I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 192: The Saint

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Chapter 192: The Saint

The heavy oak door of the embalming chamber buckled inward. The rusted iron hinges shrieked as they were torn from the ancient stone frame. Dust rained from the ceiling, coating the dry, empty slabs in the center of the room.

Vane lay against the far wall. The cold stone pressed against his spine, offering no comfort to the ruin of his chest. His right lung was entirely useless. His left was struggling against a rising tide of his own blood. The world was a narrowing tunnel of grey static. His logic, usually a sharp and flawless blade, was beginning to dull under the overwhelming biological reality of his death.

He looked at the door. It shuddered under another heavy impact. The wood splintered, revealing the dark, flooded corridor beyond. Through the crack, Vane saw the pale gleam of sharpened bone and the dripping of black sludge. The Bone Hounds were throwing their skeletal mass against the barricade with mindless, frantic repetition.

It was simple math. The door had perhaps thirty seconds left.

Vane looked at Isole.

She was standing near the center of the room. Her hands were empty. Her staff lay forgotten on the floor. Her emerald dark green hair hung in tangled, dirty curtains around her pale face. She looked small. She looked terrified.

Vane reached into the shallow puddle of water at his side. His fingers closed around the cold star-steel shaft of the Silver Fang.

He forced his body to obey. The pain was not a spike. It was an ocean. He dragged his legs under him, using the wall and the spear to haul his broken frame upright. He tasted copper. A fresh line of blood spilled over his bottom lip and dripped onto his ruined leather armor.

"Vane," Isole whispered. Her voice was a fragile, broken thing. "What are you doing? You cannot stand."

"The masonry," Vane wheezed. He pointed his chin toward the back corner of the chamber where the stone blocks had crumbled from water damage. "It is weak. Dig through it."

"I am not leaving you."

"You are," Vane corrected her. His voice lacked its usual commanding rasp. It was wet and hollow. "The Hounds track mana. They track heat. They will focus on the heaviest target at the bottleneck. I hold the door. You dig."

He took a step forward. His left leg buckled, but he caught himself with the spear. He dragged himself toward the splintering oak. He did not look back at her. He looked at the crack in the wood, preparing the final dregs of his silver mana for a localized burst.

He was going to die here. In the dark. Just like Senna. But this time, without a choice.

He was the shield. He was the one buying the seconds.

Isole watched him walk toward his death. She saw the blood staining his teeth. She saw the violent trembling in his arms as he raised the heavy spear. He was broken, bleeding, and outmatched, yet he was stepping into the teeth of the swarm so she could crawl away in the dark.

A sharp, agonizing pressure bloomed in Isole’s chest. It was not physical pain. It was the "braids."

She heard her mother’s voice echoing in the cold, perfectly clean halls of the White Pavilion. You are a monster, Isole. You are a deformity. The dark is filth. You must filter it. You must be pure, or you are worthless.

Isole had believed it. She had tied her soul into knots to please a family that looked at her with disgust. She had filtered her power, bottlenecking her own potential to maintain the fragile, golden illusion of the perfect Saintess.

She looked at the golden light. It had failed to heal the man who was currently bleeding to death for her. It had failed to protect them. The purity was a lie. It was a gilded cage that was about to get them both killed.

Vane coughed, a wet, terrible sound, and leaned his weight against the heavy stone table barring the door.

Are you trading your life for their approval? Vane had asked her in the cave.

The wood of the door gave way with a deafening crack.

The top half of the oak panel shattered inward. Three Bone Hounds scrambled through the breach, their elongated wolf skulls snapping, their ribs clattering against the stone. The black sludge that bound their joints dripped onto the dry floor, hissing with necrotic toxicity.

Vane raised the Silver Fang. His eyes were dull, but his grip was locked.

"No."

The word was not shouted. It was spoken softly.

But it carried a weight that made the stagnant air in the embalming chamber instantly drop in temperature.

Isole closed her eyes. She reached deep into the center of her core, past the golden light, past the forced serenity of the Elven teachings. She found the knots. She found the psychological iron wires her mother had wrapped around her true nature.

She grabbed them. And with a single, violent surge of will, she snapped them.

The backlash was physical. A shockwave of displaced air blasted outward from her body, blowing the dust off the stone slabs and extinguishing the last flickering embers of the room’s ambient light.

The golden hue that always surrounded her vanished. It was instantly replaced by a suffocating, heavy dark-emerald aura. It did not glow. It absorbed light. It leaked from her skin like thick, heavy smoke, pooling on the floor and crawling up the stone walls.

The air pressure in the room skyrocketed. It felt like standing at the bottom of the ocean.

Vane gasped, his ruined lung struggling against the sudden, oppressive density of the atmosphere. He looked back over his shoulder.

Isole opened her eyes. They were no longer the mismatched, uncertain eyes of a student. They were entirely black, swimming with a nebula of dark, churning emerald energy.

