©WebNovelPub
I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 187: The Quiet Before
The snow began to fall in earnest as Vane and Isole returned to the village. It was a heavy, wet snow that clung to the thatch roofs of Mourn-Hold and turned the mud of the main street into a freezing slush. The village was quiet. The shutters were bolted tight against the wind, and the only light came from the flickering lanterns hanging outside the Inn.
They entered the common room. It was empty save for the low fire in the hearth. Alden had left a pot of stew keeping warm on the iron hook, but the Headman himself was nowhere to be seen. The silence wasn’t fearful anymore. It was the heavy, exhausted silence of a community that was simply waiting for the end of the winter.
Vane secured the heavy oak door. He checked the latch three times. He checked the mana-wards etched into the frame. Then he turned to Isole.
"Upstairs," Vane said. "We need to prep the gear for a necrotic environment. The filters I bought in the city are in the secondary pack."
Isole nodded. She didn’t say anything. She walked up the stairs, her boots heavy on the wood. She looked like a ghost drifting through a graveyard. The revelation of the "Dead Soil" and the dismantled Grain-Maws had drained the last of her adrenaline.
The room was small and warm. Vane lit the mana-heater and placed his pack on the table. He began to unload the supplies with methodical precision. Three kilos of industrial purification salts. Two heavy-duty rebreather masks. A box of silver-nitrate flares.
Isole sat on the edge of the bed. She watched him. She watched the way his hands moved. They were scarred and calloused, but they handled the delicate glass vials of salt with a gentleness that seemed at odds with the violence he was capable of.
"You knew," Isole whispered.
Vane didn’t look up. He was measuring the salt into small, breathable pouches.
"Knew what?"
"You bought necrotic filters before we even left Zenith. You bought salts for a dead zone. You knew this wasn’t just bugs."
"I suspected," Vane corrected. "The mission parameters were too clean. A Rank 4 infestation in a border district usually implies a breach in the deep-earth mana currents. Breaches lead to rot. Rot leads to necrosis."
He finished filling a pouch and tied it off with a piece of twine. He tossed it to her.
"Put that in your belt. If the air gets heavy, crack the seal and hold it to your mask. It will neutralize the spores."
Isole caught the pouch. She held it in her lap. She looked at Vane’s back as he continued to work. The room felt small. It felt intimate in a way that had nothing to do with romance and everything to do with survival. They were the only two people in the world who knew what was waiting in the Crypts.
"My hands are shaking," Isole said softly.
Vane stopped. He put the salt jar down. He turned around and looked at her.
She held her hands out. They were trembling. It wasn’t a violent shake, but a fine, rhythmic tremor that traveled up her wrists.
"Adrenaline crash," Vane diagnosed. "And mana-fatigue."
"It isn’t fatigue," Isole said. She looked at her palms. "It is the braids. My mother... she used to tie my hair so tight before the ceremonies that I couldn’t blink. She said pain was a reminder of posture. Now I feel it on the inside. Every time I think about the Crypts, the knots get tighter."
Vane walked over to her. He stood in front of her, blocking the light from the heater. He cast a long shadow over the bed.
"Turn around," Vane said.
Isole hesitated. Then she turned her back to him.
Vane reached out. He didn’t touch her skin. He touched her hair. Her emerald dark green hair was a tangled mess from the wind and the fight on the ridge. It was knotted and wild.
"You are trying to tie it back," Vane said quietly. "You are trying to force it into a shape it doesn’t want to hold."
He began to untangle the knots. His fingers were rough, but his touch was careful. He worked through the snarls near the nape of her neck. He didn’t pull. He didn’t force the strands. He just patiently worked the chaos out of the silk.
Isole stopped breathing. She felt the heat of his hands inches from her neck. She felt the calluses on his fingertips brush against her ear. It was a shock of sensation that went straight to her spine.
"Loose is better," Vane murmured. "Tight braids restrict blood flow to the scalp. It causes headaches. It reduces reaction time."
"It isn’t proper," Isole whispered. Her voice sounded wrecked. "A Saintess is supposed to be bound."
"A Saintess is a statue," Vane said. "Statues don’t fight in the mud. Sentinels do."
He finished untangling the last knot. He didn’t braid it. He let her hair fall loose over her shoulders. It was a curtain of dark emerald that caught the orange light of the heater.
Vane rested his hands on her shoulders for a single second. It was heavy. It was grounding. It was a claim.
"You aren’t shaking anymore," Vane noted.
Isole looked at her hands. They were still. The tremor was gone. The "braids" in her soul were still there, tight and itching, but the physical manifestation of her fear had vanished under the weight of his hands.
"No," she said. "I’m not."
Vane stepped back. The moment broke, but the tension remained. It hung in the air like static electricity.
"Get some sleep," Vane said. He went back to the table and picked up his spear. "I will finish packing the salts. We leave at first light."
Isole lay down on the bed. She pulled the thermal blanket up to her chin. She watched Vane work. She watched the steady rise and fall of his chest. She watched the way the light played off the sharp angle of his jaw.
She realized then that she didn’t want to go back to the Silver Wood. She didn’t want the White Pavilion or the suitors or the perfect, filtered light.
She wanted this. She wanted the small, warm room with the smell of purification salts and wet wool. She wanted the man who knew how to untangle knots without hurting her.
"Vane?"
"Yes."
"If we die tomorrow..."
"We aren’t dying tomorrow," Vane cut her off. He sounded bored by the concept. "I have a chemistry exam on Tuesday. I plan to be there."
Isole smiled. It was a small, genuine thing that she buried in the pillow.
"Okay," she said. "Tuesday."
She closed her eyes.
Vane continued to work. He packed the flares. He sharpened the spear. He listened to Isole’s breathing even out as she fell asleep.
He walked to the window and looked out at the dark village. The snow was falling harder now. It was covering the tracks they had made. It was covering the world in a blanket of white silence.







![Read [BL] The Mafia Boss Wants My Body](http://static.novelbuddy.com/images/bl-the-mafia-boss-wants-my-body.png)