Chapter 263
Chapter 263
Once the formalities were out of the way, Ludger handed her the payment, one gleaming gold coin.
The woman’s demeanor shifted instantly. Her easy smirk turned into the sharp focus of someone who had just secured a paycheck. “Perfect,” she said, tucking the coin into her belt pouch with a satisfied hum. “Let’s get this over with, then. I don’t like wasting time once I’m paid.”
Efficient. At least she had that much going for her.
But then Ludger turned and pressed a smaller pouch into Tali’s hands. “And this is for you.”
The wind mage blinked, her confident smile faltering for the second time that day. “...What’s that supposed to be?”
Ludger met her gaze evenly. “Part of the deal. The posting said one gold coin for anyone who brought me a wind mage. Tali made it happen faster than expected, so she gets her share.”
The woman raised an eyebrow, then laughed under her breath, the sound dry and disbelieving. “Kids these days,” she muttered. “No idea what money’s worth. Just throwing around gold like it’s candy. You lot must be spending your parents’ coin like there’s no tomorrow.”
Ludger’s expression didn’t move. He could’ve explained that the gold was his own, earned through months of field work, logistics, and dungeon runs. That his parents hadn’t paid for anything he’d done since the age of four?
But she wasn’t wrong about one thing, arguing would be a hassle.
So he just shrugged faintly. “If that helps you sleep, sure.”
She gave him a curious look, almost expecting him to argue. When he didn’t, she just huffed and flicked her hand toward the open courtyard. “Fine. Lesson first, lecture later. Let’s see if you can catch the wind before it catches you.”
Ludger nodded once and stepped forward, already gathering mana at his fingertips. He didn’t care what she thought of his finances. As long as she taught him something useful before she left, the gold was worth every coin.
The woman, whose name, Ludger had learned by now, was Kaela, stood at the center of the courtyard, cloak flicking in the wind she was barely containing.
“Alright,” she said, clapping her hands once. “Lesson one: forget everything you think you know about mana control. Wind magic isn’t about power, it’s about permission.”
Ludger tilted his head slightly, eyes narrowing.
Kaela smiled faintly, clearly enjoying her own theatrics. “See, with fire, you force mana to ignite. With earth, you anchor it. With water, you flow it. But wind? You don’t command it at all. You convince it to move with you.”
She raised her hand, palm up. Air shimmered faintly above her fingers. “Wind is freedom. It doesn’t obey strict mana channels, it doesn’t like being boxed in. You can’t push it where you want it to go. You have to create a path and let it choose to follow.”
She flicked her wrist lightly, and the shimmer expanded into a faint, swirling current, dust spiraling upward. “That’s why most people can’t master it. They try to treat air like water, or like flame, and the result is, ” She snapped her fingers, the current bursting apart in a sharp pop. “instability.”
Ludger watched every motion carefully, analyzing her mana output. It wasn’t large, barely a fraction of what he used for his Overdrive, but it moved with eerie precision, like the air itself was listening.
Kaela continued, pacing slowly. “To attune with it, you don’t hold your breath, you match
it. Feel it in your lungs. Your heartbeat, your exhale, your rhythm, that’s what the element reacts to. The stronger your flow, the stronger its trust.”She pointed toward the sky. “That’s why true wind mages always feel restless. The air never stays still, and neither do we. It wants motion. It wants balance through movement.”
Her tone softened slightly as she turned back to him. “The first thing you need to understand isn’t how to control wind, it’s how to not lose yourself in it. If you try to force it, it’ll slip through your grasp. If you relax too much, it’ll scatter.”
She extended both hands, palms forward, and a light pressure formed in front of her—a soft, translucent shimmer bending the air like heat. “This is Wind Wall. The most basic spell, but also the foundation for everything else. You’re not blocking with it, you’re redirecting. Every gust, every arrow, every shockwave gets its direction shifted by this field.”
Ludger stepped closer, eyes focused on the faint distortion. “So it’s a redirection spell, not resistance.”
“Exactly,” Kaela said, pleased by his quick understanding. “Air doesn’t stop things. It moves them. That’s the essence of wind magic: adaptation. Redirection. Control through allowance.”
The shimmer faded, the breeze settling back into a calm whisper.
“Now,” she said, planting her hands on her hips. “Your turn, Vice Guildmaster. Stop trying to command it like you command stone or flame. Invite it to move with you. Breathe, and let the air remember what freedom feels like.”
Ludger inhaled slowly, feeling the familiar pulse of mana rise in his core.
“Freedom through motion…” he murmured, closing his eyes as the wind brushed past his fingertips.
Finally, something in her words clicked.
And for the first time since the southern bridge expedition, he felt a new current stir, an element waiting to be understood, not controlled.
Ludger listened carefully to Kaela’s lecture, arms crossed, eyes never leaving the faint shimmer of air she’d conjured. Her explanation made sense—the idea of cooperation rather than control—but he needed examples. He needed to see it in motion.
“Show me more,” he said. “Theory’s fine, but I want to understand how it behaves under pressure. How the element reacts when it’s pushed.”
Kaela gave him a knowing grin. “You want demonstrations? Fine.”
She turned her wrist, and a sharp whump of compressed air pulsed outward. Dust kicked up in a small ring around her boots. “That’s Wind Step,” she said casually. “Simple displacement—use a burst beneath your feet to boost your momentum. Not flight, but a half-leap that makes you weightless for a breath. Useful for dodging, escaping, or showing off.”
