Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 214— Introspection

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Chapter 214: Chapter 214— Introspection

Bright had the growing feeling that they had been isolated.

Not consciously—nobody had deliberately cut them off from the broader world. But it was a foregone conclusion that came about simply by attending the academy.

They’d been in Central for a long while now. Months. Nearly half a year since leaving Vester. Yet their center of presence was focused mainly on academy grounds. The training halls. The dormitories. The forge workshop where Bright spent most of his free time.

They hadn’t even had the time or leisure to properly explore the most talked-about place in the Republic.

Central was a melting pot of different cultures. People from different walks of life and varying levels of strength came together to form a functioning society. Merchants. Military personnel. Noble house retainers. Commoners seeking opportunity. All coexisting in the Republic’s administrative and cultural heart.

It was also the safest place in the Republic, barring the noble lands controlled directly by great houses.

I mean, who would put their heirs in a school without safety precautions and absolute guarantees of security?

The Republic’s Champions maintained constant watch over Central. Dimensional barriers prevented Crawler manifestation within city limits. Military patrols operated around the clock. The institutional infrastructure was designed to protect the next generation of power from threats both external and internal.

Yet despite that safety—or perhaps because of it—Bright and his squad had remained insular. Academy-focused. Missing the broader context of what Central represented.

That needed to change.

Duncan was still held by his charges. The tribunal case had been adjourned for a later date rather than dismissed, which meant the threat remained. But it was an eye-opener on the way things worked in this place.

And on the urgent need to fast-track Adam’s plan for forming something that solely belonged to them.

An organization. A faction. Something with institutional weight that could counter noble house pressure.

But Bright felt—with the kind of certainty his danger sense usually reserved for immediate physical threats—that the only time an organization like the one he envisioned could truly come about was when he progressed to Adept rank.

Right now, he was an Initiate. A budding artificer with months of forge work under his belt. A damn good combatant who could hold his own against most students his age and many who were older.

At this point, he could even direct a battlefield through his spatial awareness—coordinate squad movements, identify threats before they manifested, provide tactical overview that most commanders couldn’t match.

But that was just about it.

His capability was individual. Personal. It didn’t translate into the kind of power that would let him protect people beyond his immediate combat range.

Bright had thoughts on selling his wares. Items crafted through his Soul Talent. Fused weapons with properties that conventional smithing couldn’t replicate.

He was not unaware of his failings in improving his career prospects. He had his fusion Soul Talent—a one of a kind capability in the Republic. There were multitudes of things he could do with it.

Applications he’d barely explored. Combinations he’d never attempted. The potential was vast.

But he never felt safe enough to try. Not even in the academy.

Because experimentation with fusion required revealing capabilities he wanted kept hidden. Required pushing boundaries in ways that drew attention. Required accepting risks that his danger sense screamed warnings about constantly.

Although everything had been smooth sailing so far—relatively speaking—Bright possessed spatial foresight as part of his merged core ability. And that foresight had been buzzing since he came to Central.

A little sound. A persistent frequency in the back of his awareness.

But that buzz had been increasing lately. Growing in frequency and weight.

It was like an itch he couldn’t scratch. A warning he couldn’t quite interpret. His danger sense operated on instinct and pattern recognition, and the patterns it was detecting suggested... something. Approaching. Building. It was not immediate enough to trigger fight-or-flight responses, but persistent enough to maintain constant low-level tension.

Building his career. Making money. Finding new ways to use his Soul Talent. Researching other facets of power beyond just combat.

These were all things Bright wanted to do. Things he knew he should be doing.

I mean, it wasn’t too long ago that he’d been scrambling by with a chipped weapon in a cannon-fodder army at grim hollow. Grateful just to have functional equipment and enough food to maintain combat readiness. 𝒻𝘳𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝘯𝘰𝑣ℯ𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝘮

The opportunity to think beyond immediate survival—to plan for long-term development—was a luxury he hadn’t possessed months ago.

But that history was also the reason he knew the only thing he could truly rely on was increasing his personal strength.

Money, career, research—those were all things that increased the mass of power. The breadth of what you could influence and control.

But they never affected its density.

The concentrated capability that made you individually dangerous rather than just connected.

Initiates were a dime a dozen. Bright had literally fought an Initiate to death while being a Fledgling himself—admittedly a terrible Initiate whose cores were poorly integrated and whose technique was lacking, but still technically the same rank.

Numbers meant nothing without capability to back them.

He felt he needed to reach Adept rank. This was the threshold where truly disastrous capabilities were produced. Where individual power became sufficient to matter on massive scales.

