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rchant Prince Corvus stood in his private study overlooking Valdris’s harbor, watching three trade galleons prepare for departure. Each one carried legitimate cargo—spices, textiles, and alchemical components—that would generate respectable profit.

Each one also carried encrypted intelligence reports that were worth considerably more than their manifest cargo.

He turned from the window and returned to his desk, where twelve folders were arranged in precise rows. Each folder represented an operative embedded in the foreign exchange program. Each one a carefully cultivated asset. Each one producing intelligence that the Republic, Ashmar, and Solhaven believed was secure.

They were wrong.

Corvus opened the first folder.

The boy had delivered his report on Shroud manipulation technology three days ago. Excellent work. Technical specifications detailed enough that Valdris researchers were already analyzing its potential applications.

The boy believed he’d stolen it.

He hadn’t.

The misplaced technical manual in Sparkshire’s library hadn’t been a clerical error. It had been positioned there deliberately by one of Valdris’s long-term assets.

She’d filed the manual incorrectly and ensured the docunt would be discoverable but not suspiciously obvious.

The entire scenario had been engineered.

Not because Valdris couldn’t acquire the information through other ans—they already had most of it through different intelligence channels. But because they needed to test luge boy’s compliance under pressure.

Would he cross the line from passive observation to active espionage when pushed?

He had.

Quickly. Thoroughly. With minimal hesitation once the decision was made.

That told Corvus everything he needed to know about the asset’s reliability.

The boy was compromised enough to be useful. Desperate enough to be controllable. Competent enough to gather valuable intelligence. And morally flexible enough that escalating demands would be accepted rather than refused.

Corvus made notes in the margin and moved to the second folder.

The healer had successfully cultivated friendship with a Republic asset. His latest report including preliminary analysis of the Republic healing doctrine vulnerabilities.

Corvus continued through the folders systematically.

Ten more folders. Ten more assets. Each one recruited through different vulnerabilities—debt, ambition, family obligation, ideological disillusionnt. Each one producing intelligence streams that fed into Valdris’s comprehensive understanding of all three nations’ capabilities and weaknesses.

The Republic, Ashmar, and Solhaven each believed they were running their own intelligence operations. They were correct—their own services had embedded operatives in the exchange programs, gathering similar intelligence.

But they weren’t Valdris’s concern.

Because Valdris wasn’t trying to win an intelligence competition.

Valdris was trying to create controlled chaos.

Corvus closed the final folder and pulled out a strategic overview docunt. The actual objective. The reason he and the council of coin had invested thousand of gold coins and ti of preparation into this operation.

The foreign exchange program was ant to strengthen ties between the Republic, Ashmar, and Solhaven. Build mutual understanding. Create personal relationships between future military and political leaders. Foster cooperation that would benefit all three nations.

The Republic Senate had deliberately excluded Valdris—viewing the rchant Republic as a potential threat rather than a potential partner. They wanted to consolidate relationships with the two other major powers while keeping Valdris isolated.

A Strategic error.

Because isolation had forced Valdris to adopt more creative thods.

If Valdris couldn’t participate openly, they’d participate invisibly. And they’d ensure the program failed—not catastrophically, not obviously, but through accumulated friction that would make future cooperation politically untenable.

Corvus reviewed his strategic tiline.

The beauty of the strategy was its flexibility.

Every outco benefited Valdris.

If the exchange program collapsed in scandal—accusations of espionage, betrayed trust, exposed secrets—the three nations would retreat into isolation and mutual suspicion. Valdris would step in as the "neutral" party, offering trade relationships and diplomatic diation while quietly exploiting their weakened state.

If actual conflict erged—unlikely but possible—Valdris would have intelligence access to all sides. They could sell information to the highest bidder. Provide weapons and supplies to everyone. Profit from the chaos while maintaining plausible neutrality.

If sohow the program succeeded despite Valdris’s interference—which Corvus considered extrely unlikely given the scale of his operation—the embedded assets would remain in place.

Win. Win. Win.

Corvus made final notes in his strategic docunt.

He sealed the docunt and locked it in his personal safe.

Then he drafted twelve separate letters—one for each operative.

Each letter contained escalated demands. Push harder. Gather more sensitive intelligence. Take greater risks. Betray deeper trust.

The operatives would comply. They always did, once you’d established proper leverage.

And if they didn’t?

Corvus had extraction protocols. Contingency plans. Alternative assets waiting in reserve.

The machine didn’t require any individual component to be irreplaceable. Just functional. Controllable. Expendable when necessary.

He finished the letters and summoned his courier master.

"Deliver through the established channels. Standard protocols."

The courier master nodded and departed with the sealed correspondence.

