Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 216— Cracks in The Foundation
It was a day like any other.
Or it should have been.
But the matter of the dead student had put everybody on edge. Students walked through hallways with nervous tension. Conversations dropped to whispers when instructors passed. Even the normally confident foreign exchange students from Ashmar and solhaven moved with wary alertness, watching Republic students for signs of hostility or accusation.
The instructors were feeling the heat of trouble like it scalded along their faces. They were busy through and through—emergency meetings with the Senate, coordination with Ashmar’s diplomatic representatives, investigation protocols for the death, enhanced security measures, damage control for the exchange program.
Well, some of them were busy.
Head Disciplinary Caldwell was not one of them.
Instead, Caldwell had come to a conclusion in his deliberations on the case of a certain outpost student. Duncan varn. The theft accusation that had been adjourned pending further investigation.
Caldwell was a very ambitious man. He’d made his career through careful political maneuvering rather than exceptional capability or moral integrity. And he didn’t see the need for his conscience—such as it was—to stop him from elevating his position through whatever means presented themselves.
In the case of being stuck between two great houses—Selaris pushing for conviction, Aurin defending the accused—he’d made his decision to ally with the one that promised substantial benefits rather than the one offering only perfunctory support.
House Selaris had made their position clear through carefully worded communications and discrete resource transfers. Convict Duncan varn. Establishing a precedent that noble house accusations carry weight while demonstrating that outpost recruits—no matter how capable—operate at the mercy of established power structures.
House Aurin, on the other hand, had only offered Celestine’s testimony and vague promises of future goodwill. No concrete benefits. No career advancement opportunities. Just abstract principles about fairness and proper procedure.
The choice had been obvious.
At the last trial, Caldwell couldn’t reach a quick conclusion due to the abruptness of Celestine’s intervention. The timing had been poor—too public, too many witnesses, too much attention on the proceedings.
But after cooling his head and reassessing the situation, he’d gained a wider view of his optimal stance.
He’d planned with Theodore Selaris—the scion himself,—to hold an abrupt tribunal session today. Right now. While chaos from the dead student investigation consumed everyone’s attention.
Many higher-level instructors were being held at the southern border dealing with some unforeseen matters. Crawler activity had spiked unexpectedly. Multiple Tier 3 breaches manifesting simultaneously in patterns that suggested coordination rather than random emergence.
There was even a missive that the situation had escalated enough to call for Central’s Champions to be dispatched. Multiple Champions. Which meant whatever was happening at the southern border was serious enough to pull the Republic’s strongest defenders away from the capital.
Caldwell thanked the dead god—an ironic prayer given his complete lack of faith—that he was only an Adept.
He’d gotten the position not through combat ability, as you would expect from someone titled "Head Disciplinary." But through inheritance and institutional familiarity.
His father had been Head Disciplinary for years at Sparkshire. Caldwell had worked under him in various administrative capacities, learning the procedural mechanisms, building relationships with the right people, positioning himself as the natural successor.
So although he wasn’t the most suited for the job by any objective measure of capability or integrity, he’d still gotten it when his father retired.
Politics, not merit.
The story of institutional power throughout human history.
Now he wanted to leverage that inherited position for personal advancement. Get more resources. Acquire rare cores. Advance toward Expert rank through accumulated advantages rather than actual effort or risk.
He was a sleek weasel. And he never intended to work for advancement when manipulation and alliance-building could achieve the same outcomes with less danger.
"Today looks like a great day to improve my position," Caldwell muttered to himself, reviewing the tribunal documents he’d prepared.
The charges against Duncan were circumstantial at best. The evidence questionable. The entire case built on fabricated testimony and planted physical evidence.
But none of that mattered if the tribunal was conducted properly. If the right procedures were followed, if the documentation looked legitimate, if the ruling was issued with appropriate institutional authority—then guilt or innocence became irrelevant.
The appearance of justice was sufficient.
There was still a small nudge at the back of his mind. A quiet discomfort suggesting something was wrong with this plan. That conducting a secret tribunal while the academy was distracted, while key oversight figures were absent, while tensions were already elevated—that maybe this was a mistake.
But Caldwell dismissed the feeling as his conscience judging him for what he was planning to do.
An emotion he felt no need to indulge.
Conscience was a luxury for people who could afford moral principles. Caldwell had ambitions instead.
He sealed the tribunal summons and prepared to have it delivered to Duncan varn.
An emergency tribunal to be convened immediately with the final ruling on theft the charges.
By the time anyone realized what was happening, it would be too late to intervene.
Duncan would be convicted. Sentenced. Expelled at minimum, possibly facing worse depending on how harsh Caldwell chose to be.
House Selaris would be satisfied. Theodore’s campaign against the outpost recruits would be validated. And Caldwell would receive the promised compensation—resources, political backing, advancement opportunities.
Everyone won.
Well, everyone who mattered.
"Perfect," Caldwell said, standing from his desk.
He had no idea how catastrophically wrong he was about everything.
No idea that conducting this tribunal today—of all days—would intersect with forces far beyond his comprehension or control.
No idea that the nudge at the back of his mind wasn’t conscience at all.
It was survival instinct. The last vestige of self-preservation screaming warnings he was too arrogant to heed.
But he would learn.
Soon.
Very soon.
The day that looked like any other was about to become something else entirely.
And Caldwell’s careful plans would shatter against realities he’d never imagined could exist.
The summons was sent.
The tribunal was scheduled.
And multiple catastrophes began their final convergence toward a collision point that would reshape everything.
Caldwell walked toward the tribunal chamber, confident and satisfied.
Completely unaware that he was walking into a disaster that would consume far more than just one outpost recruit’s future.
The academy continued its routines.
But beneath the surface, pressure had been building for months.
And today—this day that looked like any other—the foundations would finally crack.
——-
Author’s Note
Hey everyone.
I just wanted to take a moment to talk to you all for a bit. This part of the Chapter is more of a small break from the story so I can give you a quick update about things on my side.
First of all, thank you for continuing to read and support the story.
Right now I’m in the middle of my exam period. Anyone who has gone through exams before probably understands how chaotic that time can be. Between studying, preparing for different subjects, and trying not to fall behind, writing time becomes a lot more limited than usual.
That said, the good news is that I’m almost done with my exams.
Once they’re over, I’ll finally be able to get back into a more consistent writing schedule. During exam periods, most of the writing I manage to do happens late at night or in small gaps between studying sessions. It’s not the most efficient way to write, but I still try to make progress whenever I can.
I also want to reassure everyone that the story itself is not on hold. I still have the outline planned out and a lot of future scenes already in my notes. Some of the upcoming moments in the story are actually parts I’ve been looking forward to writing for a long time. There will be more exploration of abilities, more battles, and some major developments for the characters.
Without giving away spoilers, the upcoming arcs should start pushing the characters into more dangerous and complicated situations. The world is going to expand a bit more in any case.
For those of you who like the combat and power development parts of the story, there will definitely be more of that. I’ve been thinking a lot about how to make the fights feel more tactical and meaningful rather than just raw strength clashes. At the same time, I also want to give more attention to character interactions and the way different personalities react to the situations they’re thrown into.
Another thing I want to say is that I really appreciate everyone who sticks around even when updates slow down slightly. Writing while balancing school, exams, and everything else in life can be a bit of a challenge, but knowing people are waiting for the next Chapter definitely helps push me forward.
If everything goes well, once exams finish I should be able to return to a more regular upload schedule again.
For now, thank you all for your patience and support. I hope you continue enjoying the story as much as I enjoy writing it.
And good luck to anyone else who might also be dealing with exams or busy schedules right now.
More Chapters coming soon.







