Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 185— Set In Motion

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Chapter 185: Chapter 185— Set In Motion

The morning announcements came through academy bracelets at precisely 0600 hours.

Twenty students received the same message: Report to Conference Hall C by 0800. Foreign exchange program briefing. Attendance mandatory.

Silas read the notification twice, his expression unchanging.

So it was official.

He felt... nothing. Not excitement, not apprehension, not even mild curiosity. Just the cold calculation that had become his default state over the past months.

Ashmar or Solhaven. Didn’t matter which. Different rules, different power structures, different opportunities to exploit. The specifics would reveal themselves during the briefing.

He was part of the so called squad with bright and the others—technically. But not really.

He shared meals with them sometimes. Trained alongside them occasionally. Participated in their strategic discussions when it seemed advantageous. But he didn’t belong to them the way Duncan or Mara or even Adam did.

They had ideals. Camaraderie. Some nebulous concept of loyalty that extended beyond mutual benefit.

Silas had ambition.

He was a climber—in the power scene, in the political arena, in every hierarchy that mattered. The squad was useful, so far as it provided cover and occasional tactical support. But his real investments were elsewhere.

Katerina Verne. His helper among the second-years. The careful cultivation of reputation as someone forgettable but competent.

Still, there was protocol to observe.

He found Bessia in the dining hall, sitting with Celestine and working through breakfast with the methodical focus she applied to everything. She was the closest thing he had to a friend in the group—though "friend" was probably too strong a word.

Ally. Acquaintance with mutual interests.

"I’m being sent abroad," Silas said without preamble, sliding into the seat across from her. "It’s the exchange program, the briefing is in two hours."

Bessia looked up from her meal, surprise flickering across her face before settling into concern. "For how long?"

"That’s unknown. Probably the rest of the academic year."

"That’s..." She paused, choosing words carefully. "That’s a significant time."

"It’s an opportunity." Silas kept his tone neutral. "Different power structures to study. New connections to make. Could be valuable."

Celestine, who’d been politely pretending not to listen, abandoned the pretense. "You don’t sound concerned about being sent into a potentially hostile territory."

Silas met her eyes—bright, earnest, genuinely worried for someone she barely knew. Noble empathy. He’d never understand it.

"Concern is unproductive," he said simply. "Adaptation is essential."

Bessia frowned but didn’t argue. She understood him better than most. "The others should know. We should—"

"Tell them if you want." Silas stood, already moving toward the exit. "I have preparations to make."

He left before she could respond.

-----

Conference Hall C was smaller than the main assembly auditoriums, designed for groups of thirty or fewer. When Silas arrived at 0755, twelve students were already present.

He recognized a few faces.

Arjun Hagar—a first-year, from the House Hagar lineage, notable for being one of the few noble students selected. The boy stood apart from the others, arms crossed, expression carved from stone. Everything about his posture screamed martial discipline.

Lyanna keer—a third-year, with no relation to Adam despite the shared surname. She was leaning against the wall with calculated disinterest, but Silas noticed how her eyes tracked everyone who entered. An Intelligence specialist, if he had to guess.

Marcus Vale—first-year like Silas, true military background. They’d never spoken, but Silas had observed him in Combat Fundamentals. Competent but unremarkable. Probably selected precisely because of that mediocrity.

The others were strangers.

By 0800, all twenty students had assembled.

Aldric Thorne entered at 0801, and the ambient conversation died instantly.

"You’ve been selected for the foreign deployment," Thorne said without preamble. "Ten of you would go to Ashmar, ten to Solhaven. Assignments are non-negotiable. The Duration is six months minimum, potentially extending to a full academic year depending on program success."

He pulled up a projection showing two lists.

ASHMAR DEPLOYMENT:

- Arjun Hagar (1st Year)

- Silas drey (1st Year)

- Marcus Vale (1st Year)

- [Seven other names]

SOLHAVEN DEPLOYMENT:

- Lyanna Cross (3rd Year)

- [Nine other names]

Silas committed the Ashmar list to memory immediately.

"You are representatives of the Republic," Thorne continued. "Your performance reflects on Sparkshire Academy and, by extension, the Senate itself. Failure is not an option. Death is expected but discouraged. Political incidents will be handled through appropriate diplomatic channels, meaning they’ll be swept under the rug and you’ll be disavowed."

Someone laughed nervously. Thorne’s expression didn’t shift.

"You leave in one week. Use that time to prepare. Questions?"

Arjun Hagar raised his hand. "Rules of engagement if hostilities occur?"

"Defend yourself. Don’t start wars. If you kill a foreign national, make sure you have witnesses who’ll corroborate your self-defense." Thorne’s tone suggested he’d had this conversation before. "Next question."

"What resources will we have access to?" Lyanna Cross asked.

"Whatever the host institutions provide. Don’t expect special treatment. You’re students, not dignitaries."

The briefing continued for another thirty minutes—logistics, emergency protocols, communication procedures. Silas absorbed it all with mechanical efficiency.

When they were dismissed, he left immediately.

One week to prepare.

One week to tie up loose ends at Sparkshire.

One week to position himself for maximum advantage in Ashmar.

He had work to do.

-----

Bright found Hendricks in the forge workshop, working on what looked like a complex locking mechanism for a containment vessel.

"Got a minute sir?" Bright asked from the doorway.

Hendricks didn’t look up. "Depends on the question."

Bright entered, closing the door behind him. The forge was quiet this early—most students didn’t have morning electives. "I want to ask about advancement. About becoming an Adept."

