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

Chapter 441



Chapter 441

Renalt’s posture shifted enough that the entire front row could feel it, something small and controlled, but unmistakably harder. His eyes narrowed, focus sharpening into something razor clean.

He’d come into this duel with assumptions. Reasonable ones. Ludger Graves was twelve. Twelve. The stories had to be exaggerated. Torvares must have been inflating his legend to secure influence and protect the guild that housed his granddaughter’s half-brother. A child vice guildmaster sounded like a political stunt, dramatic, impressive, but hollow.

Except the opening exchange had carved those assumptions into dust. Renalt had attacked with precision and speed. Not his full strength, no, but enough to test someone who claimed authority. Enough to rattle any normal fighter. And Ludger had stood there. Unmoving. Uncertain. Unguarded.

No fear. No effort. No damage. Just those froststeel gauntlets catching strikes like a wall of living iron. Renalt felt every eye, guilds, families, nobles, adventurers, watching not just Ludger’s calm, but his struggle. Because already, his reputation had taken a hit. You didn’t land clean strikes on a child and fail to draw blood. You didn’t attack openly and ended by stepping back while the other person remained unchanged.

It wasn’t just a tactical issue. It was perception, and perception destroyed guilds far faster than swords ever could.

Renalt breathed out once and lifted his slimmer sword. The blade did not flare to life, it hummed, a low, vibrating pulse as mana threaded through internal runic channels. Emerald light crawled along the cutting edge, sharpening metal past steel, past scale, into something that could shear enchanted defenses.

Weapon Enhancing.

The energy bled into the air, making the space between them feel tight, like pressure building under a storm. The audience heard the shift in tone from the blade and fell quieter, leaning forward.

Renalt shifted his footing. Weight settled. Shoulders aligned. Breath steadied. The sword angled toward Ludger with intent that no one in the arena could mistake:

This was no longer a probing exchange. He wasn’t playing safe anymore.

And the thought passed through him, brief, unwelcome, but there: He would need to injure the boy. Badly. Do it fast. Do it clean. This wasn’t spite. This was survival.

Because if he kept holding back, he wouldn’t look noble, he’d look afraid.

And Ludger’s calm, flat stare did nothing to help. The boy watched him with the same expression he might give a passing shadow, present, but unimpressive. Renalt had fought guildmasters older and stronger than himself who hadn’t unnerved him half as much as the stillness radiating off that twelve-year-old. So he made his decision. Not moral.

Not personal. Strategic.

End the match by crippling the boy’s arm. Win decisively. Protect the guild’s reputation. Walk away with honor intact.

Renalt flicked his blade to test the mana flow. Air snapped. Sparks curled off the sand. He leaned forward, the hum rising in pitch, and then he moved, fast as whiplash, cutting through the space between them with a killing-line precision aimed to sever Ludger’s arm at the elbow. The crowd sucked in breath. The arena held still. And the duel turned real.

Renalt lunged, blade cutting a ruthless arc meant to shear flesh from bone, but this time Ludger moved. Just a shift. A single, precise step.

The sword sliced past where his arm had been half a breath earlier, the edge humming through empty air. Sand hissed underfoot. The crowd gasped, leaning forward as Renalt adjusted instantly and came in again.

What followed wasn’t a single strike. It was a flurry, fast, technical, and vicious.

Renalt pivoted left, blade sweeping upward toward Ludger’s ribs. Ludger stepped back, boots scraping lightly across the sand, the edge missing by centimeters. Before the motion completed, Renalt reversed direction, twisting his hips to drive a stab toward Ludger’s throat.

Ludger slid right, letting the tip pass just in front of his shoulder.

Renalt’s eyes narrowed, focus sharpening as he shifted into the next sequence. His movements were fluid, practiced to perfection: a diagonal slice at the ankle, Ludger lifted his foot and let it pass beneath. A sudden snap upward toward the wrist, Ludger tilted his arm, the blade whistling past the bracer by a whisper. A cut from the opposite side, Ludger leaned back, spine bending just enough to turn the strike into wind.

Every dodge was small. Efficient. Controlled. He never wasted a step. Never spun away. Never broke guard. His arms stayed raised, gauntlets ready, froststeel catching stray glints of morning light as he moved. But most importantly, his eyes never left Renalt’s weapon.

The sword vibrated with mana, emerald light flickering with each change in angle. Ludger watched the runic seams, the way the hum of mana pushed against the grain of the metal, how the edge vibrated hardest when Renalt shifted weight onto his front foot.

It wasn’t random. It wasn’t instinct. It was patterned mana flow, and Ludger was mapping it with every swing. Renalt pushed harder, his strikes turning sharper, faster, more aggressive, lashes of steel that cut small rents into the air.

One slash aimed at Ludger’s ear. Another at his knee. Another straight at his heart. Every one avoided with just enough motion to stay safe.

To the crowd, it looked like magic, like Ludger could sense the attacks before they arrived. To Renalt, it looked like mockery. When he finally broke the rhythm and leapt back, breathing harder than before, his expression had shifted. Calm calculation had fractured. What remained was irritation, sharp and clear.

His gaze locked onto Ludger’s. Ludger stared back, steady, unreadable. For a heartbeat, something settled between them. Not words. Not threat. Understanding.

Renalt wasn’t fighting like a man driven by hatred or rage. He was fighting because reputation demanded it. Because the arena demanded it. Because a vice guildmaster facing a prodigy couldn’t afford to lose face.

