Chapter 588
Chapter 588
Ludger kept trying. Nonstop.
A day and a half bled together into one long stretch of cold stone, controlled breathing, and stubborn refusal. He’d sit. Clear his mind. Activate Rage Flow at a whisper. Try to sense the burn, stamina turning into heat, heat turning into pressure, pressure turning into… something he still couldn’t name.
Fail. Reset. Again. Again. Again. The old man watched for a while, then finally spoke.
“Break.”
Ludger didn’t open his eyes. “No.”
A pause. A slow exhale from the old man.
“You will dull,” the old man said. “Then you will break.”
Ludger’s voice stayed level, stubborn in the way only someone used to winning could be stubborn.
“I don’t have time,” he said.
That was the truth. There were observers coming. Letters waiting. A town that needed him even when it pretended it didn’t. Every hour he wasted up here was another hour the Empire spent planning how to fold him into their structure.
Besides… he could feel it. He felt like he was about to understand something. He’d felt that for ten hours. By the tenth hour, even Ludger’s mind had started to notice the problem.
Maybe I shouldn’t trust my intuition this much when I’m tired.
He almost laughed at himself, almost. But the thought didn’t have humor in it. It had frustration. Because that “breakthrough feeling” kept hovering in front of him like a carrot tied to a stick, and every time he reached for it, it slid away.
The longer he pushed, the worse it got.
His breathing grew rougher. His pulse stayed elevated even when he wasn’t moving. Rage Flow, kept barely active, became a constant low grind in his veins, like he’d left a forge door cracked open and now everything inside him ran hot.
He could feel stamina draining. Not in clean chunks like a skill cost. In a slow leak. The kind that made your limbs feel heavier even though you weren’t doing anything dramatic. And then his muscles started hurting. Not the polite soreness of training. Real pain.
The kind that spread across the body in ugly patches, quads, lower back, shoulders, forearms, like something inside him had been scraped raw. Every time he shifted posture, he felt it: tiny tears, overstressed fibers, the penalty for keeping his body in a tense, controlled state for too long.
He was spending stamina. And when stamina ran thin, he started spending something else. Health. Not metaphorical “health.” Actual damage.
The System didn’t need to announce it for him to know. His joints ached with sharpness instead of dullness. His muscles trembled on the edge of spasms. He could feel the micro-failures stacking, little injuries that were harmless alone, dangerous together.
Real damage they suffered. The kind you couldn’t ignore forever just because you were stubborn.
He opened his eyes at some point and realized the cave had shifted from darkness to pale morning and back again. The vents still breathed. The stars had returned. Then faded.
Time kept moving, whether Ludger acknowledged it or not. The old man finally stood and stepped close enough that his shadow fell across Ludger’s face.
“Enough,” he said.
Ludger’s jaw tightened. “I’m close.”
The old man stared down at him. “You are tired.”
“I’m close,” Ludger repeated, voice a little sharper now.
The old man crouched, bringing his face level with Ludger’s. Under the skull’s shadow, his eyes were flat and certain.
“You have been ‘close’ for a long time,” he said.
Ludger’s fingers curled slightly, irritation flickering, then he forced it down, because the old man was right and Ludger hated it. The old man continued, voice like gravel.
“Your body is not a tool you can swing until it breaks and then replace,” he said. “If you destroy it, you lose the time you think you are saving.”
Ludger swallowed once, slow. His chest rose and fell heavier now. Steam curled from his skin in the cold air. He could still feel that near-breakthrough sensation, like a word on the tip of the tongue. But he could also feel his muscles screaming.
And in that clash, ambition versus biology, Ludger finally understood something else, sharp and unpleasant: This art wasn’t about forcing power out of himself. It was about learning the line between burning and consuming.
He exhaled and let Rage Flow go, fully, for the first time in hours. The pressure eased off his ribs. His shoulders dropped a fraction. He stayed sitting, still stubborn, still annoyed, but the fight inside him cooled enough that thought could happen again.
“…Fine,” Ludger said quietly. “A short break.”
The old man nodded once, like this was the only acceptable outcome.
“Eat,” he ordered. “Sleep.”
Ludger’s mouth tightened. He hated how reasonable it was. He hated even more that the “breakthrough” feeling didn’t disappear when he stopped. It just sat there, waiting, calm and patient, like it had been mocking him the whole time.
And for the first time since he’d arrived in this endless winter, Ludger admitted it to himself: If he wanted this power, he couldn’t take it by force. He’d have to earn it the hard way. With patience. With control. With the kind of discipline that hurt worse than any fight.
Ludger forced himself to eat.
Not because he was hungry, but because his body had reached the point where hunger was just another warning sign. He chewed slowly, swallowed, drank a little water, then sat back down near the vents where the stone wasn’t quite so biting. Cross-legged again. Back straight, at first.
