Chapter 225
Chapter 225
Another month passed in the blink of an eye.
The ocean breeze had grown colder, the waves rougher, but the rhythm of work never faltered. Day after day, Ludger and Gaius continued expanding the bridge’s skeleton across the endless blue—pillars, arches, and channels forming the spine of a structure that seemed to defy reason.
Then, one morning, as the tide rolled back under the pale dawn, Ludger pressed his palms to the last foundation stone and released a steady surge of mana. The coral-rock mixture solidified instantly, merging with the seabed below like molten iron cooling into armor.
The final pillar of the first half of the bridge was done.
He straightened, wiping the sweat and seawater from his forehead as the faint hum of mana subsided. Then, a familiar shimmer appeared in front of his eyes—a translucent blue screen hovering in the air.
[Earth Manipulation +50 XP.]
[Geomancer class reached Lv 65 → New Skill Acquired!]
Ludger squinted against the light as more runes scrolled down, each one sharp and cold like carved glass.
Geomancer Lv 65 (+6 INT, +3 WIS / level)
Skills:
[Earth Manipulation Lv 85]
[Stone Grip Lv 62]
[Quicksand Lv 14]
[Seismic Sense Lv 24]
[Mineral Skin Lv 01]
[Terra Burst Lv 01]
[Gaia’s Grasp Lv 01]
[Rock Spike Lv 01]
[Continental Shield Lv 01]
[Earthen Surge Lv 01]
[Dust Curtain Lv 01]
[Tectonic Pulse Lv 11]
[Stoneflow Lv 01] (Liquefies a section of solid earth or stone into a controllable fluid state, allowing rapid reshaping, tunneling, or absorption of impacts. Cost: 120 mana.)
[Earthen Ward Lv 01] (Creates a low, curved barrier that redirects both physical and elemental projectiles; can be maintained with sustained mana. Cost: 60 mana / 10 per second.)
The notification faded as Ludger caught his breath, sweat running down the side of his face.
He knelt and pressed his hand against the bridge foundation. The stone felt different now — more obedient. His control had become sharper, precise to the millimeter.
He tested the new techniques in small motions.
First, Stoneflow: a segment of the bridge rippled like liquid, then solidified again under his will. The stability didn’t falter even a fraction.
Then Earthen Ward: a semicircular barrier curved up from the ground beside him, absorbing the spray of wind and grit before settling quietly back into the foundation.
Perfect for ambushes. Perfect for defense. Perfect for turning an entire battlefield into a trap.
Ludger smirked faintly. “Yeah… this’ll do.”
Behind him, Gaius stretched his arms with a low grunt. “Let me guess—you thought of new tricks again.”
“Two,” Ludger replied, voice calm but the hint of pride slipping through. “Flexible ones.”
Gaius chuckled. “Figures. You’ve been learning faster than the damn bridge is growing.”
“Then I’ll finish before it does,” Ludger said, glancing toward the horizon. The unfinished pillars rose from the water like distant sentinels, marking how far they still had to go.
He clenched his fist once, feeling mana flow through his body like steady current.
Halfway done. Three months to prove it could be finished. And the sea — no matter how restless — would move to his rhythm now.
The trip back to shore took time — fifty kilometers of bridge foundation stretched ahead of them, a half-finished spine of stone and coral cutting through the sea mist. Normally, the return would’ve taken hours, but Gaius wasn’t the type to waste time walking when the earth itself could do the moving.
With a grunt and a flick of his wrist, the stone under their feet shifted — each slab of stone rippling like a rolling tide. The wave of rock carried them forward, gliding smoothly over the long path.
Ludger stood steady, his balance perfect despite the motion. The sensation was strange — not unlike surfing the sea itself, but solid, responsive, alive. He crossed his arms, trying not to grin.
“Stone surfing,” he muttered.
Gaius shot him a sidelong glance. “What?”
“That’s what I’m calling it.”
The old geomancer snorted. “You and your names. It’s just walking smarter.”
