I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 167: The Hearth of the Peak

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Chapter 167: The Hearth of the Peak

The sun did not set on Zenith so much as it was consumed.

The light faded into a bruised purple, devoured by the shifting horizon of the surrounding floating islands. The silver wards of Villa 1 shimmered. They cast a soft, ethereal glow across the white stone of the Peak.

Vane walked up the winding path.

His stride was measured. Rhythmic.

His muscles were tight. It was the byproduct of the high-intensity conduction drills Instructor Thorne had pushed them through in the Somatic Synthesis lab. The silver mana of his [Silver Fang] authority hummed beneath his skin. It cooled his nervous system. It repaired the microscopic tears in his mana channels.

He reached the heavy iron-bound doors. He paused.

Heat radiated from the building. The central hearth had been lit.

Beside him, Valerica walked with her usual poise. But the golden pressure of her [Celestial Heart] was volatile. She had spent the last three hours practicing high-density output. The effort left her eyes glowing with a faint, solar intensity.

"Thorne is a man of limited imagination," Valerica said. Her voice was smooth despite the fatigue. "He believes that if we are not on the verge of core collapse, we are not learning. It is a primitive method."

"He is a veteran," Vane replied. His voice was a low rasp. "He values results. A refined core that cannot survive a sustained drain is just a pretty ornament. I find his honesty refreshing."

They entered the villa.

The sudden warmth of the foyer was a shock against the biting wind of the Peak. The interior of Villa 1 was a masterwork of marble and cedar. It was maintained by a small staff of silent, professional maids who moved through the halls like ghosts.

Vane ignored the greeting of the lead maid, Lia. He headed toward the main living area.

He had never grown comfortable with the presence of servants in his nest. But the Academy insisted that a Rank 1 Sentinel maintain a certain level of domestic prestige.

Ashe was already there.

She sprawled across a velvet armchair near the fireplace. Her boots were tossed carelessly onto the expensive rug. She looked like she had been through a physical grinder. Her uniform was disheveled. Her short hair stuck up in erratic spikes.

She was in a heated argument with Master Ren, the villa’s cook.

"I am telling you, Ren," Ashe barked. Her [Warlord] authority flickered with restless aggression. "I need the high-protein preserves. My metabolism is running at three times its normal rate. If I don’t eat something that was recently alive, I am going to chew on the furniture."

"The young lady must be patient," Ren insisted. His voice was calm. Firm. "The meal is being prepared according to the medical wing’s requirements. We cannot have a Sentinel of your rank suffering from a mana spike due to improper nutrition."

Vane stepped into the room.

His presence caused the tension to drop. Ren offered a quick, respectful bow and retreated toward the kitchen. Ashe let out a long, theatrical sigh. She sank deeper into her chair.

"Finally," Ashe groaned. She looked at Vane and Valerica. "I thought you two decided to sleep in the basalt hall. How was the Thorne Special today?"

"Lethal," Valerica said.

She took a seat on the opposite sofa. She accepted a cup of herbal tea from Lia. Steam rose in delicate curls.

"He had us maintaining a full-body shroud while he cycled the dampening arrays," Valerica said. "It was enlightening."

"I missed the fun," Ashe said. A sharp grin touched her lips. "I was in the combat pits. The Second Years are still trying to figure out how to track my movement. One of them tried to trip me. I nearly took his head off before I remembered we were supposed to be practicing non-lethal integration."

The front door opened again.

Isaac and Isole entered.

They looked significantly more exhausted than the body-trackers. While Vane and the others were physically taxed, the mages were mentally drained. The Arcanic Lattice Calculus was a brutal exercise in mental architecture. It showed. Isaac’s eyes were bloodshot. Isole’s pale skin looked translucent.

Isaac carried a wooden crate under his arm. His expression was one of weary triumph.

He set the box on the low table in the center of the group. The wood clattered against the marble.

"My mother sent a final shipment," Isaac said. He sat down with a heavy thud. "Before the transit lines were restricted. It is mostly high-altitude grain and preserved meats from the Glacium estates."

He rubbed his temples.

"She is convinced the Academy’s food is designed to starve us. I figured it would be better to share it than to let it sit in my villa’s pantry."

He opened the crate.

Jars of mountain honey. Thick slabs of smoked venison. Loaves of artisan bread that smelled of rosemary and stone ovens. It was a level of luxury that even the Academy’s chefs struggled to match. It was a testament to the staggering wealth of the Great Houses.

"A peace offering for the mages?" Ashe asked. She reached for a jar of honey.

"A survival tactic," Isole said softly.

She sat beside Valerica. Her mismatched eyes focused on the fire. She looked fragile. Her silver-white hair caught the orange light of the hearth. She was still fighting the internal revulsion of the morning’s lab. The shadow of her dark mana lingered at the edge of her core.

"The Arcanum is cold today," Isole whispered. "The math doesn’t offer much warmth."

"Then we will make our own," Valerica said.

She looked toward the kitchen. She gave a subtle nod to Lia.

Within minutes, the villa’s staff transformed the living room.