The path to Adept was long. Most people stayed Initiates their whole lives—some deepening their expertise at that stage, becoming exceptionally skilled within those limitations but never crossing the threshold to the next rank.

Others, through sheer luck or exceptional circumstance, managed the advancement and immediately decimated their lessers through the sheer capability gap.

Bright intended to be in the latter category.

But first, he needed to solve the soul force fragmentation problem that Hendricks had identified. The multiple signatures trying to harmonize. The dissonance that slowed his refinement and threatened to make Adept advancement impossible.

Which brought him back to the same frustrating conclusion: he needed expertise he didn’t have. Resources he couldn’t access. Time he might not possess given the escalating tensions throughout the academy.

Bright stared at his partially-completed weapon designs spread across the forge workshop table and felt the familiar weight of insufficient capability.

He was strong. Competent. Improving.

But not strong enough yet.

Not nearly strong enough for what was coming.

-----

Meanwhile, in a different part of Central, James received a letter through his designated dead drop.

The envelope was unmarked. Anonymous. Indistinguishable from academy correspondence except for the weight—slightly heavier than normal parchment.

He opened it in his dormitory’s privacy, hands only trembling slightly.

The letter was brief, professional and cold.

The letter stated that James’s performance so far had been considered adequate, but that the operational requirements were now being escalated.

He had been provided with a compound—tasteless and odorless—that would induce symptoms resembling a natural illness. The instructions were clear: he was to administer it to the target listed below, preferably during a joint training session or at mealtime where it could be done without attracting attention.

The effects, the letter assured him, were non-lethal but debilitating, expected to incapacitate the victim for roughly a week.

Below the instructions was the name of the target—an Ashmar student James vaguely recognized from occasional encounters in his school students meetups in the dining hall.

The letter further explained that the operation served several strategic objectives, though none of them were detailed.

James was expected to complete the task within five days.

Failure to comply, the message warned, would result in the immediate termination of his family’s financial support.

The letter was signed simply:

—V.M.

James stared at the letter for a long time.

Then at the small vial that had been enclosed. Clear liquid. Looked like water. Probably was mostly water with whatever alchemical compound Valdris’s researchers had developed mixed in at concentrations too low to detect without specialized analysis.

He was being instructed to poison one of his colleagues.

A very sad act.

But Valdris knew what they were doing. They weren’t asking him to target a republic student—that would be too obvious. A dead Republic student would trigger investigations. Security reviews. The kind of scrutiny that exposed operations like James’s.

I mean, the men in suits at the republic weren’t called that for their rashness. They were cold-blooded murderers who killed with pens on paper rather than blades in alleys.

And killing someone from Ashmar? That was an open strategic move.

If the Republic had half the brain it portrayed itself as having, it would recognize immediately that the only party who stood to gain from Ashmar-Republic tensions was Valdris. The excluded nation. The one whose economic warfare depended on making cooperation fail.

But Valdris had planned for that too.

They were muddying the waters deliberately. Creating so many layers of deception and misdirection that nobody could actually tell what was really going on. Multiple operations. Contradictory objectives. False flag accusations that would make everyone suspect everyone else.

Because Valdris had more plans to distribute as time progressed. More operations designed to ensure the Republic’s cooperative initiative—and by extension, its regional dominance—collapsed from internal contradictions.

They had the resources. The patience. The systematic approach to make it happen.

And James was one tool among many being used toward that objective.

He looked at the vial again.

Non-lethal he thought. Just an illness.

Exactly what Valdris wanted.

James closed his eyes and thought about his mother. His siblings. The medical bills and living expenses that Valdris was paying. The contract he’d signed that bound him to this for five more years.

Then he pocketed the vial and began planning how to administer it without getting caught.

Treason was getting easier.

That realization still hurt.

But not enough to stop.

-----

Across Central, in different locations, different calculations were taking place.

Bright contemplating the path to Adept rank and the obstacles blocking it.

James preparing to poison a fellow student for foreign handlers.

Theodore refining his campaign against the outpost recruits despite the setback at Duncan’s tribunal.

Adam building organizational frameworks that assumed cooperation he hadn’t secured.

Mara training with her new Phase Strike core, testing its limits.

Duncan recovering from the psychological impact of nearly being maimed by institutional injustice.

All of them moving forward. All of them unaware of how their individual trajectories were converging toward something none of them could predict.

The exchange program continued.

The political tensions escalated.

And the buzz in Bright’s danger sense grew steadily louder.

Something was coming.

He just didn’t know what yet.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​