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I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 198: Her Reflection
The fire in the hearth had burned down to a pile of softly glowing embers. The small cabin in Mourn-Hold was finally quiet. The howling wind outside sounded like a distant memory rather than a threat, muffled by the thick timber walls and the heavy wooden shutters.
Isole Sylvaris lay perfectly still beneath the thick woolen quilt.
The blood root paste plastered over her ribs radiated a deep, penetrating heat. It worked in tandem with the crude magical array carved into the headboard of the Hearth Bed. The deep ache in her bones was already beginning to recede. But it was not the herbal medicine that kept her awake. It was the rhythmic, steady breathing of the boy lying mere inches away from her right shoulder.
Vane was fast asleep. The exhausting toll of the crypt and his shattered arm had finally forced his relentless mind to shut down. His face was relaxed. The usual cold, calculating mask he wore to survive the academy was gone, replaced by a quiet vulnerability that very few people in the world had ever seen.
Isole turned her head slightly on the coarse linen pillow. She studied his profile in the dim light of the dying fire. Her dark green hair spilled across the sheets, framing her pale face.
Six months ago, she would never have imagined this reality. Six months ago, she was a prisoner in a cage made of pure white marble and suffocating expectations.
She remembered the Silver Woods. She remembered the cold, immaculate halls of her family estate. To be born into the Sylvaris line was to be born a Saintess. There was no room for error. There was no room for shadows.
When her dual affinity first manifested, the elders had looked at her mismatched eyes with undisguised horror. The emerald eye was a mark of their proud lineage. The red eye was a curse. They had forced the psychological braids onto her core. They had demanded she filter her soul, bottle up the dark necrotic mana, and present only the golden, flawless light of a healer.
Getting accepted into Zenith Academy was supposed to be her escape.
She had packed her bags and boarded the train to the city with a quiet, desperate hope. She thought the distance from the Silver Woods would give her room to breathe. She thought she could finally exist without the constant, suffocating judgment of her mother weighing on her shoulders.
But Zenith had only offered a different kind of isolation.
The academy was a brutal meritocracy. Students formed alliances based on power and social standing. When Isole arrived, the rumors of the corrupted High Elf spread quickly. The other students looked at her and saw a bomb waiting to go off. Nobody wanted to associate with the outcast of the Sylvaris family. In the cafeteria, they gave her a twenty foot exclusion zone. They sped up when they walked past her table.
For the first few weeks, Isole had accepted her fate. She sat alone in the massive dining hall, reading her thick leather bound books, resigned to surviving the academy as a solitary, broken component.
Then Vane approached her.
It was a memory that still brought a strange, tight feeling to her chest. He had not approached her with pity. He had not approached her with the false, polite smiles the noble heirs used when they wanted to exploit her.
He had simply picked up his food tray, walked across the cafeteria, and sat down opposite her. He did not ask about her family. He did not care about the rumors of her dark magic or the sickening dual aura that terrified the other students. He just slid his notebook across the table, pointed to a blank page, and flatly told her he needed help understanding Professor Vyla’s math formulas.
He treated her like a normal person. He treated her like someone who was simply smart and useful, not a cursed entity or a genetic error.
That blunt interaction had been the foundation. But over the months, it had blossomed into a genuine friendship.
Isole watched the steady rise and fall of Vane’s chest beneath the green herbal paste.
She thought about the quiet evenings in the library. She thought about how he never pried into her past, but always stood between her and anyone who looked at her with disrespect. He was a commoner from the slums of Oakhaven. He was ruthless and pragmatic.
He was also the only person in the world who made her feel completely safe.
Today, in the freezing depths of the Old Crypts, she had finally shown him the monster. She had snapped the psychological braids her mother had forced upon her. She had unleashed the heavy, suffocating dark emerald mana. She had dominated the dead and turned the Grave Warden’s own skeletal hounds against it. She had revealed the absolute, terrifying truth of her identity.
She had expected him to turn away. She had braced herself for the look of disgust she knew so well from the elders of the Silver Woods.
Instead, Vane had looked at her with total acceptance. He told her the pure light was a liability. He told her the dark had saved his life. He had taken the deepest, most shameful secret of her soul and called it a necessity.
And he had nearly died to protect her.
Isole recalled the terrifying moment when the Grave Warden’s rusted shovel had descended toward her exhausted body. She had accepted her death. But Vane had stepped directly in front of her. He had caught the falling sky with a single arm. He had shattered his own bone just to ensure she kept breathing.
A sudden, overwhelming warmth flooded Isole’s chest. It had nothing to do with the Hearth Bed or the blood root paste.
She shifted slightly under the heavy woolen quilt. The movement brought her a fraction of an inch closer to him. She could feel the ambient heat radiating from his skin.
Her heart gave a strange, violent flutter against her ribs.
Isole Sylvaris was a tactician who viewed the world through a lens of perfect, calculated balance. She analyzed vectors and mana densities. She spent her life trying to detach herself from the chaotic, messy variables of human emotion. 𝘧𝓇𝑒𝑒𝑤ℯ𝑏𝓃𝘰𝑣ℯ𝘭.𝘤ℴ𝘮
But as she lay there in the dark, listening to the wind outside the cabin, the logic finally faded away.
She looked at his bruised, exhausted face. She remembered the feeling of his calloused hand pulling her up from the freezing mud of the crypt. She remembered the steady, uncompromising weight of his voice when he promised to keep her secret safe.
The realization hit her with the quiet, unstoppable force of a rising tide.
She was entirely, hopelessly in love with him.
The thought made her breath hitch. A deep, burning flush crept up her neck and spread rapidly across her pale cheeks. She felt her pulse hammering in her ears, a frantic rhythm that completely betrayed her usual calm composure.
She panicked for a second, terrified that the sudden spike in her heart rate would wake him. She held her breath and squeezed her eyes shut.
Vane did not wake. He simply let out a quiet, sleep heavy sigh and shifted his weight. His right arm, the one that was not splinted, moved under the quilt. His hand brushed against hers. His fingers loosely curled around her own.
Isole froze. Her entire body went rigid. The heat in her cheeks intensified until she felt like she was burning up.
He was asleep. It was an unconscious movement. It was a simple biological reflex to seek warmth in a drafty room. Her rational mind supplied a dozen logical explanations for why his hand was currently holding hers.
She ignored every single one of them.
Very slowly, terrified of breaking the spell, Isole relaxed her fingers. She let her hand rest inside his. The rough calluses on his palm were a stark contrast to her own soft skin. It felt incredibly grounding.
The frantic beating of her heart began to slow, settling into a deep, steady rhythm that matched his own. The anxiety of the Silver Woods, the terror of the Grave Warden, and the expectations of her family all faded into the background.
Isole kept her eyes closed. The blush remained warm on her cheeks, a quiet testament to the new reality she had just accepted. She squeezed his hand very gently. She let the heavy, soothing heat of the Hearth Bed pull her down into the dark, and for the first time in her entire life, she went to sleep with a smile on her face.







