Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 213— Celestine’ Timely Intervention
The chamber doors opened without warning.
Everyone turned to look.
Celestine Aurin entered with the kind of presence that made people straighten unconsciously. The scion of House Aurin was the embodiment of prim and proper. She never gave off the feeling that she had weak standards—not in appearance, not in bearing, not in the careful way she carried herself.
Her family’s motto was "Grace Through Merit," and she embodied it.
She wore House Aurin colors—deep blue with silver threading. Her expression was composed but carried an edge that suggested displeasure.
"Lady Celestine," Caldwell said, surprised. "This is a closed tribunal. Unless you’re here to provide testimony—"
"I am." Celestine moved to the fifth seat without waiting for permission and sat with the kind of confidence that came from knowing exactly what her family name meant. "I’m here to provide testimony regarding Duncan varn’s character and whereabouts during the alleged theft."
The House Selaris representative stiffened. "This is highly irregular—"
"No more irregular than prosecuting a student based on circumstantial evidence and anonymous testimony." Celestine’s tone was perfectly polite, perfectly cutting. "I understand House Selaris believes they have a case. I’m here to present counter-evidence."
Caldwell hesitated. This was the nightmare scenario for any administrator—two major houses with opposing positions on a disciplinary matter. Siding with one meant offending the other.
"You may present your testimony," Caldwell said carefully.
Celestine nodded. "Duncan varn is my roommate Bessia’s squadmate. I’ve observed him extensively over the past months. His character is beyond reproach. He’s disciplined, honest, and completely uninterested in the kind of political maneuvering that theft from a noble house would require."
"Character testimony is appreciated but not—"
"I’m not finished." Celestine’s interruption was gentle but firm. "I was at the autumn equinox event. House Aurin attended as guests of House Marlowe. I can state with certainty that Duncan Voss was not present at any point during the evening."
"How can you be certain?"
"Because I made note of which students attended. House Aurin maintains detailed social records for exactly these situations—to verify attendance, to note alliances, to document who was where when incidents occur." She pulled out a ledger from her bag. "Here. Complete attendance list. Duncan varn’s name does not appear."
The House Selaris representative leaned forward. "That proves nothing. He could have attended without being on your house’s guest list—"
"House Aurin’s records include all observed attendees, not just invited guests. We document everyone present for security purposes. If Duncan had been there, he would be in these records. He is not."
Silence.
Caldwell was trapped. He couldn’t dismiss the testimony from House Aurin without political consequences. But he also couldn’t ignore the pressure from House Selaris without different political consequences.
No sooner had Celestine entered the tribunal than she’d laid her own point of view on the matter, stating in real time the people she sided with.
Both Selaris and Aurin were great houses. Major political powers within the Republic. Roughly equivalent in influence. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝚠𝕖𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝕖𝚕.𝚌𝗼𝗺
That put Caldwell on the spot. He did not have the political capital to slight either house without severe career repercussions.
"This..." Caldwell cleared his throat. "This testimony introduces reasonable doubt regarding the accused’s presence at the scene. However, there remains the matter of the physical evidence and witness testimony—"
"Witness testimony that should be cross-examined," Celestine said calmly. "Anonymous accusations without the opportunity for the accused to confront his accusers violates basic tribunal procedure."
"The witnesses requested anonymity due to—"
"Fear of retaliation from the outpost recruit factions that barely exist and have no power?" Celestine’s tone remained polite, but the skepticism was cutting. "Or fear that cross-examination would reveal inconsistencies in their testimony?"
The House Selaris representative was red-faced now. "Lady Celestine, your defense of this student is noted, but—"
"My defense is based on evidence and proper procedure. If House Selaris wishes to prosecute, they should do so through legitimate means rather than circumstantial evidence and anonymous accusers."
The tribunal chamber was thick with tension.
Caldwell looked between the two noble representatives like a man watching a duel he couldn’t stop.
Finally, he made a decision.
"Given the conflicting testimony from major houses and the procedural questions raised by Lady Celestine, this tribunal will adjourn for further review. Sentencing is postponed pending additional investigation. The accused will remain under current restrictions until a final determination is made."
