I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 165: The Sieve of Souls

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 165: The Sieve of Souls

The quartz platform beneath Vane did not merely vibrate. It roared.

The northern vent of the Void Chambers acted as a direct conduit to the island’s primary mana-vein. The energy rising from the abyss was not the gentle, filtered stream found in the student villas. It was a jagged, crystalline torrent that threatened to shred the channels of anyone unprepared for its density. The air above the vent distorted with heat and raw power, shimmering like the horizon of a desert at noon.

Vane sat at the center of the white quartz disk. His legs were crossed in a meditative posture, and his hands rested loosely on his knees. He was the anchor of the formation. Around him, the air warped under the pressure of a localized silver storm. This was the physical manifestation of the [Silver Fang] authority, a power he had seized and integrated through the primary function of the [Usurper].

He did not use the [Usurper] to navigate the flow. That authority remained buried deep within his core, a cold and silent weight that he saved for moments of absolute necessity. Instead, he relied on the predatory efficiency of the [Silver Fang].

The silver energy acted as a sieve. It caught the raw, unfiltered mana rising from the vent. It tore the energy apart. It stripped away the environmental impurities and refined the jagged power into a cold, usable stream that he fed into his teammates.

The pressure was immense. It felt as though he were trying to drink from a firehose while holding his breath underwater.

To Vane’s left, Valerica sat with her back straight and her eyes closed. Her [Celestial Heart] authority hummed at a low, resonant frequency. She acted as the heater for the group. Her authority provided a constant, controlled warmth that prevented the raw mana from freezing their nervous systems. Without her, the sheer density of the environmental cold would have snapped their focus within minutes.

To his right, Ashe sat with a grin that never quite faded, even in meditation. She used the dominating presence of the [Warlord] authority to force the jagged energy into a manageable rhythm. She was the drumbeat. If the mana stagnated for even a second, it would backflow into their cores and cause a collapse. Ashe ensured the tempo never faltered.

Behind them, Isole kept the [Samsara] authority active. Her mismatched eyes were wide open, scanning the invisible currents for surges that could overwhelm their collective perimeter. She was the watchman. She saw the spikes in the flow before they happened, guiding Vane’s filter to adjust for the incoming violence.

They were a closed loop. They were four EX-rank monsters attempting to consume a volume of cosmic energy that would have killed a standard squad of Elites.

The peace of the session was interrupted by the sound of heavy boots striking the obsidian walkway.

The footsteps were loud. They were deliberate. They carried the weight of entitlement.

Vane did not open his eyes. He triggered the secondary skill of the [Usurper], allowing the status screen to populate his dark vision with a series of cold, blue windows.

[Target Analysis]

Name: Garret

Rank: 4 (High Sentinel)

Authority: [Iron Skin] (S)

Danger: Moderate

[Target Analysis]

Name: Silas

Rank: 4 (Mid Sentinel)

Authority: [Gravity Well] (S)

Danger: Low

Five second-year Sentinels stood at the edge of the quartz platform. They were members of the "Iron Guard," a faction known for their aggressive territorial control over the high-density zones of the Academy. They wore modified uniforms with grey pauldrons, marking their allegiance to the metal-affinity clique.

Garret stood at the front. He was a tall, broad-shouldered youth with hair the color of steel wool. His arms were crossed over a chest that radiated the dull, heavy pressure of his authority.

"This platform is reserved for the upper tiers, first-year," Garret said.

His voice echoed in the cavernous hall, cutting through the hum of the mana crystals.

"I do not care what happened in Thorne’s class earlier today. The northern vent is too dangerous for children who haven’t even stabilized their fourth circle. You are leaking interference. Move to the lower rings before the feedback kills you."

Vane did not move. He did not acknowledge Garret’s voice. He focused entirely on the silver mana, guiding it through a particularly violent surge from the vent below.

"He is ignoring us," Silas muttered from behind Garret. The gravity-mana around Silas began to ripple, distorting the light near his hands. "Look at the frost on the quartz edge. He is losing control of the conduction. If that snaps, the backlash will hit us too."

"That is not frost from failure," Isole said.

Her voice was quiet, but it carried a sharp edge that sliced through the ambient noise. She did not look away from the mana-currents, but her mismatched eyes glowed with the recursive intensity of the [Samsara].

"That is the byproduct of the Silver Fang," Isole continued. "It is the residue of digestion. If you step onto this platform, that frost will be the last thing your blood feels."

Garret narrowed his eyes. The insolence of a first-year, even one with a reputation, was something the Iron Guard did not tolerate.

"This is about safety," Garret said, his voice hardening. "The Academy cannot afford to lose four prodigies because of one commoner’s ego. The vents are not a playground. Move."

He took a step forward. His iron-mana flared, turning his skin a dull, metallic grey. He reached out a hand, intending to grab Vane’s shoulder and forcibly break his meditation.

The moment his fingers entered the silver shroud, the world seemed to freeze.

Vane did not strike him. He did not dodge. He simply shifted the priority of the [Silver Fang].

