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

Chapter 469



Chapter 469

Ludger didn’t answer right away.

Julius’s words kept echoing, settling into places he hadn’t examined too closely before.

He hadn’t thought that far.

When he’d built Lionsguard, his intentions had been simple, clean, even. Treat them like friends. Give them freedom. Pay them fairly. Don’t trap them in obligations they didn’t choose. Let people come and go without chains or guilt.

That much, he’d meant.

But underneath that… there had been another layer.

He’d created the guild with a contingency in mind.

A force. A shield. Something that could move when his family was threatened.

Not an army in name, but close enough in function.

Ludger’s gaze drifted for a moment, unfocused, inward. He remembered planning routes, ranks, coverage. Thinking in terms of who fit where, who complemented whom, who could be placed on which task with minimal risk.

Efficient. Logical. Necessary.

And suddenly, the realization settled heavier than any blow he’d taken in the arena. At some level… he still saw them as pieces on a board.

Not expendable pieces, not disposable. He’d never send them into something he wouldn’t face himself. Never sacrifice them for gain. But pieces nonetheless. Assets to be positioned. Forces to be applied.

He frowned slightly. That wasn’t cruelty. It was strategy. But strategy didn’t always leave room for the things Julius was talking about, shared burden, ownership, the slow erosion that came from feeling managed instead of trusted.

Ludger had wanted to protect them from politics. Instead, he might have been insulating himself from their voices. The thought didn’t sit well.

He’d believed that standing alone made him reliable. That carrying everything himself proved commitment. But from another angle… it also drew a line. One that said, this is mine to handle, yours is to follow.

He exhaled quietly.

Friends didn’t stand behind each other forever.

And symbols that never let anyone touch the weight beneath them eventually stopped feeling real.

Ludger looked back at Julius, expression thoughtful, no defensiveness left in it.

He still believed in what he’d done.

But now he could see the shape of what he’d missed.

And that meant the next decisions he made, inside the guild, not just on battlefields, would have to change. Not because he was wrong. But because leadership, like strength, demanded growth, or it calcified into something that only looked solid from the outside.

The moment the thought settled, clear, unguarded, accepted, something shifted.

Not outside. Inside.

Ludger felt it the same way he always did when the system took notice. Not a surge. Not a rush. A quiet alignment

, like gears clicking into a position they’d been waiting for.His breath stilled. Then the information surfaced. Clean. Precise. Unavoidable.

[New Job Acquired: Guild Master]

Ludger’s eyes widened just a fraction. So that’s what it was waiting for.

Not victory. Not power. Not reputation. Understanding.

The flow of information continued, lines of text forming with mechanical clarity.

[Guild Master – Lv. 1] All Parameters + 3 per level.

[New Skill Acquired: Morale – Lv. 1]

Effect:

While Guild Master is recognized by members of the Lionsguard, all affiliated members receive a passive boost of three points of strength per level.

Ludger exhaled slowly. Morale. Not a spell. Not an order. Not a buff he could toggle at will. It was relational.

The strength didn’t come from him alone, it came from how his people felt standing with him. From belief. From unity. From knowing they weren’t pieces on a board, but part of something that would move together.

That… tracked.

He lifted his gaze back to Julius, expression steady but changed. Not lighter, broader. So this was the cost. And the reward. Ludger didn’t smile. He didn’t need to.

Somewhere across the empire, on patrol routes, in training yards, on roads and watch posts, the members of Lionsguard would feel it. Just a little. A subtle lift. A sense that standing under that banner meant something more than before.

Not because Ludger was stronger. But because he’d finally accepted that leadership wasn’t about standing in front forever… It was about standing with. Julius watched Ludger closely.

For a moment, he said nothing, just studied the subtle change in his posture, the way his focus had sharpened without tightening. Then he gave a small, knowing nod.

“I can tell,” Julius said. “Something just clicked.”

He rested a hand lightly on the fence beside him. “You understood the message. That’s good.”

Then his expression shifted, not stern, but firm in a different way.

“Still,” he continued, “seeking knowledge from others is only half the work. Advice, experience, lessons learned the hard way, they’re tools. Useful ones.”

He met Ludger’s gaze directly. “But tools don’t replace judgment.”

Julius tapped his temple once. “You have to use your head. Look at what others did, why they did it, and then decide how it fits your

situation. Your people. Your world.”Ludger nodded. He understood that immediately.

He couldn’t just follow paths carved by others and expect them to lead somewhere right. Julius had led a different guild, in a different time, under different pressures. Even Hroth, with his distant homeland and long view, saw the board from another angle.

Their knowledge mattered. But it wasn’t a map. Leadership wasn’t something you copied. It was something you constructed, step by step, with awareness of the ground beneath your feet.

“I know,” Ludger said simply.

Julius smiled faintly at that. “Good.”

Because blind imitation created brittle leaders.

And Ludger, clearly, wasn’t interested in becoming one of those. The conversation settled into a quiet understanding. Not of agreement. But of respect, between someone who had walked the path before, and someone who had just realized how many different ways it could unfold. Ludger inclined his head slightly.

