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The garrison training grounds were chaos pretending to be order. One hundred twenty soldiers from twenty-three different families, each bringing their own combat traditions and cultivation thods, attempting to function as a unified force under Captain Sarah Grey's relentless coordination.

Fenix stood on the manor's second-floor balcony, watching with the cold assessnt of soone selecting weapons for a specific task. His crimson eyes tracked individual movents, cataloging who showed promise and who was simply filling space in formations.

"See anyone worth selecting?" Khan appeared beside him, arms crossed.

"Thirty worth closer examination. Maybe fifteen actually worth trusting." Fenix's gaze settled on two figures drilling in the far corner—Kai and Abel, his cousins, moving through combinations against veterans who clearly outranked them but were being pressed hard nonetheless.

Khan followed his nephew's line of sight. "My sons."

"They know how I think, how I move, they survived the temple expedition alongside ." Fenix glanced at his uncle. "I want them on my team."

The silence stretched. Finally, Khan spoke, his voice carefully controlled. "You're asking to send my children into combat under your command."

"I'm telling you I'm selecting the best people for the mission. That includes them." Fenix turned to face Khan directly. "If you want to forbid it, do so now. But understand—I trust them more than I trust most of the garrison, and trust matters more than rank when people are trying to kill you."

Khan's jaw tightened. "They're seventeen years old."

"I'm fourteen. Does age matter more than capability?"

"You're—" Khan stopped, struggling with words that wouldn't co. "You're different. You've always been different. But they're my sons. If sothing happens to them because I let you—"

"If sothing happens to them, it won't be because you let ," Fenix interrupted. "It'll be because we're at war, and war kills people regardless of who commands them. The question is whether they're more likely to survive under my leadership or soone else's."

The brutal honesty hit harder than diplomatic phrasing would have. Khan looked at his nephew—this boy who'd beco sothing harder and colder than his years suggested—and recognized there was no good answer. Only choices with different costs.

"Choose them if you must," Khan said finally. "But understand—if they die, that weight is yours to carry."

"I know." Fenix's voice held no hesitation. "I'll carry it."

---

Fifty miles east, in the Richter family's main estate, Broderick Richter sat in his council chamber reviewing territory reports with growing irritation.

"Three rchant caravans intercepted at our western border," his steward reported. "Claims of increased bandit activity, but the attacks show coordination that suggests organized opposition rather than common thieves."

"Bandits." Broderick waved dismissively. "Send garrison forces to clean them out. What else?"

"Reports from the Ninth Province, my lord. The untiered families have been... unusually active. Increased communication between territories, movent of personnel, so indication of military coordination."

"The broken families?" Broderick actually laughed. "Let them coordinate. They're desperate survivors clinging to whatever dignity they can scrape together. It doesn't threaten us."

His eldest advisor, a weathered Expert-rank cultivator nad Dem, shifted uncomfortably. "With respect, my lord, the Ackerman family has been at the center of this activity. After your son's... encounter with their young heir—"

"My son faced a lucky nobody who got in one good showing," Broderick cut him off sharply. "Vin was overconfident, that's all. The Ackerman boy is Interdiate rank. Irrelevant in the grand sche."

"The boy has dual cultivation," Dem pressed carefully. "The Voss family's observer confird it. That's not irrelevant."

"It's interesting," Broderick corrected. "Not threatening. Dual cultivation doesn't change the fundantal reality that the Ackermans are a broken Tier family with barely enough resources to maintain their own estate. They're not organizing anything that matters."

In the corner of the chamber, a figure stirred. Elder Theron, the family's Grandmaster cultivator who rarely involved himself in daily affairs, spoke in a voice like grinding stone. "Underestimating Zeke Ackerman's bloodline once already cost this family dearly. Perhaps we should learn from past mistakes."

Broderick's expression soured. "Zeke Ackerman is dead. Has been for soti. His brother is competent but unremarkable. His son is a child with interesting talents but no aningful power base. I'm not going to waste resources chasing shadows just because so untiered families are sending letters to each other."

