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

Chapter 494



Chapter 494

Ludger slowed and angled upward. Just enough.

The water parted silently as he rose until half his head broke the surface, wind shaping itself to erase ripples and glare. To anyone watching from shore, there was nothing there, just the sea breathing in and out.

He scanned the coast. The Ironhand Syndicate camp had grown.

Since the last time he’d been here, wooden structures had spread closer to the coral line and up the beach. Storage sheds. Watch posts. Temporary barracks reinforced with iron bands.

He counted movement automatically.

At least a hundred guild members visible. Probably more inside the buildings. Delvers coming and going. Guards rotating. Cargo being shifted. No panic. No alarms.

It was early afternoon. Post-lunch lull. Most would be resting. Recovering stamina. Rechecking gear. The next wave of activity wouldn’t start for a while. Which gave them time.

Not much, but enough.

Ludger dipped back beneath the surface and rejoined Viola and Luna, sending a brief signal with his hands through the currents to tell what he’d seen.

Improved defenses. Heavy presence. Active rotations.

They had a window. They could wait for night. Slip in under cover of darkness. Fewer eyes. Slower response. Ludger dismissed the option almost immediately. Waiting meant time. Time meant risk. Time meant someone noticing patterns that shouldn’t exist. Lucius hadn’t waited.

And if he’d reached the other side, then every hour mattered.

Ludger adjusted the runes, shifting their vector toward a shadowed stretch of coral near the far edge of the camp. They would act now. Quietly. Before the labyrinth swallowed another secret. Ludger sank back beneath the surface without a splash.

The sea closed over his head, pressure returning, but muted, bent aside by wind and mana. He raised one hand and began tracing runes directly in the water. Not glowing. Not flaring. Just there, lines of intent etched into the medium itself.

Underwater runes were harder to stabilize. The flow never stopped moving. Every symbol wanted to smear, distort, dissolve. He compensated. Wind locked the water in place long enough for him to finish the first sequence. Then he sent a short, sharp signal through the current.

Viola and Luna adjusted immediately, drifting toward the coral shelf. Ludger frowned faintly as he maintained the first rune.

He couldn’t keep two of these active at the same time. Not yet.

Once the second rune went live, the first would collapse. The magic treated sustained parallel constructs as redundant load unless they were part of a unified array, and he hadn’t solved that problem yet.

Later, he told himself.

That was a problem for another time. He rewrote the runes quickly.

Water Mirror.

The concept wasn’t invisibility. It was reflection.

Light striking their bodies didn’t bounce back, it slid. Bent around contours, redirected along the surface tension of water and mana. To the outside world, they weren’t gone.

They were elsewhere.

Ludger completed the final line and released the construct. The rune dissolved. And was absorbed. Viola felt it first.

Her arms blurred, edges softening until her skin looked like layered glass. Luna followed a heartbeat later, her outline dissolving into shifting refractions that mirrored the water around her. Translucent.

Not invisible, but impossible to focus on.

Ludger let the previous rune collapse as planned and checked the stability of Water Mirror instead. Mana draw was steady. Manageable.

Good enough. He gave them one last hand signal.

Stay close. Don’t touch the surface.

Then he turned toward the shore again, three distorted shadows moving as one through the water, unseen, unremarked, and already halfway past the line where Ironhand thought their control ended.

Pressure wrapped around them as Ludger angled downward.

For a moment, Viola felt the weight of the ocean press in, then stabilize. Not gone, just… held at bay. She glanced at her arm and froze.

Her body wasn’t invisible when she left the water. It was reflective.

Low light bent across her skin in faint ripples, refracting the world behind her. From a distance, it would look like nothing more than distorted water. Up close, only if you knew exactly where to look, could you even tell a shape was there. She could see Luna the same way. A suggestion. A shimmer.

If they weren’t close to each other, she realized, they wouldn’t be able to see it at all.

They rose together and slipped out of the water onto wet sand and coral stone, movements slow and controlled. Ludger was already ahead of them, boots touching down without a sound.

He leaned in and whispered, barely moving his lips.

“No noise.”

They froze.

“Wait until your bodies dry,” he continued quietly. “No water trails. No dripping.”

Viola frowned and whispered back, “Do we have time for that?”

“Yes,” Ludger replied without hesitation. “The rune will last at least an hour.”

She blinked. “That long?”

“I fed it enough mana,” he said simply.

The implication settled in. This wasn’t a rushed infiltration. This was prepared. Calculated. Overbuilt. They waited.

The sea breeze did the rest, drawing moisture away until sand no longer darkened beneath their feet. The reflective distortion of Water Mirror

remained stable, bending light smoothly, hiding even the faint rise and fall of breath.Only then did Ludger straighten.

He raised two fingers, then pointed inland, toward the labyrinth. They moved.

Three quiet distortions slipping past the edge of Ironhand’s control, unseen, unheard, and already deep inside the space where mistakes didn’t get forgiven.

