I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 186: Dead Soil

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Chapter 186: Dead Soil

The sun was a pale and sickly disc behind the heavy grey clouds. It provided no warmth. It only served to illuminate the jagged, frozen landscape of the ridge. Vane stepped out of the cave entrance, his boots sinking into the fresh layer of snow that had fallen overnight. He didn’t look back at the interior. He knew Isole was awake. He had heard her breathing shift the moment he stood up.

"Stay within the wards," Vane said. His voice was a low rasp that didn’t carry past the rocks. "I am scouting the northern perimeter. I will be back in twenty minutes."

He didn’t wait for a response. He moved with a predatory grace, his spear held in a neutral position. He wanted to see the soil for himself.

The ground on the West Ridge was traditionally fertile, but as Vane moved further north, the landscape began to die in a way that had nothing to do with the winter. The grass wasn’t just brown; it was brittle and grey, turning to dust under his weight. The trees were skeletal. Their bark was peeling away in long, blackened strips that looked like scorched skin.

Vane knelt by a patch of earth. He pressed his palm to the surface.

The "Echo" was no longer a faint tremor. It was a rhythmic and deep thrumming that Vane could feel in his teeth. It felt like a massive machine was working deep beneath the crust of the district. It was too steady to be the movement of an insect colony. It was too deliberate.

He moved toward a shallow gully fifty yards from the cave. The smell hit him first. It was the scent of old copper and stagnant water.

Vane looked down into the gully. He didn’t see a hive. He saw a graveyard.

Three Grain-Maw Soldiers lay at the bottom of the depression. They were Rank 4 specimens, the same type that had nearly killed them the day before. But they hadn’t been killed by silver mana or holy light. They hadn’t been eaten by a rival predator.

Vane jumped down into the gully. He landed silently and walked toward the nearest carcass.

The Soldier had been dismantled. A single, clean cut had severed its head from its thorax. The edges of the chitin were not jagged. They were smooth, as if a heavy and incredibly sharp blade had passed through them with the force of a falling mountain. There were no signs of a struggle. The creature hadn’t even had time to discharge its acid.

Vane ran his fingers over the cut.

[Authority Analysis: Traces of Stagnant Mana detected. Grade: Unknown.]

"Not a beast," Vane whispered to himself.

He checked the second and third carcasses. They were the same. One had been cleaved vertically. The other had its mandibles sheared off before a final strike had crushed its central nerve cluster. The ground around them wasn’t soaked in black ichor. The fluid had been drained, leaving the bodies dry and papery.

This wasn’t an infestation. This was a cleanup operation.

The "Echo" in the ground suddenly flared. It was a violent, subsonic pulse that made the loose rocks in the gully chatter. Vane felt a spike of conceptual pressure that made his own [Silver Fang] hum in defensive reflex. The source was the North. The Old Crypts.

Vane climbed out of the gully. He didn’t run, but his pace was fast. He kept his eyes on the treeline. The fog was rolling in again, thicker and colder than before. It felt like the district was trying to swallow them.

He returned to the cave.

Isole was standing near the mana-heater. Her emerald dark green hair was tied back again, but it was messy. She looked at him as he entered. She saw the look on his face. She saw the dirt on his gloves.

"The vibration," she said. She was gripping her staff so hard her fingers were pale. "It changed. It felt like... like a bell ringing under the earth."

"The Maws are dead," Vane said. He walked over to his gear and began to pack the thermal blankets. "The Soldiers on the perimeter have been hunted. But not by us."

Isole went rigid. "What do you mean?"

"I found a graveyard. Rank 4 Soldiers cleaved in half with a single strike. It wasn’t a claw or a mandible. It was a blade, Isole. A very large, very heavy blade."

Isole stepped toward him. Her eyes were wide. "A human? Are there other Sentinels in the sector?"

"No," Vane said. He looked at the cave entrance. "The mana signature is stagnant. It is cold. It is the kind of energy that shouldn’t be moving."

He looked at her, his grey eyes piercing through the dim light of the heater.

"The Queens we killed were just the scavengers. They were the flies attracted to the rot. Whatever is in the Crypts is the one who killed them. It is clearing the district of everything that moves."

Isole looked at her hands. She could feel the "braids" in her soul tightening. The psychological knots her mother had tied were itching with a new and sharp intensity. She felt the dark mana at the edge of her core pulsing in response to the stagnant energy Vane had described. It recognized the "Echo."

"The mission objective was to clear the infestation," Isole said. Her voice was trembling. "If the infestation is gone, we should use the packet. We should leave, Vane. Now."

"We can’t," Vane said. He pointed to the North. "The Echo is coming from the extraction point’s path. If we try to teleport from here, the spatial resonance of that thing will tear the portal apart. We have to stabilize the zone. Or we have to kill whatever is making that noise."

Vane picked up his spear. The star-steel felt cold in his hand.

"The False Crusade is over," Vane said. "The bugs were just the distraction. We are walking into a necrotic zone, Isole. And we are walking in alone."

Isole looked at him. She saw the soot on his jaw. She saw the way he stood, unyielding and focused. She felt the terror in her chest, but she also felt that strange, dangerous pull toward him. He wasn’t running. He was calculating the next move.

"Okay," she whispered. She straightened her cloak. She gripped her staff. "We go to the Crypts." 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖

"We go to the Crypts," Vane agreed.

He led the way out of the cave. The snow was falling faster now, turning the world into a blur of white and grey.

The ground groaned beneath them. It wasn’t a heartbeat. It was the sound of stone being moved.