I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 197: The Hearth

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Chapter 197: The Hearth

Awareness returned to Vane not as a sudden jolt, but as a slow, agonizing thaw.

The biting, absolute cold of the mountain was gone. It was replaced by a heavy, humid heat that pressed down on his skin like a thick blanket. The sharp, jagged spikes of pain in his fractured arm and shattered ribs had dulled into a deep, pulsing ache. He smelled crushed pine needles, woodsmoke, and the pungent, earthy stench of boiled bitterroot.

He opened his eyes.

The ceiling above him was made of rough, dark wooden beams. The flickering orange glow of a hearth fire danced across the timber. He wasn’t in the immaculate, sterile medical wing of Zenith Academy. He was inside a small, drafty cabin. The howling wind of Mourn-Hold rattled the wooden shutters, but the cold couldn’t pierce the heavy walls.

Vane tried to sit up. His body immediately rebelled. The muscles in his chest seized, and his left arm felt as though it had been encased in wet cement. He looked down. His torso was wrapped tightly in thick, coarse linen bandages. A dark, greenish paste had been slathered heavily over his chest and his splinted left arm. The paste was unnaturally warm, radiating a soothing heat that seeped directly into his bones.

He let out a slow, measured breath. The lung held. The internal bleeding had stopped.

He shifted his weight and instantly froze.

He wasn’t alone in the bed.

The mattress was large, built into a heavy wooden frame that occupied a third of the small room, but it was nowhere near large enough to comfortably hold two fully grown Academy students. Vane felt a soft, rhythmic weight pressing against his right shoulder. A heavy woolen quilt covered them both, trapping the stifling heat of the herbal paste.

Vane slowly turned his head.

Isole Sylvaris was sleeping mere inches away from him. Her face was pale, finally stripped of the dirt and black sludge of the crypt, though a faint shadow of exhaustion bruised the skin beneath her eyes. Her dark green hair, no longer bound in the elegant, immaculate braids of the High Elves, spilled across the coarse pillow in a tangled, vibrant mess.

She shifted in her sleep. Her knee bumped against his under the heavy quilt. She let out a quiet sigh, her brow furrowing slightly in pain, before her eyes fluttered open.

Vane found himself staring directly into her mismatched gaze. Her left eye was a deep, striking emerald. Her right eye was the color of fresh, spilled blood.

For a long moment, neither of them spoke. The only sound in the room was the crackle of the hearth fire and the howling wind outside. The proximity was glaring. Vane could feel the radiant heat of her body. He could see the faint pulse beating at the base of her throat.

Isole blinked, the grogginess of deep exhaustion slowly giving way to sharp, sudden awareness. She realized where she was. She realized exactly how close she was lying to Vane.

A heavy, incredibly awkward silence descended on the bed. A faint flush of pink crept into her pale cheeks.

She tried to pull back, to put some distance between them, but the sudden movement pulled at her own bandaged ribs. She let out a sharp hiss and squeezed her eyes shut, dropping her head back onto the pillow.

"Don’t move," a voice barked from the doorway.

Vane looked up. An old woman stood in the entrance of the room. She was wearing a thick fur shawl and carrying a wooden basin filled with steaming, dark green sludge. Her face was a map of deep wrinkles, weathered by decades of living in the frozen shadow of the Old Crypts.

"You’re both running on empty cores," the old woman said, walking over to the bed and setting the basin on a nearby stool. "If you try to stand up right now, your hearts will probably just give out. So stay put."

"Where are we?" Vane asked. His voice was a dry, grating croak.

"Mourn-Hold," the woman replied. She dipped a wooden spoon into the basin and began to stir the pungent paste. "Alden found you two collapsed in the snow outside the crypt gates. Looked like you’d gone ten rounds with a landslide. It’s a miracle the frost didn’t take your fingers."

Vane looked at the heavy wooden frame of the bed. Faint, glowing carvings lined the headboard. They were crude, old-growth runes, entirely different from the refined magical arrays taught at Zenith Academy.

"Why are we in the same bed?" Vane asked.

The old woman let out a dry, rattling laugh. "Don’t flatter yourself, city boy. It’s not for romance. This is a Hearth Bed. The runes carved into the wood amplify the effects of the blood-root paste. It forces the herbs deep into the bone. We only have one Hearth Bed in the village, and we only had enough fresh blood-root to maintain a single array."

She pointed the wooden spoon at them, water dripping onto the floorboards.

