I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 190: The Gap

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 190: The Gap

The silence that followed the slamming of the portcullis was not empty. It was pressurized. The air in the antechamber felt like it had been replaced by water, heavy and resistant to movement. The dust from the ceiling drifted down in slow, lazy spirals, settling on the shoulders of the entity that blocked their path.

Vane stood twenty feet away. He held his spear in a loose, deceptive guard, the tip resting just inches from the black ice of the floor. His breath misted in the freezing air, but his heart rate remained artificially steady. He forced his biology to submit to his logic. Panic was a luxury for the dead.

The figure did not roar. It did not posture or beat its chest like the Grain-Maws. It simply stood there, a towering monolith of rusted iron and grave-dirt, holding the massive spade like a quill. The blue slit of its mask burned with a cold, necrotic intelligence. It was studying them. It was calculating the most efficient way to remove the weeds from its garden.

Vane focused his eyes. The overlay snapped into existence instantly, sharp and clinical. There was no flicker, no hesitation. The system that had categorized the logic of the world did not tremble before a mere construct.

[Target Analysis]

Name: Kavor (Grave-Warden)

Rank: Mid-Justiciar

Danger: Absolute

Authority: None

Skills: [Shadow Aura - Grade B]

Vane exhaled slowly.

Mid-Justiciar.

It was weaker than Malphas, the Demon General who had nearly broken the Iron Groves. But that was a meaningless distinction in a closed room. Malphas had been a force of annihilation; Kavor was a force of inevitability. To an ant, the difference between a boot and a hammer was irrelevant. Both resulted in the same mathematical certainty.

"Isole," Vane whispered. He didn’t take his eyes off the blue light. "When I move, you drop the flare. Blind it. Then move to the vent on the east wall."

"Vane, that thing is—"

"Do not cast at it," Vane cut her off, his voice a flat wire of command. "Your light will bounce. It is too dense. Just blind it."

Kavor moved.

It wasn’t a charge. It was a step. The stone floor cracked under the weight of its iron boot. The sound echoed like a gunshot. It raised the shovel, the movement smooth and oiled, betraying none of the rust that coated its armor. It held the weapon with one hand, the iron shaft thick as a mast.

Vane didn’t wait. Waiting was death.

He engaged the [Silver Fang].

The matte silver mana coated the tip of his spear, silencing the air around the blade. He poured forty percent of his remaining reserves into the conceptual law. Absolute Severance. It was the only card he had that could scratch a Justiciar-class entity.

He utilized the Argent Horizon, 1st Form: Quicksilver Thrust.

Vane vanished.

He became a blur of grey and silver, closing the twenty-foot gap in a fraction of a second. He didn’t aim for the head. The mask looked too thick. He aimed for the joint of the right arm, the gap in the heavy chainmail where the shovel was fulcrumed. He needed to disable the weapon.

Shhhk.

The impact was silent. The [Silver Fang] did its job. It ignored the durability of the rusted chainmail. It sheared through the iron links and bit into the grey, dead flesh beneath.

Vane felt the resistance immediately.

It wasn’t like cutting meat. It wasn’t even like cutting steel. It was like cutting through compressed gravity. The density of Kavor’s body was unnatural. The spear sank three inches deep and stopped, arrested not by armor, but by the sheer conceptual weight of the creature’s existence. The silver mana hissed, eating away at the wound, but there was simply too much mass to sever in a single stroke.

Kavor didn’t flinch. It didn’t scream. It simply turned its head, the blue slit locking onto Vane’s face.

It released the shovel with one hand and backhanded him.

Vane saw it coming. He saw the shift in the shoulder, the rotation of the hip. He tried to pivot. He tried to utilize the Argent Horizon to deflect the force, to make the blow slide off his friction-less mana sleeve.

It didn’t matter.

The fist was the size of a boulder. It hit the shaft of Vane’s spear, which he had raised in a desperate block.

The impact sounded like a car crash.

Vane felt the star-steel shudder. The force traveled through the weapon and slammed into his chest. He was launched backward as if he had been shot from a cannon. He smashed through a stone pew, shattering the ancient granite into dust, and slammed into the wall of the crypt.

The world went white.

