Chapter 535
Chapter 535
Needle-fast, heavy, lethal darts that hissed through the air and slammed into raised shields and webbed ground with violent thuds.
THUNK-THUNK-THUNK.
A feather struck a shield rim and bit deep enough to vibrate like a lodged arrow. Another hit the sand and punched in like a nail. A third clipped a spider mid-lunge and skewered it through the body, pinning it to the web carpet for a moment before it tore free, shrieking.
The battlefield became vertical.
Shields needed to face forward and upward. Spears needed to stab while bodies stayed braced. The line’s cohesion was suddenly under two kinds of pressure at once, swarm and bombardment.
Ludger clicked his tongue, sharp and annoyed. His eyes narrowed as he watched the timing. Spiders from the labyrinth. Crows from the sky. Same night. Same moment. Same pressure point.
Too neat. Too deliberate.
“This is way too coordinated,” he muttered.
And he didn’t say it like a conspiracy theory.
Ludger didn’t waste time worrying endlessly. He turned toward the water and the distant silhouette of the ship and raised his voice so it cut through feathers, scraping legs, and shouted orders.
“Ship sentries!” he roared. “Now! Get over here!”
His next words came like a hammer, precise and cold.
“Front line first, heal them! Stabilize the shield wall! Then take their place and give them room to breathe!”
On the ship, heads snapped toward the island. The sentries, tired, wired, braced for crows on deck, didn’t need more explanation. They could see the fire orbs. They could hear the battlefield. They could see the feather rain and the white surge pressing against shields.
They moved.
Ironhand hands shouted quick confirmations, pointing, organizing the flow. Trainees on ship duty grabbed packs, checked straps, and ran for the bridge without waiting for permission twice.
“Move!” Renn bellowed from the line, voice rough. “On the double!”
The sentries nodded as they ran, no bravado, just grim understanding. They’d trained for this. They’d been told a single mistake made everything useless.
Now the mistake would be hesitation.
They hit the stone bridge in a surge of boots and breath, crossing the span without slowing. The ocean hissed below. The bridge was slick with spray. Feathers clinked against stone like thrown nails.
None of them cared. It was tense, so tense the air felt like it would snap. But their friends were fighting ahead of them. That mattered more than fear.
So they charged, shields up and staves ready, eyes locked forward, not even thinking about turning back, because turning back wasn’t a choice when the people you trusted were holding the line and bleeding for every second you delayed.
The shield wall held, until it didn’t. Not as a collapse. Not as panic. As reality.
One of the dark feathers hit a shield that was already gouged and vibrating from earlier volleys. It punched through the weakened spot with a harsh, metallic CRACK, the point bursting out the back like a spearhead. It didn’t take the kid in the chest. It took him in the forearm.
A wet grunt tore out of him. His shield arm buckled. The shield dipped.
Another feather slipped through a gap at the wrong angle and nicked a second trainee’s bicep hard enough to leave a line of blood and a scream that cut through the battlefield like glass.
Groans echoed. Sharp, involuntary sounds, pain and surprise mixed together.
They were here to train… But Ludger hadn’t planned for that kind of training.
Not the kind where a “lesson” cost tendons and fingers and the ability to hold a shield tomorrow. His eyes went cold.
“Enough.”
He stepped forward, lifted both hands, and the air around him tightened as mana gathered like a pressure system forming over the deck.
He didn’t shape the earth. Didn’t throw more Splash. Didn’t burn the webs with fire.
He went higher. For a heartbeat, nothing happened. Then the sky above the battlefield filled. Not with birds. With weapons.
Swords, dozens, then hundreds, manifested in tight formation high overhead. Not physical steel forged in fire, but mana-made blades shaped with such sharp intent they looked real anyway: long, straight profiles with simple guards, edges shimmering with pale light. Some were narrow like rapiers. Some broader like arming swords. All of them aligned tip-down, hovering in a suspended grid like an army’s armory held aloft by invisible hands.
So many that it looked like the weapons of an entire regiment waiting for an order. The recruits froze for half a second, even with spiders clawing their shields and feathers still falling. Then Ludger dropped his hands. The swords rained down. Not tumbling. Guided.
They fell in violent lines, accelerating with rune-driven intent, the air shrieking around them. The first wave pierced the crow flock overhead, blades punching through skinny bodies mid-flight, pinning wings, shattering chests, ripping through those too-long necks.
Crows burst apart in the air like black sacks torn open. Feathers exploded outward in clouds. Some got skewered clean and carried down on the blade like impaled trophies, slammed into the webbed ground hard enough to stick upright.
The second wave hit the spider surge.
Mana swords stabbed into pale carapace with brutal ease, punching through thoraxes and pinning bodies to silk carpets. Some spiders tried to crawl over the pinned ones, then more blades fell and nailed them too, turning the front of the wave into a grotesque field of white bodies and vertical steel-light.
A sword speared a giant spider through its head and drove it down so hard its legs spasmed and went limp in the same instant.
Another blade took a spider mid-leap and split it on impact, the creature folding around the strike like wet paper.
Blades continued to fall, hundreds of impacts, a storm of stabbing light, until the battlefield looked like it had grown a forest of swords.
And the important part wasn’t the kills. It was the space.