It was not an acquittal, neither was it vindication.
The meeting was adjourned not through the merit of Duncan’s innocence, but through the power of nobility. One noble house’s testimony neutralizing another’s accusations until the political calculations could be worked out behind closed doors.
Duncan felt simultaneously relieved and disgusted.
He’d been saved. But not because he was innocent. Because a different noble had intervened with sufficient political weight to make his persecution inconvenient.
Justice had nothing to do with it.
-----
Outside the tribunal chamber, Duncan found Celestine waiting in the corridor.
"Thank you," he said simply. "You didn’t have to—"
"Yes, I did." Celestine’s expression was troubled. "What House Selaris attempted today was unconscionable."
"Still. You risked complications for someone you barely know."
"I know Bessia. She vouches for you. That’s enough." Celestine paused. "Also, I meant what I said in there. You’re one of the most straightforward people I’ve encountered at this academy. The idea that you’d engage in theft is absurd."
Duncan managed a weak smile. "I appreciate that."
"The adjournment buys time, but it’s not over," Celestine warned. "House Selaris will pressure the administration. Look for ways to revive the case or create new accusations. You need to be careful."
"I will be."
Celestine nodded and left, her House Aurin colors disappearing down the corridor.
Duncan stood alone for a moment, processing what had just happened.
Then he went to find his squad.
-----
Bright had been waiting outside the administrative building, his spatial awareness tracking the tribunal through walls and institutional barriers.
When Duncan emerged, Bright read his expression immediately.
"Adjourned," Duncan said. "Not dismissed. Not acquitted. Just... postponed."
"Because of Celestine."
"Yeah. Her testimony created enough doubt that Caldwell couldn’t rule against me without offending House Aurin."
Bright was quiet for a moment, thinking.
Then he said something that surprised Duncan.
"Adam’s faction idea has merit."
"What?"
"The plan he’s been working on. Forming an organization. Building power that doesn’t depend on individual capability or noble house patronage." Bright gestured vaguely. "It’s starting to look like a good idea."
"You wanted to confront Theodore with violence yesterday."
"I still might. But Celestine’s intervention proved something—there’s power in an organization. In having allies with weight. A single leaf gets blown away by wind. A tree doesn’t."
Duncan nodded slowly. "There’s also the saying that the tallest tree gets cut down first."
"True. But that’s only relevant when you’ve grown tall enough that enemies can view you from above. For now, we’re still small. Still have time to establish roots before anyone realizes we’re growing into something that can’t be easily removed."
Bright started walking back toward the main campus. "We should talk to Adam. Figure out what this faction actually looks like."
Duncan followed, feeling something like hope for the first time since the accusations began.
Maybe organization was the answer.
Maybe they didn’t have to fight alone.
It was something.
And right now, something felt like enough.
-----
In his private study, Theodore received word that the tribunal had been adjourned.
He threw his wine glass against the wall in a rare display of genuine frustration.
Celestine Aurin. Of course it was her. The idealistic noble who actually believed in merit and proper procedure.
Richard, standing nearby, wisely said nothing.
"This isn’t over," Theodore said quietly. "An adjournment just means we need a different approach. More careful coordination. Better evidence."
"Or we could—"
"No." Theodore’s tone was final. "We’re not backing down. The outpost recruits need to learn that challenging noble authority has consequences. If we let that Duncan walk away from this, it signals weakness."
"Even if it means prolonged conflict with House Aurin?"
"House Aurin won’t go to war over one outpost recruit. Celestine acted on personal principle. Her family won’t back her if it becomes politically costly." Theodore began drafting new messages to his network. "We just need to adjust and adapt."
But even as he wrote, Theodore felt the first stirrings of doubt.
The outpost recruits were proving harder to crush than anticipated.
They had capability. They had coordination. And now they potentially had noble house support.
Maybe this campaign needed reconsideration.
Or maybe it just needed better execution.
Theodore decided on the latter.
Pride, after all, demanded nothing less.







