All Jobs and Classes! I Just Wanted One Skill, Not Them All!

Chapter 239



Chapter 239

By the time night fell, the third island had gone still. The waves crashed rhythmically in the distance, but even that sound felt subdued, muted by the weight of unease that hung over the camp. The air was cold and damp, carrying the scent of salt and old blood.

Cor moved methodically between the fortifications, his hand tapping softly against the newly solidified stone paths as he worked. Each time he stopped, he pressed his hand into the ground and murmured a low incantation. Rings of pale blue light bloomed outward, sinking into the sand before rising again as hovering orbs of soft luminescent mana.

One by one, the orbs spread through the camp, like drifting lanterns that never dimmed. They floated just above head height, casting a faint azure glow that outlined tents, walls, and the new defensive lines. Their light was steady, unwavering, immune to the cold wind that swept from the sea. Even when a gust howled through the encampment, the wards flickered once and then stabilized, bright and resolute.

“Those’ll hold through the night,” Cor said, breath misting in the chill air. “Wards are fed directly by mana and cores. The wind won’t snuff them, and a few stray attacks won’t either.”

He gestured toward a nearby crate, where the shimmering remnants of sahuagin cores lay stacked like dull gemstones. After the battle, they had gathered them by the thousands, crystals that pulsed faintly with sea-aspected mana. They’d served their purpose in life; now they’d serve another, powering the wards that kept the camp safe.

Ludger knelt near one of the light sources, checking its mana flow. “Good setup,” he said quietly. “At least these things are finally useful for something.”

Cor smirked faintly. “Monsters are like weeds, what doesn’t try to eat you, you can still compost.”

Around them, the soldiers worked in subdued silence, tending to wounds, sharpening weapons, reinforcing barricades. Yet even as the blue light painted the camp in calm hues, it couldn’t touch the tension in their eyes.

Ludger noticed it when he looked toward the shore. A handful of soldiers stood at the edge of the surf, staring out into the dark sea. The reflection of the wards danced across the water like ghostly fireflies—but beneath that light, the waves looked too deep, too black.

Every so often, one of them flinched at a distant splash or the faint groan of shifting coral. They were thinking the same thing he was.

That somewhere out there, beneath that endless ocean, the beast that shattered their ships was still waiting. Watching. Ludger exhaled slowly, running a hand through his hair as he looked toward the horizon. Nothing moved. The sea was calm. But calm, he’d learned, didn’t mean safe.

“Keep the wards strong,” he murmured to Cor. “If those things comes up again, I want everyone awake before it even surfaces.”

Cor nodded, eyes on the water. “Yes. But let’s hope it doesn’t decide we’re worth the trouble tonight.”

The two men stood in silence a moment longer, listening to the steady rhythm of the waves and the faint hum of the mana wards, like a heartbeat against the dark.

The night deepened, but the camp didn’t sleep. The wards hummed softly, a steady blue pulse in the dark, while the waves whispered against the shore. Ludger crouched by the water’s edge, hand pressed to the sand. The stone beneath his touch rumbled faintly, and then—plop!—something shot up from the sea and landed beside him with a wet smack.

A fat, silver-scaled fish flopped helplessly on the sand. He smirked faintly. “Got one.”

Another pulse of mana, and a small ripple in the water sent three more flying out, landing in a neat pile. The soldiers watching nearby murmured in surprise, half impressed, half amused, as Ludger calmly skewered them on a length of stone and started cleaning them with ease.

“Finally,” Viola said from behind him, stretching her arms. “Actual food.”

“Yeah,” Ludger muttered, tossing a glance toward the campfire where a few Ironhand mercenaries were roasting something… suspiciously humanoid in shape. “I’m not touching those.”

The smell coming from that fire was sharp, oily, definitely sahuagin meat. Apparently, it was

edible, and mercenaries were perfectly fine chewing on it, even complimenting the flavor.Ludger wasn’t one of them.

He turned his fish over the flames, the skin crackling as it cooked. It was simple, unseasoned, but he didn’t care. It was real food.

Arslan wandered over then, grin wide, holding a mug of something steaming. “Still being picky, huh?” he said with a chuckle. “You know, back in my day, we’d eat whatever didn’t eat us first.”

