Ludger expression shifted, just a fraction. His Guild Master skills were still gaining experience. Ludger stared at the text for a long second, mind already moving.
That ant the connection was still active. Lionfang. The guild. The people on the other side. The bond hadn’t been severed.
A dry laugh escaped him, short and quiet. “Good.”
The system was still tracking him. His guild skills were still progressing. Which ant, in system terms at least, Ludger was not dead.
Now he just needed to figure out how to make the others realize it. Before they buried him in their heads and started making decisions like he was gone.
Night ca hard and fast.
One mont the island was burning gold under the last light, and the next it was shadows, surf, and silver edges. The heat bled out of the sand. The jungle sounds changed. Day birds went quiet, and sothing else, smaller, sharper, stranger, took over the dark.
Ludger stood near the beach, then slowly lifted his eyes to the sky. He checked again. And again. The stars were wrong. Not just a little wrong. Not “I’m tired” wrong. Not “different season” wrong. Completely wrong.
The constellations above him didn’t line up into a single pattern he recognized. Not one familiar hunter-shape, no crown, no river-chain, no broken spear, none of the old sky marks sailors and travelers used as shorthand for direction and weather. The stars were there, bright, clear, almost cruelly beautiful, but their arrangents ant nothing to him.
Ludger wasn’t an astronomy specialist. He knew that. He wasn’t so old court scholar with a roof full of charts. But not recognizing a single one? That hit harder than the sun position had. Harder than the weird plants. Harder, in so ways, than the monster circling the island.
Because the sky was supposed to be constant. Even when people lied, even when nobles sched, even when labyrinths spat out monsters and nonsense, the sky usually stayed where it belonged.
This one didn’t. He stared a few seconds longer, jaw tight, then turned and walked quietly back toward the tent. At the entrance, he crouched and checked on Luna without stepping inside.
She was asleep, finally breathing evenly on the leaf mat, one arm tucked under her head. The fever that had wrecked her the previous night had been ugly, skin burning, pulse racing, half-conscious muttering that made no sense. He’d spent hours cooling her with damp cloths, forcing tiny sips of water whenever she woke enough to swallow, and watching for signs the head wound was getting worse.
But she’d recovered fast. Too fast for normal people, maybe. Then again, neither of them counted as normal anymore. Now she just needed ti.
Ludger stayed there for a mont, making sure her breathing stayed steady, then stepped back out onto the sand. He lowered his gaze to his hands. Even in the dim starlight, he could see it.
The tremor.
His fingers shook faintly when he held them open. Not enough to stop him from moving. More than enough to piss him off.
Ludger let out a slow breath and curled his hands into fists, then relaxed them again, trying to bleed tension without feeding the pain. It didn’t work. The ache in his mana circuits was still there, deep and vicious, like hot wire threaded through his chest and arms.
Hurting like hell. He took another breath, slower this ti, forcing his shoulders to loosen.
The pain didn’t care. A curse slipped out under his breath, low and sharp enough for the surf to swallow. He’d practiced Overdrive x3 at ho. Repeatedly. Carefully. In controlled conditions. With room to stop, reset, and avoid stacking too much strain on top of unstable output. But battle was different.
Battle was wet deck boards and screaming wind and a hundred-ter tail trying to erase a ship from existence. Battle was panic, timing, bad footing, people behind you, and the simple fact that if your math was off by half a second, sobody died.
Doing Overdrive x3 in training and doing it in a real fight were not the sa thing.
Not even close.
Ludger looked back toward the ocean, where the dark water reflected a sky he didn’t know, and clenched his jaw until the shaking in his hands eased just a little.
“Next ti,” he muttered to no one, voice flat.
The island gave him only surf, wind, and stars from a world that wasn’t his.
Ludger honestly didn’t know when he’d get better. That part bothered him more than the pain.
Pain he could work with. Pain had rules. It spiked, it faded, it punished mistakes, and if you were smart, or stubborn, you could map it. Uncertainty was worse. Uncertainty sat in the back of his skull and whispered bad numbers.
He checked his status again, eyes scanning recovery values with the sa cold focus he used for battle plans.
His Guild Master skills were doing their job. He could feel that much even without the screen. Stamina ca back faster than it had any right to. Mana, too, at least the raw pool itself. The system kept feeding him what should have been enough to get him moving again.
But his body wasn’t matching the numbers.
His health was recovering slower. A lot slower.
