The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality-Chapter 107: War College
The War College stood apart from the city.
Not within Ashenveil’s walls but beyond them — two kilometers east, past the Forge Quarter’s outermost workshops, across a bridge over the drainage canal that marked the administrative boundary between "city" and "military." The separation was deliberate. The College trained people to fight, and fighting — real fighting, with blessed weapons and domain-enhanced combat arts — required space that the city couldn’t afford to sacrifice and noise that the city didn’t want to hear.
Ryn had heard the noise from the Academy courtyard. A low, arrhythmic percussion — not drums, not forge-hammers, something else. The sound of iron striking iron at speeds that exceeded normal human capability. The sound of combat arts being practiced.
The Academy’s military education component required all students to observe three War College training sessions during their first year. Most students treated it as entertainment — an afternoon spent watching soldiers hit each other with impressive technique. Ryn treated it the way he treated everything else in Ashenveil: as information about a system he was trying to understand.
The College’s compound was a rectangle of walls and training grounds — five arenas, a physical conditioning course, a tactical simulation hall, barracks for five hundred cadets, and the Instructor Hall where the Combat Masters maintained the kingdom’s martial traditions. The architecture was functional to the point of hostility: no decoration, no gardens, no concession to aesthetics. The War College believed that beauty was a distraction and that distractions got soldiers killed.
The Academy group — twenty students plus a faculty escort — was directed to the observation gallery above Arena Three.
Arena Three was the largest. An oval fighting ground, sixty meters at its longest axis, surfaced with compacted sand. Around the edge: weapon racks holding every implement of war that the kingdom’s armories produced. Stonesteel longswords. Iron-banded shields. Spears with tips that caught the light with an oily sheen — consecrated stone, a weaponsmithing technique that embedded divine energy directly into the metal’s crystalline structure.
In the center of the arena: six fighters.
Ryn recognized none of them. But he recognized what they were — or rather, what they represented. Each fighter wore a different uniform, a different stance, a different relationship to violence. Six schools. Six combat traditions. The kingdom’s martial arts, demonstrated for an audience of scholars who would never use them.
The Combat Master — a Human woman of perhaps fifty, stocky, scarred across the left side of her jaw, wearing the black-and-iron uniform of the College’s senior instruction staff — stood at the arena’s edge and spoke.
"The Sovereign Dominion’s military doctrine is built on six formalized combat systems. Each system corresponds to a divine domain — a specific expression of the Sovereign’s power, channeled through trained warriors into combat application. A soldier who masters one system is effective. A soldier who understands all six is *dangerous.*"
She raised her hand. The first fighter stepped forward.
***
"Iron Reckoning."
The fighter was a Minotaur. Female. Built like a siege tower — broad shoulders, thick arms, legs planted in a stance so wide and stable that Ryn doubted a cavalry charge could move her. She wore standard Iron Covenant plate — the heavy armor designed for Minotaur body proportions — and carried a stonesteel greatsword that was longer than Ryn was tall.
"Forge domain. The foundational art. Iron Reckoning is descended from the First Forge’s own combat techniques — the original [Reinforce] blessing that Krug carried into battle, adapted and systematized over two centuries into a complete martial discipline."
The Minotaur moved.
The greatsword rose — slowly, deliberately, like a drawbridge being raised. Then came down. The impact on the training dummy — a reinforced stonesteel mannequin designed to absorb punishment — produced a sound that Ryn felt in his sternum. Not the ringing of metal on metal. A crack. The sound of force concentrated beyond natural limits, channeled through the blade’s edge into a point of impact that should have dispersed on contact but didn’t. The Forge domain held the energy together. Focused it. Made the strike hit like a battering ram rather than a sword.
The training dummy split. Down the center. Clean.
"Iron Reckoning doesn’t emphasize speed," the Combat Master said, as the Minotaur stepped back and the dummy’s halves fell apart. "It emphasizes *inevitability*. The strike will arrive. The strike will land. And when it does, there is nothing between you and it."
***
The second fighter was different. Human. Male. Lean, fast, wearing light armor — leather and iron chain, the standard kit of the Royal Guard’s elite detachment. He drew a single longsword and settled into a stance that made Ryn think of drawn bowstrings and held breaths.
"Storm Severance."
