Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 177—Political Currents

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Chapter 177: Chapter 177—Political Currents

Aldric Thorne sat in his private office—a space that reflected decades of military service through accumulated scars rather than decorative choices, walls lined with tactical maps and combat documentation instead of noble house portraits or Academy propaganda. The room smelled faintly of old paper, metal, and the sharp antiseptic tang that never quite left men who had spent too many years near field hospitals and forward command posts. Every surface had a purpose. Every object had earned its place.

The desk before him was scarred by heat marks and shallow gouges, the remnants of moments when restraint had slipped and reports had been read one time too many. A cracked corner bore the imprint of a gauntlet strike from years ago—back when he’d still believed anger could substitute for authority. He hadn’t bothered to replace it. The damage was a reminder, and Aldric valued reminders more than comforts.

He leaned back in his chair, joints protesting quietly, eyes tracing a familiar route across the largest map on the eastern wall. The borders had been redrawn so many times that the original ink was barely visible beneath layers of correction and annotation. Victories. Retreats. Compromises dressed up as strategic withdrawals. Each mark corresponded to faces he no longer tried to remember individually, because remembering all of them would make the job impossible.

A sealed letter from the Republic Senate sat on his desk like a diplomatic explosive waiting for detonation.

He’d recognized the seal immediately—the Senate’s official insignia, a priority routing that demanded immediate attention.

Here we go, Thorne thought, breaking the seal with deliberate care. Another political maneuver requiring Academy participation.

The letter’s contents confirmed his cynicism:

REPUBLIC SENATE DIRECTIVE - JOINT EDUCATIONAL INITIATIVE

Thorne,

The Senate has established a diplomatic educational exchange program with the Federated Kingdoms of Ashmar and Theocracy of Solhaven. Selected candidates from both nations will attend Sparkshire Academy for a semester-long program beginning next month. Simultaneously, select Sparkshire students will participate in reciprocal exchanges at the partner institutions.

This initiative demonstrates the Republic’s commitment to regional cooperation and cultural understanding. Educational exchange as we all know strengthens bonds between nations, promotes mutual benefit, and develops future leadership capable of addressing shared challenges.

The Academy administration will coordinate logistics, curriculum integration,and security protocols as the Senate expects full cooperation in making this historic program successful.

Detailed implementation guidelines attached.

For the Republic’s continued prosperity,

Senate Committee on External Relations

Thorne read the letter twice, his enhanced perception detecting everything the clinical language didn’t explicitly state.

I smell Republic’s bullshit all over again, Thorne thought with weary recognition.

He pulled up the attached implementation guidelines—forty pages of bureaucratic procedure engineered to look neutral, benevolent, and inevitable. Aldric didn’t read them linearly. He never had. Instead, his eyes skipped ahead, hunting for pressure points: authority chains, emergency clauses, discretionary powers quietly embedded where only people trained to look for ambushes would notice them.

There it was. Page twelve. Subsection C, paragraph four.

Temporary oversight authority granted to Republic liaisons in the event of cross-jurisdictional security concerns.

He let out a low, humorless breath.

"Temporary," he muttered, the word tasting like rust. Temporary occupations. Temporary measures. Temporary sacrifices. He’d buried enough soldiers under that word to know it never meant what it claimed.

The guidelines framed the program as an exchange—bright young minds learning cooperation, building bridges for a peaceful future. What they actually created was access. Physical access to the Academy facilities. Administrative access to internal data flows. Social access to cadets who hadn’t yet learned the difference between diplomacy and manipulation.

Students were easier to shape than officers. Easier to pressure. Easier to lose. 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦

Thorne flipped the slate face-down and stood, moving toward the window despite knowing exactly what waited beyond it. The Academy grounds spread out below: training fields marked with fresh scorch lines, squads drilling in precise formations, instructors pacing with the quiet menace of professionals who no longer needed to raise their voices. Young men and women who still believed the system worked the way the manuals described.

He rested a hand against the reinforced glass. Once, long ago, he’d believed that too.

The Republic had always preferred indirect warfare. If they couldn’t control a battlefield, they infiltrated institutions. If they couldn’t defeat an army, they undermined the next generation that would lead it. Wars were expensive. Influence was not.

It wasn’t lost on him that Ashmar and Solhaven had received formal invitations while Valdris had been conspicuously excluded.

The omission was too precise to be accidental.