That got Hendricks’ attention. The instructor set down his tools and turned, studying Bright with an expression that was equal parts amusement and concern.

"You’re a low Initiate," Hendricks said flatly. "You’ve been at the academy for what, four months? And you’re already thinking about Adept rank?"

"I’m thinking about the path," Bright clarified. "I know I’m not ready. But I want to understand what it takes. What the actual steps are."

Hendricks was silent for a long moment, then gestured to a nearby workbench. "Sit."

Bright sat.

He felt his growth beginning to slow, and it didn’t take long to understand why.

Fusion came with a cost.

The more complex his core structure became, the longer refinement required. Every additional integration, every layered function, every compounded enhancement increased structural density—and density demanded time.

It was a direct exchange.

Power for speed.

Simple cores advanced quickly but plateaued early. Complex ones climbed slowly, but their ceiling rose far higher.

Bright exhaled slowly.

He hadn’t chosen an easy path. He had chosen a scalable one.

And scalability demanded patience

"You asked about becoming an Adept. So let me ask you something first." Hendricks leaned forward, eyes sharp. "Have you heard of soul force, boy?"

The question caught Bright off-guard. "Of course. It comes up constantly in lectures, in combat analysis, in—"

"I didn’t ask if you’d heard of it. I asked if you understand it." Hendricks tapped the workbench for emphasis. "That name comes up a lot in all we do, but what exactly do you think it is?"

Bright opened his mouth to respond, then closed it.

What was soul force?

He’d used the term hundreds of times. Instructors referenced it constantly. It was fundamental to advancement, to core integration, to combat effectiveness. But he’d never actually stopped to define it beyond the vague understanding that it represented... what? Power? Energy? Life force?

"You can’t answer," Hendricks observed.

"I... no." Bright admitted. "Not precisely."

Hendricks nodded, unsurprised. "Most students can’t. They treat it like a number on a status sheet. Something to increase through training and core absorption. They’re not wrong, but they’re missing the point."

He stood, moving to a shelf where various metal samples were arranged. He picked up a piece of raw iron.

"Soul force is seen in almost everything in this world, boy. It’s what drives our existence. Each and every one of us has a distinct soul force signature—unique as a fingerprint, fundamental as breath." He set the iron down. "But do you know what yours is?"

Bright hesitated. "I’ve never thought about it that way."

"That’s your problem." Hendricks fixed him with a stare that was almost paternal. "You want to become an Adept, but you don’t understand the basic truth of what that means. Advancement to Adept isn’t about accumulating more power. It’s about understanding your power. About knowing your soul force signature so intimately that you can manipulate it consciously rather than instinctively."

The instructor crossed his arms. "Think on this and get back to me. It would serve you well to not play on matters of the soul without deeply reflecting on what your soul actually is. Until you can answer that question—until you can describe your soul force signature with clarity—you’re not ready to pursue Adept rank."

"How long does that usually take?" Bright asked.

"Depends on the person. Some figure it out in months. Some take years. Some never do." Hendricks returned to his work. "You’re dismissed. Come back when you have an answer."

Bright left the workshop with more questions than he’d entered with.

What was his soul force signature?

How did one even begin to identify something so fundamental?

He had no idea.

But he’d figure it out.

He always did.

-----

Duncan stood in the combat training hall, surrounded by a dozen other students running through basic formation drills.

This was new.

For months, he’d trained alone or exclusively with his squad. Focused on his specific role as tank specialist. Honed his Momentum Control and Bone Guard through isolated repetition.

It had been comfortable. Familiar.

It had also been limiting.

The wake-up call had come some time ago during a sparring session with Bright. Not formal training—just friendly competition between squadmates. Duncan had been confident. He was larger, stronger, more experienced in pure defensive combat.

Bright had dismantled him in under few minutes.

Not through overwhelming power. Through technique. Positioning. Timing. Understanding how to exploit the microscopic gaps in Duncan’s guard that Duncan himself didn’t know existed.

It had been humbling.

Worse—it had been clarifying.

Duncan had realized something deeply uncomfortable: he’d been operating under the assumption that he was the main character in his own story. That his role as the squad’s tank made him indispensable. That his size and strength were enough.

They weren’t.

So he’d made a decision.

Train with everyone. Learn from everyone. Expose himself to different fighting styles, different techniques, different tactical approaches.

Stop being comfortable.

The instructor running the formation drills was Adept Kira salo, and she didn’t tolerate mediocrity.

"Varn!" she barked. "Your positioning is sloppy. You’re leaving the entire left flank exposed. Tighten up or sit out."

Duncan adjusted immediately, shifting his stance to cover the gap she’d identified.

Better.

He could be better.

He would be better.

Because standing still meant falling behind, and falling behind meant becoming irrelevant.

Duncan refused to be irrelevant.

-----

In the noble district of Sparkshire Academy, Theodore Selaris received the news with barely contained satisfaction.

Silas drey was being deployed abroad.

Six months minimum. Possibly longer.

The perceived threat—the predatory first-year who’d killed Gregor with casual efficiency—would be gone.

Theodore had hidden his claws for weeks, cautious after losing his enforcer, uncertain how to proceed against the outpost recruits who’d proven more dangerous than anticipated.

But now...

Now the landscape had shifted.

He pulled out a parchment and began writing carefully coded messages to his noble allies.

Silas’s departure created opportunities.

And Theodore had been planning.

New strategies. Subtler approaches.

He was ready to play his cards again.

And this time, he wouldn’t underestimate them.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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