Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 193— Thoughts on Structure

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Chapter 193: Chapter 193— Thoughts on Structure

Adam sat in the academy library’s restricted section, ostensibly researching historical military campaigns for his Warfare Tactics elective. In reality, he was thinking about infrastructure.

The way things were versus the way they had to be moving forward.

They were being marginalized. That was clear as day. Equipment reservations mysteriously unavailable. Merit point transactions delayed without explanation. Training partners suddenly too busy to work with outpost recruits. Resource access denied through a thousand small administrative inconveniences that never quite violated explicit rules but accumulated into systematic exclusion.

They couldn’t get certain things needed to allow their stay at Sparkshire to run unimpeded. They had to outsource. Beg favors from neutral students. Pay inflated prices to merchants who recognized desperation. Work twice as hard for half the access their noble-backed peers received automatically.

It was unsustainable.

Adam had been building his network just like he’d done at Vester—cultivating sources, gathering information, cross-referencing reports. But he’d been forced to acknowledge an uncomfortable truth over the past two weeks.

What he’d built wasn’t really a structured organization. It was a gossip club.

Students who noticed things and reported them in exchange for minor favors or social validation. Useful for surface-level intelligence—who was sleeping with whom, which instructor favored which students, what the current noble house feuds looked like from the outside.

But fundamentally unreliable.

Most of his informants weren’t even on the path to power. They were mid-tier students who’d plateau at Initiate rank and wash out into administrative positions after graduation. He could never count on them when things got serious. When actual pressure arrived, they’d scatter to whoever offered better compensation or lower risk.

They were, in the blunt language of an old intelligence manual Adam had read, harlots in the trade. They sold to the highest bidder. No loyalty. Just a transactional relationships that dissolved the moment circumstances shifted.

Although they were able to get low-end information due to their unremarkable presence—nobody guarded their words around forgettable people—they weren’t reliable enough to build anything substantial upon.

Adam closed his military history text and pulled out a blank parchment, sketching organizational diagrams from memory.

He thought about how noble houses were built.

Centralized power structures. Clear hierarchies. A Champion or near-Champion ancestor at the top providing absolute authority. Concentric circles of loyalty radiating outward—family bound by blood, retainers bound by oath, outer affiliates bound by mutual interest.

It worked because the power differential was so extreme that betrayal was suicidal and loyalty was rational.

He sketched another diagram, then crossed it out.

He had to shelve that idea.

The fundamental problem was that all noble houses centered their strength on one absolute power. One overwhelmingly capable individual whose sheer force made the entire structure viable.

And his squad didn’t have that.

Maybe Bright could fill that role eventually. But that was still speculative. Still early. Bright was strong, but he was still only an Initiate. Future potential didn’t create current stability.

And more critically, Bright showed zero interest in being the center of a power structure. He spent his free time at the forge, working on weapon designs, refining technique. Not building alliances. Not cultivating influence.

Adam stared at his crossed-out diagrams.

He didn’t know why, but it wasn’t a bad idea to have some place to fall back to when things went to shit. A structure independent of the squad’s current cohesion. Something he controlled personally, built on firmer foundations than circumstantial friendship.

He was pragmatic. He’d said it before, thought it constantly, lived by it as a core principle. He wasn’t compromised by emotions the way others were. That clarity let him see what most people refused to acknowledge.

Their little squad shindig, their togetherness, was all due to circumstance.

They’d been blooded on the same day. Shown their fangs sharpened on Grim Hollow’s brutality—well, aside from Mara, but she’d proven herself since. They’d survived Vester’s massacre together. Learned to trust each other’s capabilities under fire.

But beneath that shared trauma, they were all on individual journeys toward power.

Every single one of them.

Duncan wanted to be strong enough that nobody could use him as a chess piece again. Mara wanted to prove she wasn’t the weak link. Bessia wanted to keep people alive in a world designed to kill them. Bright wanted... whatever drove someone like him to keep pushing toward a higher rank despite the cost.

And Adam wanted control. Information. The ability to see patterns before they manifested and redirect them toward outcomes he preferred.

They’d been domesticated a bit by all the political and social problems the Republic dropped on their heads. The academy had blunted some of their edge, taught them to navigate bureaucracy instead of just killing their way through obstacles.

But they were still soldiers first and foremost.

And soldiers understood that alliances were tactical. Useful. Not eternal.

Adam folded his diagrams and tucked them into his notes.

He’d keep building his network. But he’d do it differently. Stop relying on gossip club informants and start recruiting people with actual capability. Students who were on the path to power but lacked the resources or connections to advance at optimal speed.

Offer them what the noble houses offered—resources, information, tactical support—but with more honest terms. No blood oaths. No family obligations. Just clear exchanges of value.

And when he finally absorbed that Mind Control core...

Well.

That would change the mathematics entirely.

-----

Duncan sat in his dormitory, staring at the sealed letter from House Corvin.

He’d been staring at it for twenty minutes.

The letter sat on his desk like an accusation.

Marcus Thale’s offer had been professional. Respectful, even. House Corvin recognized Duncan’s potential and wanted to invest in it. Five-year contract. Resources. Training opportunities. Access to rare cores and elite instructors that the academy’s merit system couldn’t match.

All it cost was loyalty.

Service to House Corvin’s interests. Wearing their colors. Attending their social functions. Providing "occasional assistance" with security concerns—a polite euphemism for being their enforcer when situations required muscle.

Duncan picked up the letter, feeling the weight of the quality parchment, the raised texture of House Corvin’s seal.

It was a real offer. They genuinely wanted him.

And part of him—the part that was tired of fighting uphill battles against noble house exclusion, tired of watching his squadmates struggle for resources that noble students received automatically—wanted to accept.

But another part kept thinking about the others he saw.

