Dawn broke over the Tier Two Shroud’s entrance as recovery teams assembled with grim efficiency with equipnt prepared to retrieve the bodies the six-hour deploynt had left behind.
Instructor Vex led the operation personally—not from any obligation of rank, but because witnessing the aftermath taught so lessons abstract casualty numbers never could.
Twenty-three dead, Vex reminded himself as the teams entered the corrupted dinsion. Twenty-three candidates who weren’t strong enough, lucky enough, or capable enough to survive this controlled trial.
Their bodies, at the very least, deserve recovery. Their families deserve closure. That’s the minimum respect this institution owes its failed investnts.
The recovery moved with thodical precision—teams using tracking matrices to locate bodies scattered through the Shroud’s ancient architecture, docunting circumstances of death and cataloguing evidence for Academy records.
Most cases were clear—Crawler assaults overwhelming insufficient defenses, accumulated wounds surpassing healing capacity, catastrophic failures against threats beyond the candidates’ ability to handle.
Combat casualties, Vex classified. An expected result from a deploynt designed to test limits. Tragic, but not unexpected.
Cedric Harrow’s body was recovered from an upper floor of a ruined structure—his partial remains were still caught in a spider-type Crawler’s mandibles, a clear signs of a vertical ambush the victim never registered.
The Crawler itself bore extensive damage: multiple severed limbs, deep blade scoring across its chitin, joints deliberately targeted and destroyed. The pattern told a clean story—Cedric had died first, taken quickly. The monster had not enjoyed its al for long afterward. Sothing had dismantled it with systematic efficiency.
A noble candidate from a minor house, Vex noted during his docuntation. Grief would co from his parents and hosue . A formal mourning. Letters sealed in black wax. But there wouldn’t be any political shockwaves. No retaliatory pressure on the Academy. A tragedy contained within acceptable boundaries of risk.
Gregor’s body, however, drew a different kind of attention.
Not because of the sheer brutality—there was less visible damage than on many others. In fact, that was the issue. One precise wound. Clean. Intentional.
This did not look like a Crawler kill.
The recovery team leader studied the body with professional focus, noting so standard details before pausing.
"Sir Vex," he called. "This one’s different, just a clean cut throat wound."
Vex stepped closer, enhanced perception taking over as he assessed the corpse with clinical precision.
Single strike to the throat, he noted. Carotid artery severed. Clean blade work and there’s no Crawler signature.
A brief silence followed.
Candidate-on-candidate violence, Vex concluded. At best, a lethal confrontation. At worst... murder.
"Docunt everything," Vex ordered. "Wound angle. Residual essence traces. Positioning. I want a full reconstruction."
The team leader hesitated. "Sir, his background isn’t that great—this Gregor boy was just a butler’s son. His Family connection is to House Cavendish, as his father serves a cavendish mber. Investigation of his death might not be worth the academy resources."
Vex didn’t answer imdiately.
That’s a practical point, he admitted inwardly. There’s going to be limited personnel as noble politics are going to be drawn into this like hounds chasing at. A case like this becos a rhetorical battlefield fast—especially if a house scion was involved.
But that wasn’t the deciding factor.
Institutions have a tendency to rot through having exceptions, he reminded himself. The mont they decide so deaths deserve scrutiny and others don’t, discipline becos a theater.
He looked down at the body again.
A Clean strike. No hesitation with a feint display of skill.
"This isn’t about his pedigree," Vex said at last, voice even. "It’s about precedent and the illusion of power. If candidates start settling matters inside the Shroud and think we’ll look away completely , we lose control of the program."
The team leader straightened. "Understood, sir."
"Full investigation," Vex ordered. "Reconstruct the scene . Analyze any essence residue and cross-check nearby engagent logs."
A pause.
But realistically, Vex thought, this won’t be a priority case. It’ll be processed—docunted, filed, analyzed—but not chased with urgency. Gregor’s death is paperwork, not a crisis.
He didn’t like that.
Didn’t argue it either.
The Academy serves the Republic. The Republic serves power. And power weighs blood differently depending on the na attached to it.
One instructor’s discomfort didn’t shift that scale.
So he enforced policy he didn’t fully believe in, because institutions ran on function, not feelings.
Recovery teams kept moving—stretchers, containnt sheets, evidence tags. Efficient. Quiet. Routine in the worst way.
Twenty-three families, Vex counted. Twenty-three ssages that start with regret.
Around him, the machine kept turning.
Bodies out. Reports filed. Training schedules unchanged. Next deploynt already on the calendar.
This is how they forge strength, he thought. Pressure. Loss. Survivors advancing over the fallen.
Necessary, the Republic would say.
Whether the parents agreed never entered the equation.
-----
Theodore Selaris received news of Gregor’s death through an official Academy notification—a clinical docuntation that listed cause as "combat casualty during Shroud deploynt,". It provided minimal detail beyond confirmation that his enforcer had died.
Gregor’s dead, Theodore processed with a cold analytical detachnt. That was fast, so the mission failed and the target survived. Only my enforcent chanism was eliminated.
He sat in his dormitory room, reviewing the implications with a strategic mind that his House training had refined.
Question one: Did Silas kill him? Or was this an actually combat casualty? Was Gregor eliminated by a Crawler, or did he encounter an opponent who proved superior?
The official docuntation suggested a Crawler attack. But Theodore’s political instincts recognized how easily such classification could mask a candidate-on-candidate violence.
If Silas killed Gregor, Theodore calculated, then I misjudged him. That’s not so soft outpost recruit you squeeze with intimidation. That’s soone who can drop a Low Initiate clean and walk away from it.
That shifted the board.
Capability changed everything. Power demanded a different approach. You didn’t keep pushing blindly against an unknown edge—you studied it.
Theodore’s strength had never been brute force anyway. It was timing. Pressure applied at the right point, not just the hardest.
This isn’t an advance mont, he concluded. It’s a withdrawal point.
It wasn’t a defeat but a ti for repositioning.
Gregor’s death wasn’t just a loss—it was data. And the data said Silas might be the most dangerous of the outpost group. The kind of opponent where open hostility didn’t weaken him—it sharpened him.
The Wrong kind of pressure creates enemies and the right kind creates leverage.
So the campaign paused.
Outwardly, nothing changed. No retaliation. No escalation. No visible interest.
But internally, the objective shifted from crush to understand.
Because if Silas really was that capable...
Then one day, Theodore might need him.
Or need a way to break him that didn’t involve swinging first.
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