The trip back home was quite easy, as they avoided the main roads. Ludger rode in the center, reins loose, sand gourd thumping against his hip. Every few miles he’d lag half a length and let his mana seep forward. The ground remembered feet; he told it to forget.
Hoofprints softened, edges sloughed, the soil shrugging back to how wind and rain would have left it. Where the sun had hardened earth into plates, he lifted a whisper of grit from his pouch and tickled the surface, just enough to scuff the telltale crescent a horse leaves.
“Tracking gods will cry,” Mira muttered once, glancing back at the blank trail.
“They can lodge a complaint in spring,” Ludger said.
The recruits conserved jokes for the flat stretches. Rhea pointed out how the sun made people squint and talked about footwork. Taron used the quiet to etch a cold-resistance rune on a bracer and immediately smudged it with glove wool. Mira and Derrin traded places without speaking—who had the better angle on an imaginary ambush; who took low ground vs. high. Callen, as always, watched weather.
They didn’t push speed. They pushed consistency. In a chase, the one who stops to breathe loses.
At dusk they found a dip in the land with a screen of alders. Ludger rolled off his saddle, touched knuckles to ground, and raised a building of stone, just enough to break wind and catch heat. They made dinner and looked after the horses.
Ludger kicked a patch of ground smooth and stood the recruits on it. “Overdrive. Limb-first ignition. One at a time. We’ll start easy, we’ll end shaky. If you puke, do it downwind.”
Rhea grinned like that was a dare. Taron looked green before they started.
He tapped his chest. “Remember the order: anchor, draw, ignite, release. Anchor is posture.”
“Which limb?” Bram asked.
“The one doing the job,” Ludger said. “Otherwise you burst your eyebrow and impress no one.”
He demonstrated: left forearm only. Mana thickened under his skin, a dull swelling pressure he pinched into a line from elbow to wrist. He flexed. The air snapped like wet kindling. No glow, no flare. Just density. He rapped his knuckles against stone—sharp crack, no pain.
“Feel where it bulges,” he told them. “Hold that shape with your breath. Three-count in, hold one, five-count out. If you get the taste of iron, you’re doing too much.”
They worked. The ring filled with careful violence—the muffled thuds of controlled strikes, the hiss of exhale on the hold. Rhea, who had body awareness for days, found the line quick and overdid it quicker; he thumped her wrist twice, light corrections, until she was pushing instead of detonating. Bram treated the exercise like lifting a gate—steady, steady, okay, too steady—so Ludger startled him with “release” callouts and made him spend it faster. Mira discovered a whisper of ignition in the shoulder rather than forearm and, to her surprise, her next draw smoothed out; archers cheat by accident.
Taron lit up his whole arm on the second try out of pure nerves. The skin along his radius went splotchy, and he hissed between teeth.
“Again,” Ludger said. “Half. Then half of half.”
Callen watched first, hands in his sleeves. When he finally tried, his mana responded like surface tension on a pond—no sound, no fuss. It held. He smiled at nothing. “Okay,” he said, as if he’d just cracked how to tie a new knot.
At some point, Freyra joined the training too.
Ludger didn’t stop her. He also didn’t want to imagine the consequences. Teaching her Overdrive felt a lot like strapping a grenade launcher to a shark—spectacular idea right up until it turned around.
Still, her presence helped. The recruits straightened their forms, focused harder, and maybe stopped trying to impress each other for five whole minutes. Fear was an underrated motivator.
As usual, Rhea pulled ahead. The girl treated every exercise like a personal duel with physics and was winning more often than not. Her strikes came cleaner, her mana burns shorter, her recovery faster.
Still, everyone made progress. Even the slowest of them had started channeling mana through their limbs without turning purple or falling over. Their movements carried more weight now—each punch, each step, sharper and heavier than before.
From here, it was only a matter of time. Repetition would carve the instinct into their bones. Sooner or later, all of them would master Overdrive completely.
By the time the fire was losing some power, they were done. Everyone could hold Overdrive for at least a breath without shaking apart. That was enough.
