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Soulforged: The Fusion Talent-Chapter 113—Convergence of Power

Chapter 113

Chapter 113: Chapter 113—Convergence of Power
Baggen moved through Vester’s chaos with desperate purpose, calling Rolf’s name into darkness that swallowed sound.
"Rolf! Where are you?"
There was no response. Just distant screams, alarm bells, the clicking of mandibles and clash of steel that meant combat everywhere except where Baggen searched.
He’d lost track of his squadmate during the initial panic—Rolf had been drunk, bitter about being excluded from the Academy, he had wandered off seeking air and space. Baggen had let him go, had thought giving him time to process would help.
Stupid. So fucking stupid.
Now, hours into the assault, Baggen couldn’t find him anywhere.
He checked the barracks—empty, abandoned. The training yards—occupied by ant swarms Baggen barely escaped. The taverns—full of bodies, some Covenant, some Republic, none of them Rolf.
"Rolf!" Baggen’s voice cracked with fear and guilt. "Answer me, damn it!"
He turned a corner into an alley, found three Covenant agents looting a supply depot. They saw him, raised weapons, and charged.
Baggen’s hammer met the first agent’s skull with bone-crushing force. The second died to a follow-up strike that caved in ribs. The third tried to flee—Baggen caught him anyway, using an earth wall, rage and fear channeling into brutal efficiency.
Then he continued searching, leaving corpses behind without a second thought.
That lad’s drunk. Unarmed. Out there somewhere in this nightmare.
The mathematics were terrible. Every minute that passed reduced Rolf’s chances of survival. Every sector Baggen cleared without finding him meant checking somewhere else while time ran out.
"Rolf! Where are you?"
The darkness pressed close, illuminated only by scattered emergency lamps that created more shadows than light.
And somewhere in that darkness, Rolf’s remains were being processed by ant digestive systems, reduced to nutrients that would never be recovered, never be identified.
But Baggen didn’t know that yet.
He kept searching.
Kept calling.
Kept believing his friend was alive somewhere, waiting for rescue.
Because accepting the alternative was impossible.
-----
In the western district’s noble quarter, bodies decorated expensive homes with grotesque artistry.
Lord Fabian Torrhen lay in his dining hall, throat cut, surrounded by the feast he’d been enjoying when the Covenant agents breached his residence. The silver-haired noble had died mid-bite, expensive wine still in his cup, his expression frozen in shock.
Lady Vesrin Carthage hung from her balcony, her body displaying the black ink markings Covenant fanatics left as signatures. Prayer stones littered the floor beneath her—theatrical touches that declared this religious execution rather than political assassination.
Commander Orin Blackwell—not noble by birth but elevated through marriage—had been found in his study, multiple stab wounds suggesting prolonged struggle before death. His security detail lay scattered throughout the residence, all killed with professional efficiency that suggested training beyond typical Covenant capabilities.
Seven nobles dead. Twelve if the entire quarter was counted.
All of them resistant to Crownhold expansion. All of them conveniently eliminated during the chaotic assault that provided perfect cover.
The Covenant agents who’d performed the killings were mostly dead themselves now—killed by response forces, by Crawlers, by the chaos they’d helped create.
But their mission was complete.
The northern political landscape had shifted dramatically in a single night.
And somewhere in his office, Vaelith Crownhold documented each casualty with cold satisfaction, knowing that power vacuums would be filled by people he could influence.
-----
Markus-POV
Markus ran through Vester’s corridors with prayer stone clutched in shaking hands.
He’d been part of this. Had mapped vulnerabilities, had coordinated assault timing, had believed—
truly believed
—that he was serving the Great One’s purpose.
But watching Covenant agents die by the dozens against trained Republic soldiers, watching ants tear through fanatics and regulars alike, watching the orchestrated chaos unfold exactly as Vaelith had designed...
We’re not warriors. We’re meat shields.
The realization had crystallized when Markus saw three agents he’d trained with—people who’d shared his faith, his conviction—torn apart by ants while trying to reach a supply depot that Vaelith’s intelligence had marked as critical.
The depot had been empty. Abandoned. Worthless.
They’d died for nothing. For misdirection. For
theater
.
The damned adept used us. We should be serving the Great One instead we’re just serving his political agenda. We were always expendable.
Markus’s faith—already damaged by Vaelith’s manipulation—shattered completely.
The Great One didn’t seem to care about Covenant followers. Vaelith didn’t care about Covenant followers. No one cared about them except as tools to create chaos.
I have to leave. Have to escape before—*
"Markus!"
He turned, saw another Covenant agent—Thera, one of the handlers who’d coordinated tonight’s assault—emerge from shadows.
"What are you doing?" Thera demanded. "Your position is sector four! You’re supposed to be—"
"I’m
leaving
," Markus interrupted, his voice tight. "This mission is suicide. We’re not warriors, we’re fucking
diversions
. That crownhold adept’s using us to kill people he wants eliminated while we die containing threats we can’t defeat!"
"That’s cowardice! The Great One—"
"The Great One is
dead
!" Markus shouted. "Has been for generations! And we’re dying for a corpse’s supposed will while nobles manipulate us like pieces on a board!"
Thera’s expression hardened. She raised her blade. "Then you’re a traitor. To the Covenant. To the cause. To—"
Markus didn’t let her finish.
He took the chance while their bodies were close. He knew they would come for him—so he struck first.
