Chapter 608
Chapter 608
Ludger waited until the noise settled into something livable again, until the wounded stopped groaning like they were dying and started groaning like they were proud.
Then he looked up at Herack one last time.
“Thanks,” Ludger said, voice plain. Not overly polite. Just… honest. “For the lesson.”
Herack’s mouth twitched. “Lesson,” he repeated, like the word could mean anything.
Ludger didn’t elaborate. He rarely did.
He bent, scooped up his backpack where he’d left it near the edge of the ring, and swung it over one shoulder. The straps settled against his coat with a familiar weight, supplies, tools, small necessities. The kind of weight that meant he was still a traveler, not a spectator.
Without another word, he started walking toward the settlement’s outer path, away from the arena and the lantern light and the eyes. He didn’t rush. He didn’t slink away either.
He left like someone who had taken what he came for and didn’t owe anyone an encore.
Freyra hesitated for half a heartbeat, still catching her breath, still wearing that stubborn “I almost had him” pride like a cloak.
Then she pushed herself up and followed.
Her steps were steadier than they’d been earlier. Her shoulders were looser. And the way she held her head had changed slightly, less like a hammer looking for a nail, more like a fighter who’d just realized there were angles she hadn’t considered.
She shouldn’t have learned much from being dragged out of a ring and slapped by exhaustion. But it looked like she had.
As they passed the edge of the settlement, Freyra shot one last glance back toward the arena, tongue clicking softly in thought. Not in annoyance this time. Something closer to planning.
Then she matched Ludger’s pace and said nothing, letting the crunch of their boots in snow fill the space.
Behind them, Herack stood near the stake line, swords resting in their sheaths again, cloak hanging loose like he’d never moved fast in his life.
He watched the two figures shrink into the white distance, one boy who didn’t belong and one northerner who refused to be small. Herack’s eyes narrowed.
He’d taught Ludger. He knew he had. But the question that gnawed at him was what, exactly.
Overdrive? Ludger already had a version of it, crude compared to Herack’s, sure, but real enough to fight with. He’d seen the boy refine it in the middle of the match like his body was taking notes.
It wasn’t gear. Ludger hadn’t taken a blade. Hadn’t asked for coins. Hadn’t even negotiated for a place to sleep. So it wasn’t payment in steel or gold. That left one thing.
Knowledge or understanding.
The kind you couldn’t weigh in a hand but could change a war with. Herack scratched at his jaw, watching the last trace of them vanish over a distant rise.
“Hah,” he murmured to himself, a slow smile returning. “What did you actually take from me, boy?”
He didn’t have an answer. Not yet.
And that uncertainty, rare, irritating, and strangely exciting, made him laugh under his breath as the north swallowed Ludger and Freyra whole. The wind got louder once they were away from the settlement.
No torches. No eyes. No crowd noise, just white land and sharp air and the steady crunch of boots in snow. Freyra walked beside Ludger for a while in silence, hands stuffed in her furs, shoulders loose in a way they hadn’t been when he’d first found her camped outside the walls.
Eventually she couldn’t hold it in anymore.
“So,” she said, glancing at him sideways. “What now?”
Ludger didn’t look back. He kept his pace even, breath steady, mind already turning over roads and messages and consequences.
“I go home,” he replied.
Freyra blinked. “Just like that?”
Ludger shrugged, a small movement under the pack strap. “I’ve been up here almost two weeks.”
He counted it out in his head without needing to say the numbers. The days of freezing breath and bruised lungs. Valk’s cave. Shera’s burned hill. The settlement and Herack’s blades.
“Three masters,” Ludger continued. “That’s enough. Time to face the real problems.”
Freyra grunted, like she didn’t like how reasonable that sounded. “You mean the Regent and his rails and all that?”
“Yes.”
She made a face. “Sounds annoying.”
“It is,” Ludger said flatly.
They crested a shallow rise, and the world opened, white and empty, the kind of emptiness that was never truly empty if you knew how to look.
Ludger stopped and reached inward, not for Rage Flow, not for Overdrive. For the warm tether in his chest. The pact line.
Freyra noticed immediately, posture shifting. “What are you doing?”
“Calling Silva,” Ludger said.
Freyra’s eyes narrowed. “What the heck is Silva?”
Ludger didn’t answer with words. He shaped intention the way Shera had taught him, calm, firm, imprinted with certainty, and let mana flow through the pact.
The air in front of them rippled. Then Silva appeared. One heartbeat there was only snow and wind.
The next, a massive dire wolf stood on the ridge, fur bristling, breath steaming, amber eyes locked on Ludger like he’d been waiting behind reality’s curtain for permission to exist.
Freyra jolted backward on instinct, hand snapping toward where she wished she had a weapon. Her knees bent, shoulders rolling, body ready to explode.
Silva’s ears pinned and he took a half-step forward, low and predatory, reading her movement as threat.
