Chapter 534
The underground shelter was supposed to be a safe place. It lasted exactly as long as it took for the island to start moving.
At first it was just a few heads poking out, sleep-heavy trainees blinking into the night, trying to understand why the ground suddenly sounded like dry cloth being dragged across stone. Then more came. Then a lot more.
Soon they were spilling out in droves, half-dressed in gear, clutching shields and weapons, eyes wide and mouths tight. You didn’t need orders for that. Instinct handled it.
When a place that was supposed to be still suddenly feels alive, people either hide deeper… or rush out to where they can see the threat.
Ludger stood near the bridgehead, watching the webbed forest beyond the camp line ripple in the dark like a living curtain.
His Seismic Sense was already running… And it was screaming numbers. Weights. Clusters. A surge from the labyrinth’s direction, spreading outward like a spill.
He took one step toward the island and pointed his hand. For a heartbeat, he almost did it the simple way.
Earth magic. Spikes. Impalement.
He could feel dozens, hundreds, within range. He could turn the ground into a field of spears and end the first wave before it ever reached their perimeter.
But the moment he imagined it, he also imagined the result.
Shredded silk. Destroyed web curtains. Ruined material. Panic from trainees watching bodies pop up from the ground. A battlefield that became a tangled mess of broken terrain and snapped lines, perfect for spiders to exploit.
And worse…
He needed to see. Night fights weren’t won by raw power. They were won by information. Ludger’s jaw tightened. He lowered his hand.
“Light,” he muttered.
Then he lifted both hands and wrote into the air.
Not a full rune lattice like the twenty fireballs. Something simpler, broader, utility magic meant to change the environment instead of kill.
He traced quick geometry, anchoring points in space, stabilizing them against wind and humidity. Then he sealed it with words that burned pale in the dark:
Fire Orbs.
Mana drained, noticeably, but not brutally. Enough to sting, enough to remind him that even he wasn’t infinite. The runes flashed once. And then the orbs appeared.
Dozens of them, fist-sized spheres of steady flame, each wrapped in a thin stabilizing ring so they didn’t gutter or spit sparks. They floated upward in smooth arcs and drifted toward the island’s edge, spreading out in a wide pattern like a net of miniature suns.
Ludger controlled their placement carefully, high enough to illuminate without touching the thickest web curtains, far enough apart that no single orb would cook one area to ash.
The island brightened. Not like day. Like a nightmare made readable.
White webbing glowed. Trees became dark silhouettes under silk. The entrances and hollows revealed themselves as black mouths. The ground’s web carpet shone in layers, every strand suddenly visible.
And the moment the light settled… The island erupted. A massive wave of spiders surged out of the webbed forest like a tide. Not one. Not a handful. A sea of them.
White bodies spilled over rock and silk, legs clattering in a unified, dry rasp. Some were small, dog-sized, fast, skittering in packs. Others were larger, man-sized and bigger, moving with heavier rhythm, pushing through web curtains like they owned the island.
They poured from between trees, from hollow mouths in the ground, from gaps that hadn’t looked like gaps until the light showed them.
The wave rolled toward the camp perimeter, toward the bridgehead, toward the ship’s line of retreat, an ocean of pale chitin under floating fire.
The trainees who’d been stumbling out of the shelter froze. Then the fear hit them properly, and you could see it in their faces. This wasn’t a duel. This wasn’t a clean fight. This was a swarm.
Ludger stared at the illuminated tide, Seismic Sense mapping the deeper mass behind it, and felt the cold, familiar click of his mind switching fully into command.
“Hold,” he said, voice steady as stone.
Because now that he’d turned on the lights… There was no pretending this was going away.
Viola stumbled out of the shelter with her hair a mess and murder in her eyes.
She took three steps, saw the fire orbs floating like trapped suns over the webbed forest, saw the white tide of spiders spilling out of the trees… and her expression twisted into pure offense.
“What the hell is going on?” she snapped, voice carrying over the camp. “Why can’t I have one good night of sleep? My bed finally isn’t moving with the waves and this happens?”
She turned toward the ship instinctively, then caught Ludger in her peripheral vision. He wasn’t watching her. He was busy.
Hands raised, writing runes in the air again, quick strokes, while he fed mana into more light around the ship’s position, extending the illuminated perimeter so the deck defenders wouldn’t be shooting into darkness.
He looked… focused.
The kind of focused that meant he was doing three things at once and didn’t have spare attention for anyone’s complaints. Viola stopped complaining.
Her annoyance didn’t vanish, it just sharpened into usefulness.
He needs a hand.
Fortunately, her sword was always by her side. She drew it in one smooth motion, froststeel catching the firelight with a cold gleam, and the familiar weight in her grip steadied her breathing.
Then she muttered, half to herself and half to the universe, “We should’ve brought northerners.”
Luna appeared nearby like she’d been summoned by the word “should,” eyes already on the swarm. Viola raised her voice, turning to the trainees and recruits at the perimeter.
“Prepare for impact!” she ordered.
The officers snapped to her tone immediately, but she didn’t wait for them to translate. She’d learned enough from watching Ludger to know that seconds mattered.
“Shields up and stay up!” Viola continued. “Do not drop guard to swing like an idiot!”
