Home Soulforged: The Fusion Talent Chapter 234—The Training Window

Soulforged: The Fusion Talent

Chapter 234—The Training Window
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Bright arrived at the temporary training grounds while the sky was still making up its mind about the day.

Not for the symbolic value of it — he was not, at this stage of his life, doing things primarily for their symbolic value. He arrived early because the grounds needed to be configured before the platoon arrived, and configuring them required his spatial awareness, and his spatial awareness required him to be there. The fact that the platoon would arrive to find their leader already present and already working was information that they would receive and process and that would tell them something about what the coming days would look like. That was a secondary effect. He took it.

He spent forty minutes rearranging the grounds.

He didn't do this physically. His spatial awareness worked at the level of perception — he could create the experience of a route being clear when it wasn't, of a position being stable when it was about to shift, of a space being larger or smaller than it was in ways that the body's instincts registered and the mind had to consciously override. He had used this application defensively since he'd understood he had it. Using it deliberately, constructively, to build a training environment that would produce a specific kind of discomfort in a controlled context — this was a different application, one he'd been thinking about since the evening conversation with Duncan and Mara.

He was not trying to develop a technique. Techniques were developed through repetition in stable conditions, and he had neither the time nor the stable conditions. He was trying to develop something more foundational. The ability to have your instincts produce incorrect information and keep operating anyway, cleanly, without the freeze or the spiral that incorrect instincts caused in people who had never had their instincts fail them before.

The academy kids in his platoon had good instincts. Their instincts had been developed in controlled environments and calibrated against predictable resistance. Days of pressure drills would not replace years of field experience. But it might — if it worked the way he was building it — give them a single experience of operating through incorrect instincts before the field produced the same experience with worse consequences.

The platoon arrived in ones and twos over the following twenty minutes. He watched them register his presence — the slight recalibration, the reassessment of what the day was going to be — and said nothing until they were assembled.

"We're not doing technique drills," he said. "You'll run techniques that you already know. What we're working on is the three seconds after your instincts tell you something that isn't true. That's all. Three seconds. That's what we're here for."

He looked at the grounds he'd prepared.

"Move to the eastern marker."

They moved. Three people hit the perception distortion he'd built at the fifteen-meter mark and stopped l. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝚠𝚎𝚋𝗻𝗼𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝚘𝐦

Two of the fledglings froze entirely.

Not long — two seconds, maybe three. But the quality of the freeze was specific. Bright knew it from the outpost, from the particular stillness that came before a person either recovered and moved or stayed still long enough for the situation to catch them. These two were neither panicking nor functioning. They were in the gap between those things, which was the most dangerous place to be.

He noted it. Said nothing. Watched the rest of the platoon navigate through the distortion — some cleanly, some with the visible effort of overriding a body that was arguing against moving — and marked who handled it how.

Voss had arrived with the others and had been watching the exercise with the expression of someone reading a language she knew. When the first run finished and the platoon was reassembling, she moved to Bright's left without being directed there and said, quietly, "it's a nice idea you've got going on."

"Yes, I think it is," Bright said.

Kieran on the other hand was watching the two fledglings who had frozen. His expression was not judgment though but recognition.

-----

The six fledglings were:

Fen. Seventeen, the youngest, from an outpost settlement so small it didn't appear on standard Republic maps. He had a Soul Talent that read as something involving heat as most people did. His technical skills were minimal. Still he leaned into the pressure drills the way he leaned into everything, with the aggression of someone who had learned early that waiting for conditions to improve was a strategy that the outpost did not support.

Calla was twenty-two had petty traders as parents and always kept scanning the exits. Her core integration was defensive — a dampening field that reduced incoming force, which was a good defensive integration and completely wrong for how she'd been trying to use it, which was offensively. She had been fighting against her own build for however long she'd had the integration, and the mismatch had produced a kind of frustration that the pressure drills were bringing to the surface.

