Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 196—Testing The Spies
James discovered the Shroud manipulation research three days after receiving his handler’s escalation demand.
It was almost accidental.
He’d been studying in the library’s restricted section—accessible to first-years only with an instructor’s permission, which he’d obtained by claiming he needed historical context for his Warfare Tactics assignment. The librarian had been distracted, waved him through without checking specifics.
He’d been looking for general information about dimensional theory. Trying to understand how the Shroud worked without revealing why he was interested.
And he’d found it.
A technical manual, filed incorrectly in the historical section rather than the classified military section where it belonged. Someone’s clerical error that would probably be discovered and corrected eventually.
But not yet.
Dimensional Stabilization Protocols: Experimental Applications for Breach Mitigation
Published eight years ago. Authored by a team of Republic researchers whose names James didn’t recognize. Marked with a classification level that should have made it completely inaccessible to students.
But it was sitting right there.
James had stared at it for a full minute, warring impulses crashing against each other.
This was exactly what his handler wanted. Exactly the kind of actionable intelligence that would satisfy Valdris’s escalating demands and secure his family’s continued support.
It was also treason.
Not the gray-area espionage of documenting political factions or reporting on student dynamics. This was actual military intelligence about the Republic capabilities that could be used against them in conflict.
If he reported this, he was crossing a line he couldn’t uncross.
If he didn’t report it, his family’s financial support would end. His mother’s medical treatment would stop. His siblings would go hungry. He’d be expelled for inability to pay tuition.
James had sat there in the restricted section, hands shaking, staring at the manual, for twenty minutes.
Then he’d started copying.
Not photographing—he didn’t have any equipment for that, and trying to acquire it would raise questions. But copying. Key passages. Technical specifications. Enough detail that the Valdris researchers could reconstruct the general approach even without the complete documentation.
His handwriting got progressively worse as he worked. Guilt made his fingers tremble. Self-hatred made it hard to focus.
But he copied everything he could fit into his notes.
When he finished, he’d carefully returned the manual to its incorrect shelf position, gathered his materials, and left the library before someone noticed how long he’d been there.
Now, back in his dormitory, he stared at his copied notes.
Dimensional stabilization techniques that could revolutionize Crawler breach response. Methods for detecting Shroud instabilities before they manifested into full breaches. Experimental protocols for reinforcing reality’s boundaries against corrupted dimension intrusion.
Everything his handler wanted.
Everything that made him a traitor.
James closed his eyes and thought about his mother. About his siblings. About the life he’d had before Valdris had offered him fifteen thousand gold coins and a contract that had seemed like salvation.
He’d made his choice months ago.
Now he was just living with the consequences.
He began transcribing his notes into a formal report, forcing his handwriting steady through pure will.
Treason, it turned out, got easier with practice.
That realization was worse than the act itself.
-----
Jara’s next meeting with Bessia happened in Sparkshire’s medical wing during a joint training exercise between Solhaven students and the Republic students.
They’d been assigned as partners for a mass casualty simulation—twenty students playing injured soldiers, two healers responsible for triage and stabilization under time pressure.
Bessia worked with efficient grace, her Tether Drain technique allowing her to sustain healing efforts longer than conventional stamina would permit. Jara watched her carefully, noting details he’d include in his next report.
"You’re getting better at the vitality distribution," Bessia commented during a brief pause between simulated casualties. "Your technique is smoother than last week."
"I’ve been practicing." Jara smiled, and it was almost genuine. "Your notes were incredibly helpful."
"I’m glad. Healing is... lonely sometimes. It’s nice having someone who understands."
The comment hit harder than it should have.
Because she was right. Healing was lonely. The burden of keeping others alive while knowing you couldn’t save everyone. The guilt when people died despite your best efforts. The exhaustion that accumulated from constantly giving pieces of yourself to sustain others.
Jara understood that burden intimately.
Which made using her friendship for espionage feel even worse.
"Have you thought about advanced healing techniques?" he asked, keeping his tone casual. "I’ve been reading about soul force manipulation for regenerative applications. Apparently there are methods for accelerating natural healing beyond what standard cores provide."
"I’d be interested in that." Bessia’s expression brightened. "Do you have references? I could add them to my research."
"A few. I’ll share them with you after the exercise."
They returned to the simulation. Stabilizing fake casualties. Demonstrating competence that would be recorded in their training evaluations.
And Jara made mental notes about the Republic healing doctrine gaps that Bessia had inadvertently revealed through her technique explanations.