And Ludger felt the weight of that.

Part of him wanted to end this now, clean and brutal. One strike to floor Renalt. One break of an arm, or a rib, or worse. Something undeniable. But another part hesitated. Bloodshed in front of the twins? Bad idea. Making Renalt an example when Renalt wasn’t his enemy? Risky.

And his mother’s warning whispered through the back of his mind, public perception mattered. How he ended this fight would define him for the Empire.

Did he want to look like a monster? A walking storm of destruction? The kind of force that crushed adults like insects? Tempting. Very tempting. It would create some enemies, but it would repel others.

Or did he want to look like a protector? A guildmaster defending his home? Someone who only drew blood when blood was required? That, too, had power.

So Ludger held his focus steady, bracers raised, stance strong, waiting. Still studying. Still choosing. Because this duel wasn’t about victory anymore. It was about what victory would mean.

Renalt steadied himself, breath drawn deep through his nose before he shifted his grip. The mana around his blade, already dense from enhancement, began to change again. This time it didn’t simply gather. It thickened. Hardened.

The glow sharpened into something almost liquid, rolling along the metal like a living current. It wasn’t just brighter; it was more violent, surging with an intensity that made the edge tremble. The energy pressed outward, reshaping itself into motion, like a tide building against a shore.

Ludger watched the transformation with narrowed eyes. That wasn’t normal sword-channeling, not even among veteran labyrinth fighters. It looked far too controlled and far too alive to be simple mana reinforcement. And it reminded him of someone. His father.

Arslan’s blade techniques had always been quiet, subtle until the moment of impact. Mana pulled inward, compressed into a line so tight it looked dull, harmless. Then the strike would come, and all that pressure would erupt in a single devastating cut.

Renalt’s weapon wasn’t identical. But it was close. Close enough that Ludger adjusted his stance on instinct. He lowered his center of gravity, boots grinding into sand, gauntlets angled forward to guard. He braced for the kind of melee burst Arslan favored… a close-range explosion of power.

Instead, Renalt lifted his sword overhead and swung downward with a clean, decisive snap.

A crescent of mana ripped free from the blade, thin and curved like the edge of a rising moon, shooting across the arena floor. It moved too fast to track fully, a thick line of condensed energy slicing the sand in two as it barreled toward Ludger.

He had just enough time to widen his eyes. Then he crossed his arms, froststeel slamming together in a defensive guard. The crescent struck with the weight of a battering ram. No explosion. No flare. Just force, pure and crushing, driving him backward.

Boots carved trenches in the sand as he slid. Muscles locked. Joints jolted. The crescent didn’t shatter. It didn’t break. It pushed, hard.

Only when Ludger finally grounded his stance did the arc begin to unravel, cracking at its center before breaking apart into glittering particles that faded into the air.

The crowd roared. Some in awe, some in panic, some in disbelief. But Renalt wasn’t finished.

He reached over his shoulder again and drew the second sword, the heavier blade, its edge rippling with the faint pattern of lizardman scales forged into the metal. The mana that surged into this weapon was different. Deeper. Darker. And far denser than the first.

Ludger felt it the moment the blade hummed, like pressure tightening around his ribs. Renalt set his feet. Shoulders squared. Breath held steady. Then he swung.

The crescent that erupted from the larger sword was almost twice the size of the first. The air split around it, kicking up sand as it ripped forward. The arc hummed with power thick enough to see, energy compressed to the edge of stability.

Ludger raised his arms again, bracers locking into place, and the crescent hit. This time, the world didn’t push. It detonated.

A blast tore through the arena floor, a shockwave erupting outward as sand and stone vaporized into dust. The explosion hit the stands like thunder, rattling benches and shaking banners loose. A column of dust billowed up, swallowing the center of the arena in a swirling cloud.

Gasps rippled through the crowd. Someone screamed. Others shouted Ludger’s name. Half a dozen northerners cheered like maniacs. For several long seconds, there was nothing to see, just the roiling haze and the memory of impact. When the dust finally thinned, every eye strained forward. Because whatever shape emerged from that cloud wouldn’t just decide who held advantage, it would define the rest of the fight.

The dust cleared slowly, thick clouds peeling apart as air currents curled through the crater left behind by Renalt’s strike. At first there was only silhouette and motion, just a vague shape inside the haze. The crowd leaned forward, breaths half-held. Some feared the boy had been torn apart. Others hoped.

Then a sound cut through the muffled quiet. A sharp, ringing impact. Once. Twice. Three times. The unmistakable rhythm of hammer on metal.

When the haze finally thinned enough to reveal the center, people saw Ludger standing there, boots planted, shoulders squared, hair wild from the blast but posture steady. His coat was marked with dust and grit, but there wasn’t a single wound on him.

More striking than his condition was what he was doing.

He held a stone hammer, summoned from conjured earth, and he was tapping it neatly against the seam between his gauntlets and bracers. Right at the joint where Renalt’s blast had struck hard enough to leave a dent.

Each measured clang echoed across the arena, loud enough for even the cheap seats to hear. The noise felt surreal, like someone hammering a nail in a church.

He wasn’t rushing. He wasn’t frantic. He wasn’t even bothered. It looked like routine maintenance. Just fixing a tool.

The dent vanished as the froststeel resettled, mana-infused metal smoothing into perfect shape. Ludger brushed his thumb across the connection point once, making sure, and then exhaled in quiet satisfaction.

Only then did the hammer crumble to dust between his fingers, returning to earth.

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