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Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 173— External Pressure
News of the twenty-three deaths moved through the Republic with merciless efficiency.
Academy notices reached families before rumors did with official seals, clinical language and precise timestamps. There was no space for disbelief to breathe before grief arrived behind it.
Names began circulating through noble houses, trade districts, and frontier estates. Anger followed. Then silence.
On a modest estate along the Republic’s eastern frontier, Gregor’s father read the notification twice before the words settled into something real.
His hands shook. Not violently — just enough to make the parchment whisper.
Combat casualty.
Academy deployment.
Body to be returned for burial.
For years, he had worn the stillness of a professional servant like armor. Now it cracked without sound.
My son.
He lowered himself into a chair he did not remember sitting in.
I sent him there to climb higher than I ever could. To trade livery for a uniform. To be more than a butler’s son.
He had believed in the Academy with the desperate faith of the powerless — not because it was kind, but because it was the only ladder tall enough.
And although he wasn’t a man with steady principles he still cared for his son deeply, lobbying the might of his employers to get him to sparkshire.
I gave him to the Republic so it could make him into something greater.
The Republic had returned him as cargo.
There would be no inquiry. No formal protest. No sternly worded demands carried by family crests.
He had no crest.
Just grief, he realized. Grief that matters entirely to me and not at all to the machinery that processed his death.
He pictured the clerks. The forms. The stamp that turned a boy into an acceptable loss.
This is what the system is for people like us. We serve. We hope. We sacrifice quietly.
His shoulders folded inward. 𝑓𝓇𝘦ℯ𝘸𝘦𝑏𝓃𝑜𝘷ℯ𝑙.𝑐𝑜𝓂
And when hope dies, we bury it without making trouble.
He closed his eyes.
So I will bury my son. I will mourn. And tomorrow I will return to work — because men in my position do not get alternatives.
In the stone halls of House Harrow, the same notice landed on a polished desk.
Lady Harrow read it standing. Lord Harrow read it seated. Neither looked at the other at first.
"Twenty-three," she said, voice tight enough to cut. "Twenty-three candidates who passed selection. Twenty-three who survived months of training. Dead in what they call a controlled exercise."
Lord Harrow exhaled slowly. Grief made him colder, not louder.
"Cedric was never a warrior," he said. "We knew the risk. We hoped discipline would forge something in him."
"And now he’s dead," she replied. "And they write to us like he was inventory."
"What would you have them do? The Shroud is not a garden. We sent him to war training and expected safety."
"I want accountability."
The word hung heavy.
"I want to know if this was failure — of planning, of oversight, of command. I want them to feel that losing our son costs them something."
Lord Harrow met her eyes then. "Then we have to apply pressure. Senate petitions. Formal inquiries. Other families will do the same."
But we are a minor house, she thought. Respected locally. Meaningless at the center.
Still, she sat and began to write.
Letters to the Senate. Demands for investigations in the academy. Requests for casualty breakdowns and operational justifications. Coordination with other bereaved parents.
The more she researched, the colder she became.
This had happened before.
Every year, deployments. Every year, losses. Every year, outrage. Every year, statements, reviews, minor procedural adjustments.
Nothing fundamental changed.
Students die in Sparkshire, she realized. That is not a failure. That is the model.
Her pen paused.
My complaints will become part of a ritual. Grief translated into paperwork. Anger absorbed by process.
She kept writing anyway.
Because if I don’t try, then Cedric is only
just a number.
But beneath the motion of ink lived a quieter truth:
We are not powerful enough to force change. Only powerful enough to be heard, briefly.
Across the Republic, twenty-three households broke in twenty-three different ways.
Some called in favors. Some wrote speeches. Some locked doors and wept where no one could see.
And in Sparkshire, the Academy administration moved with practiced precision.
Condolence letters. Official explanations. Carefully balanced phrases.
We regret every loss.
Candidate safety remains our priority.
Shroud deployment carries inherent risk that cannot be eliminated without compromising training effectiveness.
The language had been honed over decades.
Your child’s sacrifice contributes to the Republic’s defense.
Inside the administrative wing, no one celebrated the deaths.
They simply categorized them.
This happens every year, the senior staff knew. Pressure rises. Statements are issued. Investigations are opened where politically useful.
Reforms would follow — visible ones. Additional oversight committees. Revised safety briefings. Perhaps adjusted deployment ratios.
Nothing that altered the core equation.
Because the equation was simple.
Better to lose candidates in training
than soldiers in real war.
Better to discover weakness in a controlled horror
than during a strategic collapse.
It was a brutal logic. It was also the foundation of the Academy.
Twenty-three dead candidates were a tragedy.
They were also, from an institutional perspective, within acceptable bounds.
No official ever said that aloud.
They did not need to.
The notices were sent.
The bodies prepared for transport.
The complaints filed.
The responses issued.
Grief burned hot in homes that the Republic would never see.
And the system continued.
Because changing it would mean abandoning the mission those twenty-three deaths had served.
That was the truth beneath the condolences.
The Academy endured.
Training continued.
The next deployment approached.
One family at a time, the price was paid.
Some understood.
Most did not.
None had been able to refuse.
That was military education.
That was the cost of defense.
And the Republic kept paying it —
in sons,
in daughters,
in quiet funerals far from the halls where the decisions were made.
Until something changed.
Or until there was no one left to train.