"You both needed the paste to survive the night," she explained bluntly. "So, you share the array. The closer you are to the center of the bed, the faster your bones knit. Sorry about the lack of modesty, but you were bleeding to death. I figured you’d prefer breathing over personal space."

"Fair enough," Vane said simply.

Isole opened her eyes again. The red and the emerald irises locked onto the wooden ceiling. "Thank you. For saving us."

"You saved yourselves," the old woman countered, picking up the basin. "The heavy tremors stopped. The air outside tastes like clean snow again, not like an open grave. Whatever was down there, you dealt with it. The village council has already sent a message pigeon to the nearest relay station. Your Academy should have an extraction team here by tomorrow morning."

The old woman turned and left the room, pulling the heavy wooden door shut behind her.

The space plunged back into the quiet intimacy of the crackling fire.

The silence stretched. Isole stared at the ceiling. She kept her arms rigidly at her sides under the quilt, acutely aware of the point where her shoulder pressed against Vane’s.

Vane looked at the ceiling too. "You know," he said, his voice completely flat, "you smell exactly like boiled cabbage."

Isole let out a sudden, surprised laugh. It was a weak, breathy sound that ended in a wince as it pulled at her ribs, but it was genuine. She turned her head to look at him, the tension in her shoulders finally dropping.

"You’re one to talk," she fired back, her lips curving into a tired smile. "I’m pretty sure you have moss growing in your hair. We both smell like a swamp."

"It’s the paste," Vane said, lifting his chin slightly to look at the green sludge plastered to his chest. "I feel like a pot roast."

"A very bruised pot roast," Isole agreed. She let out a long, slow exhale, sinking deeper into the mattress. "Gods, I am so tired."

"We fought a Rank 5 Justiciar and met a witch who defies the laws of physics," Vane pointed out quietly. "You’re allowed to be tired."

The mention of the crypt brought a brief shadow back to Isole’s face. The banter faded, leaving a comfortable, if slightly hesitant, quiet between them. She looked down at her hands resting on top of the heavy woolen quilt.

"My mother would actually have a stroke if she saw me right now," Isole murmured. Her voice lacked the heavy, dramatic weight of the Saintess. She just sounded like a girl who was dreading an argument with her parents.

"Because you’re sharing a bed with a commoner?" Vane asked, raising an eyebrow.

"Well, yes, that would definitely cause a scene," Isole admitted with a dry chuckle. "But mostly because I broke the braids. I used the dark, Vane. I raised the dead. If my family finds out I dropped the filter and acted like a true Necromancer... it’s going to be a nightmare."

She looked at him, her mismatched eyes searching his face for judgment. "Are you going to report it? To the Academy?"

Vane turned his head to meet her gaze. He didn’t offer a cold, pragmatic breakdown of tactical liabilities. He just looked at his friend.

"Isole, that ’pure light’ routine was literally getting us killed," Vane said honestly. "When my lung collapsed, your golden healing filter was basically just giving me a warm hug. It wasn’t fixing anything."

Isole winced. "I know. It was too light."

"But the dark?" Vane continued. "The dark saved my life. You chained a three-ton monster to the floor so I could hit it, and then you forced my ribs back together. I don’t care what your family thinks about it. It worked."

Isole stared at him. The knot of anxiety that had been sitting in her chest since she snapped her mental conditioning slowly began to untangle. There was no disgust in his eyes. Just a calm, grounded acceptance.

"So," Isole said softly, a genuine smile touching her face, "my secret is safe with you?"

"I don’t know anything about any Bone Hounds," Vane said smoothly, staring back up at the ceiling. "As far as I’m concerned, you hit the Grave Warden with a really big, really shiny kinetic light blast. Very holy. Very Saintess-like."

Isole let out another quiet laugh. "Right. Very shiny."

They fell silent again. The wind outside continued to howl against the wooden shutters, but the air inside the small cabin felt incredibly secure. The oppressive weight of the Academy, the looming threat of the witch, the expectations of her family—all of it felt miles away, locked outside the warm, drafty room.

Vane closed his eyes. The herbal paste radiated heat into his fractured bones, easing the deep ache in his arm. He felt Isole shift closer under the quilt, seeking the warmth of his unbroken side as the draft from the window chilled the room.

He didn’t pull away. The shadows in the corners of the cabin were perfectly quiet. And for the first time since they had stepped into the frozen mud of Mourn-Hold, Vane finally relaxed and let himself sleep.

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