Chapter 430
Chapter 430
Ludger called Yvar in that same evening.
Not to the council room. Not to the office stacked with ledgers and maps.
Just a table. Two chairs. The froststeel samples laid out between them.
“Keep it,” Ludger said, nodding toward the metal. “All of it.”
Yvar raised an eyebrow. “No sales?”
“Not yet,” Ludger replied. “But spread the information that we are selling.”
Yvar’s pen paused mid-note.
“…Without prices?”
“Exactly.”
Yvar leaned back slowly, already seeing the outline.
“For our old clients?” he asked.
“Linne. Dalan. Anyone who dealt with us before this week,” Ludger said. “Same prices. Same terms. No changes.”
Yvar nodded. That made sense. Stability rewarded loyalty.
“And for everyone else?” Yvar asked.
Ludger folded his hands.
“They offer,” he said. “Not us.”
Yvar’s eyes narrowed slightly. “And we respond only if—”
“Only if the offer clears a threshold,” Ludger finished. “High enough that it hurts to propose it.”
Yvar exhaled.
“Explain it to me anyway,” he said. “I want to hear it in your words.”
Ludger obliged.
“Right now, nobles are testing us,” he said. “Not directly. Through third parties. They want to see if we panic, flood the market, or start undercutting ourselves.”
He tapped the froststeel lightly.
“If we name a price, we anchor the market. That gives them something to push against.”
Yvar nodded slowly.
“If we stay silent,” Ludger continued, “they’re forced to guess. Guess wrong, and they lose money or credibility. Guess low, and we don’t answer. Guess high, and they reveal how much they’re willing to pay.”
“And how desperate they are,” Yvar added.
“Yes,” Ludger agreed.
He continued calmly.
“Old clients stay stable. That signals reliability. New buyers see scarcity and uncertainty. That creates pressure—on them, not us.”
Yvar scribbled notes faster now.
“And if they complain?” Yvar asked.
“They can’t,” Ludger said. “We never refused to sell. We just didn’t accept their offer.”
Yvar smiled faintly.
“And if rumors spread that we’re hoarding froststeel?”
Ludger shrugged.
“Then the ones who really need it will raise their bids. Or show their hands.”
Silence settled between them.
Yvar closed the ledger.
“It’s not just about profit,” he said.
“No,” Ludger replied. “It’s about control. Information control. Market control. And identifying who’s pushing hardest.”
Yvar stood, expression steadier than it had been in days.
“I’ll handle it,” he said.
Ludger nodded.
As Yvar left, Ludger glanced once more at the froststeel on the table.
Metal was easy.
People were always the real problem.
Ludger left the guild hall as the afternoon light settled into Lionfang. The streets were busier than usual. He slowed when he reached the northern road.
Several carts were rolling in through the gates, heavy axles creaking under their load. Burlap sacks piled high. Crates stacked neatly. The smell hit him a moment later, fresh soil, grain, and something green enough to almost feel out of place this far north.
Crops. A lot of them. Ludger watched in silence as the carts passed.
It had been months since the kids he’d taught earlier in the year had been assigned to the southern fields. Back then, it had been little more than an experiment. Controlled water magic. Mana-guided irrigation. Nothing flashy.
Now the results were rolling straight through the gates. Increased yield. Healthier produce. Enough surplus to justify transport instead of local storage.
Ludger nodded faintly. He hadn’t overseen it.
He’d checked once, briefly, when some farmers had started raising cattle. After that, he’d left it alone. Systems that worked didn’t need constant supervision. Someone else had taken over. His gaze followed the carts toward the inner storehouses. Darnell. The realization came quietly.
Ludger rarely saw him these days. Not on the walls. Not barking orders at patrols. Not drilling recruits in the yard. Instead, he’d been buried in ledgers, schedules, supply rotations. Managing fields. Managing livestock. Managing people who had never held a sword in their lives.
It was… strange. The captain of Lionfang’s guard, reduced, no, redirected, into agricultural logistics. Ludger considered it for a moment. Then dismissed the discomfort. Defense wasn’t just walls and weapons.
Food kept people alive. Stability kept them loyal. And someone had to make sure both happened without failing.
Darnell was good at that. Ludger turned away and continued down the street. Lionfang was growing. Not loudly. Not dramatically. But in ways that would matter when things finally went wrong.
Ludger headed home at an unhurried pace, hands tucked into his coat as Lionfang settled into its evening rhythm.
The carts kept moving behind him. Grain. Vegetables. Salted meat. Real weight. Real value. He thought about it longer than he expected.
In a world of magic and labyrinths, people liked to pretend strength was measured only in mana capacity and flashy weapons and how deep someone could walk into a death trap without flinching. That was a convenient lie.
Most people never went near labyrinths. Never saw one. Never fought monsters or touched enchanted metal. They lived and died by something far more ordinary. Food. Tools. Shelter. Trade. Economy.
Economic power was still power. Maybe even more so, because it decided who could afford to chase strength in the first place.
A guild with steady food supplies didn’t panic when winters stretched long. A city with surplus crops didn’t fold when trade routes closed. People who ate well trained better, healed faster, worked longer.
Spreading knowledge and good food among his people, that was just the foundation.
Necessary, but basic. Ludger’s thoughts sharpened as the implications stacked up.
With stable agriculture, Lionfang could support a larger standing force without draining the population. With surplus production, they could stockpile instead of living cycle to cycle. With predictable supply, training schedules didn’t have to bend around hunger or exhaustion.
And beyond that… Trade leverage.
If Lionfang controlled froststeel and food, negotiations stopped being about favors and started being about access. Merchants behaved differently when their profits depended on maintaining goodwill. Nobles hesitated when cutting ties meant empty granaries or idle forges.