The silver mana, which had been focusing on the vent, suddenly turned outward. It did not blast Garret away. It did not act as a wall. Instead, it began to consume the iron-mana Garret was flaring.

The silver energy acted as a parasite. It shredded Garret’s defense and incorporated the raw kinetic pressure of his authority into the platform’s own loop.

Garret gasped. He pulled his hand back as if he had plunged it into a blast furnace.

His fingers were shaking. He looked down to see a thin line of silver frost beginning to crawl up his knuckles. The sensation was not one of impact. It was the sensation of being hollowed out. His mana wasn’t being blocked; it was being eaten.

"The northern vent belongs to whoever can breathe its air," Vane said, finally speaking.

His voice was hollow. It echoed with the metallic resonance of the silver storm. He still had not opened his eyes.

"You are struggling to maintain your own shroud just standing on the walkway, Garret. You are burning energy just to exist in this density. If you step onto this quartz, the mana from the vein will use your body as a conduit to reach the floor. You will be dead before your knees hit the stone."

Garret looked at the swirling vortex of unfiltered energy beneath the platform. He looked at the four first-years. They were sitting in the middle of a mana-storm that should have vaporized them minutes ago. He saw the way Valerica and Ashe were perfectly synchronized with Vane’s silver pulse. He saw the total lack of strain on Vane’s face.

Garret realized, with a sudden jolt of fear, that he was not looking at students practicing a technique. He was looking at a pack of apex predators feeding.

"This is a mistake," Garret spat, though he took a stumbling step back. "You are pushing your cores too hard. When the feedback hits, do not expect the second years to pull you out of the lake."

"We will be fine," Valerica said.

Her [Celestial Heart] flared. A pulse of golden gravity expanded from her position, driving the chill back toward the intruders and pushing them physically toward the exit.

"Worry about your own conduction, Garret," she said. "The semester is long. The vents do not favor the weak."

The Iron Guard retreated. They vanished into the shadows of the main hall, their presence replaced by the familiar, roaring silence of the Void.

For the next four hours, the group remained on the quartz.

Vane felt his mana-channels burning. The pain was a constant, white-hot line running through his body, but he welcomed it. The silver energy became increasingly crystalline as it refined his core. He was pushing toward the upper limits of the fourth circle. The density of his mana started to rival that of the second-year elites.

The shiver he had felt from Nyx earlier in the evening remained in the back of his mind. It was a cold reminder that there were still categories of power he had not yet grasped. Nyx dealt in concepts and reality. Garret dealt in metal. Vane needed to be ready for both.

As the first light of dawn began to filter through the high, enchanted windows of the training wing, Vane signaled the end of the session.

He slowly pulled the silver mana back into his core. The shroud receded. The frost on the edge of the platform evaporated. The quartz disk was once again white and silent.

They stood up in unison.

Ashe stumbled slightly. Her legs were numb from the lack of circulation, but her mana-signature was terrifyingly stable. The vibration around her felt sharper.

Valerica looked pale but determined. Her eyes reflected the golden heat of her core, burning with a new intensity.

Isole was the most taxed. Her mismatched eyes had lost some of their luster from the mental fatigue of maintaining the cycle, and the dark shadow behind her pupils seemed to pulse with a slow, hungry rhythm.

"That was intense," Ashe whispered. She leaned on Vane for a second as they walked toward the obsidian doors. "I feel like I could punch a hole through a mountain. Or eat a mountain. I am not sure which."

"Do not punch anything until you have slept," Vane said. "Your channels are still brittle from the intake. If you flare now, you might crack a rib."

They left the Void Chambers and walked back toward the residential tiers.

The academy was quiet. The early morning mist clung to the basalt towers like a shroud, muffling their footsteps. The air was cold and clean.

They separated at the junction. Ashe and Isole headed toward their own villas in the lower ring. Vane and Valerica began the climb toward the peak.

When Vane entered Villa 1, the silence of the house was a welcome relief after the roaring energy of the chambers. The heavy oak doors clicked shut, sealing out the world.

He walked to the central living area and stopped.

Mara was curled up on the rug near the hearth. A charcoal stick was still gripped in her small hand, staining her fingers black. On the oak desk, the parchment from their lesson the previous day was clearly visible.

Vane walked over and looked at the page.

The pillars were no longer jagged or shaking. They were straight. They were firm. They were drawn with a confidence that had not been there twenty-four hours ago. Mara had stayed up practicing until her body gave out.

He looked at the marks on the paper. Then he looked at the girl sleeping on the floor.

He felt the cold, silver weight of the [Silver Fang] in his chest. It was a power that he had seized to ensure his own survival. It was a weapon meant to kill.

But as he looked at the straight lines Mara had drawn, he realized the stakes of the game were changing.

He was not just sharpening his art to kill his enemies. He was sharpening it to ensure that the frost Nyx saw in her dreams never had the chance to touch the things he had chosen to keep.

Vane picked Mara up. She stirred but did not wake. He carried her toward her room, his movements silent on the marble floor.

The peace was temporary. The academy was still a forge, and the hammers were waiting to fall. But for one morning, the lines were straight.