He wanted to rest, but he didn’t want to go full sleeping mode. So he tried to rest the way he did everything else: controlled. Breathing steady. Awareness half-open. Listening to the cave’s quiet hiss and the distant wind outside. It lasted maybe two minutes. He was so tired that his mind simply… let go.
His eyelids slid shut. His head dipped. His torso curved forward as he slumped in the cross-legged position like a puppet whose strings had been cut. He stayed seated, but only barely, chin almost to chest, shoulders rounding, the ridiculous posture of someone trying to look disciplined while losing the war against exhaustion.
The old man opened one eye. He saw Ludger like that. And snorted.
“Youth…” he muttered, mostly to himself.
They always looked like that eventually. No matter how sharp they were. No matter how talented. He watched the boy’s slow breathing for a moment and let his gaze drift.
Youth thought every question had an answer. That every path had a shortcut just for them. That stubbornness was the same thing as strength. The old man remembered being the same.
He hadn’t been born an “old goat.” He’d been another regular northerner once, loud and hungry and convinced the world could be fixed by hitting it hard enough. Punch. Kick. Break teeth. Protect people.
That was what northerners did. That was what northerners were praised for.
He’d smashed things for his people until his hands were scarred and his ribs had stopped counting how many times they’d been cracked. He’d fought imperials when they came too far north, and he’d delved into labyrinths when he needed to prove he was still worth feeding.
He’d trained because training was what you did when you didn’t know how else to be useful.
Then, after a while, he’d started noticing patterns. Most warriors did one of two things. They stopped trying hard once they realized they couldn’t actually improve the situation of their people, couldn’t stop winter, couldn’t stop hunger, couldn’t stop arguing, couldn’t stop death.
Or they died young trying anyway. He’d watched good men burn out. Watched strong men become tired men. Watched brave men become dead men. And somehow… he didn’t die with them.
At some point, without meaning to, he’d become the oldest one still alive. Not because he was the strongest. Because he kept moving when others either quit or broke. He kept fighting imperials. Kept diving into labyrinths to test his strength, to sharpen himself, to feel like there was a point to it.
But as the years stacked, he realized something that left a bitter taste in his mouth. Most of them weren’t doing it because they had a purpose. They were doing it because they didn’t know what else to do.
Violence was simple. Violence had rules. Violence gives you a reason to wake up. So they chased it until it killed them. That realization had been the real turning point. Not some grand tragedy. Not an enlightened vision. Just an honest, ugly thought:
I’m going to die for a cause that doesn’t change anything… unless I decide my life is mine.
So he had. He’d stepped away from the noise. From the tribes. From the endless cycle of proving himself useful until the day he wasn’t. He chose to live his life for himself. To improve because improvement was the only thing that couldn’t be stolen by weather, or empire, or hunger. To build new techniques with no audience and no applause. To die someday with his hands still searching for the next edge.
The old man watched Ludger sleeping crookedly, half-folded, breath steady despite the ridiculous posture. A boy with too many burdens and too much talent, chasing power like it was a tool he could use to hold the world in place.
The old man snorted again, softer this time. Maybe the boy would learn.
Maybe he wouldn’t. But at least, unlike most fools who came north, this one was stubborn enough to keep trying. And stubborn, the old man knew, could be shaped into something better… if it didn’t break first.
A couple of hours later, Ludger’s eyes snapped open. For half a second he didn’t know where he was. Then the ache reminded him.
His body felt worse than before, far worse. Sleeping in that cross-legged slumped posture had done exactly what it was supposed to do to someone who thought discipline meant “ignore discomfort.”
It had wrecked him.
His neck felt like it had been twisted wrong. His lower back screamed when he tried to straighten. His hips were tight, his legs numb in patches, and every muscle he’d spent a day and a half abusing now seemed to be filing complaints in unison. Ludger exhaled slowly through his nose, annoyed at himself in a quiet, almost respectful way.
“Stupid,” he muttered.
He pushed himself up anyway, rising in stages, hands to knees, spine uncoiling like a reluctant rope. He stretched, carefully at first, then more aggressively as the pain became a map. Shoulder rolls. Neck tilt. Hip rotation. A slow twist that made his back crack once.
Better. Not good.
He set his palms against the cave wall and pulsed a thin thread of mana through his muscles, healing, not dramatic, just enough to mend the worst micro-tears and calm the inflammation he’d earned with stubbornness. Heat spread under his skin. The sharpness dulled. The ache turned into manageable soreness.
Once the pain finally eased, Ludger stepped toward the cave mouth. Outside, it was night again, clear and cold, stars sharp overhead, the world quiet enough that his own breath sounded loud.
He inhaled. Cold air flooded his lungs like clean water. He took another breath. Then another. And with each inhale, something inside him shifted. His body didn’t just tolerate the cold. It welcomed it.
The chill bit into his throat and down into his chest, and instead of tightening, his muscles loosened. His head cleared. The fog of exhaustion peeled away. He felt… revitalized.
Not rested, rested was too generous, but awake in a way he hadn’t been all day.
Then inspiration hit him like a slap.
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