The crow bombardment broke as the flock was shredded overhead. The feather rain thinned, then stopped as the surviving crows scattered wide, fleeing the kill zone.
The spider pressure collapsed at the front as pinned bodies created a clogged barrier of dead weight, the swarm’s momentum choking on its own numbers. For the first time all night, the line got to breathe.
Ludger stepped forward into the firelit chaos, eyes scanning the wounded arms, the punctured shields, the trembling trainees.
“Back line—Healing Touch!” he barked. “Rotate wounded out! Shields stay up!”
Because he wasn’t done. Now he was going to turn the battlefield back into a lesson, one that didn’t cost his kids their ability to hold a sword tomorrow.
Ludger’s Swordfall turned the battlefield into a graveyard of light.
Blades stood upright in silk and sand, pinning bodies, shredding wings, buying breathing room. But it didn’t end it. The swarm was too deep.
Spiders kept spilling from the webbed forest in layers, climbing over pinned corpses like water rolling over rocks. The crows, thinned, panicked, still circled wide, throwing feather volleys from safer angles. The line held, but it kept getting hit from two directions, and every second the pressure tried to rebuild.
Ludger stood in the center of it with his jaw clenched, watching kids brace behind shields with arms that were already shaking. He’d summoned one thousand mana swords… And it still wasn’t enough.
His mana circuits felt like they were on fire, heat running up his forearms and into his skull, the familiar sting of overuse turning into a dull burn that threatened to become pain he couldn’t ignore. If he kept throwing obscene spells, he’d win the battle and lose his ability to fight the next one.
It looked like it was time to solve it with his fists.
He took a step forward, shoulders tightening, Rage Flow already clawing at the edge of his control… Then he stopped. Because fists were expensive too. Not in mana. In risk.
And risk was what killed people on nights like this. Ludger’s eyes narrowed.
I don’t need more power, he realized. I need cheaper killing.
He dropped his hand to the ground and pulled.
Not spikes. Not walls.
Pebbles.
Hardened, dense little stones, thumb-sized at most, condensed and polished by earth mana until they were closer to sling bullets than gravel. They poured into his hands in a steady stream, piling up until he had hundreds of them hovering in a tight orbit around his fingers.
So small they cost almost nothing. So many they looked like a swarm of their own. The trainees near him stared, confused.
Viola glanced over mid-swing, saw the cloud of stone around his hands, and her grin sharpened like she’d understood the idea before it happened.
Ludger inhaled once. Then he triggered Rage Flow. The world snapped. Not in sound, inside him.
Heat surged through his limbs, a violent clarity that made everything feel lighter and sharper at the same time. His heartbeat deepened. His muscles tightened. His mana flow turned aggressive, less gentle river, more pressurized pipe.
He stepped forward into the firelight, into the edge of the battlefield, and raised his hand.
Then he flicked a pebble. Just a casual finger motion.
The pebble didn’t fly.
It became a line.
A gray streak that cracked the air and punched through a spider’s head like a hammer-driven nail. The body jerked, legs folding as if someone had cut its strings.
Ludger flicked again.
And again. Now it wasn’t single shots, it was a barrage.
His fingers moved too fast to track, each flick a tiny motion with monstrous acceleration behind it. Pebbles screamed across the battlefield like invisible bullets, punching into pale chitin with brutal precision.
A spider lunged at the shield wall.
Three pebbles hit it mid-leap, one through the thorax, one through a joint, one through the head, turning the jump into a dead flop that skidded across webbing.
A cluster of smaller spiders swarmed around a pinned corpse. Ludger raked his hand sideways.
A fan of pebbles shredded the pack in a heartbeat, bodies collapsing in a pile like someone had dumped a sack of broken porcelain.
Above, a crow dove to throw feathers.
Ludger didn’t even look up fully, just felt the angle, tracked motion with the edge of his senses, and snapped two flicks into the sky.
Pebbles punched through skinny black bodies mid-flight.
One crow folded instantly, wings collapsing as it spiraled down. Another took a hit through the chest and burst into a spray of feathers, the rest of its body spinning away like debris.
The battlefield changed texture.
Where Swordfall had been blunt control, pinning, choking momentum, this was execution.
Cheap. Fast. Relentless.
The sound became a staccato crack-crack-crack as pebbles broke the air and broke monsters. Every impact was a sudden stop in motion. Every stop was space gained for the line.
The trainees felt it.
They didn’t relax, they couldn’t, but you could see their posture shift as pressure eased. Shields stopped shaking as hard. Spears began to find clean targets again instead of stabbing into a wall of legs.
Viola carved through a giant spider’s abdomen and glanced at Ludger like he was insane.
He didn’t look back.
His eyes were locked forward, Rage Flow burning in his veins, hands flicking pebbles like a man firing a storm.
A sea of white bodies tried to surge.
And the pebble barrage turned it into a sea of stops, dead spiders piling, movement choking, the swarm’s rhythm breaking under a hail of cheap kinetic violence.
Ludger exhaled through clenched teeth. His circuits still burned. But this burn was manageable. Because for once, he wasn’t paying mana to create a miracle.
He was paying almost nothing to turn a handful of stone into a massacre, and letting the enemy learn the oldest lesson in the world: Numbers didn’t matter if you couldn’t reach the line.
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