Chapter 546
Chapter 546
For a moment, the only sound was the forge’s low crackle and the distant slap of waves against the shore.
Then Viola spoke, tight. “Maybe they can’t.”
Ludger looked at her. “They can always do something. Even if it’s the wrong thing.”
Rathen swallowed, carefully. “Or they’re waiting.”
Ludger’s mouth twitched, not quite a smile. More like a threat aimed at his problems.
“Waiting is also doing something,” he said.
He turned his eyes back to the sky for a heartbeat, then down again at the people around him, new members with bandaged arms and wide eyes. And in that moment, the irritation inside him sharpened into something colder. Because it wasn’t just that the Empire was complacent. It was that the world kept running on the assumption that someone competent was steering.
Ludger had stopped believing in that months ago.
He was getting more and more done with every passing week, not because he was a genius but because he was surrounded by incompetent morons, and the bar was buried underground.
Ludger let the silence hang for a heartbeat longer, just to make sure everyone understood it wasn’t a debate anymore.
“We depart soon,” he said, voice steady and unraised. “Before the island decides to remind us why it’s been left alone for years.”
A few shoulders eased. A few didn’t. The ones who didn’t were the ones who’d learned what night meant here.
“I’ll help with harvesting,” Ludger continued. “That speeds it up. We don't need the patience or caution doing this. We need time.”
Rathen nodded immediately, relief turning into action in his eyes. Viola’s jaw stayed tight, but she didn’t argue. She knew the difference between pride and survival.
Ludger’s gaze slid back to Raukor. Just once.
“Raukor,” he said. “We’re not done with this.”
Raukor’s ears twitched. “I know.”
“We’ll continue the conversation,” Ludger added, tone flat, “because it isn’t over.”
Raukor met his eyes and gave a slow, deliberate nod, like he was agreeing to a debt being collected later. Ludger turned away before anyone could mistake that for comfort.
He didn’t bother walking inland along the web-choked paths like a normal person.
Wind gathered around his boots in a tight spiral, light as a breath and sharp as a blade.
Wind Step. He moved.
One moment he was by the forge, the next he was in the trees where the webs hung thick enough to snag a man by the throat if he blundered into them. The white strands shimmered in the light, layered over branches, draped between trunks, stretched like nets.
Beautiful. Expensive.
And absolutely not worth dying for. Ludger raised one hand.
Mana flowed into the air and the wind obeyed with the eager precision of something that had been waiting for an excuse. A thin current snapped forward. A tree shivered as if something invisible had slapped it.
Then the trunk sheared cleanly, top half tilting, falling exactly where Ludger wanted it to fall, away from the thickest webbing, away from the workers, away from the shelter.
The crash shook loose strands of silk like snowfall.
Two trainees nearby froze, watching him like he was in an earthquake that learned manners.
“Don’t stare,” Ludger said without looking at them. “Roll.”
They moved instantly.
Good. He didn’t waste energy sculpting perfect harvesting tools. He didn’t need to. He just needed volume, speed, and controlled damage.
Another flick of his fingers.
Wind lines cut through the hanging webs with surgical neatness, slicing large sheets free rather than shredding them. Ludger kept the current thin, sharp enough to sever silk without turning it into useless fluff.
The freed webbing sagged and dropped, and he redirected the wind to push it gently toward the waiting poles like a giant invisible hand.
The trainees hurried in, winding it up in thick, clean layers. A few strands tried to cling to him, clinging with stubborn elastic tension. Ludger’s eyes narrowed. The wind sharpened.
The silk snapped away from his clothes like it had been offended.
He chopped down three more trees in quick succession, clean cuts, angled falls, no wasted motion. The island had plenty of timber, and he wasn’t interested in running out of poles before the ship was loaded.
Rathen had been right about one thing: speed mattered. But Ludger had the final say on another. Not everything needed to be taken. He glanced toward the beach.
The ship’s deck was already packed with rolled silk, stacked like oversized bones. The Ironhand crew were arranging it with the kind of care normally reserved for noble cargo and explosives.
Almost full. Good.
By the time the sun started bleeding into the horizon, the ship was heavy.
Not just with cargo, though the holds were packed with rolled spider silk and the deck looked like someone had stacked pale bones in neat rows, but with the kind of exhaustion that sat in your joints and made every breath feel earned.
The last bundles went down the gangplank. The last patrol came in, eyes still scanning the treeline like it might follow them onto open water.
Ludger stood on the deck and watched the shoreline without blinking. The island was all white web and dark trees now, the sunset turning it gold for a moment like it wanted to pretend it wasn’t a mouth full of teeth.
Everyone was onboard. No one is missing. No one died. That alone made it feel unreal.
Rathen moved with purpose, coat flapping in the sea breeze, voice crisp as he climbed to where the crew could hear him. He didn’t look like a merchant right then. He looked like what he really was, someone who understood logistics and fear and how to keep both from turning into disaster.