Corvus returned to his window, watching the trade galleons complete their departure preparations.

Legitimate comrce on the surface. Hidden intelligence operations underneath.

That was Valdris’s strength.

Everyone saw the gold. The trade. The rchant caravans and financial networks.

Nobody saw the intelligence apparatus woven through it all. The compromised assets. The manufactured chaos. The careful cultivation of circumstances that benefited Valdris regardless of outco.

The Republic had excluded Valdris from their precious exchange program.

Soon, they’d understand their mistake.

By then, it would be far too late to correct it.

-----

In Ashmar’s capital, a different spymaster reviewed similar folders.

Commander leak Kaine didn’t have Valdris’s financial resources. Ashmar operated on military efficiency rather than rchant wealth.

But they had their own operatives embedded in the exchange program.

Three confird assets at Sparkshire Academy. Each one reporting on the Republic and the invited Theocracy students capabilities. Military training thods. Core integration techniques. Political vulnerabilities.

Ashmar’s objective was simpler than Valdris’s elaborate chaos strategy.

They wanted parity.

The Republic liked to pretend it was humanity’s primary defender against the Crawlers. Superior training. Better resources. More advanced research.

Ashmar wanted to prove that assessnt wrong.

Every piece of Republic intelligence their operatives gathered brought them closer to matching the Republic’s capabilities. Every stolen technique. Every docunted tactic. Every exposed weakness.

Commander Kaine made notes in his strategic assessnt.

Ashmar wasn’t trying to create chaos.

They were trying to level the playing field.

And if that happened to destabilize the Republic confidence in the exchange program?

That was an acceptable collateral damage.

-----

In Solhaven’s capital, Mother Celestine—head of the Theocracy’s intelligence service—reviewed her own operational reports with prayer and pragmatism in equal asure.

The Theocracy had two operatives embedded in the exchange program. Both deeply faithful. Both convinced their espionage served the Great One’s purpose.

Solhaven’s objective was protection.

They wanted to ensure the Republic and Ashmar weren’t developing capabilities that could threaten the Theocracy’s sovereignty. They wanted early warning if either nation planned aggression. They wanted to understand how other nations interpreted the Great One’s sacrifice—whether their secular approaches to Crawler combat were fundantally incompatible with Solhaven’s theological doctrine.

Mother Celestine prayed over each intelligence report before filing it.

Great One, guide us in using this knowledge righteously. Let it serve protection rather than aggression. Let it strengthen our faith rather than compromise it.

Her operatives believed they were doing holy work.

She believed it too.

That faith made them effective. Motivated. Willing to take risks that purely rcenary operatives wouldn’t accept.

But it also made them predictable.

And Valdris had already identified both Solhaven operatives through financial analysis. Tracked their communication patterns. Compromised their dead drops.

Mother Celestine didn’t know she was being monitored.

Neither did Commander Kaine in Ashmar.

Both believed their intelligence operations were secure.

Both were feeding information directly into Valdris’s comprehensive intelligence picture.

-----

In three separate nations, three separate intelligence services believed they were running successful operations.

All three were correct.

All three were also being played.

Because Valdris wasn’t just gathering intelligence. They were orchestrating outcos.

When Ashmar discovered Republic healing techniques, it would be because Valdris ensured the discovery happened at the worst possible diplomatic mont.

When Solhaven uncovered "evidence" of Republic espionage, it would be manufactured evidence that Valdris had carefully planted.

When the Republic identified foreign operatives, it would be operatives Valdris had already burned—expendable assets whose exposure would serve strategic purposes.

Controlled chaos.

Every intelligence service thought they were winning.

Only Valdris understood they were all dancing to a tune the rchant Prince had composed.

-----

Jas submitted his report.

Jara finalized his docuntation.

In Ashmar and Solhaven, other operatives did the sa.

All of them serving their respective handlers.

None of them understanding the larger ga.

The exchange program continued.

Students studied. Trained. Built friendships and rivalries.

Completely unaware that their entire experience was being docunted, analyzed, and weaponized by multiple intelligence services with overlapping and contradictory objectives.

And in Valdris, rchant Prince Corvus reviewed the latest intelligence summary and allowed himself a mont of satisfaction.

The Republic’s precious cooperation initiative was going to collapse in spectacular fashion.

And Valdris would profit from every mont of it.

"Money doesn’t buy loyalty," Corvus murmured to his empty study. "It buys leverage. And leverage, properly applied, moves the world."

The trade galleons departed the harbor, carrying their dual cargo of comrce and espionage.

The machine continued its work.

And nobody—not the Republic, not Ashmar, not Solhaven—understood they’d already been cast aside in the race.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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