Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 198— Silas’ Perspective
In Ashmar, Silas felt the weight of Ashmar’s singular focus pressing down on him like atmospheric pressure at ocean depth.
Everything here was about combat.
The academy’s architecture reflected it—no art galleries, no libraries worth the name, no recreational spaces. Just training halls. Sparring rings. Armories. Meditation chambers designed specifically for combat-focused soul force refinement.
Even the dining hall felt militant. Students ate in assigned blocks by year and specialization. Conversations centered on technique, tactics, recent Shroud deployments. Nobody discussed philosophy or history beyond what was tactically relevant.
It was a stark contrast to the Republic.
Sparkshire had breadth. Arts. History. Political theory. Combat was central, obviously—survival demanded it—but students were expected to be more than just weapons. The Republic wanted soldiers who could think strategically, navigate politics, understand the broader context of their actions.
Ashmar wanted fighters.
Pure. Focused and uncomplicated.
Like being trained by a brute seasoned veteran versus a clinical technique-inspired instructor. Both approaches produced capable combatants, but the philosophy underneath was fundamentally different.
Silas could appreciate the efficiency. No wasted motion. No resources devoted to "unnecessary" education. Just relentless cultivation of martial capability.
But it also felt suffocating.
For the entire time he’d been in Ashmar— weeks now—he’d felt like he was sitting on pin pricks. Being stirred in a boiling pot as the temperature gradually increased. Constant low-level tension that never quite resolved into open conflict but never fully dissipated either.
The Ashmar students resented the Republic’s presence. That was obvious from day one. They viewed the exchange program as political theater—their government forcing them to host representatives from a nation they considered arrogant and overvalued.
The Republic students felt the hostility. Responded with either defensive aggression or careful neutrality.
And Silas... observed.
Because something was wrong.
There hadn’t been any directive from Republic authorities. Not for him, not for any of the other Sparkshire students deployed here. They’d been told to "participate in the exchange program" with no specific objectives, no reporting requirements, no strategic guidance.
Just participate.
A blind man could smell shit even if he couldn’t see it.
Silas wasn’t blind.
During the first week in Ashmar, he’d tried prying information from his fellow Republic students. Subtle questions. Casual conversation. Testing whether anyone had received instructions he hadn’t.
It hadn’t gone well.
He wasn’t the welcoming type. Never had been. Eye candy for certain demographics—he’d noticed the appreciative looks from some Ashmar students who found the "dangerous loner" aesthetic attractive—but disturbingly awkward for others who couldn’t parse whether he was genuinely antisocial or just performing aloofness.
The other Republic students had been defensive when he’d probed. Suspicious of his motives. Unwilling to share whatever private directives they might have received.
Or, more likely, they genuinely hadn’t received any directives either.
From what Silas had inferred through observation and careful listening, most of the students sent to Ashmar weren’t politically connected. No major noble house backing. No military families with influence in the Senate.
They were expendable pieces. Sacrificial pawns deployed to satisfy diplomatic requirements without risking anyone the Republic actually valued.
That realization had settled into Silas’s consciousness like cold certainty.
They’d been abandoned to whatever Ashmar chose to do with them.
Not maliciously. Just pragmatically. The Senate had prioritized protecting valuable assets—students from major houses, promising candidates with potential, anyone whose loss would create political complications.
And sent everyone else to Ashmar.
Silas found he wasn’t particularly bothered by it.
He’d never expected institutional support. Had learned at Vester that organizations used people as resources and discarded them when convenient. This was just another iteration of that reality.
The question was what to do about it.
-----
Arjun Hagar wasn’t interested in political subtlety.
Silas had recognized that within days of arrival. The House Hagar first-year was a pure combat specialist. Obsessed with his sword the way some people were obsessed with religion or romance.
Training from dawn until his muscles gave out. Then meditation to refine soul force. Then more training once he’d recovered enough to stand.
It was maniacal. Impressive. Limiting.
Close-mindedness, Silas had learned, was the easiest trait to exploit. People who narrowed their focus to a single priority became predictable. Their decision-making followed obvious patterns. Their vulnerabilities were structural rather than situational.
Personal power was important—obviously. Silas would never dispute that. But it wasn’t the only facet of power that mattered.
Presence. Connection. Money. Information. Social capital.
These were force multipliers. They amplified base personal capability in ways that raw combat strength couldn’t replicate.
Arjun understood none of this.
He only understood the sword.
Which meant he was simultaneously dangerous and manageable. Dangerous because his combat capability was legitimate—Silas had watched him spar, had seen the technical precision and physical power that marked someone on the path to Elite rank. Manageable because his motivations were transparent.
Take his minor noble family on a path to glory through martial achievement.
Everything else was secondary.
Silas could work with that.
-----
They’d had their first real conversation three weeks into the deployment.
Silas had been observing an Ashmar advanced combat class—open attendance, part of the cultural exchange expectations—when Arjun had approached him after the session concluded.
"You’re Drey right. The spooky assassin from Sparkshire."
"That’s what my classification says." Silas kept his tone neutral.
"You know I just can’t read you." Arjun said it bluntly, without social preamble. "Some people broadcast their capability actively but in your case it’s just like a sheathed blade. I really can’t pin it but my instinct says you’re dangerous."
"Your instinct would be correct."
"I want to test my blade against you."