Ludger stood, brushing dust off his scarf. “That’s it for tonight.”
Rhea looked like she wanted another round. Mira had that quiet, steady burn that meant she’d do another three if ordered. The rest were hovering somewhere between pride and collapse.
“From here on,” Ludger said, “you can improve on your own. The pattern’s in your muscles now. Don’t force it.”
“When we get back, split your days. A few hours exploring the frost labyrinth, a few hours tightening control over Overdrive. No more, no less.”
Callen frowned. “Won’t that slow progress?”
“It’ll stop you from breaking,” Ludger said. “Working too hard just means you carry exhaustion into tomorrow. Momentum beats muscle pain.”
He scanned their faces—Rhea still defiant, Taron trying to hide a wince, Freyra with the faint grin of someone already plotting to push harder anyway.
“You’ll get stronger if you pace it,” Ludger finished. “Anyone who doesn’t believe that—try proving me wrong. I’ll enjoy being right. It took me three months to learn overdrive as well, so you guys don’t have to rush it.”
Freyra chuckled from the edge of the camp. “Orders from the Vice Guildmaster, kids. Sleep before he decides to demonstrate.”
The fire died low, the night quiet again. Another lesson done. Another handful of kids one step closer to not dying stupidly.
Next morning, the group rode quiet—just the creak of leather and the steady crunch of hooves. Ludger was half-lost in thought, eyes fixed somewhere past the horizon.
Taron eased his horse closer. “Vice Guildmaster?”
Ludger blinked, dragged himself back. “Hm?”
“You’re not going to ask about runes anymore?” Taron’s tone was careful, like he didn’t want to sound disappointed but failed anyway.
Ludger exhaled through his nose. Right. Rune training. He had forgotten. “You’re right,” he said. “We’ve still got daylight. Teach me.”
Taron frowned. “While riding?”
Ludger nodded once. “You talk, I listen. I don’t need to stop to focus. I’ll try it later.”
Taron studied him a second, probably weighing the sanity of teaching someone rune theory mid-saddle. “All right,” he said finally, pulling a small slate from his satchel. “Just… don’t fall off when I start using terms.”
“Falling would imply I wasn’t paying attention,” Ludger said dryly. “Go on.”
So Taron started explaining—mana flow patterns, the difference between binding and direction runes, how a good etching needed intention more than perfect lines. The horses plodded on. The grass cracked underhoof. Ludger listened, filing the knowledge away with the same quiet focus he used for everything else.
“All right,” he said, flipping the small slate balanced on his knee. “First thing: a rune isn’t just a symbol. It’s a circuit. You’re not drawing language—you’re building a path for mana to flow through.”
Ludger glanced sideways but said nothing, letting the boy talk.
Taron sketched a simple circle. “Start with the base loop. It holds pressure, like a skin around water. Without it, mana just bleeds into the air. Then, you carve channels—lines that tell the flow what to do. Direction. Speed. Spread.” He marked three thin spokes radiating from the center. “The shape isn’t arbitrary; each angle shifts behavior. Straight lines compress, curves soften. A curve here”—he tapped—“makes the flow expand gently. A sharp line—” he scored the slate—“forces it like a jet through a pipe.”
“Next are anchors. Tiny runes nested inside the main one. They define the element—earth, fire, water, air, light, shadow. Each has its own resonance. You can’t just write the word; you need to think it while carving. The intention sets polarity. A careless scribe can make a fire rune that burns inward.”
Ludger raised an eyebrow. “So it’s mana geometry. Dangerous geometry.”
“Exactly,” Taron said, grinning despite the cold. “Think of it like sculpting pressure. You build a pipe network for mana. The design decides whether it bursts, glows, shields, or explodes.”
He thought for a second and then drew in the air again, this time a series of connected rings. “Runes chain into arrays. Each ring adds a function. One to gather mana, one to shape, one to release. More rings, more power—but also more instability. Every loop amplifies the last.”
Ludger watched the careful strokes. “And the material?”
