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Building The First Adventurer Guild In Another World-Chapter 252: The Ripple Effect
Five days passed in what felt like the blink of an eye, yet for the Ashford Quarter, those five days were enough to change its fate entirely.
The once quiet stretch of cracked stone roads and abandoned storefronts no longer felt forgotten. Where dust used to gather in lazy swirls, boots now stamped the ground from dawn until late evening.
Where silence once lingered like a stubborn ghost, voices rose in waves, laughter, arguments, bargaining, and the sharp clank of steel striking steel. The Adventurer Guild’s symbol, mounted boldly above the newly built hall, caught the sunlight each morning and cast its shadow over the district like a declaration.
What had begun with cautious hope now pulsed with life; even those who had doubted its survival found themselves pausing on the street to watch the steady flow of people entering and leaving its doors.
The acre of land that had once held crumbling structures now felt like the heart of something vibrant.
Horses and minor magical beasts filled the stable, some sleek and expensive, others rough and battle-worn, while their owners trained nearby where warriors sparred amid loud shouts and heavy breathing.
The ring of wooden practice swords clashing echoed across the quarter, mixing with the smell of hay and sweat. Caravans lined the outer road, painted in bright colors and bearing merchant crests from various corners of Riverdale and beyond.
Some waited for escort contracts to be finalized; others had just returned from safe journeys, their drivers praising the Guild loudly as they unloaded crates of goods.
The Ashford Quarter no longer looked like a forgotten edge of the city; it looked alive, a center of movement that signified money, power, and attention.
Inside the Guild Hall, activity never ceased. From sunrise to dusk, men and women walked through its doors with different expressions but similar purpose.
In just five days, registered Adventurers grew from a handful to well over five hundred. What began with curious warriors stepping in cautiously transformed into a flood.
Word spread quickly across Riverdale, faster than anyone expected, that this was not just some rumor from Greyvale anymore; it was real and it was accepting members.
The backgrounds of those who registered were as diverse as their weapons. Young warriors barely past their training years spoke loudly about proving themselves and earning fame while mercenaries with scarred faces shared quiet stories about lessons learned in border skirmishes where discipline outweighed pride.
Wandering knights signed their names with stiff postures, some without banners to serve while others sought coin without pledging loyalty to any lord.
Former soldiers from city guard or distant garrisons appeared too, men tired of strict command but still moving with formation habits ingrained in them.
The Guild Hall welcomed all who followed its rules; this openness created an atmosphere hard to describe yet easy to sense: opportunity.
Groups of young warriors gathered around tables after registering, their voices buzzing with excitement as they discussed which missions to tackle first.
One warrior suggested escorting a merchant caravan along the western road to Silverpine, claiming it would be an easy start. Another was eager to take on a beast extermination request from a farming village just outside Riverdale’s walls, itching to test his skills with a blade.
Their confidence was palpable, perhaps even excessive but beneath that bravado lay a genuine desire to forge their own paths.
At another table, older veterans spoke in hushed tones. One man, graying at the temples, leaned back in his chair and remarked quietly that this Guild might actually bring about change.
If it operated fairly and compensated its members honestly, it could attract strength from across the region. Another veteran nodded in agreement, adding that if the Guild expanded into other cities as rumors suggested, it would become something the nobles couldn’t ignore.
However, not everyone in the hall appeared pleased. A few members of established mercenary groups lingered near the back wall with arms crossed, watching the registration lines with narrowed eyes.
They were no fools; they understood what this meant. The Guild was emerging as a middle ground, a place where contracts could be handled openly rather than through backdoor deals and whispered arrangements.
If merchants and minor nobles began placing their trust in the Guild over private mercenary companies, Riverdale’s balance of power would gradually shift.
One mercenary leader muttered under his breath that they would wait to see if the Guild could truly handle pressure when it arose; for now, they remained watchful.
The Mission Board had transformed dramatically in just five days. What had begun as a few carefully pinned parchments now overflowed with activity.
Escort missions lined one side of the board, posted by merchants seeking protection for caravans or ships navigating the Twilight River. Missing person notices filled another section, desperate families offering coin for information about sons or daughters who had vanished beyond city walls.
Requests for beast extermination occupied yet another column, with villages reporting wolf packs and boars and even whispers of something larger lurking near forest edges.
A handful of discreet missions from minor noble houses were meticulously written and sealed with wax for private discussion at the counter rather than public display.
The board no longer resembled an experiment; it pulsed like the heart of organized chaos, a place where disorder found structure and danger had a price.