A classic divide-and-conquer maneuver, dressed up as diplomatic outreach. By engaging two of the three powers, the Republic achieved several objectives at once: it fostered quiet suspicion toward the third, invited Ashmar and Solhaven to question Valdris’s reliability, and framed the exclusion not as hostility but as absence—a subtle suggestion that Valdris had failed to meet some unstated standard.

All while presenting itself as generous. Open. Reasonable.

The Republic never needed to accuse. It merely invited—and let the implications do the work.

The letter itself was meticulous in its details, numbers laid out with the precision of a ledger rather than the warmth of an academic welcome. Twenty candidates from Ashmar. Fifteen from Solhaven. Thirty-five foreign students in total, carefully balanced, carefully limited, all slated for integration into Sparkshire’s first- and second-year programs.

Not enough to threaten the internal cohesion. Enough to signal trust.

The structure was intentional. Younger cohorts were more malleable, more adaptable, less entrenched in national doctrine. They would learn Republic standards early, absorb Republic norms, form Republic friendships. By the time they returned home—if they returned home—they would carry Sparkshire’s influence with them as naturally as an accent.

And Valdris?

Valdris would see the numbers. See the invitations. See the absence of its own crest stamped in wax.

And wonder what story Ashmar and Solhaven were being told behind closed doors.

The directive didn’t stop at inbound cooperation. It outlined a reciprocal exchange.

Select Sparkshire students would be dispatched to the partner institutions—embedded within Ashmar and Solhaven academies, exposed to alternative doctrines, divergent training philosophies, and local command cultures. Officially, it was framed as educational broadening. Cross-pollination of ideas. Mutual respect through shared hardship.

Unofficially, it was obvious what role they were meant to serve.

Republic representatives.

Proof of concept. Living demonstrations of Sparkshire’s superiority—its training rigor, its combat readiness, its disciplined excellence. Students who would excel in foreign environments and return with glowing assessments, reinforcing the narrative that the Republic didn’t merely cooperate—it led.

Thorne’s jaw tightened as he read.

And if something goes wrong? he wondered.

If foreign candidates were injured during the Academy deployments—operations never designed with outsiders in mind. If doctrinal clashes turned hostile. If long-standing political tensions between Ashmar and Solhaven bled into the training exercises, barracks rivalries, or field assignments where live cores and lethal force were not theoretical risks but daily realities.

If a student died.

If a confrontation escalated beyond containment.

If this carefully worded "cooperative program" became the spark for an incident no one could quietly bury.

Academy bears responsibility, Thorne thought grimly. Academy takes the blame.

Sparkshire’s crest would be on the reports. Its instructors named in the inquiries. Its deployment protocols dissected by committees that had never set foot in the Shroud. The Academy’s reputation—earned through decades of uncompromising standards and operational success—would absorb the damage.

Meanwhile, the Senate would maintain immaculate distance.

They would praise the vision if the program succeeded. Cite it as evidence of an enlightened governance, of diplomatic foresight, of the Republic’s moral authority. And if it failed? If blood was spilled or alliances strained?

They would express regret.

Concern.

Shock at the unforeseen complications.

Plausible deniability, Thorne thought. Always.

That was how these schemes worked. Institutions absorbed risk. Individuals on the ground bore consequences. The Senate claimed credit for victories and treated failures as administrative missteps committed by subordinates who "should have known better."

Thorne exhaled slowly and reached for his stylus.

He drafted a preliminary response—measured, professional, and carefully restrained. He acknowledged receipt of the directive. Expressed willingness to comply. Then, line by line, he requested clarification on operational boundaries, liability assignments, medical authority during joint deployments, disciplinary jurisdiction, and extraction protocols.

He flagged potential complications the Senate’s optimistic planning had conveniently ignored.

Not in defiance.

Not yet.

But on record.

Because if this cooperation turned into a catastrophe, Thorne intended to make sure no one could later claim the risks had been invisible.

——-

Hey everyone—quick heads-up and a little honesty moment.

Over the next few weeks, my update frequency is going to dip a bit. I’ve got some important exams coming up, and they need my full focus for a short while. As much as I love writing and sharing new Chapters with you, trying to juggle intense study schedules and consistent updates would end up hurting both

This isn’t a pause born of burnout or lost interest. If anything, it’s the opposite. I care enough about this story (and about you as readers) to step back briefly, handle what I need to handle, and come back with the same energy, clarity, and consistency you’re used to.

Thank you for your patience, your support, and for sticking with me through this quieter stretch. I’ll still be around, just a little less active.

See you soon, and wish me luck 💙📚

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