“Whatever holds mana evenly. Metal for permanence, wood for temporary charms, parchment if you’re desperate. Stone’s best if you want it to last. The rune burns its pattern into the medium over time—if the pattern breaks, it dies. That’s why old ruins hum. They’re still leaking from ancient arrays that forgot their orders centuries ago.”
The boy looked up, face half-hidden by his scarf. “Rune magic isn’t about drawing perfect symbols. It’s about shaping flow while feeling the resistance. The best runecrafters can tell when a line’s wrong by how the mana tastes in their mouth.”
Ludger nodded, half a smile tugging at his mouth. “Good. You explain better than most teachers I’ve had.”
Taron blinked. “You’ve had teachers?”
“Of course,” Ludger said.
Taron chuckled. “You’re fine learning theory like this?”
“I’ll test it later. Easier to focus when the ground’s not moving.”
The boy nodded and went back to his demonstration , scratching out examples for when they stopped. Ludger’s gaze drifted back to the horizon again, mind already turning over applications—anchors, channels, compression. Geometry and pressure. He could work with that.
There’s one more thing most beginners don’t think about—degradation.”
Ludger glanced at him. “Runes wear out? I guess it makes sense.”
“Everything does,” Taron said. He drew the same circle as before, then crosshatched parts of it. “Mana runs like water through the lines. Each time the rune activates, it pushes a little pressure into the material holding it. Metal bends, stone fractures microscopically, ink bleeds. That’s material degradation.
The container weakens first.”
He tapped the center of the rune. “When the medium changes shape—heat, impact, corrosion, even humidity—the mana flow inside gets distorted. Think of it like a cracked pipe. Pressure builds in the wrong places. The rune starts pulling against itself. That’s rune degradation.”
Ludger leaned a little closer, eyes following the lines. “And when it breaks?”
“Depends,” Taron said. “If the flow collapses quietly, the rune just dies—fizzles out like a snuffed candle. If it collapses violently, it inverts.” He scratched out half the circle with a thumb. “Inversion means the mana tries to return to equilibrium instantly. That’s when you get backfires—explosions, burns, freezing bursts, whatever the rune was designed to do, turned inward.”
He drew another example: concentric circles with tiny marks between them. “On enchanted items, smiths solve that by layering materials. A metal core for durability, an inlay for mana conduction, and an outer sealant to absorb strain. Over time, though, heat cycles, impacts, or just too many activations grind the pattern down. The flow loses definition. You get residual drift—mana starts leaking out at the edges instead of staying in the lines. That’s why old enchanted weapons hum or glow faintly. They’re bleeding their own charge.”
He looked up, wind tugging at his hood. “If you want an enchantment to last, you either etch it deeper—harder to break but harder to fix—or you build it to rest between uses. Like lungs. A rune that cools off is safer than one that burns constantly.”
Ludger nodded slowly. “So even the best work rots if used enough.”
“Exactly. Nothing’s eternal. Not magic, not metal. You just slow the decay and pray it breaks clean when it does.”
Ludger smirked. “Comforting thought.”
“Better than surprise explosions,” Taron said, grinning.
“Depends on who’s standing nearby,” Ludger replied, the faintest edge of humor under his tone.
Taron chuckled, flipped his slate closed, and tucked it away. “We’ll make a runecrafter out of you yet, Vice Guildmaster.”
Ludger shook his head, gaze on the horizon again. “Let’s try not to blow up the first lesson.”
Taron’s tone shifted—less lecture, more honesty.
“My own runes lean toward support work,” he said. “Reinforcement, stabilization, resistance layers, field anchors. Stuff that helps other people survive rather than blow things up.”
He rubbed a thumb over the edge of his hood, thinking. “My mana just… flows better with them. Some mages are built for direct offense—tight bursts, fast ignition. Mine prefers holding patterns. It smooths energy instead of forcing it. Support runes eat less mana and stack cleaner, so it fits me.”
Ludger nodded, reins steady. “You’re a buffer, then. Makes sense.”
