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

Chapter 536



Chapter 536

Morning didn’t arrive like a victory. It arrived like permission to breathe.

The first light crept over the horizon and spilled across the island in pale gold, and with it came something that felt almost unnatural after the night’s violence…

Silence. No wingbeats. No scraping legs. No feather rain.

Just surf, wind, and the soft crackle of dying fire orbs fading into the day.

The island looked different in daylight.

It had been a white island when they first approached, web-shrouded, ghost-pale, like a corpse wrapped for burial. Now it was… changing.

Green showed through again where web curtains had been torn back or weighed down. Trees that had been silhouettes under silk were visible in full, their leaves dull but alive. White still dominated, mats of webbing draped over stone and branches like old cloth.

And red.

A lot of red.

Blood stained the web carpet in sprawling patches. Dark fluid smeared across rocks. Severed limbs and crushed bodies lay in heaps where the swarm had broken and been broken back. Thousands of corpses had piled up overnight, white spiders stacked like spilled cargo, black crows scattered in ragged clusters, and everywhere the evidence of impacts: holes punched through chitin, bodies pinned where they fell, crushed shapes half-sunk into silk.

That explained the red.

The trainees and recruits stood or sat wherever their legs gave out, exhaustion written into every movement. Some leaned on shields like they were crutches. Others sat with heads bowed, breathing hard, eyes unfocused as adrenaline finally released them.

A few flinched when they moved, sharp pain from punctures and bruises where feather-darts had found gaps. Bandages were already going on. Healing Touch had done what it could during the fight, but night wounds always left residue: swelling, stiffness, the dull ache that reminded you your body wasn’t a machine.

Still…

No one was dead. That was the part that mattered.

Ludger watched them with a tight expression he didn’t let soften. He kept his posture calm, because calm was contagious and panic was expensive. But inside, a thread of tension finally loosened. He would’ve felt pretty bad if even a single kid had died.

Not “regret.” Not “sadness.”

Something heavier, responsibility turning into a stone you carried forever.

They’d survived because they’d listened. Because they’d rotated. Because they’d kept shields up. Because they’d learned to fight as a line instead of as individuals.

And because the training he’d given them had given them an edge in chaos. Not enough to make it easy. Enough to keep them alive.

Ludger exhaled slowly, eyes sweeping the battered line of his people and the blood-streaked webbed island beyond.

“Good,” he murmured, mostly to himself.

Then his gaze hardened again, because survival wasn’t the end. It was just the part that earned you the right to keep working. Ludger was tired. Not the polite kind of tired where you yawn and complain. The real kind, the kind that sat in the bones and made your thoughts feel heavier.

His fingers were swollen, skin split in a few places from the repeated flicking and impact recoil. Thin lines of blood ran down his knuckles and dripped from his fingertips when he flexed them. He didn’t bother hiding it. He just kept his hands loose and kept watching.

Because the battle wasn’t over until the casualties were counted.

He moved through the aftermath with slow, careful steps, eyes scanning for danger signs the kids wouldn’t admit: pale faces, shaky breathing, someone trying too hard to look fine while their arm hung wrong, someone sitting too still because moving hurt.

He checked pulses without making a show of it. He asked short questions. He watched how they answered. When he found someone close to the line, he ordered them to sit and get treated. No debate.

Only after he was sure no one was slipping into that quiet danger, shock, internal bleeding, the kind of injury that killed you an hour after the fight—did he let the tension ease inside his chest.

Everyone was still alive.

Everyone was… all right. As much as anyone could be after a night like that. Ludger turned and walked along the line of trainees and recruits. One end to the other. Slow. Serious.

His expression didn’t soften as he passed them. He looked like a judge approaching a verdict.

The camp grew quiet as he moved. People straightened. Some swallowed. A few looked guilty for no reason beyond surviving. Most of them expected a scolding.

They’d seen him in training. They knew his standards. They knew how he spoke when someone made a mistake.

And his face right now looked like the start of one. Ludger stopped at the center of the line. He looked at them for a long moment, eyes steady, blood still dripping lazily from one finger. Then he opened his mouth.

“You did well,” he said.

The words landed wrong at first, like their ears refused to accept them.

A few blinked. One kid’s shoulders sagged with relief so fast it looked like he might collapse. Another let out a breath he’d been holding since midnight. Ludger didn’t smile. He didn’t need to.

“You fought better than I expected,” he continued, voice flat but clear.

That hit harder.

Because “better than expected” from Ludger wasn’t casual praise. It was proof. It was a number going up in his head.

He let his gaze sweep over them again, over bruised arms, cracked shields, bandaged hands, and eyes that looked older than they had yesterday. Then he added, almost awkwardly, like the words didn’t fit his mouth.

“Usually I don’t do this,” he said. “But I’m saying it clearly.”

He paused.

“It would be an honor to have you as Lionsguard,” Ludger said. “As friends. As allies.”

Silence held for a heartbeat, heavy, stunned.

Then the emotion hit them late, messy and real. Pride. Disbelief. Something that tightened throats and made hands shake for reasons that weren’t pain.

Ludger raised a hand slightly, cutting off whatever noise was about to burst out.

“Even if you’ve trained with us less than three months,” he said, “just say the word. I’ll let you join immediately.”