"Storm domain. The speed art. Developed by the Royal Guard eighty years ago — a synthesis of natural swordsmanship and storm-domain enhancement. The practitioner channels ambient storm energy through the blade to accelerate draw speed, reaction time, and edge velocity."
The Human attacked the replacement dummy.
Ryn saw the draw. He didn’t see the cut.
The sword left the scabbard, crossed the distance to the target — three meters — and returned to guard position in a motion that was, from the gallery’s perspective, instantaneous. Not fast. Absent. The sword was in the scabbard. Then it was in the scabbard again. The space between those two states contained a cut that Ryn’s eyes couldn’t track.
The dummy’s head fell off. The cut line was so clean it looked polished.
"Storm Severance," the Combat Master said. "By the time you see the blade, the blade has already returned. The art’s weakness is power — sacrificing mass for speed. Iron Reckoning hits harder. Storm Severance hits first."
***
The third demonstration sent a ripple through the gallery.
The fighter didn’t carry a weapon. He was Human, average build, wearing the plain grey uniform of a military officer rather than a combat specialist. He walked to the center of the arena and stood still.
"Sovereign’s Pressure."
"Authority domain. Not a blade art — a presence art. The rarest of the six systems, because it requires a degree of personal authority that cannot be trained. It can only be recognized and refined."
The officer did nothing visible. He stood. He looked forward. His expression was neutral — not aggressive, not threatening, not performing any of the physical signals that a body uses to communicate danger.
And yet.
Ryn felt it from the gallery. Thirty meters above and twenty meters away, and he felt it — a weight descending over the arena like a change in atmospheric pressure. The other fighters in the arena — four experienced combat specialists, hardened soldiers — shifted. Subtle movements. Micro-adjustments in posture, balance, breathing. The instinctive responses of bodies that suddenly registered a predator in the room.
The sand around the officer’s feet didn’t move. The air didn’t shimmer. Nothing supernatural was visible. But the pressure was undeniable — a force that operated on the awareness itself, on the primitive part of the brain that assessed threats and allocated fear. It said: this person is not safe to fight. This person holds something larger than a weapon.
"Sovereign’s Pressure doesn’t cut," the Combat Master said. "It doesn’t block. It doesn’t parry. It makes the enemy slower. Weaker. Less certain. In formation warfare, a Pressure officer in the front line reduces enemy morale by twelve to eighteen percent before a single blade is drawn. It is, in effect, a weaponized command presence."
The officer relaxed. The pressure evaporated like heat off stone. The gallery breathed.
Ryn’s hands were shaking. Not from fear — from recognition. The warmth he’d felt in the Cathedral. The weight of conviction in the Crucible’s initiation chamber. The Sovereign’s power wasn’t just blessing and building and divine architecture. It was *this*. Raw authority, channeled through mortal bodies, expressed as the ability to make an enemy’s courage simply stop working.
***
The remaining three demonstrations were faster — the Combat Master had allocated her time with the understanding that the Authority domain display would consume the audience’s attention.
Fang Current. Beast domain. Demonstrated by a Gnoll — female, wiry, fast, fighting in a pack stance that was designed for group combat. She didn’t fight a dummy. She fought three dummies, moving between them in a pattern that looked random until Ryn recognized the structure: predator circling, identifying the weakest target, striking from an angle that the target’s companions couldn’t cover. Pack tactics translated into blade work.
"Fang Current is the only art with a mounted variant," the Combat Master added. "The Gryphon Riders of the Warden program train in Aerial Fang — the same pack-circling doctrine applied from the air. A Warden on a Gryphon, executing Fang Current from forty meters above a battlefield, is the single most lethal individual combat element in the kingdom’s order of battle. The art was developed specifically for creature-rider integration — the Gnoll pack-hunting instinct translated through a divine creature’s aerial mobility." She paused. "We will not demonstrate Aerial Fang today. It requires a Gryphon. And a sky."
Unbreaking Stance. Order domain. A Lizardman warrior in heavy plate, shield locked, stonesteel sword held in defensive position. The Combat Master directed three other fighters to attack him simultaneously. For ninety seconds, the Lizardman held ground. Not retreating. Not advancing. Simply absorbing — every strike redirected, every opening closed, the shield positioning so precise that Ryn could see the geometry of it, the mathematical certainty that every angle of attack had been anticipated and answered.