She shifted stance, lifted one hand, and twisted her palm. A twisting column of air coiled upward like a serpent, tugging at the edge of her cloak. “And that’s Gale Twist. Think of it as grabbing a current midair and pulling it through your target. Weak, but flexible, you can nudge trajectories or unbalance someone in armor.”
The currents faded slowly, and Ludger watched the movement of the dust, the subtle rhythm of her breathing, the way the mana rippled in smooth, circular patterns rather than surging in lines. He realized he’d seen it before. Maurien used the same principle, without ever explaining it.
He could remember how Maurien fought: the way the older mage never forced wind to move, but rather moved with it. Every step, every spell , every motion rode the flow like a leaf on a current. His attacks always arrived a heartbeat sooner than expected, his spells twisting along natural air paths instead of cutting against them.
Ludger had seen him use Wind Step
in the mountains to cross gaps without breaking stride. He’d seen him bend projectiles, not with brute deflection but by gliding his mana through the same air currents that carried them.He had even seen Maurien use the wind to ease his weight while descending cliffs, his fall slowed by layered air cushions that acted like invisible hands.
The pattern was the same: flow, not fight.
Kaela kept demonstrating, moving through forms like a dancer, each motion graceful but purposeful. “Wind doesn’t like sharp edges,” she explained. “It’s the element of transition. The difference between falling and flying is just how long you can ride the air before it drops you. Remember that.”
Ludger nodded slightly. “So the secret isn’t brute control, it’s integration. I make my mana flow like the wind itself.”
“Exactly,” Kaela said with a smirk. “Not bad, kid. You’re getting it.”
Ludger watched as a new realization settled into place. Maurien hadn’t been forcing air either, he’d been gliding with it.
The air wasn’t just a weapon or a shield, it was a partner.
He looked down at his own hands, already feeling the weightless hum of mana gathering under his skin.
“Alright,” he said quietly, determination flickering in his eyes. “Let’s see if I can make it move.”
Ludger stood in the middle of the courtyard, the faint traces of Kaela’s demonstration still drifting around him—whorls of dust and wind refusing to settle.
This shouldn’t be hard. Not anymore. He already had the foundation, the logic, behind elemental attunement. Every element had its own nature, and he’d learned how to make his mana obey that rhythm rather than just his will.
Fire was ignition, raw, violent release. When he infused his Overdrive with it, it burst outward, consuming everything in its path with explosive power. Fire wasn’t subtle; it was dominance through momentum, an immediate conversion of mana to force.
Earth was anchor, stability and weight. It grounded him, made every attack hit like a hammer and every defense feel immovable. It didn’t rush or burn; it endured. Earth demanded patience, and in return, it gave strength that couldn’t be pushed aside.
Water was flow, the art of transition. It taught him control through continuity, the ability to let one motion become the next without resistance. It wasn’t about overpowering, it was about never stopping. Water made the body adapt, shaping itself to circumstance, reshaping attacks into counters, hesitation into rhythm.
Now, there was wind. Wind wasn’t power or patience or precision. It was freedom.
He could feel it now, the gap between his own mana and the currents brushing past his skin. Air didn’t want to be bound; it wanted to move, to exist in constant motion. He didn’t need to control it, he just needed to travel with it.
His mind started forming the logic in the same structured way he always did. breaking the magic down into function:
Fire explodes mana outward.
Earth compresses mana inward.
Water redirects mana through itself.
Wind… liberates mana.
It didn’t confine; it expanded.
He could already see how it would blend into his Overdrive. Fire turned his strikes into detonations. Earth made them immovable. Water made them seamless. But Wind, Wind could make them limitless.
If he could synchronize his breathing with the rhythm of the air, if he could make his mana circulate the same way wind flowed, free, circular, untethered, then he could move faster, lighter, without friction. His body wouldn’t fight gravity; it would ride it.
The principle was there. The logic was sound.
Fire taught him how to ignite.
Earth taught him how to endure.
Water taught him how to adapt.
And now, Wind would teach him how to transcend.
Ludger lifted his hand, eyes half-lidded as he felt the faint stir of air against his fingertips. His mana pulsed, soft at first, then lighter, spread out instead of condensed.
The breeze responded, curling upward in gentle spirals, the air and mana mingling naturally for the first time. A faint smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. “Yeah,” he murmured. “No longer a mystery.”
Wind wasn’t something to master. It was something to join.
Ludger sat cross-legged in the courtyard long after Kaela had stopped talking.
She had left the air thick with the faint hum of her mana, light, restless, scattered like motes of static clinging to the breeze.
He closed his eyes and let it brush across his senses. Wind doesn’t obey, he reminded himself. It follows if you give it a path.
So instead of drawing mana inward, as he would for earth or fire, he pushed it outward, not as a command, but as an invitation. He let it leak from his core in slow, pulsing waves, extending beyond his skin like ripples spreading across still water.
The trick, he realized, wasn’t about domination but synchronization. He pictured his mana not as energy, but as currents, thin threads weaving through the air around him. Every breath in drew them closer; every exhale set them free. He adjusted the rhythm until his mana pulses matched the rhythm of the wind brushing across his face. The moment they aligned, something changed.
The faint rustle of leaves shifted in tone, no longer random, but attentive. The air wasn’t being pulled by his will; it was listening to it.
He slowly raised one hand, palm forward. His mana extended like invisible fingers, not gripping the air but tracing its edges, following its natural paths instead of cutting through them. He felt the temperature dip, pressure building between his fingertips and the space ahead.
He focused. Don’t command. Guide.
The currents answered.
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