Taron gave a small shrug. “Still trying to improve, but that’s about all I can teach for now. Anything past the basics—array optimization, active channel weaving—it’s all guesswork. There aren’t many books left that even mention the old systems.”
He hesitated, then added, “Different rune languages existed, centuries ago. Each came from a family or guild that guarded its own script. They didn’t share, and most of their records burned or got locked behind noble archives. A lot of what we use today is just the remnants—patched together symbols that barely talk to each other.”
“So improving them’s hard,” Ludger said.
“Hard and slow,” Taron replied. “You need compatible sources, surviving samples, and mana attuned the same way the original makers used. Half the time, we’re working from ruins and guesswork. Even scholars can’t agree which lines belong to which lineage anymore.”
He looked up, squinting into the sun. “But that’s the fun part, right? Trying to rebuild a language that no one speaks anymore.”
Ludger gave him a sidelong glance, mouth twitching. “Fun is one word for it.”
Taron smiled faintly. “Well, someone has to do it.”
Ludger nodded. “Good. Keep doing it. We’ll need that kind of stubborn later.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 552
- Chapter 551
- Chapter 550
- Chapter 549
- Chapter 548
- Chapter 547
- Chapter 546
- Chapter 545
- Chapter 544
- Chapter 543
- Chapter 542
- Chapter 541
- Chapter 540
- Chapter 539
- Chapter 538
- Chapter 537
- Chapter 536
- Chapter 535
- Chapter 534
- Chapter 533
- Chapter 532
- Chapter 531
- Chapter 530
- Chapter 529
- Chapter 528
- Chapter 527
- Chapter 526
- Chapter 525
- Chapter 524
- Chapter 523
- Chapter 522
- Chapter 521
- Chapter 520
- Chapter 519
- Chapter 518
- Chapter 517
- Chapter 516
- Chapter 515
- Chapter 514
- Chapter 513
- Chapter 512
- Chapter 511
- Chapter 510
- Chapter 509
- Chapter 508
- Chapter 507
- Chapter 506
- Chapter 505
- Chapter 504
- Chapter 503
- Chapter 502
- Chapter 501
- Chapter 500
- Chapter 499
- Chapter 498
- Chapter 497
- Chapter 496
- Chapter 495
- Chapter 494
- Chapter 493
- Chapter 492
- Chapter 491
- Chapter 490
- Chapter 489
- Chapter 488
- Chapter 487
- Chapter 486
- Chapter 485
- Chapter 484
- Chapter 483
- Chapter 482
- Chapter 481
- Chapter 480
- Chapter 479
- Chapter 478
- Chapter 477
- Chapter 476
- Chapter 475
- Chapter 474
- Chapter 473
- Chapter 472
- Chapter 471
- Chapter 470
- Chapter 469
- Chapter 468
- Chapter 467
- Chapter 466
- Chapter 465
- Chapter 464
- Chapter 463
- Chapter 462
- Chapter 461
- Chapter 460
- Chapter 459
- Chapter 458
- Chapter 457
- Chapter 456
- Chapter 455
- Chapter 454
- Chapter 453
- Chapter 452
- Chapter 451
- Chapter 450
- Chapter 449
- Chapter 448
- Chapter 447
- Chapter 446
- Chapter 445
- Chapter 444
- Chapter 443
- Chapter 442
- Chapter 441
- Chapter 440
- Chapter 439
- Chapter 438
- Chapter 437
- Chapter 436
- Chapter 435
- Chapter 434
- Chapter 433
