All Jobs and Classes! I Just Wanted One Skill, Not Them All!

Chapter 630



Chapter 630

The empire was bleeding.

And they were going to have to work until it stopped, or until they ran out of hands.

Cor returned from outside with the night air clinging to his robes and a faint dusting of grit on his boots. He moved like he hadn’t hurried at all, but Ludger could see the quiet strain in the set of his shoulders, the kind you got when you’d just sent children into the dark and pretended you weren’t imagining every way it could go wrong.

He stepped into the branch hall, staff tapping once, and found Ludger where he’d been, map half-unrolled, eyes tracking routes like the paper could warn him before the earth did.

“The new members are sent,” Cor said. Then, after the briefest pause: “The lord of the city wants to ask for your cooperation.”

Ludger didn’t look surprised. He just lifted his gaze. “For what?”

“Shelters,” Cor replied. “For the refugees. Stable structures. Something faster than tents.”

Ludger nodded once. Of course. Now that the danger had teeth and a body count, the lord wanted the guild’s help. He didn’t lift a single finger to help the refugees when he realized that they would be around consuming resources for a while and unable to do much.

Harold, leaning against a pillar nearby, clicked his tongue, sharp, irritated. It wasn’t hard to guess why. The branch had been open for months and the city’s leadership had treated them like inconvenient contractors at best and armed trouble at worst.

No support when it was political. Only urgency when it was personal. Ludger understood the irritation. He also understood that indulging it would be stupid. Being petty while other lives were being affected wasn’t a good idea. Not when you needed the city stable. Not when refugees were piling up. Not when monsters were still somewhere out there, deciding what to eat next.

“I’ll do it,” Ludger said, tone flat, already shifting the problem into materials and time.

Harold’s brows lifted slightly, like he’d expected a sharper answer.

Ludger continued, “But the city provides the mana potions.”

Cor’s eyes narrowed a fraction, then he nodded. No argument. Just recognition that Ludger was doing this the correct way, helping without letting it bleed the branch dry.

“Agreed,” Cor said.

He turned immediately, because Cor didn’t linger on solved problems.

“I’ll deal with that,” he added, and headed back out before anyone could mistake negotiation for indecision.

Ludger watched him go, then rolled his shoulders once and stood. Shelters meant structure. Structure meant order. Order meant fewer people panicking in the streets when the next scream came. And if the city wanted his earth magic, then the city could pay the price of the mana it took to make it happen. That was how cooperation worked. Even in a crisis.

An hour later, Ludger was in the middle of an empty lot that used to be nothing but packed dirt and a few stubborn weeds. Now it was becoming a village. He worked without ceremony.

No speeches. No applause. Just motion, hands cutting through the air, fingers shaping invisible lines, mana pushing into the ground like a command the earth couldn’t ignore.

Stone rose in slabs, then folded into walls. Soil compacted into clean foundations. Pillars formed with sharp edges and reinforced cores, the kind of structure that didn’t care if the weather got ugly. Roof supports locked into place with a dry crack as the geometry settled.

He built small, rectangular shelters, simple layouts that could fit families without wasting material. No windows large enough to be a weakness. Doorframes wide enough for injured people to be carried through.

Not “temporary” in the way that meant “it will collapse when the wind gets bored.” Ludger took a mana potion, bit the stopper off with his teeth, and drank. The taste was always the same: bitter, metallic, like someone had dissolved a thunderstorm into water and dared you to swallow it.

Warmth spread through his chest. The emptiness in his mana pool eased. He didn’t savor it. He just used it. Stone rails had taught him how to build long and straight. Lionfang’s walls had taught him how to build thick and defensible. Now he applied both lessons to speed, each shelter erected in minutes, each one snapping into stability like a puzzle piece.

The refugees watched from the edges of the lot, eyes hollow and hopeful. Some cried when the first roof settled. Some simply sat down and stared like their legs had finally remembered they were allowed to stop running.

Ludger didn’t look at them for long. He couldn’t. Not if he wanted to keep his hands steady. Another potion. Another pull of mana. Another building. His mind drifted into that familiar half-state where his body did the work and his thoughts wandered ahead.

And that was when he noticed it. Not in the world. In himself. A subtle “click” behind his eye, the System’s quiet reminder that progress existed even when the world burned. He blinked and pulled his status list up in his mind while his hands kept shaping stone.

Geomancer Lv 139 (+12 INT, +6 WIS / level)

Skills:

[Earth Manipulation Lv 100]

[Stone Grip Lv 100]

[Quicksand Lv 100]

[Seismic Sense Lv 100]

[Mineral Skin Lv 100]

[Terra Burst Lv 50]

[Gaia’s Grasp Lv 50]

[Rock Spike Lv 100]

[Continental Shield Lv 81]

[Earthen Surge Lv 100]

[Dust Curtain Lv 100]

[Tectonic Pulse Lv 100]

[Stoneflow Lv 50]

[Earthen Ward Lv 100]

[Landslide Break Lv 100]

[Geo Resonance Lv 100]

[Earth Pulse Lv 100] 

[Earth Attunement Lv 100] 

[Stone Surfing Lv 100] 

[Earth Creation Lv 100] 

[Geomancer’s Hand Lv 41] 

Most of them were there. Level one hundred. Again and again and again.