Ludger gave him a sidelong look. “You mean like them?” He nodded toward the mercenaries gnawing on sahuagin meat.

Arslan laughed. “Exactly like them! You could learn something from their stomachs.”

“I’d rather not,” Ludger said dryly.

Arslan crouched beside him, squinting at the skewered fish. “You sure you trust that one more than sahuagin? At least we know they’re full of mana.”

“Yeah,” Ludger said, “and parasites, and possibly curses.”

That got another booming laugh from Arslan. “Still a kid, being picky about food.”

Ludger turned his fish over once more, the golden skin flaring in the firelight, and then looked at his father. “Then why are you eating my fish?”

Arslan froze mid-bite, eyes glancing down guiltily at the stick in his hand, one that very clearly held one of Ludger’s catches.

He grinned. “Because while I can eat all sorts of things in an emergency, it doesn’t mean I like them.”

Ludger stared at him for a long second, deadpan. Then he sighed and rolled his eyes. “Unbelievable.”

Arslan laughed harder, tossing him a wink. “See? You’re learning how the world works, Luds.”

“Yeah,” Ludger muttered, poking the fire with a stone stick, “I’m learning that my father steals my dinner.”

Their laughter mixed with the crackle of the fire and the hum of the wards, warm against the cold ocean wind. For a brief moment, even with the labyrinth’s shadow looming in the distance and the dark sea hiding gods-knew-what beneath its waves, the camp almost felt… peaceful.

The fire crackled low, its orange glow flickering against the black sand as the sea wind carried away the smoke. Most of the camp had settled into a wary quiet, some eating, some cleaning gear, others just staring at the horizon as if expecting the ocean to rise up again.

Ludger was halfway through patching another section of wall when Rathen appeared at the edge of the firelight, his armor still damp and streaked with sea grit. His usual calm expression was gone, replaced by a furrowed brow that told everyone before he even spoke that something was wrong.

Lucius noticed first. “Report,” he said, standing from his seat beside the map table.

Rathen exhaled, rubbing a hand down his beard. “The scouts came back from the labyrinth’s perimeter,” he began. “We… found something off.”

Ludger turned, straightening. “Off how?”

Rathen hesitated for half a second, as if trying to choose the right words. “The structure’s changed. The ruins still look the same from the outside, same coral growths, same pillars, but inside… it’s different.”

Lucius’s eyes narrowed. “Different how?”

“The water,” Rathen said grimly. “It’s higher. The tunnels that used to be dry, or close enough, are knee-deep now. The whole interior’s flooding.”

Ludger frowned. “Wait. There’s water inside the labyrinth?”

Rathen nodded. “Wasn’t like that before. The first time we came here, there were only a few puddles, little ponds scattered through the lower chambers. But each time we checked since, it’s been getting worse.”

Lucius crossed his arms. “How bad are we talking?”

Rathen’s tone was steady but uneasy. “The last expedition we made, a year ago, it barely covered our heels. Now it’s halfway up our legs in some sections. And it’s not just stagnant water. It’s flowing, from somewhere deeper.”

A long silence followed, broken only by the soft hiss of the waves.

Ludger’s brow furrowed, his mind already piecing together the implications. “If the water level’s rising from the inside,” he said slowly, “then the labyrinth’s structure is connected to something below it. A reservoir… or something else”

Rathen nodded. “That’s what we’re afraid of.”

Lucius’s gaze drifted toward the cliffs that loomed in the distance, the mouth of the labyrinth glowing faintly blue in the dark. “If that’s true,” he murmured, “then whatever’s powering this place might be stirring again.”

Ludger’s frown deepened. “And if it keeps rising?”

Rathen looked him squarely in the eye. “Then the labyrinth won’t just flood, it’ll burst. All that mana pressure and seawater will find a way out.” He gestured toward the ocean. “And when it does, that creature out there might not stay under much longer.”

The fire popped, throwing sparks into the night. Lucius didn’t say anything right away, just stared toward the labyrinth, his face shadowed and thoughtful. “We hold position until dawn,” he said finally. “No one goes in until we understand what we’re walking into.”