- Chapter 432
- Chapter 431
- Chapter 430
- Chapter 429
- Chapter 428
- Chapter 427
- Chapter 426
- Chapter 425
- Chapter 424
- Chapter 423
- Chapter 422
- Chapter 421
- Chapter 420
- Chapter 419
- Chapter 418
- Chapter 417
- Chapter 416
- Chapter 415
- Chapter 414
- Chapter 413
- Chapter 412
- Chapter 411
- Chapter 410
- Chapter 409
- Chapter 408
- Chapter 407
- Chapter 406
- Chapter 405
- Chapter 404
- Chapter 403
- Chapter 402
- Chapter 401
- Chapter 400
- Chapter 399
- Chapter 398
- Chapter 397
- Chapter 396
- Chapter 395
- Chapter 394
- Chapter 393
- Chapter 392
- Chapter 391
- Chapter 390
- Chapter 389
- Chapter 388
- Chapter 387
- Chapter 386
- Chapter 385
- Chapter 383
- Chapter 382
- Chapter 379
- Chapter 381
- Chapter 380
- Chapter 378
- Chapter 377
- Chapter 376
- Chapter 375
- Chapter 374
- Chapter 373
- Chapter 372
- Chapter 371
- Chapter 370
- Chapter 369
- Chapter 368
- Chapter 367
- Chapter 366
- Chapter 365
- Chapter 364
- Chapter 363
- Chapter 362
- Chapter 361
- Chapter 360
- Chapter 359
- Chapter 358
- Chapter 357
- Chapter 356
- Chapter 355
- Chapter 354
- Chapter 353
- Chapter 352
- Chapter 351
- Chapter 350
- Chapter 349
- Chapter 348
- Chapter 347
- Chapter 346
- Chapter 345
- Chapter 344
- Chapter 343
- Chapter 342
- Chapter 341
- Chapter 340
- Chapter 339
- Chapter 338
- Chapter 337
- Chapter 336
- Chapter 335
- Chapter 334
- Chapter 333
- Chapter 332
- Chapter 331
- Chapter 330
- Chapter 329
- Chapter 328
- Chapter 323
- Chapter 322
- Chapter 321
- Chapter 320
- Chapter 319
- Chapter 318
- Chapter 317
- Chapter 316
- Chapter 315
- Chapter 314
- Chapter 313
- Chapter 312
- Chapter 311
- Chapter 310
- Chapter 309
- Chapter 308
- Chapter 307
- Chapter 306
- Chapter 305
- Chapter 304
- Chapter 303
- Chapter 302
- Chapter 301
- Chapter 300
- Chapter 299
- Chapter 298
- Chapter 297
- Chapter 296
- Chapter 295
- Chapter 294
- Chapter 293
- Chapter 292
- Chapter 291
- Chapter 290
- Chapter 289
- Chapter 288
- Chapter 287
- Chapter 286
- Chapter 285
- Chapter 284
- Chapter 283
- Chapter 282
- Chapter 281
- Chapter 280
- Chapter 279
- Chapter 278
- Chapter 277
- Chapter 276
- Chapter 275
- Chapter 274
- Chapter 273
- Chapter 272
- Chapter 271
- Chapter 270
- Chapter 269
- Chapter 268
- Chapter 267
- Chapter 266
- Chapter 265
- Chapter 264
- Chapter 263
- Chapter 262
- Chapter 261
- Chapter 260
- Chapter 259
- Chapter 258
- Chapter 257
- Chapter 256
- Chapter 255
- Chapter 254
- Chapter 253
- Chapter 252
- Chapter 251
- Chapter 250
- Chapter 249
- Chapter 248
- Chapter 247
- Chapter 246
- Chapter 245
- Chapter 244
- Chapter 243
- Chapter 242
- Chapter 241
- Chapter 240
- Chapter 239
- Chapter 238
- Chapter 237
- Chapter 236
- Chapter 235
- Chapter 234
- Chapter 233
- Chapter 232
- Chapter 231
- Chapter 230
- Chapter 229
- Chapter 228
- Chapter 227
- Chapter 226
- Chapter 225
- Chapter 224
- Chapter 223
- Chapter 222
- Chapter 221
- Chapter 220
- Chapter 219
- Chapter 218
