Varik straightened.
“The battle—” Varik began.
The spear-man cut him off without raising his voice.
“The orders,” he said, “were for all forces to surround the castle.”
His gaze flicked briefly toward the ruined mouth of the ant castle… then to the massive line of ice damage punched straight through it.
His eyes returned to Varik.
“But it seems soone disobeyed.”
The courtyard’s air tightened.
Heads turned.
A few officers looked at Varik with surprise. Others looked like they’d known this mont was coming the second the capital banners appeared.
The ones who had heard Varik’s private request, who knew exactly why Ludger had gone inside, held their expressions carefully neutral.
The ones who didn’t know the details could still guess. You didn’t get a skewered castle and a broken swarm without sothing unapproved happening inside.
All eyes settled on Varik.
Varik didn’t flinch.
He stepped forward one pace, boots crunching on debris, posture rigid with the kind of discipline that didn’t need permission to exist.
“I followed the plan,” he said, voice clear, “with a simple exception.”
The spear-man’s face didn’t change.
Varik continued anyway.
“I sent a small team to eliminate the leader of the monsters.”
A murmur rippled through a few ranks, quickly suppressed.
Varik kept his gaze forward.
“The objective was to make the ant army lose focus and teamwork quickly,” he said, “to decrease losses.”
He didn’t sugarcoat it. He didn’t pretend it was anything other than what it was.
“Without that action, the swarm would have remained coordinated long enough to evolve further variants and break containnt again,” Varik added, tone steady. “The four-sided assault would have bled far more n.”
Then he paused, just long enough for the weight of it to settle.
“In any case,” Varik said, “I will accept any punishnt for my decision.”
He didn’t look at Ludger. He didn’t point at anyone else. He didn’t try to spread responsibility.
He simply stood there in the middle of the ruined courtyard, in front of an immaculate capital force, and took the bla like a man who believed command ant carrying the consequences.
The man with the golden spear didn’t respond to Varik’s acceptance of punishnt.
He let the words sit in the air like a docunt awaiting a signature.
Then his gaze shifted.
It slid past Varik and landed on Ludger.
And the temperature in the courtyard seed to drop another degree, not because of ice this ti, but because of attention.
The spear-man studied him the way a professional studied a problem.
Not the wounds first. Not the blood. The posture. The eyes.
The way Ludger stood like a tired animal that could still bite your hand off if you reached wrong.
Then the spear-man’s focus moved to Ludger’s back.
To the silver hilts.
Four of them.
Clean lines. Matching tal. Too pristine to belong to a battlefield that had chewed everything else into rust and gore.
His eyes narrowed slightly.
He stared at the swords as if they were speaking a language he understood.
Then he looked back at Ludger and finally addressed soone other than Varik.
“Na,” he said.
A beat.
“Affiliation.”
Ludger didn’t straighten. Didn’t bow. Didn’t offer the respectful tone a capital officer clearly expected.
He just answered, voice flat.
“Ludger.”
Then, without changing expression, he added:
“Lionsguard.”
He paused just long enough for the spearman to think that was the end.
Then Ludger continued, deadpan as a gravestone.
“And my mother… until she decides otherwise.”
For half a second, the courtyard forgot it was a political powder keg.
A few soldiers—mostly not from the capital—snorted. Soone coughed to hide a laugh. Selene’s mouth twitched like she wanted to clap. Even Harold’s exhausted face almost cracked.
It was brief.
Because the spearman turned his head slightly and let his gaze sweep across the gathered forces.
No anger in his expression.
No raised voice.
Just that sa serious, surgical attention—like he’d taken note of every sound and filed it away.
The chuckles died imdiately.
Silence snapped back into place.
Varik’s eyes closed for a heartbeat.
He looked like he wanted to slam his palm into his own face hard enough to leave a print.
Because it was obvious, painfully obvious, that Ludger wasn’t just making a joke.
He was testing the spear-man.
Prodding him. Inviting friction.
And with the capital’s finest standing right there, in front of a fractured ant castle, with four suspicious swords on a boy’s back…
Varik could practically see the report being written already.
The spear-man’s gaze drifted back to the four hilts on Ludger’s back like they’d offended him by existing.
“Where did you get those swords?” he asked.
Ludger didn’t miss a beat.
“Found them,” he said, then nodded vaguely toward the ruined streets behind the castle. “In a dark alley over there.”
There was a pause. Not the good kind.
The spear-man’s jaw tightened, just a fraction, but it was the first visible crack in his composure. His eyes sharpened, the serious gaze turning from “assessnt” into “correction.”
“Enough,” he said, voice still controlled but now edged. “Any and all resources obtained in this battle belong to the Empire.”
Ludger blinked once. Then tilted his head, like he was genuinely curious.
“Who decided that?”
The spear-man’s grip on the golden spear shifted. His answer ca clean and cold.
“I decided that.”
Ludger’s mouth twitched.
He looked the man up and down, golden spear, capital formation, polished armor—and the dryness in his voice turned into a blade.
“That’s funny,” Ludger said. “You couldn’t contain the ant army by yourself… but you want to hog all the spoils.”