Gaius grumbled something under his breath that sounded suspiciously like ‘smartass’, but didn’t deny it. The wave of stone carried them onward, the rumble beneath them deep and steady, until the shoreline came back into view — a pale stretch of sand framed by the rising morning fog.
As they approached, the rolling motion slowed, and the stone solidified beneath their boots again. The air smelled of salt and smoke, faint traces of the sahuagin attacks still lingering.
And there, at the edge of the beach, stood Varik.
Just like every other afternoon that month.
The Silver Talon commander was easy to spot — tall, broad-shouldered, his armor perfectly polished even with sea spray glinting off it. His cloak shifted in the wind as he stood on a flat rock near the tide, arms crossed, watching the ocean as if it owed him answers. His spear was planted in the sand beside him, the blade catching the sunlight.
Gaius slowed to a stop beside Ludger, his brow furrowing. “He’s been doing that every damn day. What’s he looking for, mermaids?”
“Maybe he’s waiting for the sea to salute him,” Ludger said, his tone dry.
The older mage snorted. “Or waiting for someone to drown so he can say it’s our fault.”
Ludger didn’t answer right away. His eyes lingered on Varik — the man hadn’t noticed them yet, or maybe he had and just didn’t care. Either way, he stood with the stillness of a statue, watching the horizon like it was a battlefield.
Gaius adjusted the strap of his bag. “So… you planning to go over there and talk, or keep your distance like always?”
Ludger shrugged. “Depends.”
“On what?”
“On whether I can watch him without hearing some pompous nonsense again.”
Gaius chuckled, his deep voice carrying over the surf. “If you ever learn to keep your mouth shut, you’ll live longer.”
“I’d rather live honest,” Ludger replied.
That earned him a grin from the old man — half amused, half resigned.
They walked closer down the slope of the beach, the sound of their boots crunching over sand finally drawing Varik’s attention. The commander turned, his eyes sharp and assessing as always.
“Master Gaius. Vice Guildmaster Ludger.” His tone was clipped, formal. “Back from the outer stretch?”
Gaius nodded. “Pillars are stable up to the fifty kilometer. Not a single crack.”
Varik’s gaze flicked to Ludger, cold and unreadable. “Impressive. Though I suppose you’d consider that only halfway.”
Ludger’s mouth twitched faintly. “You’re catching on.”
Varik’s jaw tightened just enough for Ludger to notice, but the man turned back toward the sea without another word.
He’d been watching the water every day, searching for patterns in the waves — maybe waiting for another sahuagin attack, maybe studying the sea currents, maybe something else entirely.
Either way, Ludger couldn’t shake the feeling that Varik wasn’t just observing.
He was measuring. And Ludger didn’t like being measured.
Varik didn’t take his eyes off the ocean when he spoke. The waves crashed against the rocks, steady and rhythmic, filling the pause between his words.
“Tell me,” he said finally, voice low and even, “have either of you been to the archipelago yet?”
Ludger blinked, caught slightly off guard. He exchanged a quick glance with Gaius, who arched a brow and shook his head.
“No,” Gaius said flatly. “Not yet.”
Varik hummed softly, his tone unreadable. “Interesting. You accepted the job—built half a bridge across the ocean—without ever setting foot on the place it’s meant to reach.”
Ludger crossed his arms. “We were hired to build the bridge, not sightsee.”
That earned him the faintest curl of Varik’s lip, something between a smile and a sneer. “Pragmatic answer. But still short-sighted.”
Gaius snorted. “You can save the speeches, commander. I’ve built fortresses without stepping on the mountain first. You make the foundation solid, the rest follows.”
Varik finally turned to face them, his cloak catching in the sea breeze. “The foundation, yes. But what if the land on the other side isn’t solid to begin with?”
Ludger frowned. “What are you getting at?”
Varik planted his spear in the sand, the blade glinting in the light. “Only the Ironhand Syndicate has been to that archipelago in the past few years. They’re the ones who confirmed the labyrinth’s existence. They’re also the ones who stopped sending ships because of the sahuagin attacks.”
