Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 189— Culture Shocks
The cultural friction became apparent during the first morning assembly.
All students gathered in the main courtyard at 0500 for what Headmaster Kelvan called "patriotic conditioning." The Sparkshire students exchanged confused glances as Ashmar students snapped to attention with military precision.
Kelvan stood on an elevated platform, the Federation’s banner—a silver sword crossed with a wheat sheaf on a field of deep blue—hanging behind him.
"Students of Crownspire," he began, his voice carrying across the silent courtyard. "What is our purpose?"
The Ashmar students responded in perfect unison: "To defend humanity through strength and sacrifice."
"What is our legacy?"
"The blood of our ancestors who died standing rather than kneeling."
"What is our future?"
"Victory or death in service to the Federation."
The call-and-response continued for ten minutes—a recitation of Ashmar’s military history, its independence from the Republic, its proud refusal to bend to external pressure.
The Sparkshire students stood awkwardly silent throughout.
When it finally concluded, Kelvan’s gaze swept across the foreign students with barely concealed contempt.
Marcus bristled. Arjun remained carefully neutral. Silas simply observed.
After the assembly, the first classes began.
"Combat Philosophy" was taught by an Adept named Rhylan Kent—a scarred veteran who’d lost his left arm in a Tier 4 Shroud breach and had it replaced with an alchemical prosthetic that looked more weapon than limb.
"Others would teaches you to survive," Adept Kent said, pacing in front of the assembled students. "We teach you to win. There’s a difference. Survival is about minimizing risk, retreating when necessary, accepting acceptable losses."
He slammed his prosthetic arm against his desk, the impact echoing through the classroom.
"Victory requires sacrifice. It requires accepting that some battles can’t be won without casualties. It requires understanding that your life is worth less than the objective."
One of the Sparkshire students—a second-year girl named Lyra—raised her hand. "Isn’t that just glorifying unnecessary death?"
The classroom went silent.
Adept Kent turned to her slowly. "Is defending your homeland unnecessary? Is protecting your fellow soldiers unnecessary? Is refusing to surrender territory to Crawlers unnecessary?"
"That’s not what I—"
"The Republic’s problem," Kent interrupted, "is that you’ve made peace with managed losses. You accept Crawler incursions as inevitable. You build walls and wait for them to come." He moved closer to Lyra, looming. "We don’t accept incursions. We hunt them. We push into the Shroud and kill Monarchs before they can organize attacks. And yes, sometimes that costs lives. But it saves more lives than your defensive cowardice ever will."
Lyra’s jaw tightened, but she didn’t respond.
Silas watched the exchange with detached interest. This was propaganda, obviously. Ashmar’s aggressive Shroud tactics did result in higher casualty rates—that was documented fact. But the propaganda was effective. The Ashmar students believed it completely.
That belief could be exploited.
The rest of the day followed similar patterns. Every class, every instructor, every casual conversation reinforced the same message: Ashmar is strong because it refuses to compromise. The Republic is weak because it prioritizes survival over victory.
By evening, several Sparkshire students were visibly angry.
Marcus cornered Silas in the mess hall. "Are you hearing this shit? They’re basically calling us cowards."
"They are calling us cowards," Silas corrected. "Implicitly, but consistently."
"And you’re just... fine with that?"
Silas considered the question while taking a measured bite of the surprisingly decent stew they’d been served. "Being offended serves no purpose. Understanding why they believe what they believe is more useful."
"They believe it because they’re indoctrinated nationalist zealots," Marcus snapped.
"Exactly." Silas set down his spoon. "Which means their worldview has predictable pressure points. Exploit those, and you can manipulate the outcomes."
Marcus stared at him. "You’re talking about some bullshit psychological warfare against our host nation."
"I’m talking about surviving this six months in a culture that resents our presence." Silas returned to his meal. "Do whatever you want. But I’m not planning to spend half a year being insulted without gaining something from the experience."
Marcus walked away, disgust evident in his posture.
Silas didn’t care.
He had more important things to consider.
-----
Fifteen hundred kilometers southeast, the Sparkshire students deployed to Solhaven were experiencing a different kind of culture shock.
Lyanna keer stood in the Sacred Heart Academy’s central chapel, watching the morning prayer with analytical detachment.
The Solhaven students knelt in perfect rows, heads bowed, reciting devotions to the Great One in harmonized chants that echoed through the vaulted space. Incense burned in ornate censers. Stained glass windows depicting the Great One’s sacrifice cast colored light across the assembled faithful.
It was beautiful.
It was also deeply alien.
The Republic acknowledged the Great One’s existence—the titan whose death had created the Shroud was a historical fact. But the Republic treated it as a catastrophic event to be mitigated, not a divine sacrifice to be worshipped.
Solhaven had built an entire theology around it.
The head priest—a woman named Mother Serana who also served as Sacred Heart’s Headmistress—led the morning prayers with absolute conviction. "The Great One gave its life so that humanity might endure. We honor that sacrifice through devotion, through discipline, through service to those who cannot protect themselves."
The students responded in unison: "We are the Great One’s hands, doing the work it can no longer do."
Lyanna felt profoundly uncomfortable.
She wasn’t religious. Most Republic citizens weren’t—it was hard to maintain faith in divine benevolence when Crawlers spawned from corrupted dimensions to eat people. But she could at least understand the function of religion. Social cohesion. Moral framework. Comfort in the face of existential horror.
What she didn’t understand was the intensity.
These students didn’t just believe. They knew. With absolute certainty. And that certainty made them simultaneously compassionate and inflexible.
After prayers concluded, Lyanna approached one of her assigned guides—a second-year girl named Elara who’d been nothing but kind since the Sparkshire students’ arrival.
"Can I ask you something?" Lyanna said carefully.
"Of course." Elara smiled warmly. "What troubles you?"
"The prayers. The devotion. Do you really believe the Great One’s death was purposeful? That it chose to sacrifice itself?"
Elara’s smile didn’t waver. "I don’t believe it. I know it. The Great One saw humanity’s future—saw the Crawlers that would emerge from the Shroud’s creation—and chose to die so we would have the tools to survive."
"But how do you know that? It could have been an accident. A cosmic catastrophe without intention."
"Faith isn’t about proof," Elara said gently. "It’s about trust. Trusting that even in tragedy, there’s purpose. That suffering has meaning." She touched Lyanna’s shoulder. "The Republic doesn’t teach that, does it?"
"The Republic teaches pragmatism."
"Pragmatism without faith is just despair with better organization."
Lyanna had no response to that.
The rest of the day reinforced the pattern. Every class integrated theology with practical training. Combat instruction included prayers before sparring. Soul force refinement was taught as "communing with the Great One’s residual essence." Even artifact crafting was framed as "honoring the Great One’s gift of cores."
It was pervasive. Inescapable.
And deeply effective at creating social cohesion.
The Solhaven students moved with unified purpose that Sparkshire’s factional conflicts could never achieve. They genuinely cared about each other—not as tactical assets but as fellow believers in a shared sacred mission.
Lyanna found herself envying that certainty even as she rejected its foundations.
-----
Back in Ashmar, Silas lay awake in his own dormitory, listening to Kael’s steady breathing.
He’d survived the first day.
Now came the real work.
Understanding Crownspire’s power structure. Identifying exploitable individuals. Building relationships that could be leveraged later.
And most importantly—learning everything he could about Ashmar’s military tactics, core integration techniques, and political vulnerabilities.
Information he could sell.
Not to Ashmar. Not to the Republic.
To whoever paid the most.
Silas smiled in the darkness.
Six months was plenty of time and he had plans to use it wisely.







