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

Chapter 541



Chapter 541

The torso caved inward slightly, and the hybrid’s arms spasmed as if the structure that controlled them had been punched loose. Ludger followed with a second punch. Then a third.

Each hit landed with a dull, ugly crunch, less like flesh, more like breaking thick ceramic over something wet. The hybrid staggered backward on its spider legs, trying to regain distance, but Ludger stayed glued to it.

He wasn’t fighting the legs now. He was dismantling the torso. A hook-like hand slashed at his face.

Ludger tilted his head and slammed his elbow down on the forearm, shattering the joint. The arm went limp. He stepped in again and punched through the cracked chest plate. The torso split, dark fluid spraying in a fine mist. The hybrid’s legs buckled.

It collapsed sideways, spider half twitching, human half collapsing like a puppet with cut strings.

The second hybrid screeched and tried to back off, firing another webline toward a boulder to start a swing again. Ludger’s gaze snapped to it, expression flat. He charged. Not with a spell. Not with finesse.

With the simple, ugly truth that the fastest way to stop a smarter monster was to get close enough that its tricks stopped mattering.

Wind Step carried him forward in a blur. The hybrid tried to swing the boulder. Ludger reached it first.

He drove a fist into its torso the same way, straight through the chest with a crack that echoed down the brick corridor, and the webline slackened instantly as its arms lost coordination.

The boulder dropped harmlessly.

And the hybrid dropped with it, collapsing in a twitching heap at Ludger’s feet.

Ludger stood over the two dead hybrids, breathing steady, fists dripping with dark fluid and sticky silk.

He flexed his fingers once, feeling the burn in his knuckles. Then he looked down the empty corridor where other bodies were hiding behind boulders and pillars.

More of them emerged. Not rushing. Not screaming into a charge.

They slipped out from behind boulders and pillars and half-collapsed brickwork like shadows deciding to become solid, white spider bodies, human torsos, long arms hanging at their sides. They formed a loose ring at a distance, watching Ludger the way a pack watched a wolf that had killed two of their own without effort.

Some were perfectly still. Others shifted slightly, spider legs clicking softly as they adjusted stance and spacing like trained soldiers. Ludger stared back, jaw tight.

Then the new ones did something he hadn’t seen yet.

A hybrid raised its human torso and leaned forward, mouthparts flexing. Silk threaded out, not a single harpoon line, but multiple thin strands that flowed like spooled wire. It didn’t fire them at Ludger.

It fired them into the air in front of itself.

A pale fan of thread.

And then, using its spider legs like nimble hands, it began to knit.

Not slowly. Not by layering over minutes like normal web building.

Instantly.

Its front legs moved in sharp, precise taps, hooking, looping, tightening. The silk strands twisted around each other and condensed, thickening into a rigid, pointed shape as if the fibers were being braided under invisible tension.

A spear formed. White. Glossy. Reinforced.

The tip sharpened on its own as the threads tightened, forming a narrow point that looked more like bone than silk. Another hybrid joined in. Then another.

Some used their arms to pull strands taut while their legs stitched and locked the weave. Others did it entirely with legs, four points working in concert, looping and cinching with a speed that felt wrong for an animal.

It wasn’t normal craftsmanship.

It was like watching someone “knit” with magic, silk turning from thread into weapon in a handful of breaths. Ludger’s frown deepened.

He’d been frowning so much lately he genuinely wondered if the muscles responsible would grow strong enough to be considered a skill.

New passive unlocked: Frown Mastery.

Useless. He shoved the thought aside. Because the real problem was the pattern.

These hybrids weren’t behaving like a hive mind executing one simple order.

They were acting independently while also working as a group with a decent teamwork..

One knit a spear. Another anchored silk to a pillar and began weaving a net. A third climbed a wall to gain height, watching angles. A fourth stayed perfectly still, clearly waiting for Ludger to commit so it could punish the movement.

They weren’t just “stronger spiders.”

They were roles. Like the labyrinth had started producing units with different jobs.

And that made last night feel even worse in hindsight. Crows above. Spiders below. Timing too perfect.

Coordination without a visible commander. Ludger’s eyes narrowed as he watched the silk spears finish forming, rigid shafts held in front legs like lances, tips pointed at him with unnatural steadiness.

And here I was thinking my worst problems were the changes in the Empire, he thought bitterly.

Politics could be brutal. But politics didn’t learn how to knit spears overnight. Not yet, anyway.

The hybrids lowered their silk weapons in unison, then, disturbingly, not all of them. Some held. Some shifted. Some prepared to throw.

Ludger’s stance settled, Wind Step coiling under him again, fists loosening into readiness.

He stared at the ring of spider-men and exhaled through his nose.

“Alright,” he muttered.

“Show me what else you’ve learned.”

The hybrids tensed.

It wasn’t subtle, legs lowering, torsos leaning forward, silk-spears angling to strike. The air tightened with that pre-charge stillness where even breathing felt like a sound you shouldn’t make.

Ludger mirrored them.