He glanced at the water again. “And yet… it’s been weeks since the last real wave of them. The attacks have ceased entirely. No sightings, no remains washing ashore, no sounds below the currents.”
Ludger’s eyes narrowed slightly. “Your point?”
Varik’s gaze cut back to him, sharp and cold. “My point, Vice Guildmaster, is that it’s strange. Conveniently strange. Monsters don’t just stop. Either something killed them… or something called
them somewhere else.”The wind picked up, carrying the scent of salt and wet stone between them.
Gaius crossed his arms, his tone thoughtful now. “You think they’re gathering at the archipelago.”
“I think,” Varik said, “that the Syndicate knows more than they’re saying. And that the Empire isn’t being told the full story of what lies beyond that fog.”
Ludger’s jaw tightened. “And you’re implying we’re walking into it blind.”
Varik didn’t answer. He didn’t have to. His silence was answer enough.
For a long moment, the three men stood there — the soldier, the veteran, and the boy — all staring at the same restless horizon, each of them measuring the weight of what might be waiting across the waves.
Varik’s gaze lingered on the horizon for a moment longer before he finally turned fully toward them, his expression composed but calculating.
“So,” he said, brushing some salt spray off his gauntlet, “if I were to bring the matter of a scouting expedition to Lord Lucius… would you two be willing to go to the archipelago yourselves?”
Ludger didn’t hesitate. “Fine by me.”
Gaius, however, frowned. “Depends on the details.”
Varik tilted his head slightly. “Caution. Good. Though, I imagine you’ve already guessed what I’m implying.”
“Lucius wants results,” Gaius said, voice measured. “If he agrees, he’ll want more than a visit. He’ll want data, samples, proof. And we’ll be the ones bringing it back.”
Varik gave a quiet chuckle. “You make it sound like a burden.”
“It usually is,” Gaius replied.
The commander’s eyes moved between them, his tone almost casual but the weight behind it unmistakable. “Lord Lucius is still the head of this operation, and he’s not a fool. Once he sees that the attacks have stopped and the bridge is ahead of schedule, he’ll want to test what happens beyond it. I simply intend to make sure the right people are chosen to lead that venture.”
Ludger crossed his arms. “You mean us.”
“I mean the only two who can turn the sea floor into a road,” Varik said smoothly.
He looked back toward the bridge stretching behind them — a colossal structure of coral and stone cutting across the ocean like a scar. “If the noble lord wishes to send someone across before completion, he’ll need assurance that the path will hold.”
“Then you’re already assuming Lucius will agree,” Ludger noted.
Varik smiled faintly. “I’d be disappointed if he didn’t.”
The wind pushed across the beach, rustling Gaius’s cloak and carrying the faint scent of salt and earth.
“How fast can you make it?” Varik asked finally. “If Lucius approves the journey?”
Gaius looked to Ludger, then crouched and pressed a hand to the ground. A faint vibration rolled outward, small stones shifting as his mana pulsed through the earth.
“We don’t need to finish the full bridge,” he explained. “For travel, all we need is a single line of connected pillars — each close enough to support a narrow path of stone between them. No timber. Just solid rock.”
He stood, dusting his hands off. “That would take less than a week.”
Varik’s smile deepened — not wide, but deliberate. The kind of smile a man wears when a plan falls into place.
“Incredbile,” he said. “I’m glad to hear it. I am sure Lord Lucius will be, too.”
Ludger studied him for a moment, the faintest flicker of unease crossing his features. Varik’s tone was polite, but there was intent behind it — one that wasn’t entirely about the bridge.
Still, Ludger gave a short nod. “Then tell him. We’ll be ready.”
Varik inclined his head slightly, retrieving his spear from the sand. “Good. I’ll have that conversation tonight.”
With that, he turned back toward the waves, eyes narrowing at the fog rolling far beyond the horizon — where the archipelago waited unseen.
Gaius let out a slow breath once the man was out of earshot. “You sure about this?”
Ludger’s smirk was faint but steady. “No. But I’m curious.”
“That’s what worries me,” Gaius muttered.
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