He could standardize equipment production. Set maintenance cycles instead of emergency repairs. Create reserve stocks of mana-infused materials meant only for defense.
He could fund infrastructure quietly. Better roads. Reinforced storage. Underground shelters disguised as cellars. Mana-warmed housing to reduce winter attrition. He could invest in people who never fought.
Healers who never left the city. Craftsmen who didn’t need to gamble their lives for materials. Teachers who could turn unremarkable kids into reliable specialists.
None of that required a labyrinth. All of it made the city harder to break. Ludger exhaled slowly. Labyrinths were accelerators. Dangerous ones. But the economy?
Economy was a multiplier. It amplified everything else, strength, loyalty, recovery, resilience. He reached his door and paused, looking back once more toward the city. Going deeper into labyrinths would always matter. But if he wanted the Lionsguard, and Lionfang, to survive what was coming, he’d need to wield more than mana and stone. He stepped inside, already planning how to turn prosperity into armor.
Ludger asked his mother that night.
Not during a meeting.
Not while reviewing reports.
Just at home.
Elaine was seated near the hearth, folding clean cloth with steady, unhurried movements. The twins had already claimed Ludger the moment he stepped inside, Elle clinging to one side of his scarf, Arash tugging the other, pulling him back and forth like he was a particularly sturdy piece of furniture that existed solely for their entertainment.
He tolerated it without comment, shifting his stance automatically to keep them balanced.
“Mother,” Ludger said, voice calm. “As a civilian living in Lionfang… what do you think the city needs most right now if it’s going to prosper beyond guild work?”
Elaine paused mid-fold. She looked up at him slowly, eyes narrowing, not in anger, but in confusion. Then suspicion. The kind that came from knowing someone too well.
The twins chose that moment to pull harder, laughing. Ludger adjusted, catching Elle before she tipped and nudging Arash back into place, never breaking eye contact.
“…Why are you asking me that?” Elaine asked.
Ludger didn’t answer right away. He waited until the twins settled, then spoke carefully.
“I need the opinion of someone who isn’t thinking about patrol rotations or labyrinth routes,” he said. “Someone who isn’t weighing every problem in terms of battles or contracts.”
Elaine’s gaze sharpened.
“But who still sees what’s happening,” Ludger continued. “Who walks the streets. Talks to people. Buys food. Watches neighbors worry about ordinary things.”
The cloth in Elaine’s hands lowered slightly.
“You want a civilian’s view,” she said slowly.
“Yes.”
“And not just any civilian,” she added. “One close enough to the center that she can’t ignore the consequences.”
Ludger nodded once. Elaine leaned back in her chair, studying him with new attention. Not her son the prodigy. Not the vice guildmaster. Just a boy asking a question he didn’t yet trust himself to answer.
“…You’re planning something,” she said.
“Yes.”
“And you don’t want to plan it blind.”
Ludger hesitated, then answered honestly.
“I don’t want to assume I already know.”
The room grew quiet. The fire crackled softly. Outside, distant sounds of Lionfang settling in for the night drifted through the walls. The twins had grown tired of tugging and now leaned against Ludger’s legs, content.
Elaine closed her eyes for a moment. When she opened them, the confusion was gone. What remained was thoughtfulness, the kind born of living in a place long enough to feel its pulse.
“All right,” she said. “If you want a civilian’s answer…”
She met his eyes directly.
“…then you’ll get one without flattery.”
Ludger inclined his head. That was exactly what he needed.
Elaine took her time answering.
She shifted the folded cloth onto her lap, fingers smoothing a crease that didn’t really need it. When she spoke, her voice was calm—gentle, even—but there was weight behind it.
“You and your father lead the guild,” she began. “So of course your attention goes to safety first. Walls. Patrols. Monsters. Politics. That’s normal.”
She looked at Ludger steadily.
“But that focus builds a wall.”
Ludger didn’t interrupt.
“You protect the city well,” Elaine continued. “Better than anyone expected. People feel safer. They eat better. They sleep without checking the door every hour.”
She paused, then added quietly, “But safety isn’t closeness.”
The words settled. Elaine leaned back slightly, eyes drifting toward the window as if she were looking at the streets beyond.
“The common folk are grateful,” she said. “They enjoy what the guild brings, jobs, protection, trade, prosperity from the labyrinth. But they don’t feel connected to it.”
Her gaze returned to him.
“And they certainly don’t feel connected to you.”
The twins shifted at Ludger’s legs. He stayed still.
“I talk to people,” Elaine went on. “At the market. At the baths. When I buy food. When I wait in line like everyone else.”
A faint smile touched her lips, humorless.
“They talk to me because I’m not wearing armor. Because I don’t carry authority with me when I walk.”
She shook her head.
“They all say the same thing.”
Ludger felt a faint tightening in his chest.
“You and your father are hard to approach,” Elaine said plainly. “Not because you’re cruel. But because the stories about you are… bloody.”
She didn’t soften it.
“Every tale people hear is about conflict. Battles. Labyrinth dives. Enemies crushed. Commanders killed. Monsters shattered.”
She held his gaze.
“There are no stories about you talking to people. Or listening. Or helping with ordinary problems.”
Elaine spread her hands slightly.
“So when someone thinks of you, they don’t think, ‘I can speak to him.’ They think, *‘That’s someone who deals with threats.’”
The fire cracked.
“That creates distance,” she said. “Even when the intention is protection.”
She looked at Ludger not as a strategist, but as a mother.
“If you want Lionfang to prosper beyond guild work,” Elaine finished, “then people need to see you as more than a blade pointed outward.”
Silence filled the room. The twins pressed closer, unaware of the weight of the words spoken above them. Elaine exhaled.
“You don’t need to fight less,” she said softly. “You need to be seen more.”
And that, Ludger realized, was a problem no amount of mana could solve alone.
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