Wind Step coiled under his feet. Pebbles began to gather unconsciously at his fingertips, earth responding to intent. His shoulders loosened, fists half-raised, eyes tracking the first two that would commit.

One heartbeat away from violence… And then an annoyed voice echoed through the brick corridors.

“Enough!”

Ludger froze.

Not because he was scared, because it didn’t fit.

The word didn’t come from a mouth in front of him. It came from everywhere at once, rolling through the vaulted ceiling and bouncing off brick like the labyrinth itself had spoken.

He flicked his gaze left, then right, confused for a rare, sharp moment.

For a split second he wondered if he was hearing his own thoughts louder than usual. He’d been awake too long. He’d been fighting too long. Maybe fatigue was making his mind dramatic.

But the sound had weight. It was real enough that the spiders reacted.

The ring loosened. Silk-spears dipped. A few hybrids actually stepped back, legs clicking as they retreated behind boulders and pillars like children who’d been caught doing something they weren’t supposed to.

Ludger’s eyes narrowed. The voice returned, calmer now, still carrying that irritated edge like the speaker was already tired of him.

“Come to me, human. We should talk.”

Ludger didn’t move. He kept his stance. Kept his guard. He tilted his head slightly as if listening to a distant person across a crowded room.

“No?” he said.

A beat.

Then he added, deadpan, “We’re talking just fine.”

The voice sounded like it wanted to sigh.

“I cannot keep talking like this from so far away forever,” she said, the words vibrating through the bricks with a strange resonance, like a person speaking through a long tunnel and getting annoyed at the echo.

Ludger’s mouth twitched. Not a smile. A warning.

“That’s not my problem.”

A faint pause, like the voice wasn’t used to being dismissed.

Then she said, more carefully, “My children will not attack you.”

Ludger’s gaze swept over the hybrids again. Several were still watching him. Several still held silk weapons. None of them had fully relaxed.

He snorted softly. “They won’t attack for now.”

The voice sharpened. “I said they will not.”

Ludger didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t need to.

“Until I’m surrounded from both sides,” he said. 

Silence stretched. Then her voice returned, firmer, with a hint of offended dignity.

“I will not do that.”

Ludger’s eyes narrowed harder. His fingers flexed, pebble orbit tightening.

“And why should I trust a labyrinth guardian,” he said slowly, “that tried to kill my allies?”

The brickwork seemed to hum with restrained irritation.

“I did not try to kill your allies,” she replied, clipped.

Ludger didn’t let her dodge it.

“You sent spiders out of the labyrinth,” he said. “At night. In waves. While those crow-things hit from the sky.”

The voice held for a beat, then answered with something that sounded dangerously close to honesty.

“My children went out,” she said, as if correcting a misunderstanding. “They were… excited. You were inside their territory. You were taking. You were breaking. They reacted.”

Ludger’s expression didn’t soften.

“And the crows?”

A pause. A longer one.

“…Not mine,” she finally said.

Ludger’s eyes narrowed further. “Convenient.”

Her annoyance flared again, echoing through the corridor like a pressure shift. “Human. I am speaking to you because I am choosing to. If I wished you dead, you would not be arguing.”

“That’s not an argument,” Ludger replied. “That’s a threat. A laughable one at that.”

“It is a fact,” she snapped back, then took a breath, audible in the way the echo shifted. “Come to me. Speak where I can speak clearly. I will explain what I can.”

Ludger stared into the shadows beyond the boulders, weighing it.

Then he said, flatly, “You want me to walk deeper into your labyrinth. Alone.”

“Yes.”

Ludger’s mouth twitched again. “No.”

The voice’s irritation returned instantly. “Stubborn—”

Ludger cut in. “My brain is working better than you would assume.”

She held her temper for a moment. When she spoke again, it was slower, like she was forcing the words through clenched teeth.

“I give you my word: my children will not attack you on the path.”

Ludger didn’t budge.

“You gave them ‘not mine’ about the crows too,” he said. “And they still carved up my camp. Don’t talk to me about words.”

The corridor went quiet. Then her voice returned, lower, almost tired.

“Human… what do you want, then? You came here. You cut. You killed. You took. You broke my eggs. You slaughtered my children. You do not leave. You push deeper. Why?”

Ludger’s gaze didn’t waver.

“Because this is a labyrinth and you attacked us first,” he said. “Because last night wasn’t normal. Because you’re making spiders with human torsos.”

He took a slow breath.

“And because I won’t let something like you sit under the Empire’s coast and grow.”

A beat. Then the voice, very real and very close to sounding insulted, answered:

“…Then come to me, human. If you truly want answers.”

Ludger’s eyes narrowed to slits.

“And if I refuse?”

The labyrinth’s echo carried her next words like a door closing gently but firmly.

“Then we will keep doing this,” she said. “Until one of us understands the other.”

Ludger stared at the retreating hybrids, at the spears of silk, at the brick “streets” that shouldn’t exist under an island.

He exhaled through his nose.

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