“Thank you,” he said. The words were simple, but they carried weight. “That’s enough for me.”

Julius studied him for a moment longer, then nodded in return.

“Yes,” he said quietly. “It is.”

He could see it now, the way Ludger’s gaze moved, not just outward but inward, sorting, testing, integrating. Julius had taught enough leaders to know the difference between someone who needed more instruction and someone who would learn better by doing.

Ludger fell firmly into the second category. Still. Julius’s mouth twitched, and his tone shifted just a bit.

“Now,” he said, “it’s my turn to ask something.”

He stepped away from the fence and raised both hands. Mana gathered, not explosively, but smoothly, with the ease of long familiarity. The air shimmered, then condensed, forming two solid shapes in his grasp.

Shhhk.

A pair of magic swords manifested in his hands, stable and well-balanced, their edges humming softly with contained power. Julius rolled his wrists once, testing them, then looked back at Ludger.

“I can do this much,” he said. “Have been able to for decades.”

He lifted one blade slightly, then dismissed it and reformed it again without effort. “Condensed constructs. Stable grip. Proper balance.”

Then he glanced upward, toward the empty air above them.

“But I can’t do that,” he added. “I can’t summon them freely in the air. Can’t anchor them without a physical hold.”

The swords dissolved as he lowered his hands.

He looked at Ludger directly now, eyes sharp with curiosity rather than authority.

“You did it instinctively,” Julius said. “Mid-fight. Under pressure. With better control than most scholars manage in a lifetime.”

A pause.

“So,” he finished, “I’d like to know how you do it.”

Not a demand. Not a test. A genuine request, from one master to another, acknowledging that understanding sometimes flowed in unexpected directions. The twins shifted on Ludger’s shoulders, blissfully unaware.

And Ludger, standing there between generations of experience and expectation, realized that leadership wasn’t the only thing he’d grown into. He was being asked to teach, too.

Ludger shifted his weight slightly, careful not to unbalance the twins, then extended one hand. Mana stirred.

Not violently. Not explosively. It flowed outward from him in thin, deliberate threads, sinking into the air itself. The space around him responded, pressure changing in subtle ways that only trained senses could catch.

A sphere of water formed first, clear, perfectly contained, surface rippling gently as if stirred by an unseen current. To his other side, wind condensed, not visible at first until dust and leaves were pulled into a slow, controlled orbit. Above his shoulder, fire ignited soundlessly, a compact orb of steady flame that radiated heat without flicker. And beneath it all, earth answered last, gravel and soil lifting from the garden path, compressing into a dense, rotating mass.

Four spheres hovered around him. Balanced. Stable. Obedient.

“I don’t just control the mana in my body,” Ludger said calmly. “I extend it.”

He closed his fingers slightly, and the spheres shifted position in response, drifting farther away, then closer again, without losing cohesion.

“I treat ambient mana like it’s already mine,” he continued. “I pull it in, synchronize it with my own flow, then change its attunement.” His eyes flicked briefly to the hovering elements. “Once it’s aligned, distance doesn’t matter as much. It’s not away from me anymore.”

The twins watched in awe, utterly silent for once.

Julius stared.

Not at the spectacle, but at the control.

He rubbed his chin slowly, eyes narrowing as he traced the invisible connections Ludger was describing. “So you’re not projecting constructs,” he murmured. “You’re redefining ownership of the mana itself in the air.”

Ludger nodded. “That’s how it feels.”

Julius let out a low breath, half a chuckle escaping him. “It probably isn’t as simple as you’re making it sound.”

Ludger shrugged lightly. “It wasn’t, at first.”

He released the mana. The spheres dissolved instantly, elements returning to their natural state without backlash or residue, as if they’d never been there at all. Julius lowered his hand, thoughtful now rather than skeptical.

“No,” he said quietly. “It never is.”

But his eyes lingered where the spheres had been, mind already racing, theory colliding with lived experience.

Because whatever Ludger had just shown him… It wasn’t a trick. It was a different way of seeing control altogether.

“It’s easy,” Ludger said matter-of-factly, “if you can control the four elements at the same time.”

Julius stared at him for a beat, then chuckled, low and genuine.

“I’m sure it is,” he said dryly. “In exactly the same way lifting a mountain is easy if you’re already standing on one.”

He inclined his head slightly. “Still. Thank you. Those pointers are worth more than most lectures I’ve sat through.”

Ludger nodded, accepting the thanks without ceremony.

As Julius turned the idea over in his mind, Ludger’s thoughts drifted inward. He could already feel the difference between what Julius understood and what he himself did. For Ludger, the overlap came naturally—jobs layered over jobs, classes reinforcing one another, experience smoothing the friction between disciplines that should have conflicted.

The system made it possible.

Not easy, never easy, but possible.

He could learn multiple frameworks at once, apply them in parallel, and let practice fuse them into something cohesive. Control wasn’t a single road for him; it was a network of paths he could walk simultaneously, switching weight from one to another as needed.

Someone without that scaffolding would hit limits. Hard ones.

Ludger glanced at Julius again, understanding dawning fully now.

This wasn’t something you simply copied.

It was something you became, over time, with the right foundation.

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