"Then you should at least reinforce our secondary holdings," Dem suggested. "If there is coordinated action being planned—"

"If there is, our current forces are more than sufficient to handle scattered families whose best days are thirty years behind them." Broderick stood, signaling the eting's end. "I have actual concerns to address. The Third Province's trade negotiations, the upcoming Domain council, managing our relationship with the Second Tier families who actually matter. I'm not wasting ti on the Ninth Province's death throes."

As the council dispersed, Elder Theron remained seated, his ancient eyes distant with thought. He'd felt the sa dismissive confidence from Tier One patriarchs thirty years ago, right before Zeke Ackerman had reminded them all that potential was more dangerous than established power.

History, he suspected, was about to repeat itself in ways his arrogant family head couldn't anticipate.

But he was old, and tired, and perhaps it was ti to see if the younger generation could learn lessons the hard way.

---

Back at the Ackerman estate, Fenix found his cousins finishing their training session. Both were drenched in sweat, breathing hard from extended exertion against opponents who'd pushed them to their limits.

"Walk with ," Fenix said without preamble.

They followed him away from the main courtyard to a quieter section of the estate grounds. Once they were alone, Fenix turned to face them directly.

"I'm selecting my assault team for the Richter operation. I want you both."

Kai recovered first, grinning despite his exhaustion. "About ti you asked."

"I'm not asking," Fenix corrected. "I'm telling you what I've decided. But you need to understand what that ans. In that compound, I'm not your cousin. I'm your commander. Can you follow orders from soone younger than you, soone lower-ranked than you, soone who might make decisions that put your lives at risk?"

The grin faded from Kai's face. Abel, as usual, processed the implications more analytically.

"Father agreed to this?" Abel asked.

"Uncle is concerned but not forbidding it. The choice is yours."

The twins exchanged that silent communication that ca from sharing a lifeti. Finally, Kai spoke for both of them.

"We were shit to you before the temple. Treated you like you were charity we had to tolerate because you were family." He t Fenix's eyes directly. "The temple taught us who you actually are. Soone worth following not because of bloodline, but because you make decisions that keep people alive when they should die. So yes. We can follow your orders."

"Even if those orders might get you killed?"

"Especially then," Abel said quietly. "Because we trust your judgnt more than we trust our own."

Sothing tight in Fenix's chest eased slightly. "Then help select the other thirteen. I need people who can set aside pride and politics when violence starts. People who understand that survival matters more than glory."

---

The selection process took three days of brutal assessnt. Fenix, Kai, and Abel watched garrison soldiers train, tested them through sparring sessions that revealed capability beyond formal rank, interviewed them with questions designed to expose how they thought under pressure.

They looked for specific qualities: adaptability, tactical thinking, ability to follow orders from soone they'd normally dismiss. That last requirent eliminated many otherwise capable soldiers whose pride wouldn't allow subordination to a fourteen-year-old Interdiate cultivator.

The rejections were sotis ugly.

"You want to follow a *child*?" A Graduator-rank veteran nad Harrison laughed in Fenix's face when approached. "I've been fighting since before you were born, boy. I don't care what bloodline you carry—respect is earned through ti and rank, not inherited."

"Then you're not suited for my team," Fenix replied calmly. "Thank you for your ti."

"You're making a mistake, dismissing experienced warriors because we won't bow to—"

"I'm dismissing warriors who value their pride over mission success," Fenix interrupted. "In combat, your pride will get people killed. I need soldiers who'll follow tactical orders regardless of who gives them. You're not that soldier."

The veteran's face reddened, but Fenix had already turned away, conversation over.

By the fourth day, they had their roster. Thirteen soldiers ranging from Expert to Graduator rank, each one selected not for capability alone but for demonstrated willingness to function as part of sothing larger than individual ego.

Fenix gathered his team in a private section of the training grounds. Fifteen faces looked back at him with varying expressions—curiosity, skepticism, cautious assessnt. Most were at least a decade older. All outranked him in cultivation.

"I'm Fenix Ackerman," he began without preamble. "Fourteen years old. Interdiate rank. And for this operation, I'll be giving you orders that might get so of us killed."

The blunt honesty created uncomfortable silence.

