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Now reading: Chapter 81: Hidden Agendas from Help! I'm just an extra yet the Heroines and Villainesses want me!, a Fantasy novel by LegionWorker.

The formal dining hall was even more imposing at night, lit by dozens of essence-powered lamps that cast everything in cold white light. The long table had been set for twelve people, and William found himself seated in the middle section, positioned where he could be observed but not close enough to the head of the table to suggest importance.

Duke Edward sat at the head in full military dress uniform, dals gleaming on his chest. Around him sat officers of various ranks, all wearing their formal regalia. These were n who commanded armies, made strategic decisions that affected thousands of lives, and held real power within the kingdom’s military structure.

William recognized a few from their portraits in the manor’s halls. General Aldric Thorne, the kingdom’s Minister of War. Commander Helena Vex, who’d led the successful campaign against the northern insurgents. Colonel Marcus Ashford — no relation to Mira’s family, just coincidence of nas.

The others he didn’t know, but their bearing and the deference shown to them suggested high rank and significant influence.

"Gentlen," Duke Edward said once everyone was seated, "this is my third son, William. He’s recently made the Inter-Academy team and will be competing in three weeks."

The officers studied William with the clinical assessnt of n evaluating potential resources. He kept his expression neutral and his posture correct, aware that every detail was being catalogued.

"Fifth place in the team selection, I understand," General Thorne said. His voice was gravelly and his eyes were sharp despite his advanced age. "Respectable for soone with your previous... academic record."

"The competition was strong," William replied evenly. "I was fortunate to place at all."

"Fortunate or capable?" Commander Vex asked. She was younger than Thorne, maybe in her forties, with scars visible on her hands that spoke of real combat experience. "Your instructors’ reports suggest significant improvent in the past few months. What changed?"

William felt the weight of attention from everyone at the table. His father was watching him with that sa cold expression, clearly expecting him to fail this interrogation.

"I stopped making excuses and started actually training," William said. "I had good partners who pushed to improve, and I finally understood that coasting on family na wasn’t sustainable."

"Interesting." General Thorne leaned back in his chair as servants began bringing the first course. "Your older brothers both serve with distinction in the military. Marcus commands a battalion on the eastern border, Alexander leads an elite cavalry unit. Both achieved their positions through rit rather than family connections."

The implication was clear, his brothers had earned their success while William had accomplished nothing comparable.

"I’m aware of my brothers’ achievents," William said. "They set a high standard."

"And do you intend to pursue military service after graduation?" Commander Vex asked.

"I haven’t decided on my post-academy path yet. The competition is my imdiate focus."

"A safe answer," Colonel Ashford observed. "Though also a non-answer. You’re either being diplomatic or genuinely haven’t considered your future."

Duke Edward spoke for the first ti since introductions. "William has spent most of his life avoiding serious consideration of anything beyond imdiate comfort. I wouldn’t expect him to have concrete plans."

The temperature in the room seed to drop. Several officers shifted uncomfortably, clearly not expecting the Duke to openly criticize his own son at a formal dinner.

William kept his expression neutral, refusing to react to the provocation.

"With respect, Your Grace," General Thorne said carefully, "the young man’s recent performance suggests he’s moved beyond his previous habits. Perhaps we should evaluate him based on current capabilities rather than past failures."

"Perhaps," the Duke said coldly. "Or perhaps this is a temporary performance that will collapse under actual pressure. The competition will tell us which."

The dinner continued with that tension hanging over everything. The officers asked William questions about his training, his techniques, his assessnt of the other academies’ teams. He answered carefully, aware that every word was being weighed.

"The Ashenheart girl has been training you personally, I hear," Commander Vex said during the third course. "That’s quite an endorsent. Seraphina Ashenheart doesn’t waste ti on students without potential."

"She’s been generous with her instruction."

"Generous," Vex repeated with a slight smile. "Is that what we’re calling it? The reports I’ve received suggest she’s quite... invested in your developnt."

William caught the implication and kept his face carefully blank. Of course military intelligence would be tracking relationships between students at the kingdom’s premier academy.

"Lady Seraphina is a skilled instructor and a valuable teammate," he said neutrally.

General Thorne laughed — a short, sharp sound. "Diplomatic answer. You’re learning." He gestured with his wine glass. "Let be more direct, young Cross. Several of us at this table are interested in recruiting promising talent for various military positions and special operations units. Your recent improvent has caught our attention."

"However," Colonel Ashford continued, "we need to know you can handle pressure. The Inter-Academy competition is more than just an academic exercise. It’s a proving ground that determines career trajectories."