The Bone Hounds froze.

They were mid-lunge, their jaws open, their bone claws mere inches from Vane’s face. But they did not complete the strike. The necrotic sludge animating their joints suddenly stopped bubbling. The constructs hung suspended in their momentum, arrested by a force they could not fight.

Isole walked forward.

Her footsteps made no sound. The heavy dark mana clung to her like a royal mantle, dragging across the floor. She did not raise her staff. She did not cast a beam of light.

She walked past Vane, stepping directly into the path of the frozen undead monsters.

She was a High Elf Saintess. But the Sylvaris line had a shadow. She was a Necromancer. And in the dark, the Saint of Death did not fight corpses. She commanded them.

Isole reached out a pale hand. She touched the bleached skull of the closest Hound.

She did not burn it. She felt the necrotic strings of mana that Kavor had woven into the bone. The Grave Warden’s control was cold and mechanical. It was the magic of a tool.

Isole’s magic was the grave itself. It was absolute.

She pushed her heavy, dark-emerald mana into the skull. It flooded the construct, overriding Kavor’s stagnant control with terrifying ease. The black sludge binding the Hound’s joints instantly turned a deep, glowing emerald.

The Hound dropped to the floor. It did not attack. It pressed its elongated skull against the stone at Isole’s boots, submitting entirely to the superior Authority of Death.

Isole did not stop. She pushed the wave of heavy mana outward, flooding the broken doorway and spilling into the flooded corridor beyond. The dense, suffocating energy rolled through the water, wrapping around the remaining Bone Hounds that were waiting in the dark.

Every single construct in the corridor stopped moving. The frantic clicking of their jaws ceased. The necrotic domain of the Grave Warden had been hijacked.

Isole lowered her hand. She looked out into the dark hallway. Her voice, when she spoke, sounded layered, echoing with the crushing weight of a collapsing tomb. 𝘧𝓇𝑒𝑒𝑤ℯ𝑏𝓃𝘰𝑣ℯ𝘭.𝘤ℴ𝘮

"Guard the door."

The Bone Hound at her feet rose instantly. It turned its back on her, facing the flooded corridor. In the dark beyond, a dozen more skeletal constructs stepped into the light of the doorway, forming a perfect, silent barricade of bone and emerald sludge. They were no longer Kavor’s hunting dogs. They were her vanguard.

Silence reclaimed the embalming chamber.

The oppressive, terrifying display of power lingered in the air, a physical pressure that made the stone walls sweat.

Behind her, Vane finally lost his battle with gravity. The adrenaline that had kept him standing evaporated. The Silver Fang slipped from his fingers, clattering loudly against the floor. His knees buckled, and he collapsed backward onto the cold stone.

Isole turned.

The terrifying, absolute entity of the grave softened. The black receded from her eyes, leaving her normal, mismatched irises, though the heavy dark-emerald mana still pulsed thickly around her.

She rushed to his side, dropping to her knees in the dust.

Vane looked up at her. His vision was swimming, the edges turning black. He saw the dark smoke curling off her shoulders. He saw the absolute destruction of the pure, golden Saintess. He saw the monster her mother had warned her about.

"You broke the filter," Vane whispered. Blood spilled over his chin with the effort of speaking.

"I am sorry," Isole said. Her voice broke, tears finally spilling hot down her cheeks. She was terrified of the look in his eyes. She was terrified he would look at her the way the Elders did. "I am sorry, Vane. It is ugly. It is dark."

"It is perfect," Vane rasped.

A weak, bloody smile touched the corner of his mouth before his eyes rolled back, his body finally shutting down to protect itself from the agony.

Isole did not hesitate. The fear of her own power was gone, burned away by the sight of him lying broken on the floor.

She placed her hands flat against his ruined chest. She did not summon the gentle, useless golden light. She summoned the heavy, suffocating dark mana. It was the magic of the earth, of the grave, of things that endure.

The dark emerald energy sank into Vane’s flesh. It was not a warm, soothing heal. It was violent and forceful. The heavy mana gripped his shattered ribs and physically dragged them back into alignment with a sickening crunch. It sealed the puncture in his lung with dense, necrotic pressure, halting the internal bleeding instantly. It was a brutal, ugly reconstruction of biology.

It was exactly what he needed.

Isole kept her hands on his chest, feeling the steady, rhythmic beat of his heart return to normal beneath her palms.

She looked toward the shattered door. The Bone Hounds stood in silent, perfect obedience, waiting for her command. Deep in the labyrinth, the Echo of the Grave Warden’s footsteps began to approach. Kavor had felt the usurpation of its domain. The architect of the dead was coming to reclaim its tools.

Isole wiped the tears from her face, leaving a streak of dust across her cheek. The braids were gone. The White Pavilion was a memory.