"If anyone has problems with that reality, speak now. No judgnt. I'd rather reform the team than discover trust issues when lives depend on coordination."

A Graduator-rank woman nad Vera spoke up. "I watched you fight the Richter boy. Saw you make a genius look like an amateur. That's qualification enough for . But I need to know—are you commanding this team because you're Ackerman, or because you're actually qualified?"

"Test ," Fenix said simply. "Non-lethal spar. You'll have your answer."

Vera studied him for a long mont, then shook her head. "That won't be necessary. Anyone who offers to prove themselves rather than demanding blind faith has already proven themselves." She looked at the rest of the team. "I'm in. Anyone who's not can leave now."

No one moved.

"Good," Fenix said. "Then understand this: I don't care about rank, age, or family politics. I care about mission success and keeping as many of us alive as possible. You follow my orders not because of who my father was, but because I'll make tactical decisions that maximize our survival chances."

He gestured to Kai and Abel. "These two are my tactical advisors. Kai handles heavy assault coordination. Abel manages defensive positioning. If sothing happens to , command passes to Vera as senior cultivator."

Vera nodded, accepting the contingency.

"Our target is a Richter compound in the western holdings," Fenix continued, producing a map. "Secondary facility, but strategically important. Intelligence suggests thirty defenders, mostly lower ranks with Expert leadership. Our objective: neutralize resistance, secure the facility, hold for extraction."

He traced their approach. "We go in fast. Avoid detection as long as possible, then hit hard once committed. Vera's group takes main entrance, drawing attention. Kai leads heavy assault through side access. Abel coordinates defensive positions to prevent reinforcent. I handle any Expert or Graduator-rank opposition."

"And if we encounter sothing stronger?" asked a scarred veteran.

"We extract imdiately. I'm not asking you to face impossible odds. Mission success matters, but not more than survival." Fenix t each team mber's eyes. "Clear?"

Agreent rippled through the group.

"Then let's begin coordination drills. We have less than a week to function as a cohesive unit."

---

The training that followed was brutal. Fenix pushed his team through scenarios that exposed every weakness in their coordination—building entry under fire, defensive formation while protecting wounded, rapid extraction when everything went wrong.

He was demanding but not cruel, adjusting approaches when soone struggled rather than simply demanding better performance. When personalities clashed, he diated with diplomatic skill that surprised veterans twice his age.

On the third day, tension erupted during a drill. Two team mbers—both Expert rank from different families—nearly ca to blows over conflicting tactical approaches.

"Your family's thods are outdated," one snarled. "We're not fighting barbarians with crude weapons. We need precision—"

"Your 'precision' will get us killed when speed matters more than perfect form," the other shot back.

"Both of you, shut up," Fenix said, his voice cutting through their argunt like cold steel. "Your family traditions don't matter here. What matters is that you're both thinking about individual glory instead of team function. That ends now, or you're both off the team."

They stared at him—this child barely tall enough to et their eyes, speaking with authority that shouldn't exist in soone his age.

"In that compound, you won't have ti for this posturing," Fenix continued. "You'll follow the tactical plan or you'll die. Worse, you'll get others killed. So decide right now—are you soldiers who can follow orders, or are you representatives of family pride who need to be replaced?"

The silence was thick. Finally, both n nodded, their conflict unresolved but at least suppressed by recognition that Fenix was right.

"Good. Now run the drill again. Together this ti."

Kai watched his cousin manage the conflict with sothing approaching awe. "When did he learn to talk like that?" he muttered to Abel.

"Probably around the sa ti we stopped treating him like he didn't belong," Abel replied quietly.

---

Across the province, in the Richter family's western compound that would soon beco Fenix's target, a different kind of preparation was underway.

Commander Vex, an Expert-rank cultivator responsible for the facility's defense, reviewed his garrison roster with growing unease. Only twenty-eight soldiers currently stationed here, and three of those were injured from recent patrol incidents.

"Request for reinforcents," he said to his second-in-command. "Send it to the main estate. Again."

"That's the third request this month, Commander. Lord Broderick keeps denying them."