Vane slid to the floor. He tried to inhale, but his chest refused to expand. There was no system alert, no red text to tell him what was wrong. He didn’t need one. He could feel the jagged ends of his ribs grinding against each other. He could feel the wet, bubbling heat of a collapsed lung.

He coughed, and a spray of bright red blood painted the black ice of the floor.

The gap. It was too wide. He had known it, calculated it, and yet the reality of it was different. In the classroom, a Rank 5 was a statistic. Here, it was a physical law that stated he was fragile.

"Vane!"

Isole’s scream tore through the ringing in his ears.

She hadn’t run to the vent. She was standing in the center of the aisle, her staff raised. The crystal was glowing with a frantic, blinding intensity. She wasn’t filtering it. She wasn’t trying to be pure. She was terrified.

"Lumina!"

A beam of solid white light erupted from her staff. It hammered into Kavor’s chest.

It hissed. Steam rose from the rusted armor where the light connected. But Kavor didn’t stop. It walked through the beam as if it were a stiff breeze. The necrotic mana radiating from its core simply ate the light before it could do any real damage. The "purity" of her magic made it brittle; it shattered against the Warden’s density instead of burning through it.

Kavor raised the shovel again. It looked at Isole. It decided she was the louder weed.

Vane gritted his teeth. He forced his body to move. He grabbed his spear, using it as a crutch to haul himself upright. The pain in his side was blinding, a jagged spike with every heartbeat that threatened to send him back into the dark.

He couldn’t kill it. He couldn’t tank it.

He looked at the floor.

The center of the antechamber, where Kavor had dropped the Queen’s carcass, was cracked. The sheer weight of the dead Alpha had compromised the integrity of the tiles.

Vane checked his mana. Twenty percent. Enough for one burst.

"Isole!" Vane rasped. Blood bubbled past his lips. "The floor! Hit the floor!"

Isole looked at him, confused. Kavor was ten feet from her, the shovel rising for a killing stroke. The blue light of the mask was reflecting in her wide, panicked eyes.

"Do it!" Vane roared.

He didn’t wait for her. He utilized [Flash Step].

The teleportation tore at his frayed channels, sending a shock of agony through his ruined chest. He appeared not in front of the Warden, but directly above the cracked section of the floor, mid-air.

He channeled every ounce of silver mana he had left into the spear tip.

Combat Art: Argent Horizon, 3rd Form – Falling Star.

He spun, driving the spear down like a pile driver. He wasn’t aiming for an enemy. He was aiming for the architecture.

At the same moment, Isole swung her staff down. She didn’t question him. She slammed a wave of kinetic light into the same spot.

The two impacts merged. Silver severance and white force.

The floor of the antechamber groaned. The ancient stone, weakened by time and the weight of the monsters, finally gave up.

CRACK.

The center of the room collapsed.

Kavor’s foot slipped as the ground vanished beneath it. The massive entity stumbled, its shovel swinging wide and smashing into a pillar instead of Isole. The blow pulverized the stone column, sending debris raining down on them.

Vane hit the crumbling debris and slid. He reached out, his hand closing around Isole’s wrist just as the floor beneath her disintegrated. 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦

They fell.

The darkness of the lower crypts rushed up to meet them.

Vane pulled Isole into his chest, twisting his body mid-air to take the impact. He felt the wind rush past his ears. He saw the blue light of Kavor peering over the edge of the jagged hole above them.

They slammed into a pile of refuse and stagnant water.

The impact knocked the remaining air from Vane’s lungs. He rolled, dragging Isole into the shadows of a massive drainage tunnel. The water was freezing and smelled of centuries of decay.

Vane lay there for a second, staring up at the hole in the ceiling forty feet above. His vision was swimming. His side was on fire.

Above them, Kavor did not roar in frustration. It did not pace.

It simply stepped off the ledge.

Vane watched as the massive silhouette plummeted toward them, silent and inevitable. The blue light of its mask left a streak in the darkness like a falling star made of ice.

"Move," Vane wheezed, pushing Isole deeper into the tunnel. "It’s coming."

He wiped the blood from his mouth. The gap wasn’t just power. It was patience. And the Grave-Warden had an eternity of it.