He lowered his hand… And for a moment, the battered camp looked at him like he’d offered them something bigger than money or weapons. A place. A banner. A family that didn’t pretend the world was kind, only that you didn’t have to face it alone.

For a second, nobody moved. Not because they didn’t understand. Because they did, and it hit too deep, too fast.

Then the excitement broke through like sunlight after a storm.

It was in the way eyes widened and stayed wet without anyone wanting to admit it. In the way bruised shoulders straightened like pain suddenly mattered less. In the way hands that had been shaking from fatigue now shook from something warmer, something dangerously close to hope.

For a lot of them, it looked like the first time in their life someone had seen their effort and decided it meant something. Not the polite praise adults gave kids to make them quiet. Real recognition.

The kind that said: I saw what you did. I saw what it cost. And I still want you.

Despite the clumsy footwork. Despite the fear. Despite the mistakes they almost made. Despite the weakness they hated in themselves. Accepted anyway. One by one, they began to stand.

Slowly at first, some with winces, some leaning on shields, some with bandages tight around their arms—but they stood.

And they nodded at Ludger. Not frantic. Not begging. A steady agreement. A choice.

“I want it,” a boy said hoarsely, voice cracking.

A girl beside him nodded hard enough her hair whipped. “Me too.”

Another recruit pushed himself upright, grimacing through pain, and forced the words out like a vow. “I… want to join.”

More followed. Not as a shouted chorus, but as a rising wave, heads lifting, eyes locking onto Ludger, nods multiplying until the whole battered line felt like it had one heartbeat.

They wanted to join. Despite the fear. Despite the pain they’d felt tonight. Because pain without meaning was torture.

But pain with a place to belong to? That was… survivable. Ludger met their eyes and nodded back, once per person, like he was counting them in. Like he was accepting the weight they were offering.

“Good,” he said simply.

Then he turned his head toward Raukor. “Raukor.”

The beastman blacksmith was already watching, arms crossed, expression unreadable.

“Start forging bracers,” Ludger said. “For the new Lionsguard. Immediately.”

A few recruits blinked, like they hadn’t even considered the idea of getting something that marked them as real.

Raukor gave a single nod. “Yes.”

He started moving without another word, already thinking in measurements and batches and time. Ludger walked with him for a few steps, matching pace.

When they were side by side, Ludger spoke without turning his head, quiet enough that the recruits couldn’t hear, sharp enough that Raukor didn’t miss it.

“What the hell was that attack?” Ludger asked. “I’ve never heard of anything like this.”

Raukor grunted, eyes forward. For a moment Ludger expected a beastman answer, short, blunt, unhelpful. This time it was blunt and honest.

“I have never seen anything like this either,” Raukor rumbled.

Ludger’s jaw tightened. That wasn’t reassuring.

If even the beastmen, who treated troublesome terrain like a lifestyle, had never seen crows and spiders coordinate like a staged assault…

Then last night wasn’t just “the island being hostile.”

It was something new. Something that learned.

And Ludger didn’t like enemies that could do that.

Ludger turned away from Raukor’s forge preparations and scanned the camp.

He found Viola first, standing a little apart from the cluster of newly-minted Lionsguard, sword still at her hip, face drawn tight with fatigue she refused to show. There was dried blood on her sleeve. Her eyes were sharp, but the way she blinked told him she hadn’t slept.

Rathen was nearby as well, speaking quietly with a couple of Ironhand hands, posture stiff with the strain of a night spent watching two fronts at once. He looked calm on the outside, but his shoulders carried the weight of a man who’d just had his assumptions shattered.

Ludger caught their attention with a small gesture.

They followed him without questions, stepping away from the main group and the rising noise of relief. Away from the recruits celebrating their survival and their new place.

Out here, the morning air felt colder. It had been one hell of a night for them too.

And it was obvious, painfully obvious, that neither of them had ever experienced something like this. Not like that. Not spiders surging out of the labyrinth while the sky tried to nail everyone to the ground.

Ludger stopped near a web-streaked boulder and faced them.

“I’m going to check the labyrinth,” he said.

Viola’s eyes narrowed immediately. “Now?”

“Now,” Ludger confirmed. “While it’s quiet. While we can see. While the island is still catching its breath.”

Rathen’s mouth tightened. “And us?”

“You stay behind,” Ludger said. “Organize the forces. Rotate the wounded. Keep harvesting if it’s safe. Get the bracers started. Make sure the ship is loaded.”

He looked between them, expression flat, voice turning harder.

“But if there’s another attack, retreat immediately.”

Viola opened her mouth like she wanted to argue on instinct.

Ludger cut it off before it formed. “No pride. No ‘we can hold it.’ No waiting for confirmation. If the sky darkens or the ground starts moving, you pull back to the ship and leave.”

Rathen studied him for a beat, then nodded once. He understood logistics. He understood survival.

Viola’s jaw tightened, but she nodded too—one sharp motion, accepting even if she didn’t like it.

Ludger’s gaze held on them a moment longer.

“This place is not normal,” he said quietly. “Something is coordinating. I need to know what’s inside before we pretend we can control it.”

Then he turned his eyes toward the island’s center, toward the grand cavern-mouth that looked like architecture pretending to be stone.

“I’ll be back,” he added, like it was just another job.

But the way he said it carried an unspoken warning:

If the labyrinth has learned to strike like last night… then the next time, it might aim for something more important than sleep.

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