Master Ren coordinated with the maids to integrate Isaac’s contraband into a full meal. Large platters of roasted vegetables appeared. Fresh greens. The Glacium meats were laid out on the table.

The smell of the food mixed with the crackling of the fire. It created an atmosphere of domestic normalcy that felt alien to their daily lives.

They were not a family. They did not live together.

Vane lived here with Mara. Valerica, Ashe, Isole, and Isaac each had their own separate villas scattered across the upper residential tiers. But in this moment, the territorial lines of the Academy blurred.

They were just five monsters seeking a temporary sanctuary from the cold logic of the fourth circle.

"Where is she?" Isaac asked. He looked around the room.

"Mara," Vane called out.

A moment later, the small girl appeared from the upstairs hallway.

She wore a simple, warm tunic. She clutched a stack of parchment to her chest. She had been hiding, waiting for the loud people to settle down. But the smell of the food had finally drawn her out.

She walked over to Vane. Her eyes darted toward the others with a mix of curiosity and lingering caution.

"Show them," Vane said. His voice was softer than it had been all day.

Mara stepped toward the table. She laid the parchment out for the group to see.

On the page, the letter ’M’ and the letter ’A’ were repeated dozens of times. The lines were not the shaky, jagged marks of a child. They were straight. Firm. Executed with a level of focus that mirrored Vane’s own.

She had practiced exactly as he had told her. She turned the charcoal into a tool of precision.

"These are better than some of the reports I see in the logistics track," Ashe noted. She gave Mara a sharp, approving nod. "You have a steady hand, kid. That is the first step to holding a blade."

"Or a pen," Isole added. She offered Mara a small, encouraging smile. "Precision is the foundation of everything. If you can control the charcoal, you can control your future."

Mara beamed at the praise. Her chest puffed out slightly. She sat on the rug near Vane’s feet. She took a piece of the Glacium bread and ate it with a quiet, satisfied intensity. 𝗳𝐫𝚎𝗲𝚠𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝘃𝚎𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝗺

The meal proceeded in a comfortable silence.

They didn’t talk about the [Usurper]. They didn’t talk about the recursive loops of [Samsara]. They didn’t discuss the political pressure from the Second Years or the impending difficulty of the mid-term evaluations.

Instead, they talked about the mundane things. The quality of the mountain honey. The way the wind sounded at the Peak. The eccentricities of the villa’s staff.

"Ren thinks I am going to explode if I eat too much sugar," Ashe said. She pointed a fork toward the kitchen. "He spent ten minutes telling me about the visceral heat of the Warlord authority. He thinks it reacts with glucose. I think he reads too many medical journals."

"He is doing his job, Ashe," Isaac said. His voice was relaxed. "Most people would be terrified to be in a room with five Sentinels. The fact that he is willing to argue with you about your diet is a sign of extreme professionalism."

As the evening wore on, the heat of the fire took its toll.

The physical and mental exhaustion of the new curriculum couldn’t be ignored forever. One by one, the visitors began to gather their things. They didn’t live here. The transition gates between the residential tiers would close soon.

"We should head back," Valerica said.

She stood up. She smoothed her uniform. The solar glow in her eyes faded, replaced by a calm, tired clarity.

"Thorne expects us at the pits by seven tomorrow," she said. "I do not want to give him a reason to increase the dampening arrays."

"Monday will be a long day," Isaac agreed. He stood beside her. He looked at Vane and gave a short, respectful nod. "Thanks for the hearth, Vane. It is quieter here than in my villa."

"It is the Peak," Vane replied. His expression remained unchanging. "The silence is the only thing the Academy doesn’t charge us for."

Isole and Ashe stood up. The group moved toward the foyer.

The maids waited with their heavy winter cloaks, ensuring they were prepared for the freezing trek back to their own residences.

"See you in the morning, Vane," Ashe said. She gave Mara a quick salute. "Keep practicing those lines. I want to see the whole alphabet by Friday."

Vane watched them leave.

The heavy iron-bound doors clicked shut.

The villa was suddenly silent again. The only sound was the crackling of the dying fire and the rhythmic ticking of the clock on the mantle. The staff moved through the room, clearing the table with their usual, ghostly efficiency before retreating to their own quarters in the lower wing.

Vane looked down at Mara.

She was fast asleep on the rug. Her head rested on her stack of parchment.

He stood up. He picked her up. Her small weight was a grounding reality in a world of abstract power. He carried her to her room and tucked her into the heavy blankets. He checked the heater, making sure it was set to a comfortable level.

He returned to the living room.

He stood by the large window overlooking the abyss.

The floating islands were dark silhouettes against the starlit sky. The distant lights of the lower tiers looked like embers in a cold hearth.

He felt the silver mana of the [Silver Fang] humming in his chest. It was a constant, predatory presence. It reminded him of the shiver he had felt from Nyx in the Void Chambers.

The peace of the evening was a lie. It was a temporary bubble of warmth in a forge that was designed to break them.

But as he looked at the straight lines Mara had drawn on the parchment, Vane knew that the lie was worth maintaining.

He turned away from the window. He headed toward his own room. The silence of the Peak followed him into the dark.

The game was getting harder. The winter was only beginning. But for one night, the monsters had been home.