"I understand."

"Do you?" Duke Edward’s voice cut through the conversation. "Because from where I sit, you’re still an untested variable who happened to have a few good months at an academy that coddles students. Real combat, real consequences, real pressure — you’ve experienced none of these."

"Edward," General Thorne said quietly, "perhaps—"

"No." The Duke set down his silverware with precise force. "These n are considering investing resources and political capital in my son’s future. They deserve honesty about what they’re getting." He looked directly at William. "Tell them, William. Tell them about the training accident that almost killed you last year. About how you failed basic combat certification three tis. About how your cultivation was so poor that instructors suggested you drop out entirely."

The silence was absolute. Every officer was looking at William now, waiting to see how he’d respond to being systematically dismantled by his own father.

William took a slow breath and t his father’s eyes directly.

"Everything you said is accurate," he acknowledged. "I was a failure by every asurable standard. I wasted opportunities, refused to put in effort, and generally proved every low expectation people had of ."

He paused, letting that hang in the air.

"And then I decided that wasn’t acceptable anymore. I worked harder in the past four months than in the previous eighteen years combined. I earned my position on that team through performance in the tournant, not through family influence. And I intend to prove at the competition that my improvent is permanent, not temporary."

Duke Edward’s expression didn’t change, but sothing flickered in his eyes — surprise, maybe, or frustration that William hadn’t reacted defensively.

"Bold words," the Duke said. "We’ll see if they’re backed by action."

General Thorne cleared his throat. "Well. I appreciate the honesty from both of you." He looked at William with renewed interest. "Self-awareness is valuable. Many young nobles never develop it."

The conversation shifted after that, moving to broader military topics and political situations that William mostly listened to rather than participated in. He learned more in two hours about kingdom politics and military positioning than he’d ever known before.

The northern territories were unstable. Three different succession disputes were simring across major duchies. The military was quietly preparing for potential internal conflicts while officially maintaining that everything was stable.

And through it all, Duke Edward maintained his cold distance, occasionally making cutting remarks about William that the other officers politely ignored.

When dinner finally ended, the officers stood and began taking their leave. Several stopped to speak with William directly.

"Your performance at the competition will matter, young Cross," General Thorne said quietly. "More than you probably realize. Certain parties are watching very carefully."

"What parties?"

"That’s not sothing I can discuss here." Thorne glanced at Duke Edward, who was speaking with Commander Vex across the room. "Just know that success opens doors, but it also paints targets. Be careful."

He walked away before William could ask what that ant.

Commander Vex approached next. "Your father is harder on you than necessary," she observed. "That usually ans either he genuinely believes you’re worthless, or he’s trying to toughen you up through harsh treatnt. I’m not sure which is worse."

"Neither option is particularly encouraging."

"No, it’s not." She studied him. "But you handled tonight well. Didn’t rise to the bait, didn’t beco defensive, didn’t try to oversell yourself. That suggests you’ve actually developed so maturity."

"Thank you, Commander."

"Don’t thank yet. If you’re serious about military service after graduation, you’ll be competing against your brothers’ reputations every step of the way. That’s a heavy burden." She moved toward the exit. "Good luck at the competition, William Cross. You’ll need it."

The officers left one by one until only William and his father remained in the dining hall.

Duke Edward stood at the head of the table, still in his formal uniform, looking at William with an expression that was impossible to read.

"You surprised them tonight," the Duke said. "They expected you to either crumble under criticism or lash out defensively. You did neither."

"Would you have preferred I did?"

"I would have preferred you showed that kind of composure years ago instead of wasting everyone’s ti." Duke Edward moved toward the exit, pausing at the door. "General Thorne was right about one thing. The competition matters more than you understand. People are watching. People with interests that don’t align with your survival."

William felt his pulse quicken. "What does that an?"

"It ans the world is more complicated than academy training grounds and tournant brackets." His father’s voice was flat. "It ans that success makes you valuable to so and threatening to others. And it ans that if you’re not prepared for the consequences of that attention, the competition might solve everyone’s problems by removing you from the equation entirely."

"Are you threatening ?"

"I’m stating facts." Duke Edward opened the door. "Whether you’re intelligent enough to understand those facts is yet to be determined. Get so sleep, William. You have one more day here before returning to your academy and whatever awaits you there."

He left, and William stood alone in the massive dining hall, his mind racing.

General Thorne’s warning about parties watching him. Commander Vex’s comnt about targets. His father’s statent about removing him from the equation.

Was his father involved in the assassination attempts? Or just aware of threats and doing nothing to prevent them?

---

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