Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 217— Race Against Time

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Chapter 217: Chapter 217— Race Against Time

"What would it profit a man to gain everything but lose his soul in the process?"

Bright had read that statement over and over again, the words blurring together as he sat in the academy library trying to focus on the soul force theory text spread before him.

He was supposed to meet up with Hendricks today—finally get the introduction to that reclusive Expert who supposedly understood complex soul structures and might be able to help with his fragmentation problem.

But with the way the school was right now—Duncan’s adjourned trial hanging over everyone, the dead Ashmar student whose body had been found yesterday, tensions between Republic and Federation students reaching breaking points—shit wasn’t just hitting the fan at this point.

It was already stuck there. Clinging. Spreading rashly across every surface until the entire academy reeked of impending disaster.

Bright had tried reading the book on soul force he’d acquired from the library’s restricted section. It had taken him a substantial amount of his merit points—anything concerning soul force theory at this level was treated as sensitive advanced material, priced accordingly to limit access.

Still, he found himself stuck on those particular words. Not because they were especially profound or offered insight into his technical problems. They were a decent philosophical talking point, sure.

But he couldn’t get past them for one particular reason.

The ringing in his head—his danger sense, his spatial foresight, whatever amalgamation of his fused abilities was screaming warnings—it was more or less like a blaring alarm clock at this point.

Constant. Insistent. And Impossible to ignore.

Bright knew something was up. Something immediate. Something that required action rather than contemplation about souls and profit.

His first thought was to gather his friends. Talk about their plans. Figure out how they could weather the storm about to crash down on all of them.

Because his danger sense wasn’t just warning about personal threats anymore.

It was warning about everything.

-----

Elsewhere in the academy, Duncan had been feeling miserable.

He’d already accepted the fact that he wasn’t some kind of protagonist in a grand narrative. He was just a soldier. A competent tank specialist trying to advance through the ranks like thousands of others.

So he didn’t see the reason why he was suddenly facing protagonist-type trials.

Frameups. Tribunals. Political conspiracies involving major noble houses. The threat of maiming or execution for crimes he hadn’t committed.

He’d been settled in his strength. Content with the pace he was making on his path to power. Training consistently. Building his capability. Working with his squad toward mutual advancement.

Until this blockade had pulled up and disrupted everything.

Now he had nothing productive to do. His academy privileges were suspended. His merit point access frozen. His movement restricted to essential activities only.

So he’d decided to clean up his desk. Organize his dormitory. Do something mindless and physical to keep from dwelling on the fact that his entire future was hanging by a thread controlled by people who wanted him gone.

He was sorting through combat training notes when he heard the knock.

Which was not strange in itself—visitors happened. But the timing was odd. It was literally late into the night. And the knock had a firmness to it that suggested an official business rather than a casual social call.

Not something he would expect from any of his squadmates.

Duncan swung the door open and was greeted by two bulky men in academy security uniforms.

"Duncan varn," the first one said without preamble. "Your trial is to begin immediately. Please follow us."

Duncan was shellshocked.

"What? Now? It’s—" He glanced at the time display on his academy bracelet. "It’s nearly midnight. The trial was adjourned pending further investigation. I haven’t received any notification about—"

"It’s an emergency tribunal. Convened under special circumstances. Attendance is mandatory." The second guard stepped closer, positioning himself to block any attempt at closing the door. "We can escort you peacefully or we can use restraints. Your choice."

This was supposed to be an academy. An educational institution operating under Republic law and procedural guidelines.

What kind of sketchy operation were they planning, holding a final trial at this time of night?

Duncan had the sudden urge to flee. Just slam the door, grab his weapon, teleport out through—

No. He couldn’t teleport. That was Bright.

And fleeing would accomplish nothing except confirming his guilt in everyone’s minds.

But he also recognized that these guards weren’t just bulky for intimidation purposes. They had the power to back up their authority. Mid-tier Initiates at minimum, possibly low Adepts. More than sufficient to subdue one suspended student if he resisted.

"Why is it so abrupt?" Duncan asked, trying to buy time to think. "Can I have some time to speak with my friends? To get legal representation or—"

"No." The first guard was already moving into the doorway. "The tribunal is convened. The judges are waiting. Your presence is required now."

Duncan opened his mouth to protest further but was cut off by the second guard’s hand on his shoulder—firm grip that wasn’t quite violent but communicated clear intent.

