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

Chapter 548



Chapter 548

The last stretch home was almost insulting in how easy it felt.

No ambushes. No storms. No screaming in the dark. Just wheels on packed earth, the steady sway of the wagons, and a sky that didn’t look like it was plotting murder.

After the island, the road felt tame.

People relaxed without realizing it. Shoulders unclenched. Conversations got louder. Someone even started laughing properly, real laughter, the kind you heard in taverns, not the brittle kind you used to convince yourself you weren’t about to die.

The new members dozed in awkward positions, bracers still on their wrists like they were afraid the proof would vanish if they took them off. Others stared at the horizon with that distant look of someone replaying a battle over and over until it turned from terror into a story they could own.

Ludger let them have it. He didn’t. While everyone else enjoyed the quiet, he used it like a workbench.

His mind ran the entire expedition back in clean lines: what worked, what cost too much mana, where they’d gotten lucky, where they’d been arrogant, where the enemy had been smart. The Spider Queen’s voice still sat in the back of his skull like a thorn he couldn’t reach.

Sapient. Territorial. Strategic. That wasn’t a monster problem. That was a political problem wrapped in a dungeon.

He stared out at the passing trees and started stacking next steps like stones in a wall.

First: the report. Second: training. The new members needed structure immediately, if you let a fresh victory ferment, it turned into ego. Third: the bracers. Rathen’s request wasn’t just business, it was a door. If Ludger handled it right, it became a permanent pipeline into Lionfang.

Repairs. Workshops. Contracts. Leverage.

And then, looming over it all, the spider labyrinth itself, what it meant to claim it, what it meant to not claim it, and what it meant if the Empire already knew and chose silence anyway.

By the time the wagons crested a hill and the wind shifted, Ludger had already built half a plan and hated himself for it. He truly felt like he should dump the whole thing on his father’s lap.

Let Arslan deal with politics. Let him stand in front of angry nobles and smooth it over with that calm, dangerous impatience of his. Let Yvar chew through the information, find patterns, chase names and crests and supply chains like he lived for it.

That was what they were for. That was what a guild had.

Ludger even pictured it for a moment, walking into Lionfang, tossing the entire mess onto a table, and saying, Here. Handle it. I’m going to sleep for a week.

It was a beautiful fantasy. He exhaled softly and watched the road roll under the wheels. The problem was… he couldn’t. Not cleanly. Not honestly. Because they didn’t know what he had in mind.

He had decided too much already. He’d made too many silent calls, drawn too many lines in his head without consulting them. He’d built the skeleton of the next phase alone, the way he always did when time was short and people were slower than danger.

If he dumped it on them now, it wouldn’t be delegation. It would be shifting responsibility after the fact. And Ludger wasn’t that shameless. Not yet.

So he stayed quiet. Let the wagon carry him. Let the others rest. And kept planning anyway, because the road was easy…but the work waiting at home would not be.

Viola had been quiet for most of the ride, sitting across from Ludger with her arms folded and her eyes fixed on the passing trees like she was daring the road to offend her.

Luna, as always, was just… there. Too still. Too calm. The kind of presence that made you forget she existed until you tried to do something. Near a bend where the path split toward the coast road and the inland track, Viola finally spoke.

“I’m going to jump off soon,” she said, casual like she was talking about stepping out of a tavern. “Me and Luna.”

Ludger didn’t look up from his thoughts. “No.”

Viola’s lips twitched. “Not asking permission. Informing you.”

He shifted his gaze to her, flat and unimpressed. “You’re still on my convoy.”

Viola rolled her eyes, then sighed like she’d decided to be slightly reasonable. “I don’t want to ask you to take me all the way home,” she said, voice quieter. “Not when you’re… at odds with Grandfather right now.”

There it was. Politics creeping into the carriage like smoke. Ludger held her stare for a beat, then looked away. He didn’t deny it. He didn’t confirm it. He just filed it under annoying but real. Viola changed the topic with the speed of someone who hated sounding vulnerable.

“So,” she said briskly, “what kind of people do you even need to work that spider silk? You’re hauling a fortune. What’s the plan?”

Ludger went silent for a moment. Not because he didn’t know. Because he was deciding how much to say without turning the conversation into a negotiation. Then he answered, simple.

“I’ll need workers,” he said. “People with experience handling unusual silk. Not normal cloth. Not a common thread.”

He stared out the window again, the words steady and practical.

“I need spinners who can process it without burning it. Weavers who can keep tension consistent. Tailors who can work with thread that doesn’t behave. People who can turn it into cloth first, then into clothing, wraps, armor liners, bandages, whatever sells.”

Viola nodded slowly, absorbing it. “So… specialists.”

“Yes.”

“And you’re going to bring them to Lionfang.”

“Yes.”

She hummed like she’d just confirmed something in her own head. “Makes sense.”

The carriage rocked over a bump. Viola leaned forward, grabbed the door latch with one hand, and glanced at Luna.

“We’re getting off here,” Viola said.

Luna gave a small nod, already shifting her weight.