A few trainees flinched, then lifted shields higher, overlapping edges like they’d been drilled to do on the ship.
Viola pointed her sword toward the incoming wave, the tip steady despite the chaos.
“Focus on impaling!” she shouted. “Swords and spears, thrusts only! Don’t slash into webs, don’t waste motion, don’t overextend!”
She looked down the line, eyes hard. “You stab, you pull back, you stab again. You don’t chase. You don’t break formation.”
The first edge of the spider wave hit the outer web carpet near their cleared zone, fast bodies skittering, larger ones pushing behind like living battering rams. Viola’s grin returned, grim and fierce.
“Hold the line,” she said, voice lower now, dangerous. “Let them come to you.”
And under the floating fire, with the swarm rushing in and Ludger still scribbling runes into the air like a man rewriting the night, the trainees did the only thing that kept you alive in a world like this:
They listened. They braced. And they pointed their weapons forward, ready to make the island pay for every step it took toward them.
The first spider hit the line like a thrown knife. Then the second.
Then the wave arrived and stopped being individual monsters and became a pressure, a living wall of pale bodies and clicking legs that slammed into shields with wet, hard impacts.
THUNK.
A dog-sized spider launched itself into a trainee’s guard, legs stabbing, claws scraping for purchase. Its forelegs were sharp enough to gouge wood and bite into metal edges, and it didn’t hesitate, it pushed, body weight driving forward like it wanted to shove the shield bearer off balance and climb over him.
The trainee staggered back half a step. Then his neighbor tightened formation and braced with him, shield edge overlapping, shoulder to shoulder. More spiders piled in.
Their legs hit like spears, rapid, precise jabs aimed at gaps, joints, and faces. Some stabbed low, trying to hook ankles. Others stabbed high, trying to slip over the rim of shields. The line answered with disciplined thrusts, spears punching forward in short, controlled bursts, swords stabbing under shield cover, blades withdrawing fast before webbed legs could grab them.
The sound was wrong. Not the clean ring of metal on metal.
It was scraping chitin, snapping silk strands, the dry clatter of too many legs, and the heavy drumbeat of bodies slamming into defensive walls.
The recruits and trainees were pushed backward violently. A step. Then another. Then they stopped. Not because the spiders had run out of strength. Because the line held.
Their numbers were overwhelming, white bodies stacked two and three deep against the shield wall, larger spiders forcing their way through the smaller ones like battering rams. The biggest among the first wave were as large as a man, their pale legs stabbing down with enough force to dent shields and make arms shake.
Yet the formation didn’t break immediately. It flexed. It groaned. It bent like a reinforced door under a mob. But it didn’t split.
Part of that was training, Renn and Marie shouting timing, Bramm and Jorin correcting stance, Tali anchoring with sheer presence and trying to swing her halberd. Part of it was Ironhand hands stepping in at key points, bracing where a weaker trainee might have folded.
And part of it was Ludger.
Not directly with a spell, he was still finishing his light field, but with something quieter, heavier. His Guildmaster skills sat over them like invisible weight, sharpening their parameters. His skills weren’t flashy. They didn’t kill spiders. They kept people from becoming victims. The line thrust again in unison.
A spear punched through a spider’s underside and pinned it briefly to the webbed ground. A sword stabbed into a joint and twisted, severing a leg cleanly. Another trainee drove his blade forward at exactly the right moment and split a smaller spider’s head with a short, brutal push.
Bodies piled. Legs twitched. The pressure stayed. Then Ludger finished the last of his illumination. Fire orbs drifted wider, casting hard light over the beach and the first layers of forest, turning the battlefield from a shadow nightmare into a readable slaughter.
He turned… And saw Viola. She wasn’t holding the line like the trainees. She was cutting a hole in the wave.
Her sword flashed in the firelight, froststeel carving clean arcs through pale chitin. She wasn’t slashing wildly, she was stepping into openings, then striking with controlled violence, splitting giant white spiders in half with single decisive cuts. When one lunged, she pivoted, the blade taking it through the thorax like it was brittle wood. Two halves hit the webbed ground and slid apart, dark fluid steaming faintly in the cold air.
Nearby, the beastmen were working with the same grim competence.
Harkun and Ragan moved like hunters in thick brush, short steps, brutal strikes, ripping legs off and finishing with joint breaks. Sivra darted in and out, cutting lines and stabbing soft points with precision.
And Raukor… Raukor had abandoned metal for meat.
His hammer rose and fell like a judge’s gavel. Every swing landed with a deep, bone-rattling CRACK, smashing spider heads and caving in armored plates. He didn’t fight like a duelist. He fought like a forge, steady, inevitable, turning enemies into broken material.
For a heartbeat, Ludger felt it stabilize. The line held. The flank killers thinned the pressure. The swarm could be managed. Then the sky betrayed them.
A harsh, ugly chorus rolled in from above, those metal-scrape calls that didn’t sound like nature. Ludger looked up. Black dots. Crows.
They swooped into the firelight like blades thrown from the dark, circling above the camp and island edge. And this time they didn’t dive at shields to be stabbed.
They opened their wings. A carpet of dark feathers rained down. Not fluttering. Fired.
Thank you for reading!
Don't forget to follow, favorite, and rate. If you want to read 400 chapters ahead, you can check my patreon: /Comedian0