His blade found her throat, opened her windpipe, and she collapsed in a spray of arterial blood.
He stared at her dying form, watched the light fade from eyes that had held such certainty, such faith.
Then he ran.
Not toward any designated position. Not toward any Covenant rally point.
Just
away
.
Away from the assault. Away from the faith. Away from the lies that had consumed long months of his life and dozens of his companions.
I’m done. Done being a pawn. Done serving causes I don’t understand. Done.
He reached the outer perimeter, found a drainage tunnel the ants hadn’t discovered, and crawled into darkness.
Behind him, Vester burned.
Ahead of him... he didn’t know. Didn’t care. Anywhere was better than dying for someone else’s agenda while believing it was divine purpose.
Markus disappeared into the Never-Ending Night, leaving the Covenant behind, leaving faith behind, leaving everything behind except survival.
The Great One’s will could find someone else to fulfill it.
He was done.
-----
Adept Rowan Kadesh stood at the administrative center’s main entrance, his cores blazing with power that made the air shimmer with heat distortion.
Before him, emerging from the colony breach with terrible majesty, came the
queen
.
She was massive—fifteen feet of segmented chitin plating, mandibles that could crush stone, compound eyes that tracked movement with insectoid precision. Behind her, soldier ants assembled in formation, hundreds strong, waiting for her pheromone commands.
Rowan had fought Crawlers for years. Had killed Monarchs, had survived impossible encounters, had earned his Adept rank through capability rather than politics.
But this was different.
The queen wasn’t just another Crawler. She was a tad
intelligent
. The coordinating mind behind the swarm that had devastated Vester’s defensive response.
This is what coordinated the emergence,
Rowan realized.
This is what turned random ant hunting into strategic assault.
He activated his primary combat core—
Titanic Strength
—and felt power flood through his enhanced musculature. His blade—six feet of Republic steel, enchanted and lethal—ignited with soul-force that could cut through nearly anything.
"Come on then," Rowan growled at the queen. "Let’s see what you’ve got."
The queen’s mandibles clicked, pheromones flooding her swarm with simple commands.
KILL. DEFEND. FEED.
Soldier ants surged forward in coordinated wave, fifty at once, mandibles snapping.
Rowan met them head-on.
His blade carved through chitin like paper, each strike backed by Titanic Strength that made him a mobile siege weapon. Ants died in sprays of ichor, their bodies launched backward by impacts that shattered carapaces.
But they kept coming. Endless. Coordinated. Learning.
Rowan’s blade found weak points, exploited joints, targeted sensory organs. His combat experience let him fight multiple opponents simultaneously, his Adept-level reflexes letting him process threats faster than human baseline could perceive.
But the swarm was
vast
. For every ant he killed, three more took its place.
And the queen watched, mandibles clicking, adjusting her pheromone commands based on observed weaknesses in Rowan’s defense.
She’s learning
, Rowan realized with something like respect. *
Adapting tactics in real-time."
He killed another dozen ants, carved through their formation, pressed toward the queen herself.
If he could eliminate the coordinating intelligence, the swarm would revert to basic hunting behaviors. Easier to contain. Easier to defeat.
His blade rose for a killing strike—
—and then, suddenly a
presence
flooded the administrative center.
A spiritual kind. The weight of another Adept-level soul manifesting combat readiness.
Rowan pivoted, saw the figure emerge from shadows.
Tall. Hooded. Wearing robes marked with Covenant symbols that looked too clean, too pristine to belong to a common fanatic.
The figure removed its hood, revealing a scarred face, eyes burning with fanatical certainty, and soul-force presence that marked him as an
Adept
.
"Rowan Kadesh," the Covenant Adept said, his voice carrying absolute conviction. "Vassal of a corrupt Republic. Defender of blasphemous resistance. The Great One demands your death."
Rowan’s blade shifted targets automatically, his combat instincts recognizing the greater threat.
"You’re the handler," Rowan assessed. "The one coordinating tonight’s assault. Adept-level Covenant infiltrator."
"I am Tertius," the Covenant Adept confirmed. "Chosen vessel of the Great One’s wrath. And I bring divine judgment to—"
He never finished the declaration.
Because the queen, sensing weakness in its prey distracted by a new opponent,
charged
.
Fifteen feet of organic weaponry, driven by hunger and hive-mind purpose, mandibles wide enough to crush both Adepts simultaneously.
Rowan and Tertius moved in perfect synchronization—both diving opposite directions as the queen’s charge thundered between them, mandibles snapping on empty air.
They rolled, came to their feet facing each other across the queen’s massive body, three Adept-level threats suddenly occupying the same space.
The ant soldiers clicked confusion, receiving conflicting pheromone signals—
attack the Adepts, protect the queen, maintain formation—
"Truce?" Rowan offered flatly. "Kill the Crawler first, then fight each other?"
"The Great One’s will—"
"Will be irrelevant if that queen kills us both!" Rowan interrupted. " I would assume the practical theology would be to survive, then fulfill divine purpose!"
Tertius hesitated, fanaticism warring with his base survival instinct.
The queen made the decision for him, mandibles snapping toward the Covenant Adept with enough force to pulverize stone.
Tertius moved, his own combat cores blazing to life, his blade meeting the mandibles in a shower of sparks.
"
Fine
," he snarled. "Temporary alliance. The queen dies. Then you die."
"Acceptable," Rowan agreed.
They attacked in concert—two Adepts with opposing ideologies and mutual hatred, united temporarily by the simple mathematics of survival against a greater threat.

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