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There were third year high initiates Voss and Kieran.

Voss was a well defined woman. She had a core integration that Bright's spatial awareness read as force-multiplication, a talent that had been developed for close-range engagent over distance engagent. She looked at Bright with the expression of soone who had been assigned to a lesser student's formation and was reserving judgnt on how that would go.

Kieran was quieter. He looked younger than most and had the quality of soone who had years to get used to it and had arrived at sothing more asured than pride. He was watching the platoon with the sa cataloguing attention that Bright was using, which told Bright that they had the sa professional habit, which told him sothing about Kieran's developnt path.

"You've done field work," Bright said to Kieran, during the first break in the formation proceedings.

"Three years on the eastern periter," Kieran said. "Before the academy. I ca through the outpost track late."

"Voss?"

Voss, from three ters away, without looking up from the equipnt check she was running: "Southern outpost network. Three years." A pause. "You're young."

"I know," Bright said.

"It's not criticism." She looked up. "Just an observation. The outpost kids usually are, when they're good." She stated matter of factly as she returned to her equipnt.

The rest of the platoon had gone quiet, their attention locked onto the exchange like blades drawn but not yet swung. This wasn't just curiosity—it was calculation. They were watching, learning, adjusting. Rebuilding their understanding of what this platoon would be… and where they stood in it.

Bright could feel it without looking.

So of the faces were strangers. Others weren't.

Lenne stood among them, posture straight, expression composed to the point of indifference. Noble blood—House Maren. He rembered her from tactics class. Sharp. Precise. The kind of person who didn't need to show off because she already knew exactly how capable she was. But beneath that quiet confidence, there was tension. Not fear—no, she hid that well—but uncertainty. Like soone translating theory into reality in real ti, hoping nothing got lost in the process.

Then there was Orn.

Orness, technically—but no one called him that.

Outpost-born, second-year. Practical. Grounded. Useful.

Bright rembered the breach. Orn hadn't hesitated, hadn't overthought it. He had acted—and more importantly, he had acted correctly. And now he stood there, silent, watchful, waiting.

Not for praise.

For acknowledgnt.

For proof that what he had done ant sothing.

Bright didn't need long to decide.

It did.

It already did.

And more than that—

Bright had already decided exactly what he was going to do about it.

The fledglings stood together—six of them—just far enough from the others to make the distance obvious without making it defiant. It was the kind of spacing that spoke of awareness. They knew where they stood. More importantly, they were waiting to see if anyone else would enforce it.

Seventeen to mid-twenties. Different faces, different builds, different origins written in the way they carried themselves. No uniformity.

Except for one thing.

That look.

Bright recognized it instantly.

It was the look of people who had been told, clearly and repeatedly, you are not enough—and then had been thrown into the field anyway. A contradiction forced into flesh. Fear, yes… but not the kind that froze. This was the kind that burned. The kind that sharpened. The kind that, if it didn't break you, turned into sothing dangerous.

So of them held themselves too tight. So too loose. One kept scanning exits. Another refused to look anywhere but forward.

All of them were waiting.

Bright understood that too.

Because he had been them.

Not in the abstract sense. Not in the distant, romanticized way people rembered hardship once they were past it. No—he rembered the exact weight of it. The awareness of the gap. The constant asurent of himself against it.

Outpost or academy, it hadn't mattered. The gap had followed him anyway.

The difference was what ca after.

He hadn't closed it through training. Not really.

Training had helped—but it hadn't been enough.

What had changed him… was the Shroud.

A deploynt that went wrong.

A mont where survival stopped being theoretical.

Where his body, faced with the certainty of death, chose sothing else.

He hadn't grown out of being a fledgling.

He had been forced out of it.

And that wasn't sothing he could replicate here.

Not in a controlled way. Not in a way that wouldn't get them killed.

Bright exhaled slowly, eyes moving over the six of them again—asuring, assessing, deciding.

No Shroud trial.

No near-death catalyst.

Fine.

Then he would build sothing else.

Sothing deliberate.

Sothing that didn't rely on luck or desperation.

They had been drafted below the threshold.

That ant the system had already written them off.

Bright didn't agree.

And in the coming days—

He would make sure that mattered.

-----

The briefing on deploynt paraters ca from Fell directly, in a smaller session for platoon leaders.

The situation, as Fell described it without flourish: the Republic was not yet in a declared state of war with the Federation. This was a technicality of considerable strategic importance. The Republic's military was operating under a pretext frawork — the Federation's infiltration on Republic soil, docunted, evidenced, constituting an act of aggression that authorized a military response under the Republic's existing defensive provisions without requiring a formal declaration. The formal declaration would co. The tiline was approximately three weeks. In the anti, the student companies and their parallel formations were authorized for what Fell described as responsive operations at the border periter — light skirmishes and planned disruptions.

