I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 199: The Anchor and the Star

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Chapter 199: The Anchor and the Star

The pull of the relay station faded. Vane and Isole stepped out of the runic circle onto the polished cobblestones of Argentum City. The transition from the freezing mud of Mourn Hold to the pristine streets of the capital was jarring. The air smelled of refined mana and expensive perfumes, entirely devoid of the necrotic rot they had been breathing for three days.

Vane took a slow breath. His right lung expanded perfectly. The blood root paste from the Hearth Bed had done its job overnight. His fractured left arm still ached with a dull throb, but it was functional.

Isole walked right beside him. She did not look like the fragile Saintess who had arrived six months ago. She was no longer drowning in heavy silk robes meant to hide her from the world. She wore her standard academy mantle over her clothes. Her dark green hair fell loosely around her shoulders. She walked with a quiet, grounded confidence.

They navigated the immaculate streets, ignoring the stares of the merchants, and reached the massive central hub. They stepped into the glass walled cabin of the mana lift. The heavy doors slid shut. The lift began its smooth ascent up the colossal pillar of rock that held Zenith Academy in the clouds.

Vane leaned against the glass. He watched the city shrink below them. The wet clouds rushed past, breaking apart to reveal the floating continent of the academy.

The elevator docked at the main concourse with a soft chime. The doors slid open to the thin, cold air of the peaks. They walked through the bustling student sectors toward the residential cliffs, finally reaching the heavy iron bound doors of Villa 1. It was Vane’s personal residence, quiet and secluded at the edge of the spiral.

Vane pushed the door open. The sudden warmth of the foyer wrapped around them, carrying the smell of roasted meat and spices.

Before Vane could even take off his heavy travel cloak, a small blur of motion launched itself from the hallway.

Mara sprinted across the wooden floorboards. She crashed directly into Vane’s legs, wrapping her small arms tightly around his knees.

Vane stopped. The cold mask he wore for the rest of the world softened instantly. He reached down with his uninjured right hand and patted the top of Mara’s head.

"You were gone for three days," Mara mumbled into his trousers. She looked up at him with wide amber eyes. "You said it was only two."

"There were complications," Vane told her. He gently untangled her arms and crouched down to her level. "But I am back now. Have you been drawing?"

Mara nodded vigorously. "I drew a dragon. Ashe said it looked like a fat lizard, but she is wrong."

"I am never wrong about reptiles, Rat," a raspy voice called out from the kitchen.

Ashe Razar swaggered into the foyer. The Warlord of the East was wearing a loose black tank top and cargo pants. Her obsidian horns were polished, and her crimson eyes glinted with amusement. She was wiping her hands on a cloth, having clearly taken over cooking duties while she watched the little girl.

"I kept her alive while you were playing in the mud," Ashe noted, tossing the cloth aside. She looked Vane up and down. "You look terrible. I expected you to come back with a trophy. Instead you come back smelling like a swamp and walking like an old man."

"A minor setback," Vane said dryly, standing back up.

The front door opened behind them. Isaac Glacium walked in, groaning dramatically as he brushed snow off his coat. Lyra followed close behind him, carrying a thick leather bound ledger.

"We saw your names flash on the academy entry logs at the main gates," Isaac complained, heading straight for the warmth of the living room. "Walking all the way from Villa 5 to your house in this cold is oppression, Vane. You owe me tea."

"You are walking with a fourteen degree list to your left side," Lyra noted, pushing her wire rimmed glasses up her nose as she analyzed Vane. "Your breathing is shallow, and you are actively suppressing a wince every time you shift your weight. You encountered something significantly heavier than a standard crypt spawn."

"We ran into a Mid Justiciar," Vane said, walking toward the coat rack to drop his cloak. "We dealt with it."

Valerica Sol stepped through the open front door last, closing it quietly behind her. She was wearing her pristine training uniform. Her petite frame carried the crushing weight of a stellar core. Her cascading deep violet hair caught the warm light of the mana lamps. Her dark, bottomless eyes locked onto Vane immediately.

She walked across the room with silent grace. She stopped a few feet away from Vane and Isole.