"Then send a fourth. Sothing's wrong. The border activity, the increased coordination from untiered families, the way rchants keep avoiding our trade routes..." Vex shook his head. "It feels like the air before a storm."

"You think they'd actually attack us? The untiered families?" His second's skepticism was clear. "They're barely holding their own territories together. What threat could they pose?"

"Individually? None. But if they've united under leadership that knows what it's doing..." Vex didn't finish the thought. "Just send the reinforcent request. Mark it urgent."

The ssage would reach the main estate two days later, where it would be filed with all the other "urgent" requests that Broderick Richter considered paranoid overreactions from commanders who'd grown too comfortable in their positions.

By the ti anyone realized Commander Vex's instincts were correct, it would be far too late.

---

Back at the Ackerman estate, on the fifth evening of training, Fenix's team ran a full mock assault against garrison forces playing Richter defenders. The exercise was ssy—communication breakdowns, hesitation during critical monts, individual mbers abandoning formation to pursue isolated targets.

They ran it again. And again. Each iteration smoothing edges, tightening coordination, building muscle mory that would serve them when training beca lethal reality.

By the sixth day, sothing had changed. The fifteen individuals had begun functioning as a single organism—Vera's assault group, Kai's heavy strikers, and Abel's defensive coordinators moving with synchronization that impressed even Captain Sarah Grey.

"Your team is ready," Sarah told Fenix after watching their final training run. "More than ready. I'd put them against most professional military units."

"Ready in training isn't ready in combat," Fenix replied, watching his team clean weapons and review assignnts.

"No, it's not." Sarah's expression was serious. "First battle is always the hardest. So freeze. So panic. So discover capabilities they didn't know they had. You won't know who's who until the fighting starts."

"Then I'll adapt to whatever happens."

"That's all any commander can do." Sarah studied him for a mont. "Your father led troops once. Did you know that?"

"No."

"He was brilliant in combat. Absolute genius at reading opponents, adapting tactics, winning battles that should have been impossible." She paused. "But he never learned to accept casualties. Every soldier who died under his command tore sothing from him. By the end, he was trying to fight wars alone because he couldn't bear losing anyone else."

"Why are you telling this?"

"Because you're about to learn the sa lesson. And when you do, when soone on your team dies because you gave an order that put them in danger..." Sarah's voice was gentle despite the harsh words. "Rember that dead soldiers are still better than dead causes. Your father forgot that. Don't make his mistake."

---

The evening before deploynt, Fenix stood alone in the estate's highest tower, watching the sun set over territories they would assault co dawn.

Footsteps announced Kai and Abel's arrival. The twins climbed the stairs together, as they did everything, and joined their cousin at the parapet.

"Couldn't sleep?" Kai asked.

"Too many variables." Fenix's gaze remained on the horizon. "Too many things that could go wrong."

"Father spoke to us earlier," Abel said quietly. "Asked if we understood what we were doing, following you into combat."

"What did you tell him?"

"That we trust your judgnt more than our own," Kai said. "Which both reassured and terrified him."

"He's sending his sons into battle under his fourteen-year-old nephew's command," Fenix said. "Terror is appropriate."

"He's also watching his nephew beco sothing his brother never was," Abel countered. "A leader who values his team's survival over proving himself. Father respects that, even if it worries him."

They stood in silence as darkness claid the sky. Finally, Kai spoke again.

"We were wrong about you. Before the temple. Thought you were just weak—the orphaned cousin living on family charity."

"I was weak," Fenix said quietly.

"No. You were healing. Building yourself into sothing stronger." Abel found the right words, as he usually did. "We couldn't see it because we judged you for what you'd lost instead of recognizing what you were becoming."

"Tomorrow, we're trusting you with our lives," Kai said. "You deserve to know that trust isn't just tactical. It's faith in who you are."

Before Fenix could respond, Soren appeared at the tower's entrance. The Grandmaster warrior looked at the three young n, then gestured for Fenix to follow him.

"Your team is waiting for final briefing. Then rest—tomorrow, everything changes."

---

The briefing room was crowded but focused. Fifteen team mbers, all present, all attentive. Maps covered the table, marked with approach routes and tactical positions.