Too slow for his usual rate. Too slow for his constitution. Too slow for soone with his passives and titles stacked on top of guild-linked bonuses.
Ludger exhaled through his nose, irritation rising under the exhaustion.
“Debuff,” he muttered.
It had to be.
So hidden penalty for pushing his body past its limit. Overdrive stacked on Overdrive, Rage Flow, storm mana density, massive output, circuit damage—all of it piled together until the system probably decided he deserved to crawl for a while.
A silent penalty. The kind that didn’t show up cleanly unless you were lucky.
His mouth twisted.
Not like the system would kindly flash a warning saying CONGRATULATIONS, YOU BROKE YOURSELF. RECOVERY REDUCED.
No. That would’ve been useful.
Instead, it gave him mana, gave him stamina, and left his actual body dragging behind like cracked armor soone forgot to repair.
Ludger rolled his shoulders once, wincing as pain crawled across his chest and arms in thin hot lines. He just needed enough recovery to move properly.
Enough to explore. Enough to survive whatever this island actually was. And eventually, enough to make that monster answer questions.
The next morning, Luna woke before the sun had fully climbed.
She pushed herself up on the leaf mat, paused when the old pain in her head pulsed once behind her eyes, then exhaled through it and stood anyway. By the ti Ludger looked over from the beach, she was already at the tent entrance, brushing sand from her dress like they were late for a guild briefing instead of stranded on a monster-guarded island in another world.
“We should start exploring,” she said. “Now.”
Ludger, still seated cross-legged in the sand from his morning recovery cycle, opened one eye and gave her a long look. “You just woke up.”
“And I’m awake,” Luna replied.
“That’s not the sa thing.”
She stepped out into the light, squinting toward the treeline. The morning air was warm already, salt-heavy, with a breeze coming off the ocean that did nothing to settle the tightness in her chest.
Ludger stood slowly, rolling one shoulder with a faint wince. “Luna.”
She didn’t look at him. “I’ve trained to keep moving while exhausted. You know that.”
“I do,” he said. “And this still isn’t the sa.”
There was no bite in his tone, just that infuriatingly steady calm. “This isn’t fatigue from drills. It’s a head injury. You had a fever last night. Your balance is still off even when you pretend it isn’t.”
Luna ignored him completely.
She moved a few paces down the beach instead, scanning the shoreline, the treeline, the sand for prints, debris, anything. Her eyes kept moving—left, right, back to the water, then inland again—too fast to really focus.
For so reason, she was too restless to stay still.
The island felt wrong in daylight. Too quiet in so places, too alive in others. The ocean looked calm, but she could still feel the thing out there, sowhere beyond the glittering surface. Every ti she stopped moving, her mind went back to the sa thoughts:
No ship.
No crew.
No knives.
No answers.
So she moved.
Ludger watched her for a mont, reading the tension in her shoulders, the way her hands flexed empty at her sides.
“You’re not trying to explore,” he said finally.
Luna stiffened. “What?”
“You’re trying not to think.”
That made her turn.
Fast enough that she imdiately regretted it when her vision blurred for half a second.
Ludger didn’t smirk. Didn’t press. He just stood there, tired and battered and annoyingly observant.
Luna clicked her tongue and looked away first.
“…Fine,” she muttered, voice tight. “Maybe I’m restless.”
“Good,” Ludger said. “That ans your brain is working.”
She shot him a glare.
He nodded toward the treeline. “We will explore. Just not by sprinting into an unknown island while concussed and under-equipped.”
Luna crossed her arms, jaw set. “Then what?”
“Short radius,” Ludger said imdiately, already in planning mode. “Stay within sight of the beach. Check for fresh water, tracks, and anything built. Mark the path. Co back before your head starts pounding again.”
Luna blinked. “So… we are starting.”
Ludger’s mouth twitched. “I never said no. I said don’t be stupid about it.”
That, at least, sounded normal enough to steady her a little.
Luna exhaled, then gave a short nod—still restless, still wired too tight, but now with direction.
And direction, on an island like this, was close enough to control.
The next morning, Luna woke before the sun had fully climbed.
She pushed herself up on the leaf mat, paused when the old pain in her head pulsed once behind her eyes, then exhaled through it and stood anyway. By the ti Ludger looked over from the beach, she was already at the tent entrance, brushing sand from her dress like they were late for a guild briefing instead of stranded on a monster-guarded island in another world.