He gave a short series of orders. Ropes pulled free. Sails unfurled. Oars dipped. The ship groaned as it obeyed, wood complaining under the weight of silk and survivors.
Then the distance started to grow. Slowly at first. Like the island was reluctant to let go.
The webbed shoreline shrank. The treeline became a jagged smear. The mouth of the labyrinth vanished behind the curve of the beach and the angle of the light.
And as the island began to move further away, something in the air changed.
It wasn’t magical. Not directly. It was human.
A long, collective exhale rolled across the deck like a wave. Someone actually laughed, quiet, disbelieving. Another person sat down hard where they stood, as if their legs had only been pretending to work until they were safely out of range.
Even the Ironhand crew, hardened sailors who’d seen storms and blood and fights in equal measure, looked less sharp around the eyes.
Relief didn’t make them happy. It made them soft for the first time in days. People started to speak, low and uneven, the way you did when you were trying to convince yourself it had really happened.
Viola leaned against the rail, eyes still on the shrinking island. The wind tugged at her hair, and for once she didn’t try to fight it. Her expression was complicated, pride, frustration, and the quiet realization that the world was bigger and worse than court politics had ever prepared her for.
“Next time,” she said, more to the ocean than anyone else, “we come back more prepared.”
Luna stood a few steps away, silent as ever, watching the horizon with the same patient focus she’d worn all expedition. If she was relieved, she didn’t show it. She just… stored the memory away behind her eyes like a weapon to be used later.
Rathen drifted closer to Ludger, keeping his voice low. “No deaths,” he said, like he was afraid the numbers might change if he spoke too loudly.
Ludger didn’t look away from the island until it became a pale smudge. “Good.”
Rathen hesitated. “Most people will talk about this for years.”
“They’ll talk about the crows,” Ludger said. “They’ll talk about the spiders. They’ll talk about the sword rain.” His eyes narrowed slightly. “They won’t talk about the voice.”
Rathen swallowed. “And if they do?”
Ludger finally turned his head, expression calm in a way that made it clear the calm was engineered.
“Then we control the story,” he said. “Or someone else will.”
The ship cut forward through darkening water, sails catching the last light, and behind them the web-covered island sank into dusk like a bad dream trying to pretend it was only a dream.
Around Ludger, people kept sighing, relief leaking out of them in pieces. Some replayed the fights in their heads like trophies. Some replayed their mistakes like warnings.
Some stared at the horizon and realized, maybe for the first time, that the world wasn’t fair, and that surviving it didn’t make you pure. It just made you still here.
And as night settled over the sea, the expedition carried its prize home… along with a new kind of fear. One that spoke.
Once they were far away enough from danger, Ludger actually slept.
Not the deep, comfortable kind. The kind you earned when your body decided it was going to shut down whether you approved or not. He lay in the cramped captain’s spare cabin, because sleeping in the open on this ship meant someone would inevitably step on him or try to ask him a question, and let the rocking of the sea do what it always did.
Turn thoughts into noise.
Seismic Sense stayed muted. He could force it on, but there was nothing to map except water and wood and the steady heartbeat of a crew that finally believed tomorrow existed.
He woke before sunrise anyway. Old habit.
He washed, ran Create Water over his hands, then stepped onto the deck while the sky was still bruised purple. The spider island was a memory behind them now, nothing but an ugly weight sitting in everyone’s minds.
The ship creaked under its cargo. Rolls of silk were strapped down like prisoners. Men moved softly, voices low, careful not to jinx the peace.
Ludger watched the horizon for a minute. Then he went to find Rathen.
The merchant-guildmaster was already awake, seated by a small table lashed to the deck near the helm, a ledger open and a cup of something bitter in his hand. He looked like a man who’d survived danger and immediately decided to monetize it.
Rathen glanced up when Ludger approached. “Ludger.”
Ludger sat without being invited. “Morning.”
Rathen’s eyes flicked to Ludger’s bracer, then to the bundle of fresh bracers stacked in a crate nearby, Raukor’s work, grooves ready for future rune inlay.
Ludger didn’t bother with small talk. “Let’s renegotiate.”
Rathen’s eyebrows lifted. “Renegotiate costs?”
“Yes,” Ludger said. “The expedition was more troublesome than planned. More injuries. More danger. That changes the math.”
Rathen exhaled slowly. “I expected this.”
Ludger nodded once. He’d come prepared too.
He was ready for Rathen to push for labyrinth rights. Ready for the dance.
Instead, Rathen shut his ledger and leaned forward like a man skipping to the only part he cared about.
“I’m not here to argue about the labyrinth,” Rathen said.
Ludger’s eyes narrowed slightly. “You’re not.”
“No,” Rathen replied. “You can keep your rights. You can keep your claims.” He paused, then tapped the table once. “I want bracers.”
Ludger didn’t react outwardly, but his attention sharpened.
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