Others with noble backing. People who’d served their Houses faithfully and ended up with their throats slit because their master had pointed them at the wrong target.

Duncan wasn’t them. He was smarter, stronger, more aware of how these games worked.

But the parallel was uncomfortable.

He set the letter down and thought about what acceptance would mean.

House Corvin would invest in his advancement. Accelerate his path from Initiate to Adept. Give him access to the kind of resources that could transform him from a competent tank into an actual Elite prospect.

But they’d also own him. For five years minimum, possibly longer if the contract included renewal clauses—which they always did.

And when House Corvin’s interests conflicted with his squad’s interests, he’d have to choose. Every time. And the contract would make that choice for him.

Duncan realized he’d made his decision.

He picked up the letter one final time, walked to the dormitory’s small fireplace, and dropped it into the flames.

House Corvin’s seal blackened and curled. The quality parchment caught quickly, consumed by fire that didn’t care about political implications or future regrets.

He watched it burn completely before returning to his desk.

It hurt a bit that they’d felt the need to play him like a chess piece. Like he was a resource to be acquired rather than a person making his own choices.

But he’d rather stick with the growing chicken than the conniving snake.

At least the chicken had a chance of turning into a dragon.

The mixed metaphor didn’t matter as the point stood.

Duncan pulled out his Combat Fundamentals notes and forced himself to focus on tomorrow’s training instead of the opportunity he’d just incinerated.

He didn’t regret it.

Not yet.

-----

Mara submitted her deployment request form and waited for the preceding adept’s inevitable objection.

It came within the hour.

"You’re pushing too hard." The adept cornered her outside the Combat Fundamentals classroom, deployment form in hand. "Three Tier 2 Shroud deployments in three weeks. All solo operations. All high-risk zones. What are you trying to prove?"

"I’m trying to advance," Mara said flatly, her Clear Mind core filtering emotion out of her voice. "I’m still a Fledgling while everyone in has moved past me. I need a breakthrough, and breakthrough moments happen under pressure."

"Breakthrough moments also happen when you’re properly prepared." Vex’s tone was sharp. "Not through desperation deployments more likely to get you killed than advanced."

"With respect, Instructor, I don’t have time for the conventional path."

Mara met their eyes without flinching. She’d rehearsed this conversation, anticipated the objections, prepared responses that were honest without being vulnerable.

The adept studied her for a long moment. "You’re aware that forced advancement through repeated trauma doesn’t work reliably."

"I’m aware. But waiting for a perfect circumstances doesn’t work either when you’re being systematically denied access to those circumstances." Mara gestured to the deployment form. "I’m not being reckless. I know my limits. I’m just testing them more aggressively than conventional students would."

"Conventional students value survival over advancement timelines."

"Conventional students didn’t watch their outpost fall and then spend months feeling like dead weight while their surviving squadmates moved forward."

That landed.

The adept’s expression shifted slightly—not sympathy, but understanding. Recognition that the girl she converses with wasn’t just chasing power for ego. She was trying to stop being a liability.

"Fine," the adept said eventually. "Request approved. But if you come back injured for the third consecutive deployment, I’m mandating a two-week recovery period regardless of your protests."

"Understood. Thank you, Instructor."

Mara left before they could reconsider.

-----

The Tier 2 Shroud deployment was exactly as brutal as she’d anticipated.

Solo operations meant no backup. No tactical support. No healer standing by if things deteriorated. Just Mara, her twin daggers, her Clear Mind core, and whatever Crawlers the corrupted dimension manifested in her vicinity.

She’d deliberately requested a high-activity zone. Areas where Crawler density was elevated, where the Shroud pressed harder against reality’s boundaries.

Dangerous.

But rich with breakthrough potential.

The deployment timer gave her six hours. She intended to use every second.

The first Crawler died in forty seconds. A Scorpion variant that was aggressive but predictable. Her daggers found the gaps in its carapace with technical precision that would have impressed instructors if anyone had been watching.

The second and third attacked simultaneously. Spider-forms coordinating with rudimentary pack tactics.

Mara killed the first with a perfect strike to its neural cluster. The second landed a hit before dying—claws raking her shoulder, drawing blood, triggering pain responses her Clear Mind core immediately filtered into tactical data.

She killed it with her off-hand dagger, compensating for the shoulder wound with technique rather than strength.

Four hours into deployment, she’d killed eleven Crawlers and sustained three injuries. None serious enough to warrant extraction. All painful enough to remind her she was operating at her absolute limits.

Her soul force churned with turbulent energy that suggested proximity to something. Breakthrough, collapse, or just exhaustion—she couldn’t distinguish which.

She kept pushing.

The twelfth Crawler was different.

Larger. A Centipede variant with crystalline armor segments that deflected her initial strikes.

Mara should have retreated.

She engaged instead.

The fight was vicious. The centipede’s armor was too dense for easy penetration. She had to target joints, gaps, vulnerable segments—all while avoiding mandibles that could crush her torso.

Her Clear Mind core kept her functional. Analyzing patterns. Predicting movements. Filtering fear into data.

But it wasn’t enough.

The centipede caught her with a sweeping strike that sent her crashing into collapsed building remnants. Impact and pain flooded her system with possibly cracked ribs.

She struggled upright, blood trickling from a cut above her eye.

The centipede advanced.

And Mara felt something shift inside her.

It wasn’t a breakthrough not yet.

But proximity to breakthrough. The sensation of standing at a threshold, knowing one more push might be enough to cross it.

She gripped her daggers tighter.

The centipede lunged.

Mara moved.

She felt closer than ever before.

Closer to something that would finally let her stop being the squad’s weakest link.

The centipede’s mandibles snapped inches from her torso.

She felt the threshold calling.

Soon.

Very soon.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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