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

Chapter 458



Chapter 458

The hesitation was brief, but Ludger caught it.

For a heartbeat, the motion of the mana clusters faltered. Their paths lost a fraction of their smoothness, rotations slowing just enough to be noticeable to someone watching as closely as he was. The lattice around him wavered, alignment drifting by inches instead of millimeters.

Surprise.

She hadn’t expected him to win a contest of mid-flight control.

Her focus had cracked. It didn’t last.

Almost immediately, the clusters corrected themselves. Rotations stabilized. Drift vanished. The hum in the air evened out as she reasserted control, threads of mana tightening back into disciplined formation. Whatever shock she’d felt was buried quickly, professionalism snapping back into place. But the damage was done.

Ludger had learned something. This wasn’t a fight meant to end him.

It was a measurement… until the checkmate

He could see the pattern clearly now, different fighters, different styles, each one designed to probe a specific weakness. Speed. Control. Endurance. Reaction under pressure. The whip-user had tested assassination and paralysis. This woman was testing area control, sustained output, and fine manipulation.

They were collecting data. Strip him down piece by piece. Feed that information to someone who would eventually send a counter designed not to lose. The most efficient way to crush a rising threat wasn’t to overwhelm it blindly. It was to understand it first.

Ludger exhaled slowly, eyes steady as the mana field tightened once more. How long, though? he wondered. How many fighters would they burn trying to map him before deciding it wasn’t worth the cost?

And more importantly… How many chances would he give them to keep learning?

Ludger’s gaze swept across the suspended clusters, his mind already running the numbers.

He could dismantle them.

One by one, he could snipe the spheres out of the air, precise mana bolts, controlled detonations, carefully timed corrections. It would work. Slowly but surely, the lattice would unravel, her control disrupted piece by piece until the field collapsed.

But the cost…

Each shot wasn’t just a bolt. It was shaping, guidance, mid-flight correction, and impact stabilization. Do it once and it was negligible. Do it dozens of times, and the drain would stack fast. Worse, it would play directly into what she wanted, forcing him to bleed mana in public, revealing how long he could sustain high-level control.

He didn’t need to check his reserves to know the truth.

The last duel had already taken its toll.

Gate of Lionsguard (first name) had been spectacular, and expensive. Showing off that level of formation control had eaten roughly a third of his mana pool in one go. Acceptable in a labyrinth. Risky in the capital, under this many eyes.

He wasn’t here to impress. He was here to win. Which meant it was time to stop feeding them information. Ludger clicked his tongue softly, irritation flickering through his otherwise calm expression.

Tch.

Cut his losses. The approach was riskier. Less elegant. It meant committing, forcing an outcome instead of dismantling the problem cleanly. But it would end this phase quickly, and deny them the long, careful measurements they were clearly after.

He adjusted his stance again, mana circulation shifting as he prepared to move decisively.

Fine, he thought. If they wanted data, they wouldn’t get it for free. Ludger raised his hand and leveled it straight at the cloaked woman. Mana gathered instantly.

At first it condensed into a familiar shape, a dense core forming in his palm, but it didn’t stop there. He fed more into it, tightening the structure, forcing it to rotate. The bolt grew in size as it spun faster and faster, layers of compressed mana wrapping around themselves in a violent spiral.

The air reacted.

Gusts of wind tore outward from the forming attack, sweeping across the arena and kicking sand into the air. Cloaks snapped. Loose banners rippled. Even the hovering mana clusters shuddered slightly as the pressure wave brushed against them.

This wasn’t a snipe.

Ludger’s expression stayed cold, eyes locked on the woman without blinking. He didn’t bother hiding what he was doing. There was no point. The moment he committed to this, the fight would tip decisively one way or the other.

Her next move would decide everything.

If she tried to maintain the field, the bolt would punch through her defenses before she could reposition. If she collapsed the lattice and counterattacked, the resulting chaos would engulf both of them at once.

Lose control, and she’d fall. Hold on too long, and he’d break through. Either way, someone was taking a hit.

The wind howled louder as the spinning mana bolt stabilized, power coiling tighter in his grip. Ludger’s stance anchored into the sand, shoulders squared, intent clear and unmistakable.

This wasn’t about probing anymore. This was the moment she either disengaged… or tried to take him down with her.

Ludger fired.

The spinning mana bolt tore free from his hand with a violent crack, the spiral tightening as it surged forward. Wind screamed in its wake, pressure flattening sand and ripping loose grit from the arena floor as the attack barreled straight toward her, stable, hungry, unstoppable.

The woman reacted instantly. Her arm snapped forward and a swarm of the hovering clusters broke formation, racing into the bolt’s path. As they flew, they changed, mana flashing, aspect locking in at the last possible moment. Fire bloomed across their surfaces, heat spiking as they turned into living bombs.