Silas studied him. There was no hostility in the abrupt request. Just a genuine martial curiosity. The kind of person who measured worth through combat because combat was the only language he fully understood.
"Why?"
"Because I need to know where I stand. It’s as simple as that."
Honest and direct.
Silas appreciated it in the same way he appreciated well-maintained weapons. Functional simplicity had value.
"You’d probably win," Silas said. "In direct combat. You’re stronger, faster, better trained in conventional techniques. Your cores are optimized for sustained engagement."
Arjun’s expression shifted to something between satisfaction and disappointment. "Then why does my sword instinct tell me you’re more dangerous than your capabilities suggest?"
"Because direct combat isn’t the only kind of danger." Silas gestured vaguely to the surrounding academy. "You could beat me in a sanctioned duel. But if I wanted you dead without anyone knowing who killed you, you’d be dead within a week. That’s the difference between our specializations."
It was more honest than Silas usually allowed himself to be.
But something about Arjun’s straightforward nature made pretense feel unnecessary.
The House Hagar student considered this for a long moment. "That’s... unsettling."
"Most people find infiltration specialists unsettling."
"But you’re telling me this. Warning me."
"Because you’re not my enemy. You’re just someone trying to advance through the path you understand best." Silas allowed a slight smile. "And because honestly, it’s refreshing to talk to someone who isn’t playing three layers of political games with every conversation."
"I don’t understand political games." Arjun said it without shame. "My family thinks it’s a weakness. They’re probably right."
"It is a weakness," Silas agreed. "But it’s also a kind of strength. You can’t be manipulated through political leverage because you genuinely don’t care about it. That makes you predictable, but it also makes you reliable. People know what you want and what you’ll do to get it."
"Is that a compliment?"
"It’s an observation."
They’d talked for another hour after that. Not quite friendship—Silas didn’t do friendship in any conventional sense. But something like mutual professional respect.
Arjun had started seeking him out after training sessions. Brief conversations. Sometimes about combat theory. Sometimes about the political dynamics Arjun didn’t understand but was slowly becoming aware of.
"The exchange program isn’t really about education, is it?" Arjun had asked last week.
"No."
"It’s intelligence gathering. Political maneuvering. Testing how our nations interact under controlled conditions."
"Yes."
"That’s..." Arjun had struggled to articulate his frustration. "Wasteful. We could be training instead of playing diplomatic games."
"Welcome to institutional politics," Silas had said dryly. "Where the actual objectives are never the stated objectives, and competent soldiers get used as chess pieces by people who’ve never held a weapon."
Arjun had been quiet for a moment. "You sound angry."
"I’m pragmatic. Anger requires emotional investment I don’t maintain."
"That sounds lonely."
It was.
But Silas didn’t say that.
-----
Weeks into the deployment, Silas had a reasonably clear picture of Ashmar’s internal dynamics.
A rigid hierarchy. Combat capability as primary currency. Intense nationalist pride that bordered on xenophobia. Genuine belief that Ashmar’s aggressive Shroud tactics were morally superior to the Republic’s defensive doctrine.
And underneath it all, insecurity.
They resented the Republic because the Republic was larger, wealthier, more politically influential. Ashmar’s military pride was compensation for feeling diminished in every other metric.
That insecurity could be exploited.
Not by him directly—he was just one expendable first-year with no institutional backing. But information about that vulnerability was valuable. Could be sold. Could be leveraged.
Silas had been documenting observations. Not formal intelligence reports—he had no handler, no official channel for reporting. Just personal notes. Analysis of power structures. Potential leverage points. The kind of information that would be valuable to someone, even if he didn’t know who yet.
He’d also been watching the other Republic students.
Marcus Vale was struggling. The constant hostility was wearing him down. He’d gotten into two fights with Ashmar students—both technically sanctioned sparring that had escalated beyond what instructors considered acceptable. He was on thin ice with Crownspire’s administration.
Some were adapting better. Keeping their heads down. Training hard. Not making waves. A competent survival strategy.
The others fell somewhere in between.
And Silas...
Silas was doing what he did best. Observing. Adapting. Surviving through awareness rather than strength.
His Sense Fade core helped. Ashmar students had trouble interacting with him.
Arjun was the only person who seemed immune to the effect. Maybe because his sword instinct operated on a level deeper than conscious memory. Maybe because his single-minded focus on combat made him less susceptible to subtle mental manipulation.
Either way, their conversations had become Silas’s primary source of human interaction beyond tactical necessity.
That probably said something unfortunate about his social integration.
But functionality mattered more than comfort.
-----
The boiling pot continued heating.
Small incidents. Accumulated friction.
An Ashmar third-year "accidentally" injuring a Republic student during sparring.
A Republic second-year making disparaging comments about Ashmar training methods.
Equipment damage. Scheduling conflicts. The steady erosion of whatever diplomatic goodwill the program had started with.
Silas watched it all and made notes.
Someone was going to die before this exchange program concluded.
It wasn’t a speculation just an Observation.
The temperature was rising too fast. The hostility too persistent. The institutional controls too weak.
Eventually, someone would cross a line that couldn’t be uncrossed.
And when that happened, the political consequences would be...
Interesting.
Silas found he was almost looking forward to it.
Not because he wanted violence. Just because chaos created opportunities.
And he’d always been good at capitalizing on opportunities.