A ripple went through the courtyard—tiny movents, soldiers stiffening, officers drawing breath like they might speak and then deciding they valued their teeth.
The spear-man’s eyes narrowed further.
“Are you saying,” he asked, “that you will disobey the orders of the commanding officer of the Empire’s forces?”
Ludger shrugged, the motion careful because his ribs still hated him.
“I don’t have to,” he said. “I’m not part of the Empire’s forces.”
That landed harder than a punch.
The capital wedge reacted like a chanism being engaged.
Behind the spear-man, shields shifted forward with a unified scrape. Spearpoints lifted, angling in clean lines. Halberdiers stepped into ready positions, polearms lowering. Mages behind them spread slightly, hands hovering near staffs and etched focuses, mana gathering in restrained glows, the air starting to prickle with contained spellwork.
Even the horses on the flanks stamped and snorted, riders tightening reins as if they’d been waiting for the excuse.
It wasn’t a charge. Not yet. It was worse. It was preparation disciplined, professional, and very real. Varik made a sound under his breath that might’ve been prayer or regret.
Arslan’s posture shifted, sword hand tightening like he was one bad sentence away from solving this the old way. Viola’s eyes sharpened into sothing dangerous and Torvares.
And Ludger…
Ludger looked at the capital line, then at the golden spear, then at the soldiers raising weapons like they were about to “reclaim” his back by force.
He didn’t step back.
He didn’t even look impressed.
He just sighed, like the whole thing was an inconvenience scheduled at the worst possible ti.
Then he smiled—small, flat, and irritatingly calm.
“You’ll need three tis your numbers,” Ludger said, voice carrying just enough, “to take these swords from .”
The capital ranks stiffened.
A few spearpoints dipped, then steadied again, anger tightening their formation like a drawn cord.
The spear-man’s expression didn’t explode into rage.
It didn’t need to.
His annoyance was colder than that.
“Careful, boy,” he said quietly.
Ludger’s eyes stayed level, exhausted and unafraid, blood still drying on his skin.
“Careful?” Ludger repeated. “I’m already being careful.”
And the courtyard, fresh from victory, tilted toward sothing else entirely.
A second battle, born not from monsters…
…but from n who couldn’t stand being told no.
Ludger’s mouth was already opening again.
Varik could feel the next sentence forming like a disaster.
Viola moved first.
She stepped in behind him, precise as a knife, and tapped the back of Ludger’s knees with the edge of her boot, hard enough to fold the joints, not hard enough to injure him.
Under normal circumstances, Ludger would’ve caught himself.
Right now, exhausted to the marrow?
His legs simply… agreed.
He dropped.
It wasn’t graceful.
It was a controlled collapse that turned into a skid, his palms catching him on the grit-stained ground as his swords clinked faintly on his back. His breath punched out in a frustrated huff.
Ludger tried to push himself up imdiately, irritation flaring through fatigue—
Viola’s hand settled on the top of his head.
Not gentle.
Not cruel.
Firm. Absolute. Like she was pinning a dangerous animal without making it a scene.
“Stay,” she murmured, voice low enough for him and loud enough for everyone else to understand the aning.
Ludger’s shoulders twitched.
He tried again.
Viola kept him down with one hand and leaned forward, her presence sharp as steel in the tense silence.
Then she raised her gaze to the spear-man.
“Commander Orleandul,” Viola said clearly.
The na landed with weight, capital authority made official.
“The battle is over,” she continued, voice calm and razor-straight. “You can’t command the Vice Guildmaster of the Lionsguard to hand you resources he obtained during a battle where he risked his life for the people of the Empire.”
Orleandul didn’t move.
His soldiers stayed ready, shields locked, spearpoints leveled.
He watched Viola with the sa unblinking seriousness he’d used on Varik.
Viola didn’t flinch.
“At the sa ti,” she added, tilting her head slightly as if she were offering the commander a polite exit from a bad situation, “he is a bit worked up after a tense battle against a powerful monster. So you shouldn’t bla him too much for his words.”
Under her palm, Ludger’s eyes narrowed.
He lifted his head a fraction despite her grip, like he physically couldn’t resist making it worse.
He raised one finger, slow, stubborn, absurdly formal given he was being held to the ground like a misbehaving dog.
“I don’t care if I’m blad for it,” Ludger said, voice flat.
Viola’s hand pressed down again.
Ludger’s forehead t the dirt with a soft thump.
“Shut up,” she said sweetly, the kind of sweetness that promised violence later.
The courtyard held its breath.
Orleandul’s gaze shifted back to Ludger, studying him again, slower this ti. Taking in the blood, the torn clothes, the swords, the posture even while pinned. asuring whether this boy was simply insolent… or dangerous enough to justify a different kind of response.
For a long mont, nothing moved except drifting smoke and the subtle tremble of exhausted bodies.
Then Orleandul’s eyes lifted from Ludger to Viola again.
He didn’t look amused.
He didn’t look angry.
He looked like a man deciding what precedent to set.
And that was sohow worse.
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