Chapter 631
Chapter 631
Ludger woke from his “sleep” the way he woke from most things lately, half a breath before the problem arrived.
His eyes snapped open, and for a moment he just listened. No screams. No alarms. Just… footsteps. A group approaching the branch hall. Organized. Heavy boots, measured pace, not refugees. Not trainees. Not panicked civilians.
Not Lionsguard.
He sat up on the cot in the side room they’d claimed as a temporary command space. His body felt like it had been folded and unfolded wrong, short nap, stiff muscles, mana still not fully recovered, but his mind was already awake.
He swung his feet to the floor and stood.
By the time he reached the main doors, he could hear them clearly: the soft clink of armor, the quiet rattle of gear, and the kind of discipline you only got from people who’d been yelled at professionally.
He opened the door. Varik stood in front. He looked like he hadn’t slept either.
A small squad of soldiers stood behind him, eight. Clean lines. Standardized kit. No guild crests, Imperial soldiers. Or at least soldiers under someone important enough to borrow Imperial discipline.
Varik’s posture straightened as he saw Ludger, and he tried to switch into formal mode like he was putting on a uniform over exhaustion.
“Vice Guildmaster Ludger,” Varik said, voice controlled. “On behalf of—”
“Get straight to the point,” Ludger replied. No hostility. Not really respect. Just time management. Varik’s jaw tightened, then relaxed. He nodded once, tiredness slipping through his expression like water through a cracked dam.
“Right,” Varik said. “We’re creating a containment zone around Rokram.”
That phrasing made Ludger’s eyes narrow. Containment meant they weren’t treating it like a single incident anymore. It meant they expected the problem to persist.
Varik continued, “The Lionsguard is being solicited to assist. Patrols, cordons, monster interception, refugee routing, whatever you can provide. Orders are being sent to other guilds as well, but…” He glanced past Ludger at the branch hall. “You’re already here, and you’re already proven.”
Ludger held his gaze for a heartbeat, then nodded.
“All right.”
Varik looked like he wanted to say something else, something about politics, or thanks, or how bad it really was, but whatever he’d planned died in his throat when he realized Ludger wasn’t going to play the ceremony game.
Ludger stepped back from the doorway.
“I’ll wake the others,” he said.
Varik exhaled, relief and dread mixed together. “Understood.”
Ludger didn’t respond with reassurance. He didn’t have any.
He simply turned and walked back into the hall, already rolling the next steps in his head, who to bring, what to pack, what protocols this proved they needed, and how far the containment line would have to stretch before the empire stopped bleeding.
Sleep was done. Now the work got harder.
An hour later, they were leaving Fittar. Not with fanfare. Not with cheers. Just movement.
Gear strapped tight. Weapons checked. Water skins filled. Some people stood by the gate with tired eyes, watching the veterans and Ludger fall into step with Varik’s soldiers like this was simply the next problem on the list.
The city looked calmer in daylight, which was a lie the sun told well. Refugee shelters smoked with cooking fires. People stood in lines for water. Guards on the walls had that rigid posture of men trying to pretend they weren’t waiting for another wave.
Ludger didn’t look back when the gates closed behind them. Selene, however, couldn’t hold her curiosity for more than five minutes.
As they hit the road and the city’s noise faded, she drifted closer to Varik with the casual swagger of someone who treated “authority” as a suggestion.
“So,” she said, tone light, “this containment zone thing, what’s that actually about?”
Varik kept his eyes forward. His squad moved with tight discipline around him, boots in rhythm.
Selene continued anyway. “We handled our swarm pretty fast. I figured the same thing is happening everywhere. Monsters spill out, someone hits them, done. Right?”
Harold made a quiet sound that could’ve been a laugh or a warning. Aleia’s gaze stayed on the horizon, but her attention clearly sharpened.
Varik’s jaw tightened. When he spoke, his voice carried that tired edge of someone who’d been repeating bad news all morning.
“No,” Varik said.
Selene blinked. “No?”
Varik finally glanced at her, eyes flat. “Only the Lionsguard responded fast.”
That landed harder than it should have.
Selene’s grin faded. “What do you mean, only…”
“Other guilds are mobilizing,” Varik said. “Militias too. But mobilizing takes time. Messengers. Command chains. Resources. Arguments.” His mouth twisted. “You know how it is.”
Ludger didn’t comment, because he’d been thinking the same thing since the message from Torvares arrived.
Varik continued, voice tightening. “And while everyone else is still getting their boots on…”
He gestured vaguely east, toward where Rokram sat like a wound.
“A large number of monsters are still in Rokram. Enough that we can’t even count them accurately.”
Selene’s eyes widened a fraction. “That many?”
Varik nodded once. “The city is… occupied. They’re guarding it for themselves.”
The phrase sounded wrong, but Ludger understood it immediately. Not just “roaming.” Not “lurking.” Holding.
Territory behavior. Sapient behavior.
Varik’s voice lowered. “And they’re not staying put. They’re sending hunting parties. Multiple directions. Like patrols.”
Harold’s expression went hard. “So it isn’t a spill.”
Varik shook his head. “It’s a foothold.”
Aleia exhaled slowly, like she’d just watched a trap close.
Selene’s mouth tightened. “So we’re making a containment line to stop the hunting parties from spreading.”