They crossed the island at a steady pace, not rushing, not hesitating. The ground shifted from wet sand to packed soil, then to stone veined with coral remnants.Ludger didn’t need to look  around.

Seismic Sense unfolded beneath his steps, painting a precise map of the terrain, and of the people moving across it. Every footfall. Every weight shift. Every pause as someone leaned against a wall or turned to speak.

He knew where they all were. He knew which direction they were facing. More importantly, he knew which directions they weren’t.

Ironhand hadn’t set detection wards or runic arrays around the island. They relied on visibility, patrols, and routine mana checks. Effective against most intruders. Not against him.

And even if they had layered the area with detection runes, it wouldn’t have mattered. Ludger wasn’t broadcasting mana. He was walking through blind spots.

The places between pulses. The gaps in coverage that appeared when systems assumed consistency instead of variance. His mana flow was threaded through the environment itself, grounded, diffused, indistinguishable from ambient noise.

To a ward, he didn’t exist. To a rune, he was terrain. To a guard, there was nothing to notice.

Viola and Luna followed his exact path, stepping where he stepped, stopping when he stopped. From the outside, nothing crossed the island. But under the surface… Three presences moved with absolute clarity. And ahead of them, carved into the island’s spine, the labyrinth waited.

Ludger felt Luna’s gaze on his back.

Not heavy. Not intrusive. Just… focused.

If she were anyone else, he might’ve ignored it. But Luna’s attention always meant evaluation. Comparison. Quiet assessment of tools she didn’t possess.

Jealous, he thought mildly.

Skills like this would make her job trivial. No disguises. No contingency plans stacked three deep. Just walk where you weren’t meant to exist and leave without a trace. Still, she didn’t comment.

That was Luna. She didn’t voice envy. Didn’t ask to be taught things she knew weren’t freely given. If she wanted something, she watched. Learned what she could. Adapted the rest.

Ludger respected that.

The thought drifted, unbidden.

It would be useful to train some of the trainees into spies. Or assassins.

The logic was clean. Lionsguard would benefit immensely from internal intelligence. Scouts who didn’t just observe, but infiltrated. Neutralized threats before they matured.

The idea settled… then stopped. No.

His mouth tightened slightly.

His morality, thin as it was, still existed. And it drew a hard line there. He wouldn’t train children to become killers in the dark. Not deliberately. Not systematically. That path led to things he didn’t want Lionsguard to become.

Which, inevitably, made him wonder…

How did Torvares find Luna?

And more importantly…

Where?

She hadn’t become this by accident. This level of discipline, restraint, and lethality was cultivated. Carefully. Over the years. Somewhere far from scrutiny. Ludger glanced back just enough to catch the faint shimmer where Luna should be. Her posture was relaxed. Balanced. Ready. A professional forged long before he’d ever known her.

He filed the question away. Not for now. But someday, he intended to understand exactly what kind of world produced people like Luna, and whether the Lionsguard would ever be forced to touch that same darkness.

Ahead, the stone entrance of the labyrinth loomed closer. And thoughts of the future were shelved. For now, the present demanded all of his attention.

They found only a handful of Ironhand members near the labyrinth entrance.

Far fewer than Ludger had expected.

Most were busy with mundane preparation, checking straps, refilling potion belts, arguing quietly over load distribution. A few sat on crates, helmets off, resting in the shade while they waited for the next exploration window.

Others were working on the aftermath of a previous run.

Runic golems lay dismantled in sections near the stone wall, arms stacked, torsos split open, heads cracked apart with practiced precision. Mana cores were being extracted carefully, wrapped in insulated cloth, and logged before being stored away. It was routine work. Methodical. Unemotional.

No one looked nervous. No one looked guilty.

Ludger passed within a few meters of them, close enough that he could hear breathing, heartbeats, the scrape of metal on stone. He slowed his steps, letting Seismic Sense read micro-movements, hesitations, tension spikes, irregular pacing.

Nothing stood out.

If someone here had helped Lucius, they weren’t sloppy enough to give it away through posture or rhythm. Sellouts didn’t always look like traitors. The good ones never did.

Too early, Ludger decided.

This wasn’t the place to shake the tree. For now. He didn’t pause.

He slipped past the last cluster of guild members and crossed the threshold into the labyrinth, Viola and Luna moving in his wake like reflections that had learned how to walk.

The air changed instantly. Cooler. Heavier.

Stone swallowed sound. The sea vanished behind them, replaced by narrow passages carved with unfamiliar precision. Faint lines pulsed along the walls, not bright enough to illuminate, just enough to remind intruders they were being observed.

Ludger stopped just inside the entrance. Now came the hard part. Clearing a path. With two people. Without noise. Without leaving bodies. Without leaving signs that someone far more dangerous than an ordinary delver had passed through.

He raised one hand slightly, fingers curling in a signal for stillness.

This wasn’t a place to rush. The labyrinth rewarded patience, and punished arrogance.

And Ludger intended to give it neither a sound nor a clue that it had already lost control of the game.

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