"Move, or we move you."

Duncan had no real choice.

He followed the guards down the corridor, through empty hallways that should have had students moving about but were conspicuously deserted, toward the administrative wing where tribunals were held.

As he walked, Duncan had the growing feeling that he was heading straight to a guillotine.

Not metaphorically.

Literally. This felt like an execution dressed up as procedure.

And there was nothing he could do to stop it.

-----

Bright had been meeting up with his friends one by one over the past hour, tracking them through his spatial awareness and intercepting them as they moved through the academy.

He didn’t want to give the information he had—the danger sense warnings, the feeling that something catastrophic was imminent—until they were all together.

Adam had been found in the library, researching something in his usual corner. He’d looked up when Bright approached, immediately reading the tension in his posture.

"Something’s wrong," Adam stated rather than asked.

"Yes. We’ll gather at Duncan’s room. Bring whoever you trust."

Bessia had been with Celestine in their shared dormitory, studying together. Bright had knocked, explained briefly, and both had agreed to come. Celestine wasn’t technically part of their squad, but Bright had spent enough time with her in Artifact Refining classes to recognize her value. And she’d defended Duncan at the tribunal. That earned her inclusion.

Mara had been spotted on her way back to her own dormitory after anevening training. Bright had intercepted her in the corridor, explained the gathering, and she’d nodded once before following.

They were meant to converge at Duncan’s room—he was the one with the strictest movement restrictions, so it made sense to meet at his location rather than making him come to them.

The group assembled outside Duncan’s door. Six people total if you counted Duncan.

Bright steadied himself and knocked once.

No answer.

He knocked again, louder.

Still nothing.

Bright’s danger sense continued its humming.

He tried the door which was unlocked and swunged it open to reveal an empty room.

Duncan’s belongings were there. His training equipment. His notes. But no Duncan.

"Where is he?" Mara asked, already scanning the corridor for threats.

Bright closed his eyes, extending his spatial awareness as far as it would reach. Searching for Duncan’s presence anywhere within range.

Nothing.

"He’s not in this building," Bright said, opening his eyes. "Or if he is, he’s beyond my detection range."

Adam was already checking Duncan’s desk, looking for notes or messages that might explain his absence.

"No signs of struggle," Adam observed. "But he left his weapon. He wouldn’t voluntarily go somewhere without his spear."

Bright started to wonder if his danger sense had been specifically warning about Duncan all along. His ability was subjective—it primarily detected threats to himself. But maybe he’d gained a new facet of his fused core’s capability. Maybe the spatial foresight component was expanding to include threats to people he considered important.

Maybe Duncan was in immediate danger and Bright’s instincts had been screaming about it for hours.

But that’s not how danger sense works, a quieter part of his mind insisted. It’s never been that broad before. Why would it change now?

It was true that Duncan was probably in danger—that much seemed obvious given his suspicious absence.

But the hazard that was about to come wasn’t targeting Duncan specifically.

It was something with no conscience. No discrimination. Something meant to reach everybody indiscriminately.

A truth Bright was deluding himself from realizing because focusing on Duncan’s personal crisis was easier than acknowledging the scale of what his danger sense was actually warning about.

"We need to find him," Celestine said quietly. "If he’s been taken somewhere—if the tribunal has been reconvened without proper notification—"

"Then we go to the tribunal chambers," Mara finished. "Now."

Bright nodded, but his danger sense was still screaming.

Not just about Duncan.

About everything.

The academy. The city. The convergence of threats that nobody else seemed to be noticing because they were all focused on individual crises rather than the pattern connecting them.

Dead student. Missing Champions. Tribunal manipulations. Political tensions. Foreign students. Something moving beneath the surface.

Something coming.

Bright pushed the thoughts aside. Focus on what was immediate. Find Duncan. Deal with the tribunal.

Then figure out what his danger sense was actually trying to tell him.

"Let’s move," he said.

The group left Duncan’s empty room and headed toward the administrative wing.

None of them aware that they were already too late to prevent what was coming.

But possibly in time to survive it.

If they were lucky.

If Bright’s danger sense could translate its warnings into actionable intelligence before whatever it was detecting finally manifested.

They moved through empty corridors.

And somewhere in the distance, something malicious and terrible stirred.

Waiting.

Patient.

Inevitable.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​