“Yes,” Varik said. “We’re trying to keep the infection from moving outward until we can figure out how to cut out the source.”
Ludger’s eyes narrowed, mind already mapping the implications. A swarm was bad. A swarm with a home base was worse. A swarm with patrol doctrine, sending hunters like soldiers, meant they were operating under command.
Meaning there was a brain. A queen. Or something close enough that killing it would be the only real “victory.”
Selene rolled her shoulders once, the restless energy returning, but now it was sharpened, focused, hungry.
“Good,” she said softly. “I was worried it’d be boring.”
Varik didn’t smile. Because for him, this wasn’t a fight he wanted. It was a fire he was trying to stop before it reached the capital.
And Ludger, walking in step beside them, felt the same cold certainty settle deeper:
Five hundred had been nothing. Rokram was the real swarm. They walked in tight formation along the road, the air cooler now that the sun was climbing, the land stretching open and unforgiving around them.
Ludger let Varik’s last words settle, foothold, hunting parties, infection—, slid in the question that had been sitting in his throat since the first report.
“What do you know about the sealed labyrinths?” Ludger asked.
Varik’s shoulders rose and fell with a slow breath. He looked like a man deciding which rules he could afford to break today. He sighed.
“This is… supposed to be top secret,” Varik said.
His eyes flicked to Ludger, and there was a tired resignation there, because the “secret” part had already died the moment Ludger Graves started sniffing around old seals like a dog with a grudge.
“But of course you know they exist,” Varik added, voice dry.
Ludger didn’t deny it. He just waited. Varik glanced ahead, then spoke as if he were reading from a document he hated.
“Regarding this one,” he said, “I don’t know much. Not specifics. Not the guardian. Not the exact seal architecture. I’m not part of that circle.”
Selene made a quiet sound of annoyance at the word circle. Harold’s eyes stayed forward. Aleia’s expression didn’t change. Varik continued anyway.
“But I can guess what happened,” he said. “Given the number of monsters… it’s fair to assume the family guarding it was slacking off.”
Ludger’s brows tightened. “Slacking off on what?”
Varik’s mouth pulled into something between a grimace and a shrug.
“On decreasing the labyrinth’s power,” he said.
Ludger’s gaze sharpened. “Explain.”
Varik nodded once, like he’d expected the pushback.
“The mana inside sealed labyrinths is contained,” he said. “Sealed by a powerful spell, layers of it, actually. The idea is to lock the pressure in place so it doesn’t leak into the world.”
Ludger listened, expression flat. His mind was already building a model. Varik spoke carefully now, choosing clarity over caution.
“But seals aren’t ‘set it and forget it.’ They’re stable only if the internal pressure doesn’t climb too high. And inside a labyrinth, that pressure is… living. The monsters feed on mana. They grow. They multiply. They evolve and they expel mana on use as well..”
He glanced at Ludger again. “So to keep the seal stable, the monsters inside have to be hunted. Often.”
Harold’s jaw tightened. “Maintenance,” he muttered.
Varik nodded. “Exactly. A sealed labyrinth is like a furnace with the door locked. If you don’t keep removing fuel, or breaking down what’s inside, eventually the heat builds until the containment fails.”
Ludger’s eyes narrowed to slits.
“And if they don’t hunt enough…” he said.
Varik’s voice went colder. “Then the spell eventually breaks.”
Selene let out a low whistle. “So the family’s job wasn’t just guarding the entrance.”
“It was preventing a breach from ever becoming possible,” Varik said.
Ludger’s mind flashed back to Rokram: monsters emerging under the manor, a wave striking command structures first, organized occupation. That wasn’t a simple overflow. That was pressure building for years until something intelligent inside found the weakest seam… or forced one. Ludger’s voice stayed level, but there was an edge now.
“So either they were incompetent,” he said, “or they were paid to be incompetent. Or maybe they found value in being incompetent.”
Varik didn’t answer immediately. That silence was an answer of its own. Cor had been quiet through Varik’s explanation, staff tapping in a steady rhythm that matched his thinking more than his walking.
When Varik finished, Cor finally spoke. His voice was mild, almost conversational, but the question underneath it had teeth.
“Any survivors from the family that guarded the seal?” Cor asked. “Anyone seen. Anyone recovered. Any sign at all?”
Varik didn’t even pretend to consider it. He shook his head once.
“No signs,” he said. “None.”
He exhaled, then added with the kind of bluntness exhaustion made inevitable, “And considering how the ants treated their prey…”
He flicked his gaze away for a moment, like he could still see the aftermath.
“They’re probably inside their stomachs.”
Selene muttered something unpleasant under her breath. Harold’s expression went hard as stone. Ludger didn’t flinch, but his eyes narrowed.
“That’s what most people will think,” Ludger said.
Varik glanced at him. “Is it wrong?”
Ludger’s tone stayed flat. “It’s too obvious.”
Cor’s staff tapped once, slower.
“Agreed,” Cor said. “Being eaten by monsters is the perfect alibi.”
Varik’s brows lifted slightly.
Cor continued, voice steady. “No witnesses. No bodies worth investigating. And grief discourages questions. If someone wanted to cause chaos in the realm and avoid blame, ‘they died in the fall’ is a clean story.”
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