Ludger’s eyes narrowed. “Wait until…”

Too late.

Viola swung the door open and the wind slapped into the carriage. She and Luna moved in perfect sync, Viola impulsive but athletic, Luna controlled like she’d measured the ground ten seconds ago.

They jumped. For a heartbeat they were just two silhouettes against the road and the lowering sun. Then they hit.

They slid a short distance through dust and grit, boots carving shallow lines, momentum bleeding off in a controlled skid. Viola landed firm, knees bent, one hand brushing the ground for balance. Luna landed beside her like gravity had signed a contract.

Both upright. Both fine.

Viola turned immediately to Luna and started talking, hands moving slightly, quick, sharp gestures like she was giving instructions or arguing about something she didn’t want to admit she cared about.

Ludger watched them through the open door as the convoy rolled forward. They stayed there, talking in the road’s shoulder, small figures against the long stretch of wilderness behind them.

For several seconds, Ludger didn’t move. Then his mind caught up to the obvious problem he’d somehow let slip past his planning.

This is stupid.

Letting Viola Torvares and her assassin-bodyguard walk home alone, even if “alone” included Luna, was the kind of decision that aged you into an idiot in one afternoon.

Bandits didn’t need to beat Luna. They only needed a distraction. A crossbow bolt from the trees. A stupid accident. A political “misunderstanding.” Ludger’s jaw tightened. He leaned out and snapped a short command to the driver.

“Stop.”

The runic carriage slowed, then the wagons behind it creaked and rattled as the entire convoy came to a halt. Heads turned. People shifted, confused. Ludger stepped down and raised his voice, not loud, just enough to cut through the movement.

“You five,” he said, pointing.

Renn, Marie, Bramm, Jorin, and Tali looked up like they’d just been chosen for a sacred quest.

Ludger jerked his chin toward Viola and Luna. “Escort them home.”

For a heartbeat, the five just stared, processing what he’d said, and who he’d said it about.

Then their eyes started to shine. Actually shine. Like someone had handed them a legendary drop. Viola Torvares, frontline fighter, noble blood, half-sister of their vice guildmaster, the one who’d held the shield wall like it was an oath.

They were fans. Some of them had worshipful looks.

One of them swallowed hard and straightened so fast his bracer clinked. “Y-yes, Vice Guildmaster!”

Ludger’s expression stayed flat.

“Good,” he said. “No detours. No stories.. You keep your eyes open, you keep your mouths shut, and you bring them home.”

The five nodded like their necks had been trained for obedience. Viola, down the road, turned at the commotion. Her face shifted from surprise to a small, reluctant smile.

Luna just looked at Ludger for a moment, quiet, assessing, then gave a faint nod that felt less like gratitude and more like acknowledgement of competence.

Ludger turned back toward the carriage, already done with the moment.

Because protecting them wasn’t kindness. It was logistics. And the road didn’t forgive stupid. The convoy rolled again.

Wheels bit into the road, the runic carriage humming softly with each rune-stabilized bump like it was annoyed at having to behave like a normal wagon. Behind them, the five escorts jogged back into position after seeing Viola and Luna moving, faces still bright with that stupid, contagious excitement.

Two hours later, Lionfang came into view.

The walls rose from the earth like a promise, stone shaped by magic and stubborn hands, patched where they’d been tested, reinforced where Ludger had decided the world didn’t get to choose their fate. Smoke curled from chimneys. People moved in the streets. Kids ran between stalls like nothing in the world wanted to eat them.

Peaceful. Looked peaceful. Ludger didn’t trust “looked.”

He didn’t rush. He didn’t wave. He didn’t let the relief from returning home soften his awareness. His eyes moved over rooftops, alleys, the market line, the gates, the watch rotations on the walls. He listened.

Not with Seismic Sense, he kept that quiet, because the town was full of normal movement and he didn’t need to drown in it, but with something older.

Pattern recognition. A missing guard. A cluster of people standing too still. A merchant looked nervous for the wrong reason. A door that should be open and wasn’t.

Everything matched. No tension spikes. No strange crowds. No sudden absence of the usual noise. He let himself breathe. Only then did he guide the convoy through the gate and toward the Lionsguard compound.

By the time they rolled into the yard, the rumors had already arrived ahead of them. Faces appeared in the windows. People drifted closer like moths to a lantern. Someone shouted a name. Another shouted a question. The new members sat a little straighter, suddenly remembering they were returning as something more than “trainees.”

Ludger stepped down first. He took one look at the battered, proud group and decided to cut off the chaos before it bloomed into a problem. He raised a hand. “Listen,” he said. The yard quieted fast. Lionfang had learned what that hand meant.

“You have a week off,” Ludger announced.

There was a beat of stunned silence, as if nobody’s brain wanted to accept the words, then the yard erupted.

Relief. Excitement. Disbelief. A couple of people actually looked like they might collapse on the spot.

Someone whooped. Someone else groaned in happiness. A few started talking immediately about food, sleep, baths, and the kind of celebrating that required forgetting the concept of spiders.

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