Cinder Edge. Flame domain. A fighter from the Cinderlands — Human, wearing the fire-resistant leather that Vaelthyr’s province produced. His sword glowed. Not metaphorically — the blade itself radiated heat, a dull red shimmer along the cutting edge that said the metal was hot enough to cauterize on contact. He cut the dummy. The cut smoked. The wound edges blackened. Cinder Edge didn’t just cut — it burned, leaving injuries that couldn’t be healed by conventional medicine and that required priestly intervention to close.
"Six arts," the Combat Master concluded. "A seventh exists — the Shadow domain’s Veil Step. You will not see it demonstrated. Veil Step practitioners are classified assets of the Crucible’s Dark Operations division. Their techniques are not displayed publicly."
She let the silence hold, then added: "And beyond the individual arts — combined-arms doctrine. A domain-art practitioner fighting alongside a divine creature produces compound effects that exceed the sum of their parts. The Hydra Assault formation — Iron Reckoning heavy infantry advancing behind a three-headed divine creature using Sovereign’s Pressure to suppress enemy morale — broke the Thornwyrm line in the Third Demeterra War. No single element could have done it. The creature’s mass. The infantry’s discipline. The domain-art’s force multiplication. Together, they ended a war."
A student raised his hand. "Why not?"
"Because the entire point of an assassination art is that no one sees it demonstrated." The Combat Master’s expression suggested that the question had lowered her estimate of the Academy’s educational standards. "If you could see Veil Step, it wouldn’t work."
The session ended. The Academy group filed out through the College’s main gate, passing cadets running formation drills in the outer yard — five hundred young soldiers from every race, moving in synchronized patterns that turned individual bodies into a single mechanism. The War College’s product: not warriors but components. Interchangeable, reliable, disciplined components that formed the gears of the kingdom’s military machine.
Ryn walked back toward the city. Behind him, the percussion of training resumed — iron on iron on iron, the endless heartbeat of a kingdom that had been preparing for the next war since the last one ended.
"Six combat arts," Thresh said, keeping pace beside him with the characteristic Kobold half-jog that covered ground without appearing to hurry. "Notice what was missing?"
"The seventh. Veil Step."
"Not that. The people." Thresh’s amber eyes were thoughtful. "Six demonstrated arts. Six fighters. Each one a specialist — trained for years, blessed by the Sovereign, enhanced by divine domain energy. Extremely powerful. Extremely expensive." He paused. "The kingdom has eighty-four thousand active soldiers. How many of those do you think are domain-art practitioners?"
Ryn thought. "All of them?"
"About four thousand. Roughly five percent. The rest are conventional soldiers — well-trained, well-equipped, professional, but not domain-enhanced. The War College demonstration shows you the elite. The army runs on the ordinary." Thresh paused. "That’s not a criticism. It’s a design principle. You can’t build a military on exceptions. You build it on the standard, and you use the exceptions to break stalemates. The divine creatures are the other exception — ten creatures across the entire kingdom. Ten. Against eighty-four thousand soldiers. But those ten creatures represent more concentrated combat power than any thousand conventional soldiers. The Hydra alone accounted for thirty percent of enemy casualties in the Second Demeterra War. The creatures and the domain-art specialists are the scalpel. The regular army is the hammer. You need both."
"How do you know this?"
"My uncle is Vrenn Myrvalis. Everything the Ministry of Whispers knows, I know approximately sixty percent of."
"That seems like a security concern."
"My uncle considers it family education. The Ministry of Whispers recruits from House Myrvalis before it recruits from anywhere else. I’ve been in intelligence training since I was nine." Thresh smiled — the Kobold grin that showed too many teeth. "Why do you think I knew about the construction gallery in the Crucible Hall?"
Ryn stared at him.
"Mapping every building’s architectural vulnerabilities is Module Three," Thresh said. "I completed Module Three when I was eleven."
They crossed the bridge back into the city. The War College faded behind them, its percussion swallowed by the noise of Ashenveil’s streets. But the memory of the Sovereign’s Pressure lingered — that invisible force that had made Ryn’s hands shake from thirty meters away.
Six arts. One god. One kingdom. 𝓯𝙧𝓮𝓮𝒘𝓮𝙗𝙣𝒐𝒗𝒆𝓵.𝓬𝓸𝒎
How do you fight a civilization that turns prayer into a combat technique?
He didn’t have an answer. He suspected that was the point of the demonstration.