- Chapter 217
- Chapter 216
- Chapter 215
- Chapter 214
- Chapter 213
- Chapter 212
- Chapter 211
- Chapter 210
- Chapter 209
- Chapter 208
- Chapter 207
- Chapter 206
- Chapter 205
- Chapter 204
- Chapter 203
- Chapter 202
- Chapter 201
- Chapter 200
- Chapter 199
- Chapter 198
- Chapter 197
- Chapter 196
- Chapter 195
- Chapter 194
- Chapter 193
- Chapter 192
- Chapter 191
- Chapter 190
- Chapter 189
- Chapter 188
- Chapter 187
- Chapter 186
- Chapter 185
- Chapter 184
- Chapter 183
- Chapter 182
- Chapter 181
- Chapter 180
- Chapter 179
- Chapter 178
- Chapter 177
- Chapter 176
- Chapter 175
- Chapter 174
- Chapter 173
- Chapter 172
- Chapter 171
- Chapter 170
- Chapter 169
- Chapter 168
- Chapter 167
- Chapter 166
- Chapter 165
- Chapter 164
- Chapter 163
- Chapter 162
- Chapter 161
- Chapter 160
- Chapter 159
- Chapter 158
- Chapter 157
- Chapter 156
- Chapter 155
- Chapter 154
- Chapter 153
- Chapter 152
- Chapter 151
- Chapter 150
- Chapter 149
- Chapter 148
- Chapter 147
- Chapter 146
- Chapter 145
- Chapter 144
- Chapter 143
- Chapter 142
- Chapter 141
- Chapter 140
- Chapter 139
- Chapter 138
- Chapter 137
- Chapter 136
- Chapter 135
- Chapter 134
- Chapter 133
- Chapter 132
- Chapter 131
- Chapter 130
- Chapter 129
- Chapter 128
- Chapter 127
- Chapter 126
- Chapter 125
- Chapter 124
- Chapter 123
- Chapter 122
- Chapter 121
- Chapter 120
- Chapter 119
- Chapter 118
- Chapter 117
- Chapter 116
- Chapter 115
- Chapter 114
- Chapter 113
- Chapter 112
- Chapter 111
- Chapter 110
- Chapter 109
- Chapter 108
- Chapter 107
- Chapter 106
- Chapter 105
- Chapter 104
- Chapter 103
- Chapter 102
- Chapter 101
- Chapter 100
- Chapter 99
- Chapter 98
- Chapter 97
- Chapter 96
- Chapter 95
- Chapter 94
- Chapter 93
- Chapter 92
- Chapter 91
- Chapter 90
- Chapter 89
- Chapter 88
- Chapter 87
- Chapter 86
- Chapter 85
- Chapter 84
- Chapter 83
- Chapter 82
- Chapter 81
- Chapter 80
- Chapter 79
- Chapter 78
- Chapter 77
- Chapter 76
- Chapter 75
- Chapter 74
- Chapter 73
- Chapter 72
- Chapter 71
- Chapter 70
- Chapter 69
- Chapter 68
- Chapter 67
- Chapter 66
- Chapter 65
- Chapter 64
- Chapter 63
- Chapter 62
- Chapter 61
- Chapter 60
- Chapter 59
- Chapter 58
- Chapter 57
- Chapter 56
- Chapter 55
- Chapter 54
- Chapter 53
- Chapter 52
- Chapter 51
- Chapter 50
- Chapter 49
- Chapter 48
- Chapter 47
- Chapter 46
- Chapter 45
- Chapter 44
- Chapter 43
- Chapter 42
- Chapter 41
- Chapter 40
- Chapter 39
- Chapter 38
- Chapter 37
- Chapter 36
- Chapter 35
- Chapter 34
- Chapter 33
- Chapter 32
- Chapter 31
- Chapter 30
- Chapter 29
- Chapter 28
- Chapter 27
- Chapter 26
- Chapter 25
- Chapter 24
- Chapter 23
- Chapter 22
- Chapter 21
- Chapter 20
- Chapter 19
- Chapter 18
- Chapter 17
- Chapter 16
- Chapter 15
- Chapter 14
- Chapter 13
- Chapter 12
- Chapter 11
- Chapter 10
- Chapter 09
- Chapter 08
- Chapter 07
- Chapter 06
- Chapter 05
- Chapter 04
- Chapter 03
- Chapter 02
- Chapter 01