The pretext was the cover. The operations under the pretext were real. The Federation would know the difference. The diplomats would have a language to use. The military would have the space it needed to move.

Bright had known this, in general. Hearing it stated plainly by a calm man in a room of platoon leaders produced a different quality of knowing. The abstract beca operational.

"Questions," Fell said, which was not an invitation to philosophical inquiry.

One of the other platoon leaders of noble origin raised his hand. "The fledglings in the our companies. What's their operational role?"

"Support and logistics functions where possible," Fell said. "Combat deploynt at squad leader discretion in situations where the alternative is worse." He looked around the room. "If you're asking whether you'll be ordered to use fledglings in direct engagent: not preferentially. If you're asking whether direct engagent will occur regardless: yes."

The platoon leader absorbed this with the expression of soone who had expected this answer and did not like it.

Bright said nothing. He was thinking about the six fledglings in his platoon and the tifra he had and what he could reasonably do with it.

-----

He found Duncan and Mara that evening, in the narrow window between the second briefing session and lights-out, in the space behind the temporary barracks where the assembly grounds gave way to a stretch of unoccupied ground that nobody had assigned a purpose to yet.

They were already there. Mara was running the Phase Strike integration through its paces against an imaginary target. Duncan was sitting against the wall with his spear across his knees, doing the thing he did where he looked like he was resting and was actually processing.

"How are you guys holding up under your platoon leaders," Bright said, sitting down.

"It's Noble-heavy on my side," Mara said, without stopping the practice. "That's all I can say for now."

Duncan said, "we are being led by a third year in my platoon. Fell is seeding most of the third years and second years through the student platoons." A pause. "Theodore is two platoons over."

"I know."

"He's been quiet since the formation assignnts," Duncan said. "Which is worse than if he'd been loud."

Mara stopped the practice. "We should just walk over and gut the boy and be done with this." She looked at Bright. "I for one am sick of the shenanigans that co up from that prick."

"I know," Bright said again.

"So do sothing about it before the deploynt," Mara said. The directness of Clear Mind finding the efficient line through ambiguity. "You're a platoon leader. He's a squad leader. The hierarchy is established. Use it."

Bright thought about Fell. About the specific quality of a calm common man in a noble-ruled world who had been given command of a makeshift student company. About what that choice communicated regarding the Republic's operational priorities for this formation.

"Adam," he said.

"Already working on it," Duncan said. "He's been talking to Fell's administrative staff for three hours."

Of course he had.

"Tomorrow," Bright said. "I'll run my platoon through whatever I can cover in the ti I have. The fledglings specifically." He looked at the dark above the assembly grounds, at the not-quite-right quality of sky that still hadn't fully cleared from the breach's dinsional residue.

Bright's gaze dropped to the katana resting across his knees.

The sheath was worn in places, the wrapping familiar against his palm even without touching it. It wasn't just a weapon—it was continuity. A constant that had followed him through every version of himself he had survived.

He didn't romanticize it.

He thought about the blood instead.

Not in so distant, symbolic way—but practically. The way a soldier thought about maintenance. About steel that would need cleaning. About edges that would et resistance. About the quiet, thodical work that ca after violence.

It would happen soon.

That much was certain.

And Bright intended—very specifically—to still be standing when the counting was done.

He had once been cannon fodder.

Just another body at the outpost. Another na that wouldn't have mattered if it disappeared.

He rembered it clearly.

The weight of inadequate weapons. The way every fight felt slightly out of balance, like you were always compensating for sothing missing. Fighting with tools that weren't enough—because the alternative was having nothing at all.

That version of him had survived anyway.

But he wasn't that man anymore.

Not quite.

The problem was—

He didn't yet know what he was instead.

His grip tightened slightly on the sheath.

War had a way of answering questions like that.

Brutally. Efficiently.

It stripped people down, burned through pretense, and left only what couldn't be removed. That was the truth no one liked to dwell on—not the ones who glorified it, and not the ones who condemned it.

War didn't ask.

It revealed.

And the answer it gave you… wasn't always the one you wanted.

Bright exhaled, steady and controlled.

Thirty-two people.

That was his responsibility now.

Thirty-two lives, arranged into sothing that was supposed to function as a unit.

And not much ti left to make it real.

The war had been there long before anyone bothered to na it.

Now—

It had finally introduced itself.

Bright rose to his feet in one smooth motion, the katana shifting easily with him as if it belonged exactly where it was.

No more thinking.

Only action.

He stepped forward.

And went to work.

You are reading Soulforged: The Fusion Talent Chapter 233 - 233— The Company of The Unprepared II on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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