His handler’s latest message had been explicit:
Your work is satisfactory but insufficient. We require deeper intelligence. Specifically:
1. Advanced Republic healing techniques beyond what you’ve documented. Push your asset to share more complex methods.
2. Medical supply chain vulnerabilities. What resources do Republic healers depend on? What would cripple their capability if supply was disrupted?
3. Personal information about your asset. Family connections, political allegiances, exploitable weaknesses. She may become valuable beyond medical intelligence.
Your sister’s condition is stable. Her next treatment cycle is funded. Continued funding depends on meeting these expanded objectives.
—V.M.
The escalation was clear.
Valdris no longer wanted just healing techniques. They wanted intelligence that could be weaponized. Supply chain vulnerabilities. Personal information about Bessia that could be used for recruitment, blackmail, or worse.
And they were framing it as business. As if demanding he betray someone’s trust more deeply was just another contractual obligation.
Jara had drafted his response carefully:
I can provide medical technique documentation and some supply chain information. Personal intelligence about my asset is more difficult—she’s cautious about sharing family details, and pushing too hard risks raising suspicion.
Request clarification on acceptable risk levels. If I’m discovered, the entire operation compromises.
He’d submitted it two days ago.
The response had come this morning:
Acceptable risk level: High. We’re prepared to extract you if necessary, but intelligence value justifies significant exposure risk. Your sister’s treatment costs are increasing—experimental compounds required for her condition are expensive and rare. We need corresponding increase in intelligence value.
Push harder. We’ll handle extraction if needed.
—V.M.
Translation: They didn’t care if he got caught. They’d already extracted enough value to justify losing him. His sister’s medical dependence was just leverage to squeeze more intelligence before the asset burned.
Jara felt sick.
But he also felt trapped.
Because what choice did he have?
Let his sister die to preserve his integrity? Refuse Valdris’s demands and watch her condition deteriorate while he maintained moral purity?
He couldn’t do it.
Wouldn’t do it.
So he’d keep betraying Bessia’s friendship. Keep documenting her techniques. Keep gathering intelligence that would eventually be used against the Republic she served.
And he’d hate himself every moment of it.
"You okay?" Bessia asked during another pause. "You look pale."
"Just tired," Jara lied. "It’s been a long week."
"I understand. This training is exhausting." She smiled sympathetically. "We should take a break after this. Maybe get coffee?"
"That sounds good."
They finished the simulation. Received positive evaluations from the supervising instructor. Made plans to meet later for coffee and continued their collaborative study.
And Jara added another item to his mental list of things he’d include in his next report.
Asset continues to trust me. Access to advanced techniques remains stable. Will push for deeper intelligence as directed.
He was good at this.
That realization was worse than anything else.
——
For the Merchant Prince of Valdris, what he demanded of his Academy operatives was merely a pilot phase—a contained simulation of the larger subterfuge he intended to unleash.
James believed he had delivered valuable intelligence about Shroud manipulation technology weeks ago.
He had.
But it had also been bait.
The data trail had been arranged by senior Valdris handlers—an internal calibration. A loyalty test. A way to measure how quickly, how thoroughly, how unquestioningly their embedded assets complied.
James had passed.
Jara was passing now.
They operated under the illusion of usefulness, never realizing that even their "successes" were curated environments designed to evaluate obedience.
The Merchant Prince did not gamble on untested tools.
He stress-tested them.
In separate cities. In separate dormitories.
James and Jara sat alone.
Each stared at a finished report.
Each hesitated for only a moment.
Both thought of family.
Both remembered the contracts—how they had seemed like lifelines at the time. Protection. Funding. Security.
Both now understood those contracts for what they truly were.
Chains.
Lines had been crossed.
And once crossed, they did not uncross.
James sealed his report on Shroud manipulation research, preparing to deliver it to his designated dead drop. 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝒆𝒘𝙚𝓫𝙣𝙤𝒗𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢
Jara finalized documentation on Bessia’s healing techniques—clinical, structured, thorough. He even included a section on her emotional patterns and potential leverage points.
His hand lingered over that part longer than the others.
But he did not delete it.
Both operatives served Valdris.
Both despised the version of themselves required to continue.
Neither stopped.
Because family needed protection.
Because survival demanded compromise.
Because love, obligation, and fear could justify nearly anything—if you let them.
Far away, the Merchant Prince’s network expanded exactly as projected.
Assets embedded.
Trust cultivated.
Loyalty measured.
His strategy was not merely working.
It was unfolding precisely on schedule.