"You fractured your left radius," Valerica stated. She did not ask. She read the subtle stiffness in Vane’s posture with the flawless expertise of a martial prodigy. "And you are favoring your right lung. The structural damage was catastrophic."

Isole turned her head to look at the Sun of their squad.

"He held the line," Isole said quietly. "The crypt was a trap. Vane took the brunt of the physical impact so I could cast the final execution."

Valerica finally pulled her gaze away from Vane and looked at Isole. The dark eyes analyzed the High Elf. She noticed the missing silk robes. She noticed the way Isole held her shoulders. She noticed the subtle, lingering scent of something incredibly heavy and dark clinging to Isole’s mana signature.

"You broke your filter," Valerica noted softly. Her voice was pitched low so only Isole could hear.

Isole did not flinch. She met the gaze of the Imperial noble. "The pure light was a liability. I did what was necessary."

Valerica slowly nodded. There was a profound respect in that simple gesture. She knew exactly what it meant to be a containment vessel for a terrifying force.

Vane walked over to the low table near the hearth where Mara had her crayons scattered. He pointed at a specific blue mark on the paper, offering a dry critique on the placement of a castle wall. Mara giggled, completely ignoring his tactical advice.

Isole leaned her hip against the back of the leather couch. She watched the boy from Oakhaven. Her heart beat with a steady, warm rhythm. She thought about the Hearth Bed. She thought about the absolute safety she had felt holding his hand in the freezing dark.

She let out a quiet sigh. Her mismatched red and emerald eyes softened with an affection she no longer wanted to suppress.

A split second later, a strange instinct made Isole glance to her right.

Valerica was leaning against the heavy wooden pillar near the kitchen. The Imperial heir was watching the exact same boy. Valerica’s expression was not her usual blank mask. Her dark, bottomless eyes were filled with a heavy, quiet intensity. It was a look of absolute devotion. It was the look of someone who had watched that same boy stand in front of a Demon General while his bones turned to dust.

Valerica felt the shift in the air. She turned her head.

The red and emerald eyes of the Weaver met the dark, bottomless stars of the Core.

The living room around them seemed to fade into a dull hum. Ashe laughing loudly at a joke Isaac made and Lyra turning the pages of her ledger became background noise.

No words were spoken. The air between the two women did not crackle with petty hostility or cheap rivalry. It thickened with a profound, terrifying realization.

Isole looked at Valerica and saw the exact same anchor she had found in the crypt. She saw the silent, unyielding gravity that tied the Imperial heir to the vanguard.

Valerica looked at Isole and saw the exact same salvation. She saw the quiet, steady warmth that the High Elf now directed entirely at the boy sitting by the fire.

They both instantly understood.

They were two opposing absolutes. The Sun and the Moon. They were both isolated by the terrifying nature of their own power. And they had both given the entirety of their quiet loyalty to the same pragmatic commoner.

Valerica did not look away. She simply offered a very slow, almost imperceptible nod of acknowledgment.

Isole returned the nod, her posture remaining perfectly calm.

The unspoken tension dissolved into a mutual, respectful understanding. They both knew the lethal stakes of the world they lived in. They both knew the monsters waiting for them. And they both knew exactly who they were willing to burn the world down to protect.

"Food is ready," Ashe announced loudly from the kitchen, breaking the silence. "Vane, tell your tiny shadow to wash her hands. I cooked, I am starving, and I am not eating dinner with crayon wax on the table."

Vane stood up. He picked up Mara with his good arm and set her on her feet, pointing her toward the washroom.

He turned around and looked at his friends. He looked at Isaac complaining about the cold, Lyra analyzing her notes, Ashe serving plates, Valerica watching quietly, and finally Isole. The cold logic in his silver eyes remained sharp, but the tension in his jaw relaxed completely. He was out of the freezing mud. He was back in the light.

"Set the table," Vane ordered smoothly. "Let us eat."

Isole smiled and walked toward the kitchen to help with the plates. Valerica pushed off the wooden pillar and followed suit. The villa filled with the chaotic, warm noise of the squad, a fleeting moment of perfect normalcy before the world outside could demand their blood once again.