Freyra’s teeth bared. “What the—!”
Ludger lifted a hand, calm as if summoning a dire wolf into existence was a normal afternoon habit.
“Silva,” he said. One word. Flat. Commanding.
The wolf hesitated. Then, like the world had suddenly remembered who he belonged to, Silva bounded forward… Straight at Ludger.
Freyra’s body tensed, muscles ready to strike… and then Silva slammed his weight into Ludger’s side in a full-body tackle that was affectionate in the way only something dangerous could afford to be.
Ludger staggered half a step, caught his balance, and didn’t even bother to push the wolf off.
Silva’s tongue hit his face. Once. Twice. Ludger tilted his head away with a dead-eyed expression like he was enduring an unavoidable tax. Freyra froze mid-attack, eyes wide. Silva licked again, tail thumping. Freyra slowly lowered her hands, staring like she’d just watched a battle axe start purring.
“…You’ve been busy,” she said.
Ludger wiped his cheek with the back of his sleeve. Then he sighed, long, tired, and faintly betrayed.
“Yes,” he said. “Clearly.”
Ludger pried Silva off his side with the slow patience of someone removing a large, affectionate boulder.
The dire wolf huffed, offended, then sat down in the snow like he’d done Ludger a favor and expected gratitude for it. His tail still thumped once, steady, as if to remind Ludger he could always tackle him again.
Ludger ignored the implication and stood, rolling his shoulder under the pack strap until it sat right.
Freyra watched him for a moment, then clicked her tongue, habitual annoyance returning like a comfortable coat.
“I’ll return too,” she said. “It’s annoying that my mother is around, but it can’t be helped.”
Ludger glanced at her. “Sigrid will be pleased.”
Freyra made a face like she’d bitten ice. “That’s not comforting.”
Silva sneezed.
Ludger started walking again, and Freyra fell into step beside him, boots crunching in rhythm. For a while the only sound was wind and snow and the soft, heavy padding of a dire wolf moving like the terrain owed him passage.
And Ludger, annoyingly, felt light.
Not physically. He was bruised. His knuckles ached. His shins had that deep soreness that would bloom later when he tried to sleep.
But in his head? Light.
The last ten days had been weird. Absurd, even. A cave monk who taught breath by making you burn inside. A summoner who pretended she didn’t care while her eyes quietly tracked every mistake. A “master” who hosted daily war-games like it was breakfast.
He’d gained new classes. New tools. New ways to shape his body’s limits instead of fighting them. He’d spent his focus on simple problems: breathe, endure, learn, hit, adapt.
No councils. No titles. No polite poison wrapped in offers and rail lines. No Imperial letters with hidden barbs. Just cold air, hard lessons, and the honest clarity of violence. It had been… fun.
Ludger’s mouth almost twitched at the thought, then he forced it flat again like he didn’t trust himself to enjoy it too much.
This is the life, a traitorous part of him whispered. Train. Improve. Solve what’s in front of you. Sleep when you can. No politics. No games. Then reality pressed back in, sharp as the wind. He hadn’t come north just to have a good time. He’d come north because Lionfang was being measured by people who built cages with smiles.
Because the Regent’s “offer” wasn’t an offer. Because Torvares was hiding a knife so big it could split the realm, and Ludger had been kept ignorant on purpose. Because a rail line could become a leash, and a title could become a collar, and the moment they accepted either, the Lionsguard stopped being a guild and started being property.
He couldn’t forget that. Not even for a clean day of training.
Ludger exhaled slowly, feeling Vitality Well sit steady inside him like a promise. Feeling the new shape of Overdrive in his aura, cleaner, recognized, capable of growth. Feeling the pact line to Silva warm and alive.
He’d left politics behind for ten days. Now he was walking back into it with sharper hands. Ludger’s eyes hardened as the southern horizon waited beyond the white.
I came north for a reason, he thought. Now I solve it with what I learned.
Ludger was back three days later.
He could have arrived sooner, much sooner, if he’d pushed his body to maximum output, burned Vitality Well dry, and treated the road like an enemy to be defeated. He’d learned enough in the north to do it too. He could run for hours without collapsing, keep heat in his limbs, keep breath steady, and force the world to yield distance.
He didn’t. Because Freyra was with him. Because Silva was with him. And because he didn’t care enough to arrive half-dead just to look impressive.
They moved at a strong pace, steady and relentless, the kind of travel that didn’t break you. Ludger let Freyra keep up without making it a contest. Let Silva roam wide and then reappear when needed, slipping in and out of sight like the snow belonged to him.
On the next day, they cut close to the northerners’ camp.
It wasn’t hidden the way Shera’s hill had been or the way Valk’s cave had tried to pretend it didn’t exist. The camp was alive, smoke, noise, people moving with purpose. Everything felt heavier there, like the air remembered laughter and brawls and hard work. Ludger sighed in relief thanks to such familiarity.
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