The rumors started three days after Silas’s departure.
Quiet at first. Whispered conversations in the dining hall that stopped when outpost recruits walked past. aningful glances exchanged between noble students during Combat Fundantals. The kind of social signaling that was designed to be noticed without being directly confrontable.
By the end of the week, it had escalated to actual words.
"I heard so Silas guy killed that Gregor in the Shroud deploynt," soone said just loud enough for Duncan to overhear during morning training. "It was a clean execution though. I an, I get we’re combatants and all, but that was just straight up murder."
Duncan had turned, ready to confront the speaker.
The noble student—a second-year from House Marlowe—had simply raised his hands in mock surrender. "Just repeating what I heard. If it’s not true, maybe your squad should address the rumors."
It was impossible to address. The accusation was vague enough to deny but specific enough to sound credible. And it carried the weight of plausibility—Silas did have the capability to kill soone without being seen. Gregor had died in the Shroud with a throat wound. The fact that Silas was now conveniently deployed abroad made defending him complicated.
Especially because most of the squad privately suspected the rumor was true.
They just couldn’t prove it.
And even if they could, what would they do? Report Silas posthumously? Confirm the nobles’ accusations and validate their exclusion campaign?
The damn mastermind was moving again.
And this ti—
he had chosen his weapon perfectly.
-----
The resource denial was more subtle but equally effective.
Training equipnt began disappearing from communal storage when outpost recruits tried to reserve it. "Already claid by House Crownhold students for the afternoon session. You’ll have to wait."
rit point exchanges took longer to process. "Administrative backlog. Should clear up in a few days." It never cleared up.
Elective class recomndations—the informal guidance that instructors provided to help students optimize their builds—beca suddenly unavailable. "I’m quite busy this week. Perhaps ask one of your squadmates for advice."
None of it was actionable. None of it violated explicit academy rules. It was just friction. Systematic, persistent, accumulating friction that made every day at Sparkshire slightly harder than it needed to be.
Mara felt it most acutely.
She was still a Fledgling—the only mber of the original Vester squad who hadn’t advanced to Initiate. That alone made her vulnerable to the kind of social exclusion that Theodore’s network was implenting.
Noble students who’d previously been neutral toward her suddenly found reasons to avoid partnering with her in training exercises. "No offense, but I need to work with soone at my rank. Nothing personal."
Noble aligned Instructors who’d praised her technical skill in Combat Fundantals began offering pointed critiques instead. "Your fundantals are solid, but without advancent, you’ll struggle to keep pace with your peers. Consider whether you’re dedicating sufficient ti to core acquisition and soul force refinent."
The weapon rchant who’d sold her the twin daggers months ago suddenly had "inventory issues" whenever she ca looking for maintenance supplies or potential upgrades. "Supply chain problems. You understand how it is."
She understood perfectly.
After two weeks of systematic exclusion, Mara approached Duncan during an evening training.
"They’re isolating ," she said without preamble.
Duncan paused mid-strike, lowering his spear. "I’ve noticed. It’s not just you—they’re targeting all of us."
"Exactly." Mara’s jaw tightened. "Which ans I need to advance now."
"I just need intense fight that will push over the threshold. Doesn’t have to be perfect—just functional." She t his eyes. "And rit points to afford an initiate core, can’t be a sitting duck during that period."
Duncan exhaled slowly. "That’s... a lot."
"I know. But I’m running out of options." Her Clear Mind core kept her voice steady despite the strain beneath it. "If I don’t advance soon, I’ll beco the squad’s liability. The weak link they can exploit to pressure the rest of you."
Duncan didn’t argue.
They were individualistic by nature, each pursuing their own path—but even he understood a simple truth: it was harder to break a bundle of sticks than a single one.
And enemies always struck the weakest point first.
She wasn’t being dramatic.
She was being realistic.
-----
Theodore’s most ambitious move targeted Duncan directly.
It ca through an interdiary—a third-year student from House Corvin nad Marcus Thale. He approached Duncan after a particularly brutal Physical Conditioning session, when Duncan was exhausted and his guard was lowered.
"You’re Duncan, right?"
Duncan glanced up from his water flask, wary. "Yeah. Who’s asking?"
"I’m Marcus, Thale." He extended a hand that Duncan didn’t shake. Marcus withdrew it without apparent offense. "I’ve been watching your performance in training. Very impressive. House Corvin is always looking for talented combat specialists, and we think you’d be a strong fit for our sponsorship program."
"Sponsorship program."
"Exactly." Marcus smiled—practiced, professional, the kind of expression that ca from noble house etiquette training. "We provide resources, training opportunities, access to rare cores, and eventual placent in elite military units after graduation. In exchange, you serve as a sworn sword to House Corvin. It’s just a Standard five-year contract with very competitive compensation and excellent advancent prospects."
Duncan set down his water flask. "And what would this sponsorship require?"
"Nothing dramatic. Attend so House Corvin social functions. Wear our colors during the academy exhibitions. Provide occasional assistance with... let’s call them ’security concerns’ that noble houses face." Marcus’s smile never wavered. "Simple loyalty, really. You’d still be a Sparkshire student. You’d just have backing that most outpost recruits never access."