Sev was twenty-five, the oldest of the six. He had been doing some kind of security work before the draft — his bearing communicated experience with controlled confrontation, the bouncer-or-guard variety that was nothing like field deployment. His instincts had been calibrated for situations that escalated slowly and resolved through presence. Nothing about field deployment escalated slowly.

Brinn was nineteen,had applied to Sparkshire and hadn't been accepted, which put him in the category of people who were close enough to the institutional track to have some of its training and far enough outside it to have none of its protections. Core integration that Bright couldn't read cleanly, which meant it was either undeveloped or unusual. He was the other one who had gone still at the fifteen-meter mark, and he had stayed still longer than Sev, and when he finally moved he had the expression of someone who had had a private argument with himself and wasn't certain who had won.

Tem and Wex were the remaining two. They were the somewhere-between ones, who processed the pressure drills with the grinding effort of people who were neither ahead of the curve nor behind it.

By the third session, Bright had identified Sev and Brinn.

He pulled them at the break and they came with the particular dread of people expecting a verdict.

"Logistics and support," Bright said. He said it the way Fell said things — as a fact rather than a judgment. "Fell briefed us on the role. It's not a secondary function. Supply lines, communication relays, equipment maintenance under field conditions — if those fail, the combat element fails regardless of what we do." He looked at them. "I need people who can maintain function under pressure in a support context. That's a different skill set and it's not a lesser one."

Sev absorbed this neutrally, after a moment he nodded. The relief was visible and he didn't hide it, which Bright thought well of — people who hid relief were people who had decided how they were supposed to feel rather than how they actually felt.

Brinn said nothing though, he just accepted the orders as he knew it came from his superiors.

-----

On the evening of the first day, Bright found Orn at the edge of the assembly grounds, running a solo equipment check.

"The logistics squad," Bright said. "Sev and Brinn, and the two I'm keeping in support rotation. You're their lead. It's a real role. I need it run like one."

Orn looked at him steadily. "Understood."

That was all he said. Bright had expected something more and then had thought about who Orn was and had stopped expecting it. The acknowledgment had been given. The role had been given. Orn would answer with the role itself, not with words about it.

Bright went to find Lenne.

She found him first. She had a document.

It was two pages long with a detailed description of the platoon. Capability distribution across the platoon's thirty-two members. Rank, talent type, field experience where available, behavioral observations from three sessions, gaps in the current deployment configuration.

He read it. Added three notes in the margin — two corrections, one expansion. Handed it back.

She read his additions with the expression of someone who had expected either dismissal or blanket approval and had received neither. She added two notes of her own. Returned it.

He read them. One was a correction of his correction, which was accurate. One was a question about the fledgling deployment philosophy that she had framed as an observation to make it less confrontational, and he could see the framing and appreciated that she'd used it rather than found it annoying.

"Our Intelligence function," he said. "You're running it."

"I know," she said. Not arrogantly. She had been doing it since the first day. He was naming what was already happening.

The document became the working document. Over the following two days it acquired both their handwriting in the margins.

-----

On the second day, Adam's report arrived through the channel Adam had established,

which Bright read in the twenty minutes between the second and third training sessions.

It was talks regarding their prideful noble problem.

Bright read it twice. Set it down. Returned to the training session.

He did nothing about it until the session break, when he walked to where Fell was reviewing the day's logs at the edge of the grounds, and said, without prelude, "Platoon leaders — are we authorized to establish cross-platoon situational awareness sharing?"

Fell looked up. "For what purpose."

"My spatial awareness gives me a real-time picture of the company's position and the immediate environment out to operational range. If the other platoon leaders have a shared communication protocol that feeds into that picture, everyone's operating on better information than any of us have individually."

Fell looked at him for a moment.

"It has to be Company-wide or it doesn't happen," Fell said.

"Yes."

Fell held the moment a beat longer. Then: "Approved. Brief the other platoon leaders at end of day."

Bright returned to the training session. Filed the exchange in the same place he filed the things that cost something to do. Playing the game rather than standing outside it had a specific texture — not unpleasant, just different from the texture of refusing to play. He was aware of the difference. He intended to stay aware of it.

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