“We should start exploring,” she said. “Now.”
Ludger, still seated cross-legged in the sand from his morning recovery cycle, opened one eye and gave her a long look. “You just woke up.”
“And I’m awake,” Luna replied.
“That’s not the sa thing.”
She stepped out into the light, squinting toward the treeline. The morning air was warm already, salt-heavy, with a breeze coming off the ocean that did nothing to settle the tightness in her chest.
Ludger stood slowly, rolling one shoulder with a faint wince. “Luna.”
She didn’t look at him. “I’ve trained to keep moving while exhausted. You know that.”
“I do,” he said. “And this still isn’t the sa.”
There was no bite in his tone, just that infuriatingly steady calm. “This isn’t fatigue from drills. It’s a head injury. You had a fever the other night. Your balance is still off even when you pretend it isn’t.”
Luna ignored him completely.
She moved a few paces down the beach instead, scanning the shoreline, the treeline, the sand for prints, debris, anything. Her eyes kept moving, left, right, back to the water, then inland again, too fast to really focus.
For so reason, she was too restless to stay still.
The island felt wrong in daylight. Too quiet in so places, too alive in others. The ocean looked calm, but she could still feel the thing out there, sowhere beyond the glittering surface. Every ti she stopped moving, her mind went back to the sa thoughts:
No ship. No crew. No knives. No answers. So she moved.
Ludger watched her for a mont, reading the tension in her shoulders, the way her hands flexed empty at her sides.
“You’re not trying to explore,” he said finally.
Luna stiffened. “What?”
“You’re trying not to think.”
That made her turn. Fast enough that she imdiately regretted it when her vision blurred for half a second. Ludger didn’t smirk. Didn’t press. He just stood there, tired and battered and annoyingly observant.
Luna clicked her tongue and looked away first.
“…Fine,” she muttered, voice tight. “Maybe I’m restless.”
“Good,” Ludger said. “That ans your brain is working.”
She shot him a glare.
He nodded toward the treeline. “We will explore. Just not by sprinting into an unknown island while concussed and under-equipped.”
Luna crossed her arms, jaw set. “Then what?”
“Short radius,” Ludger said imdiately, already in planning mode. “Stay within sight of the beach. Check for fresh water, tracks, and anything built. Mark the path. Co back before your head starts pounding again.”
Luna blinked. “So… we are starting.”
Ludger’s mouth twitched. “I never said no. I said, "Don't be stupid about it.”
That, at least, sounded normal enough to steady her a little.
Luna exhaled, then gave a short nod, still restless, still wired too tight, but now with direction. And direction, on an island like this, was close enough to control.
They entered the forest slowly, pushing past broad leaves and low branches with careful hands instead of mana.
No Seismic Sense. No Mana Sense. No quick scans. No easy answers.Just eyes, ears, sll, and instinct. Luna adjusted faster.
She moved through the undergrowth with quiet precision, stepping where the ground looked firm, ducking branches before they snapped back, reading disturbed leaves and bent grass with the sa sharp focus she usually gave a target’s hands. Even without her knives, she still knew how to move like a blade.
Ludger hated it. Not the forest. Not even the heat. The helplessness.
Without magic, every shadow felt deeper. Every sound felt farther away than it should. He couldn’t read the terrain under the soil. Couldn’t sweep for movent. Couldn’t feel mana signatures. It left him with a constant, crawling irritation under his skin.
Almost naked. He didn’t say it out loud, but Luna noticed anyway. She noticed everything. Then again, she had her own version of it.
More than once, her hand drifted toward the inside of her dress on reflex, quick, practiced, automatic, only to close on empty cloth.
Each ti, her expression tightened by a fraction.
By the third ti, Ludger glanced at her and said, “You learned from Gaius too. Why not make a few hardened earth knives from the ground?”
Luna pushed aside a hanging vine and gave him a flat look. “Because I know the basics. Basics.”
“That’s enough to improvise.”
“It’s enough to make sothing sharp-shaped,” she corrected. “Not enough to make sothing I trust in a real fight.”
They stepped over a fallen trunk slick with moss. Insects buzzed sowhere above them, hidden in the canopy.
Luna continued, voice lower now, more honest than annoyed. “I don’t want to accumulate too many unmastered skills. I’m not you. I can’t learn sothing and use it imdiately like it was always there.”
Ludger snorted quietly. “That’s not how it works.”
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