It was a good offer. Genuinely good.
Access to resources that Duncan desperately needed. Training opportunities that would accelerate his advancent. The kind of institutional support that could transform him from a competent tank into an actual Elite prospect.
All it required was abandoning his people and serving a noble house whose interests might—would—eventually conflict with those of his.
"I’ll think about it," Duncan said neutrally.
"Of course." Marcus pulled out a sealed letter bearing House Corvin’s insignia. "Details are here. Take your ti. The offer stands for the next two weeks."
He left before Duncan could refuse outright.
Duncan stared at the letter for a long ti before tucking it into his pack.
He didn’t open it.
But he didn’t throw it away either.
-----
Adam detected the campaign during a routine intelligence review in his second week of monitoring.
His network had grown substantially since arriving at Sparkshire—small investnts in relationships, careful cultivation of informants who didn’t realize they were informants, systematic docuntation of information flows through the academy’s social structures.
The pattern erged when he cross-referenced three separate data points:
A House Marlowe student spreading rumors about Silas in the dining hall.
A House Rashin administrator "losing" Mara’s equipnt reservation request.
A House Corvin representative approaching Duncan with a sponsorship offer.
Three different houses. Three different tactics. But all targeting the sa group with coordinated timing that suggested central coordination.
Soone was running an operation.
Adam spent two days mapping connections between the three houses and found what he was looking for: all three had representatives in Theodore Selaris’s informal noble alliance. The network Theodore had been building since before the foreign exchange program.
There was no conclusive proof. But enough to establish probable direction.
Adam called a squad eting.
-----
They gathered in the sa empty training room where they’d said goodbye to Silas. The symtry wasn’t lost on anyone.
"We’re being targeted again," Adam said without preamble.
"We know," Mara said. "We’ve been living it for two weeks."
"What you might not know is that it’s coordinated. It’s not so random noble house politics—soone is organizing this." Adam pulled out his notes. "House Marlowe spreading the Silas rumors. House Rashin controlling equipnt access. House Corvin offering Duncan a sponsorship, congrats by the way. Three different approaches, sa target, overlapping timing."
Duncan shifted uncomfortably. He hadn’t ntioned the sponsorship offer. "How do you know about Corvin?"
"Because I pay attention to who talks to whom and when." Adam’s tone was clinical rather than accusatory. "You were approached three days ago after Physical Conditioning. You received a sealed letter. You haven’t opened it yet, but you also haven’t disposed of it."
"That’s—" Duncan started to object, then stopped. "That’s accurate."
"I’m not criticizing. It’s a good offer, and you’d be smart to consider it seriously." Adam set down his notes. "But you should know it’s part of a larger campaign. They’re trying to fracture us. Isolate Mara because she’s still a Fledgling. Turn you by offering resources we can’t match. Damage all our reputations through the Silas rumors."
Bessia had been silent until now. "Do we know who’s organizing it?"
"Not definitively." Adam hesitated. "But the noble houses involved all have connections to the Selaris’s network."
Bright, who’d been leaning against the wall listening, spoke for the first ti. "So selaris is probably behind it. But we can’t prove it."
"Correct."
"And confronting them directly would escalate to sothing we can’t walk back on."
"Also correct."
Silence settled over the room.
Mara broke it. "So what do we do? Just accept being systematically excluded until we can’t function?"
"No," Adam said. "We adapt, that’s what we’re being trained in the academy for. It’s a Cold War now and we have to recognize that we’re in a political conflict that operates through social pressure rather than violence. And we need to respond accordingly."
"How?" Duncan asked.
Adam looked at each of them in turn. "We stop expecting the academy to be neutral ground. We build our own networks. We find allies outside the noble house system. And we make ourselves too valuable to exclude—so effective in training and deploynts that the instructors and administrators can’t justify denying us resources without obvious bias."
-----
Theodore sat in his private study, reviewing the latest reports from his network.
The campaign was proceeding exactly as planned.
Small victories. But victories nonetheless.
He wasn’t trying to destroy the chaff—that would be counterproductive and likely trigger violent retaliation he wanted to avoid. He just wanted to establish dominance. To be recognized as the face of their year’s political structure. The person that instructors and administrators looked to when addressing first-year concerns.
When advancent opportunities ca—call-ups for elite training programs, nominations for early military commissions, recomndations for Adept-track ntorship—he wanted his na at the top of the list.
Not because he was the strongest. He wasn’t blind to reality. Others were probably stronger.
But strength alone didn’t determine who succeeded in the Republic’s system.
Positioning determined success. Being in the right place, with the right connections, when opportunities erged.
And Theodore was very good at positioning.
He wrote another carefully coded ssage to his network, outlining the next phase of the campaign.
Nothing dramatic.
Just the little things.
Chipping away, bit by bit, until the structure they’d built started showing cracks.
He sealed the ssage and summoned a runner.
Then he returned to his Combat Theory howork and allowed himself a small, satisfied smile.
The ga in his view was proceeding perfectly.
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