Rathen nodded and stepped back, his expression still grim.

As he walked away, Ludger stared out toward the dark silhouette of the island’s cliffs. The faint blue mist rising from the labyrinth’s entrance seemed to pulse in time with the ocean’s waves—like a heartbeat syncing with something vast and unseen beneath the sea.

He clenched his fists, voice low. “The water’s not rising on its own,” he muttered. “Something down there is moving.”

The next morning, the gray veil of dawn finally lifted over the island.

For the first time in days, the sea was calm, no roaring waves, just the rhythmic whisper of the tide brushing against the black sand. The early sunlight spilled across the camp, turning the blue wards into pale gold as soldiers began to stir, shaking off exhaustion from the night before.

Ludger was already awake, standing near the shoreline with his arms crossed, staring at the horizon like it might answer a question he’d been asking all night.  Then, finally, something shifted in the distance.

“Look!” one of the Ironhand scouts shouted from the ridge. “Something’s coming in from the east!”

Heads turned. The shimmer of sunlight on water revealed a massive slab of stone gliding toward them, smooth, controlled, floating effortlessly just above the waves. Spray glistened off its sides as it drew closer, and then shapes became visible upon it.

Two men. One broad and solid, his familiar stance unmistakable even from afar. The other, tall and armored, his silver cloak tattered and darkened by smoke. Gaius and Varik. They’d made it.

A ripple of relief spread through the camp. Soldiers and mages dropped what they were doing to rush to the edge of the beach, calling out as the stone platform slowed and grounded gently against the sand.

Ludger stepped forward first. “You took your time,” he said, though the weight in his voice betrayed his relief.

Gaius looked up, smirking faintly beneath the layer of salt and soot that streaked his beard. “Had to make sure the sea didn’t eat us twice.”

He and Varik dismounted the platform with careful steps, both of them moving like men who’d been through hell and barely clawed their way out. Varik’s armor was scorched and dented, the sigil of the Silver Talon barely visible beneath the damage. Gaius’s clothes were torn, his sleeves crusted with salt and dried blood, but his eyes were sharp, alive.

Lucius was there a moment later, expression tense. “We thought you were gone,” he said. “What happened?”

Gaius exhaled, glancing back at the sea. “We survived, that’s what happened.” He rubbed a hand down his face before continuing. “We lost five ships. The beast chased us for hours, dove, surfaced, dove again. We couldn’t outrun it in a straight line, so I had to raise reefs and barriers just to slow it down.”

He grimaced, his voice dropping lower. “Even then, we lost twenty men. Some went down with the first ship, others during the retreat. But the rest, most of the fleet, made it back to the mainland.”

The camp fell silent. The numbers weren’t catastrophic, but they hit hard. These weren’t random sailors, they were trained, hardened men. Losing that many in a single encounter spoke volumes about what they were up against.

Varik straightened beside Gaius, exhaustion plain in his face. “We held the beast off long enough for the remaining ships to escape beyond its range. It didn’t pursue once we reached open waters. For now, they’re regrouping near the southern docks.”

Lucius’s shoulders relaxed, just slightly. “Then we still have our supply line.”

“Barely,” Gaius muttered. “We’ll need to rebuild half those vessels before they can come back.”

Ludger nodded once, quietly. “Still… you made it.”

Gaius gave him a small grin, the kind that only half hid his fatigue. “Told you I would. You didn’t think I’d let an overgrown eel send me to the depths, did you?”

Ludger crossed his arms. “Would’ve been a waste of good stone.”

That earned a chuckle from a few of the soldiers nearby. Even Varik cracked a faint smirk.

For a brief moment, the tension that had gripped the camp since last night eased. They were battered, yes—but together again. The sea was calm, the sun warm, and for the first time in days, the smell of salt didn’t sting quite so sharply.

But when Gaius’s eyes drifted toward the towering cliffs of the labyrinth, his smile faded. “Don’t relax yet,” he said. “The sea monster wasn’t the only thing stirring out there.”

And though he didn’t elaborate, the look in his eyes said enough—whatever waited in that labyrinth was far worse than anything swimming beneath the waves.

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