They detonated one after another. Explosions blossomed in rapid succession, fire roaring outward as the mines collided with the spiraling attack. Flames flooded the space between them, shockwaves overlapping, heat rolling through the arena in suffocating waves.

The mana bolt didn’t slow. It ate them.

Fire washed over its surface, fed into the rotation, dispersed and crushed by sheer density. The spiral tightened further, wind screaming louder as the bolt punched through the inferno without losing cohesion.

Her eyes widened, just a fraction. That was all the time she needed. In the same blink of an eye, she made a second decision. Half of the remaining clusters dropped.

They slammed into the arena floor in a coordinated cascade and detonated simultaneously, not in fire, but ice. Frost exploded outward, temperature crashing as a thick layer of jagged ice surged up from the sand, racing forward like a frozen tide.

The wall of ice collided head-on with the mana bolt. The impact was catastrophic.

The spiral bored into it, pulverizing layers of frozen mass, shards exploding outward in every direction as the wind pressure tore the structure apart. Steam burst violently where heat and cold met, visibility vanishing in an instant.

But she wasn’t finished.

The remaining clusters split wide, slipping past the sides of Ludger’s attack while his focus was committed forward. They curved around the spiraling bolt in tight arcs, accelerating hard as they reassigned aspects mid-flight.

Then they rushed him. Ludger felt it, too many vectors, too close, converging all at once.

The next moment, the space where he had been standing erupted.

A massive explosion tore through the arena floor, sand and stone blasted skyward as overlapping detonations collapsed inward. Fire flashed. Ice shattered. Shockwaves slammed outward in all directions, rattling the barrier and silencing the stands in a single, collective gasp.

Smoke billowed up in a thick, choking cloud. Sand rained down. For a heartbeat, nothing could be seen through the chaos.

The arena disappeared behind rolling dust and steam, the echo of the blast still hanging in the air, right where Ludger was supposed to be.

The dust didn’t clear all at once.

It thinned in layers, sand and smoke peeling back under the arena’s circulating winds, revealing the impact zone piece by piece. The crowd leaned forward as one, breath held, eyes searching for blood, for movement, for Ludger

.He wasn’t there.

Where he had been standing now rose a thick dome of earth, dark and compact, its surface layered with compressed stone and reinforced strata. It wasn’t crude or jagged like an emergency wall. This was clear. Dense. Every curve calculated.

A controlled Continental Shield.

Not spread wide. Not wasteful. All of its mass and reinforcement had been focused inward, wrapped tightly around a single point. Around him.

Chunks of the dome cracked and fell away as residual force finished dispersing. Heavy slabs of stone hit the sand with dull thuds, fragments crumbling into dust as the structure shed what it no longer needed.

Then the shield opened. Earth folded back into itself, sinking smoothly into the arena floor as if it had never been there at all. Ludger stood at the center.

His stance was the same as before, feet planted, posture steady, eyes forward. No dramatic reveal. No triumphant pose. Just quiet presence. The only signs of strain were subtle: his shoulders rose and fell a little more with each breath, and the faint shimmer of mana around him was thinner now, circulation working harder to stabilize.

That exchange had cost him. A lot.

The spiraling bolt. The shield. The timing required to execute both without being buried under overlapping detonations, it had burned through mana at a rate he wouldn’t normally allow himself in public. Efficient, yes. Necessary, definitely. Cheap? Not even close.

Still, he remained standing. Across the arena, the cloaked woman hadn’t fallen either.

Her defenses had collapsed, the rotating clusters gone, spent, detonated,  but she herself was untouched. No blood. No stagger. Just stillness, her posture tight now, more guarded than before.

They faced each other in the aftermath. Ludger had forced her hand. Forced her to reveal everything she’d brought into the arena. Fire, ice, layered control, delayed aspect assignment, every card played in rapid succession.

And yet…

Neither of them had landed a decisive blow. The arena lay scarred between them, sand scorched and frozen in overlapping patterns, stone cracked where the shield had risen and fallen.

A draw, for now. Ludger’s eyes stayed fixed on her, sharp despite the fatigue creeping in at the edges. He’d learned what she could do. The question now was simple… Had she learned enough about him to make the next move worth the cost?

The woman raised her arms again.

The motion was slower this time.

Her shoulders lifted, cloak shifting as she tried to draw mana back into alignment, but the strain showed through the control. Her arms trembled as they came up, fingers stiff, posture tight with effort rather than confidence. The lattice was gone, the mines spent, but there was still mana left in her. Not much, but enough to be dangerous.

Ludger felt it. Enough for one last trick. That was when his patience finally snapped.

He exhaled through his nose, irritation cutting through the fatigue. He was done dancing through traps. Done letting people carve the arena into experiments around him.

No more tricks. Ludger stomped once.

A chunk of earth tore free from the ground in front of him, rising sharply into the air. It was crude at first, an uneven mass of stone and compacted sand, but he didn’t give it time to stabilize.

He jumped. His fist came down like a hammer.

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