Merchants especially found solace in this newfound order. Instead of negotiating separately with various mercenary groups while worrying about betrayal or inflated prices, they could simply walk into the Guild to post a mission and trust that registered Adventurers bound by Guild rules would fulfill it.
Payments were recorded, completions verified, and disputes settled under supervision. In a city where coin flowed like water but trust was scarce, this kind of structure proved powerful and it didn’t take long for more merchants to follow Garen Holtweiss’s lead.
The mission he had posted five days earlier not only received a swift acceptance but was also completed within that same timeframe, stirring the town of Riverdale like a gust of wind through dry leaves.
A team of five Adventurers stepped up including Roran who was the first to register when the Guild opened: a former river patrol soldier, a silent archer with sharp eyes, a heavy shield bearer who once served on the border wall, and a young scout with an astute mind familiar with the twists of the Twilight River.
They took the mission docket, examined the routes of Holtweiss ships, and began discreetly questioning dockworkers.
Within two days, they uncovered signs of sabotage that pointed not just to river raiders but also to information leaking from within the Consortium itself. This was no random attack; it was coordinated interference.
By the fourth day, they tracked the raiders to a hidden cove along a bend in the river where stolen goods were being sorted for resale. The confrontation was quick and brutal.
The former patrol soldier recognized the raiders’ formation tactics and anticipated their movements. The archer took down two men before they could reach their boats.
The shield bearer held off attackers at a narrow path while Roran attacked infront while the scout circled around behind them. By sunset, either the raiders were dead or bound.
However, what shocked many was what came next: evidence found at the site implicated a minor overseer within Holtweiss docks who had been selling shipping schedules to the raiders.
The team returned not only with captured criminals but also with undeniable proof.
Garen Holtweiss didn’t shy away from this outcome; instead, he made it public. Two days after their return, he placed an announcement in Riverdale’s busiest area declaring that thanks to the Adventurer Guild’s efforts, the river raiders had been eliminated.
He ordered the arrest of the corrupt overseer and ensured that stolen goods were returned while compensation was distributed to affected traders.
Garen himself appeared outside Guild Hall one morning to loudly commend the Adventurers for restoring security along Twilight River routes and declared his Consortium would continue collaborating closely with them in future endeavors.
This single public acknowledgment carried significant weight. The Holtweiss Consortium wasn’t just any player in Riverdale’s economy; it controlled five mid-level trade ships moving goods across three regions linked by Twilight River, an influence hard to ignore.
When such a prominent merchant openly endorsed the Guild, others began taking notice.
Within a day, rumors spread like wildfire: "They finished it in five days." "River pirates wiped out." "Even City Guard couldn’t handle them so quickly."
Whether these claims were entirely accurate didn’t matter; what mattered was that people believed them.
As a result, registration numbers surged even higher. Warriors who had previously hesitated rushed to sign up while merchants who had waited cautiously lined up to post escort missions.
The Guild’s name started appearing more frequently in tavern conversations and market gossip, Ashford Quarter no longer felt like just an experimental branch; it felt like something stable was beginning.
Yet Growth rarely goes unnoticed. In a quiet manor near the heart of Riverdale, a servant stood respectfully by the doorway of a well-lit study. Inside, two nobles were deep in conversation, discussing trade movements and security concerns over glasses of wine.
The servant bowed slightly, waiting patiently for their acknowledgment before speaking in a measured tone that revealed no personal opinion.
He conveyed that the Adventurer Guild branch in Ashford Quarter had experienced rapid growth, that the Holtweiss river issue had been resolved under their leadership, and that an increasing number of merchants were beginning to depend on them.
One noble set his cup down slowly, while the other leaned back and inquired about the current number of registered Adventurers. When informed that the count had already surpassed two hundred, a hush fell over the room for a moment.
Meanwhile, within the larger estate of the City Lord, similar news was circulating through corridors adorned with polished stone.
A senior aide whispered to another about how surprisingly swift the Guild’s expansion was; rumors suggested that nine other branches across the Evergreen Region were either under construction or already completed.
The aide’s expression tightened as he contemplated the implications. A city might tolerate mercenaries and merchant guilds, but an organization capable of uniting warriors from multiple cities under one banner posed an entirely different challenge.
Later that evening, as lanterns flickered to life and Ashford Quarter settled into a quieter rhythm, a single phrase echoed softly in a hallway far from the Guild itself.
A servant carrying documents paused near a private chamber and whispered to his superior with concern rather than fear: "The Adventurer Guild is growing too fast."
Though his words didn’t resonate loudly through the corridor, they hung in the air long after he spoke.







