structure—the pillars, the pathways, the meticulous symmetry—and then turned his eyes to Ludger.
“Impressive work,” he said finally, his voice calm, steady, and carrying effortlessly over the sea wind. “I expected a foundation. I didn’t expect architecture.”
Ludger met his gaze, expression unreadable. “We don’t build things halfway.”
Varik’s lips curved slightly, almost into a smile. “So I see.”
Gaius leaned toward Ludger just enough to murmur, “That’s your two minutes.”
Ludger exhaled through his nose, a faint smirk twitching at his mouth. “Guess I lost the bet.”
The Silver Talon commander stepped forward, hands clasped behind his back. “Ser Varik Darran, Imperial Knight-Captain. I take it you’re the geomancer leading this operation?”
Ludger didn’t bother bowing. “Vice Guildmaster of the Lionsguard,” he said. “Name’s Ludger.”
Varik’s eyes lingered on him for a moment—assessing, measuring. “Vice Guildmaster? At your age?”
Ludger gave a dry half-smile. “Be the son of the guildmaster helps with promotions.”
Varik chuckled softly. “A fair exchange.”
Behind him, the Silver Talon soldiers stood at perfect attention, silent as statues. The wind tugged at their cloaks, the metallic shimmer of their armor casting shifting reflections across the wet stone.
For a moment, the three men simply stood there—one noble soldier of the Empire, one grizzled geomancer, and one boy who built bridges out of sheer defiance—each trying to read the others’ intent without saying more than needed.
Gaius broke the silence first. “You came a long way to stare at rocks.”
Varik smiled faintly. “When the rocks start holding up empires, I make it a point to check on them myself.”
Ludger didn’t smile back. “Then I hope you brought patience. The sea doesn’t rush for anyone.”
Varik’s eyes glinted with quiet amusement. “We’ll see about that.”
And just like that, the polite standoff began.
Varik stood beside Gaius near the base of one of the coral pillars, the ocean wind carrying salt across their armor and robes. Ahead of them, Ludger was still working—focused, methodical, stubbornly ignoring the presence of the Silver Talon.
The rhythmic sound of shifting stone filled the pause between them until Varik finally spoke.
“I’ve heard your name before,” he said, his tone calm but pointed. “Gaius Ifonfist. The Senate once tried to have you teach at the Academy, didn’t they?”
Gaius smirked faintly without turning his head. “They did.”
“And you refused.”
“I did,” Gaius said, his gravelly voice steady as the tide. “I don’t train brats who think power is something they can purchase with tuition.”
Varik crossed his arms. “A lot of people tried to make you take apprentices over the years. I’ve heard that story too. Every one of them turned away.”
Gaius gave a small grunt. “Most weren’t worth the patience.”
“And yet…” Varik’s eyes flicked toward the boy further down the bridge, “…it seems you changed your mind.”
The old geomancer exhaled slowly, a wry smile forming under his beard. “Changed? Maybe. Or maybe I just ran out of excuses.”
Varik studied him for a moment longer, the faintest shadow of curiosity passing behind his eyes. “You’re not an easy man to read, Gaius. But that one—” he nodded toward Ludger—“doesn’t strike me as someone who begged for your time.”
“No,” Gaius said, watching Ludger raise a new wall of stone with a single motion. “He didn’t beg. He just worked until it was impossible not to notice him. That’s rarer than talent.”
The commander gave a quiet hum of acknowledgment, expression unreadable. “I see.”
Gaius shrugged. “Besides,” he added, glancing at the sea, “I owed a few people favors. Some have more patience and persistence than others.”
Varik arched a brow. “So someone convinced you.”
“Let’s say someone reminded me that building a future’s harder than building a fortress.”
Varik gave a small, knowing smile. “A fair reminder.”
Their eyes turned toward the other side of the shore, where movement caught their attention. Viola stood knee-deep in the surf, her dark braid whipping behind her as she trained, her boots anchored in the wet sand.
The air around her shimmered faintly with Overdrive light—an earthen-brown aura pulsing along her arms and sword.
She inhaled deeply, grounding her stance, then brought her blade down in a sharp, controlled arc.
WHUMP!
The sword didn’t cut the water—it parted it. A burst of compressed wind pressure shot forward from her swing, carving a half-meter trench in the sea before collapsing back into foam.
Even at a distance, Gaius could feel the flicker of mana, raw, fierce, but disciplined.
“Seems young bull is sharpening her horns as well,” he muttered.
Varik’s gaze followed hers. “That’s Torvares blood for you. Pride’s a better motivator than fear.”
“Or worse, depending who you ask.”
Varik’s eyes softened slightly. “She’ll make a fine warrior one day.”
Gaius grunted in agreement. “If she stops trying to prove it every five minutes.”
The two stood in silence again, the sound of the sea and the distant rhythm of hammering filling the space between them.
Eventually, Varik said quietly, “You’ve built something good here, Gaius. Both the bridge and the boy.”
Gaius gave a low chuckle. “Let’s see if either lasts through the storms ahead.”
Varik nodded slowly. “We’ll make sure it does.”
And as the wind shifted and the tide began to rise again, both men kept their eyes on the horizon—where stone, sea, and fate were starting to intertwine into something greater than either had planned.
By the time evening came, the day’s work was finished and the Silver Talon had returned to their camp near the docks. The sun dipped low behind the waves, bleeding gold across the bridge and the sea. Lucius arrived at the Lionsguard base not long after, looking equal parts exhausted and thoughtful.
The group gathered in the main room—Gaius leaning back against a pillar, Viola and Luna sitting near the table, and Ludger quietly cleaning his gauntlets. The hum of cicadas filled the air outside while the smell of cooked fish lingered faintly in the room.
Lucius removed his gloves and sat down. “Well,” he began, “the inspection’s over. I can’t deny it—Varik seemed impressed.”
Gaius raised a brow. “That’s good news, isn’t it?”
Lucius exhaled. “Impressed doesn’t mean friendly. He acknowledged our progress, yes, but he’s already requested regular updates, full access to resource logs, and reports from both the Ironhand Syndicate and the Lionsguard. Said it was for ‘coordination and transparency.’”
Ludger gave a dry snort. “In other words, surveillance.”
Lucius nodded grimly. “Precisely. Still, he didn’t interfere today, and I’d rather keep it that way for as long as possible. The Senate will start asking for numbers soon. The faster we build, the less room they’ll have to justify taking over.”
Gaius grunted. “We’ll keep the pace. Let the man watch if it makes him feel important.”
Luna, who’d been silent until then, finally spoke up. Her tone was quiet but sharp. “He doesn’t like Ludger.”
That drew a few glances.
Lucius frowned slightly. “He said something?”
Luna shook her head. “No. But I watched him closely. His expression changed the moment he looked at Ludger. The polite mask slipped just a little.”
Gaius chuckled low in his throat. “Can’t blame him. The kid has that effect on people.”
Ludger looked up, unimpressed. “What effect?”
“The one where people can’t tell if you’re about to insult them or save their lives,” Gaius said, smirking. “And you didn’t even smirk at him yet.”
That earned a quiet laugh from Viola, who was pretending not to listen.
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