He’d been so busy building and fighting and training others that he hadn’t paused to appreciate how close he’d gotten to the ceiling. He had used them to create the stone rails in some shape or form.

Level one hundred was… supposed to matter. In his experience, it always did.

Reaching one hundred in a skill wasn’t just “better numbers.” The System liked thresholds. It liked turning effort into transformation. When a class or skill reached a certain point, it sometimes stopped being a ladder and started being a door. Ludger’s eyes narrowed slightly as he raised a wall and set roof supports into place.

Maybe this is the chance.

This situation was brutal, exhausting, and constant, exactly the kind of pressure that forged mastery. If he pushed the Geomancer class fully, if he completed it instead of just leveling parts of it, maybe something would change.

Not just strength. Understanding. Efficiency. A refinement that made everything cheaper, faster, cleaner… the way reaching one hundred had done before.

He finished the shelter he was working on, brushed dust off his palms, and checked the list again. Then the cold reality slid back in. To push mastery, he needed mana. A lot of it.

And unlike training in a quiet yard, this was a live-fire situation. He couldn’t afford to drain himself to nothing and then have another swarm show up at the gates. He would have to rely on the magic water… or keep buying mana potions.

He glanced down at the bottle in his hand, empty now. The city had agreed to supply them. for now. But cities had short memories once panic faded. Ludger took another potion from his pouch and rolled it between his fingers.

Mastery costs.

He lifted his hands again, and the earth answered. Stone rose. Walls locked. Another shelter became real. And Ludger built, drank, and calculated, because if the empire was about to be swallowed by sealed labyrinth horrors, then he wasn’t going to survive it on bravery.

He was going to survive it on resources, systems… and the next level of power he could force the world to give him.

By the time the last shelter’s roof settled into place, the lot looked like a rough stone camp that had grown out of the earth overnight. Rows of squat buildings. Narrow lanes between them. A few fires already starting, smoke rising in thin lines as refugees finally had something that felt like a boundary between them and the dark.

Ludger wiped dust off his hands and leaned back against a pillar he’d shaped into place for structural support. His mana pool felt like a cup that had been refilled and emptied too many times, still functional, but complaining.

Around him, the veterans waited.

Harold stood with arms crossed, eyes scanning the streets like he expected something to crawl out of a shadow and ask for permission to kill people. Cor spoke quietly with a pair of healers, voice calm, posture unhurried.

Selene lasted about five minutes longer than her patience. Then she snapped.

“So,” she said, planting her hands on her hips and looking between them like she was addressing a council of idiots, “what now?”

Her tone wasn’t fear. It was the opposite, too much energy with nowhere to spend it. She’d had a fight, she’d won, and now the world was asking her to stand still while the problem remained unsolved.

Selene hated that. Aleia answered before anyone else could. She didn’t raise her voice. She didn’t posture. She just stated reality like it was an arrow already released.

“Now we rest,” Aleia said, adjusting the strap of her quiver. “We eat. We sleep in shifts. We prepare for whatever happens next.”

Selene’s nose wrinkled. “That’s it?”

Aleia’s eyes flicked toward the city walls, toward the roads, the distant villages, the directions the monsters could come from.

“That’s what we can do here,” she said.

Harold grunted in agreement, but Aleia continued, because Selene was the type who needed it spelled out before she stopped vibrating.

“We can defend the city,” Aleia said. “We can patrol. We can respond to swarms. We can keep refugees alive.”

Selene’s grin returned slightly. “Good.”

“But we can’t do anything else on a large scale,” Aleia added, voice sharpening, “because it will cause problems.”

Selene tilted her head. “Problems?”

Aleia nodded once, slow. “Political. Logistical. We start marching across territory, clearing roads and villages like an army, and people start calling it an army. Lords start asking questions. The Regent starts smiling.”

Harold clicked his tongue, expression sour. “And then we’re fighting two battles at once.”

Aleia’s gaze returned to Selene, steady and annoyingly reasonable.

“This isn’t a local incident,” she said. “This affects the whole empire. If sealed labyrinth monsters are moving, then we don’t solve it with one strong group doing hero work.”

Selene opened her mouth, Aleia cut in before she could argue. “We solve it by coordinating.”

That word hung in the air like a curse.

“Other guilds,” Aleia continued. “Local militias. Branches. Whoever still has teeth and isn’t terrified. We share information. We establish routes. We set response teams. We build a net.”

Selene blew out a breath, clearly offended by the concept of not punching the problem until it stopped existing.

“…Fine,” she said finally. “But if another swarm shows up, I’m not coordinating. I’m breaking things.”

Harold’s grin returned, tired and grim. “That’s why we keep you close.”

Aleia’s mouth twitched, almost a smile. And Ludger, still leaning against his pillar, watched them and thought:

Good.

Because Aleia was right. This was bigger than a single fight. Bigger than one city.

If the empire was about to turn into a maze of breaches and swarms, then the Lionsguard couldn’t act like lone hunters anymore. They’d need a network. A system. Protocols.

And allies, whether they liked them or not. For tonight, though, the goal was simpler. Survive until morning. Then do it again.

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