"Signal fires light at dawn," Fenix began. "Simultaneous strikes across five Richter holdings. Our target—western compound, strategic value, estimated thirty defenders."

He traced their approach. "Fast and quiet until we're compromised. Then overwhelming force. Vera's group takes main entrance. Kai's strikers hit side access. Abel coordinates defensive positions. I handle high-rank opposition. Questions?"

"Rules of engagent?" Soone asked.

"Neutralize resistance. Accept surrenders. If they fight, eliminate the threat. No unnecessary cruelty, but no hesitation." Fenix's voice was cold and clear. "They chose to serve a family that's exploited our province for years. We're making our choice in response."

More questions followed—logistics, contingencies, communication protocols. Fenix answered each with confidence born from preparation and tactical instinct.

Finally, Vera asked what others had been thinking: "What if sothing goes catastrophically wrong? If we're overwheld, if the intelligence was bad, if we're walking into a trap?"

"Then we extract and survive to fight another day," Fenix said simply. "Mission success matters. But it doesn't matter more than your lives. I'm not asking you to die for glory. I'm asking you to fight smart and co ho alive."

The answer satisfied them. They saw their young commander prioritize survival over heroics—the mark of soone worth following.

"Get rest," Fenix dismissed them. "Tomorrow, we prove the Ninth Province isn't finished. We prove unified families are stronger than scattered individuals. We prove the Ackerman na still ans sothing."

As his team filed out, Kai and Abel remained.

"Still can't believe this is real," Kai said quietly. "A month ago, we were just training. Now we're about to assault a Tier Three family."

"A month ago, Fenix was just protecting his sister," Abel added. "Now he's leading armies."

Fenix looked at his cousins—the twins who'd once treated him like unwanted charity, now standing beside him as the world tilted toward violence.

"Neither of you have to co tomorrow. You could stay back, assist with estate defense—"

"Shut up," Kai interrupted. "We're in this together. That's how it works now."

"Since the temple," Abel agreed. "Whatever happens tomorrow, we face it as family."

Despite everything, Fenix felt sothing warm in his chest. "Thank you."

"Thank us after we survive and steal whatever alcohol the Richters have stored," Kai grinned.

---

In the Richter main estate, Elder Theron stood in a tower much like the one Fenix occupied, watching the sa stars erge in the darkening sky.

He felt it—that electric tension in the air that preceded significant events. The sa feeling he'd experienced thirty years ago when six Tier One patriarchs had entered the Ninth Province to eliminate a threat nad Zeke Ackerman.

"You sense it too," Broderick Richter said, appearing behind him. For once, the family head's arrogance was muted. "Sothing's coming."

"The Ackerman boy," Theron said simply.

"He's Interdiate rank. A child."

"So was his father, once. Before he beca the monster who required six Tier One patriarchs to eliminate." Theron turned from the window. "History doesn't repeat, but it rhys. And tomorrow, I suspect we'll learn whether the son inherited more than just his father's na."

"You think they'll actually attack us?"

"I think we've underestimated what desperation can accomplish when properly organized." Theron's ancient eyes held certainty. "Tomorrow, we'll discover if I'm right."

---

Dawn ca cold and clear across the Ninth Province. Signal fires blazed to life on distant hilltops—coordinated signals launching five simultaneous assaults.

Fenix's team stood assembled in the courtyard, weapons ready, faces set with determination concealing various levels of fear and anticipation.

Khan appeared with his own strike force. Uncle and nephew regarded each other in a mont that spoke volus without words.

"Co back alive," Khan said simply.

"You too," Fenix replied.

Soren erged last, his presence radiating power that made even veterans step back. The Grandmaster warrior looked at his young master with sothing approaching pride.

"Lead well. Your father would be proud of what you've beco."

Fenix drew his silver katana, the blade catching morning light as he held it high.

"For the Ninth Province," he said, his voice carrying authority beyond his years. "For the families who've suffered. For the future we're going to build."

"For the Ninth Province!" his team echoed.

The assault had begun.

And the Richter family had no idea what was about to hit them.

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