By morning, Adam knew the name of the Adept who had arrived.
He had felt it the evening before—the quality of the soul-force, controlled and deliberate in a way that didn't belong to anyone ordinary. He'd caught a glimpse of the banners as well, half-hidden in the low light near the owner's tent. That had been enough.
House Crownhold.
Under different circumstances, he might have recognized it instantly. Someone with his reputation—sharp, observant, capable—should have known it on sight.
But the truth was simpler.
His mind was his strength.
Not his education.
Adam had not grown up with the kind of knowledge noble-born students carried without thinking. The outpost hadn't taught heraldry. It hadn't cared about the histories of old houses or the meaning behind their symbols. Survival didn't require that kind of learning.
The Academy had helped. Filled in gaps. Given structure where there had been none.
But it hadn't erased the difference.
There were still things he had to piece together after the fact—connections others would make instinctively.
And banners were one of them.
Because in the outpost, nothing that wanted to kill you carried a flag.
Vaelith Crownhold was the one occupying the large, carefully arranged tent set slightly apart from the rest of the camp.
Adam sat with the name for a moment before doing anything else with it.
He knew it.
Not from books or from some carefully curated Academy lectures.
It was from his days in Vester.
How could he forget?
Vaelith had been the only man there who unsettled him—not through force, not through presence in the usual sense, but through something harder to define. Adam didn't have the nerve to go near him and be put in his radar. There was no bravado or curiosity strong enough to override his instincts.
Because his instincts had been clear.
Stay away.
Adam's strength had always been his mind. Not in the abstract, but in a very practical sense—awareness, pattern recognition, control. Where others guarded their bodies, he guarded his thoughts.
That was his defense.
And Vaelith had stepped through it.
Effortlessly.
Like it wasn't there.
The memory still sat wrong with him. Those first days at Vester—brief, controlled interactions that had felt anything but controlled on his end. It hadn't been overt. There was no obvious intrusion or visible exertion.
But Adam had felt it.
The way Vaelith's attention settled on him. The way it seemed to reach, to map, to understand without permission. As if the man wasn't just looking at him, but through him.
It had been invasive in a way Adam had no defense against.
Like someone had handled something that wasn't meant to be touched.
And now—
Vaelith was here.
In the same army.
Moving toward the same war.
Adam exhaled slowly, forcing the reaction down into something usable.
Crownhold.
He hadn't studied their banners in detail—never saw the point—but he had made the effort to understand the house itself. Enough to place it. Enough to know where it stood.
It was not an immediate threat, the way Selaris had been due to that prick he still had an axe to grind with.
Still it was a house that endured.
Senate representation. Military history. Influence in both arenas without overcommitting to either.
Crownhold wasn't loud power.
It was sustained power.
The kind that lasted across generations because it understood two things equally well:
The use of the sword.
And the rooms where the sword wasn't carried.
Adam didn't like that combination.
Didn't like it then.
Didn't like it now.
Because men who could operate in both spaces—
Rarely needed to force anything.
And that made them harder to predict.
He began turning over the possibilities of why Vaelith was positioned so close to the student camp.
First—official military function.
Technically plausible.
But it didn't hold under scrutiny.
Adepts of Crownhold's standing didn't linger near student companies, not in forward deployment zones. They attached to battalion command or higher—positions where their presence influenced outcomes that mattered on a larger scale. Strategy. Coordination. Decision-making at levels that shaped the battlefield.
Not this.
Not a tent set just close enough to observe trainees.
The explanation existed, but it didn't fit.
Adam discarded it.
Second—political positioning.
More likely.
Wars weren't just fought in the present. They shaped what came after, and the old houses understood that better than anyone. Influence wasn't built in moments—it was seeded early, cultivated quietly, and harvested years later.
Position yourself near individuals who would matter.
Not now.
Later.
That was the kind of move houses like Crownhold made without announcing it. It was long-game thinking, the kind that stretched across generations. Adam hadn't studied their history in depth, but he knew enough to recognize the pattern.
They had done it before.
Found talent early. Watched. Invested when necessary. Claimed proximity before others even realized something worth claiming existed.
This—
This fit better.
But it still wasn't complete.
Because political positioning was broad.
Calculated.
Spread across multiple targets.
Vaelith's presence here didn't feel broad.
It felt… focused.
Which led to the third possibility.
Personal interest.
The least visible.
And the one Adam trusted the most.
Because it explained what the others couldn't.
Vaelith hadn't attached himself to battalion command.
He hadn't spread his attention across the entire student company.
He had positioned himself close—
And he had been watching.
A specific platoon.
A specific leader.
That level of precision wasn't political drift.
It was intent.
Adam's gaze lowered slightly as the conclusion settled into place.
This wasn't coincidence.
It wasn't convenience.
It was choice.
And choice meant purpose.
He let that sit for a moment before pushing further.
What does he want?
The answer didn't come immediately, but the context did.
Vester.
They had disrupted something there. Adam didn't know the full extent of it—didn't need to. What mattered was that whatever Vaelith had been building, observing, or controlling had not gone according to plan.
And men like him—
Didn't forget that.
Didn't dismiss it as chance.
They tracked it.
Filed it.
Came back to it when the opportunity presented itself.
Grudges, for people like Vaelith, weren't emotional.
They were… structured.
Part of a larger accounting.
Adam exhaled slowly.
Their current status didn't protect them.
Bring students of the republic was a temporary role.
A phase, not a position.
Soon enough, they would be sorted—into those who become independents,or serve in various noble houses.
Which meant—
From Vaelith's perspective—
This was the ideal time to evaluate them.
No protections.
No established alliances.
No formal backing.
Just raw potential, still in motion.
Easy to observe.
Easier to influence.
Or eliminate.
Adam didn't like any of those options.
But he understood them.
And more importantly—
He understood that Vaelith wouldn't be here without a reason that justified his time.
Which meant whatever he wanted—
Was worth watching closely.
And that made him a problem.