I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 200: The Architect’s Shadow

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Chapter 200: The Architect’s Shadow

The dining table in Villa 1 was rarely this crowded, and it was never this loud.

Ashe had commandeered the kitchen earlier, resulting in a massive platter of roasted meat and root vegetables. She believed in calories and protein, not delicate plating.

Vane sat at the head of the heavy oak table. Mara was perched on the chair to his right, her legs swinging as she devoured a piece of buttered bread.

The warmth of the hearth fire pushed back the chill of the high altitude winds rattling the villa windows. Vane felt the baseline tension in his spine begin to unwind. The dull throb in his fractured left arm was entirely manageable now.

He reached for the heavy copper pitcher in the center of the table to pour himself a glass of water.

Before his fingers even brushed the handle, Valerica Sol smoothly intercepted it. The Imperial heir was sitting further down his right side. She did not say a word. She simply lifted the pitcher with flawless, silent grace, filled his glass, and slid it exactly two inches from his right hand. It was perfectly positioned so he would not have to stretch his recovering chest muscles.

Vane blinked, looking at the glass. "Thank you."

Valerica offered a microscopic nod. Her dark, bottomless eyes held a quiet satisfaction. She returned to her meal, cutting her meat with precise, mechanical efficiency.

Across the table, Isole Sylvaris paused with her fork halfway to her mouth. The Weaver sat on Vane’s left. Her mismatched red and emerald eyes flicked toward Valerica, then down to Vane’s plate.

Vane had a thick cut of meat in front of him. To eat it, he would have to hold it down with a fork in his fractured left hand while cutting with his right.

Isole set her own fork down. She reached across the space between them, her dark green hair shifting over her shoulder. She smoothly took Vane’s plate, brought it to her side of the table, and used her own knife to cleanly slice the tough meat into perfect, bite sized portions. She placed the plate back in front of him exactly three seconds later.

"The bone needs to set, Vane," Isole said softly, her voice an ocean of calm reason. "You should not strain the radius."

Vane stared at the perfectly diced meat. He looked at Isole. The High Elf offered him a serene, flawless smile.

He glanced back at Valerica. The Imperial heir had stopped chewing. Her dark eyes were locked onto Isole’s plate. The air temperature in the dining room spiked by two degrees as the latent plasma in Valerica’s core reacted to the subtle challenge.

Isole did not back down. The ambient shadows beneath the dining table seemed to lengthen, pooling heavily around her boots.

Vane picked up his fork. He possessed the tactical genius to survive Justiciars as a Sentinel. He knew a localized warzone when he saw one. He wisely chose absolute silence, spearing a piece of the meat and eating it without acknowledging the terrifying, unspoken crossfire happening directly over his dinner plate.

"This is ridiculous," Isaac complained from the far end of the table. The ice mage was picking miserably at his vegetables. "I requested mashed potatoes. These are roasted. My jaw is already sore from shivering all the way here."

"Chew harder, Glacium," Ashe retorted around a mouthful of meat. "Or I will mash them for you with my fist."

"Your diplomatic skills remain a marvel to us all, Ashe," Lyra noted dryly, not looking up from the thick ledger she had brought to the table. She was eating mechanically while cross referencing mana expenditure charts.

The dinner proceeded in a chaotic, comfortable rhythm. The subtle, silent war of attrition between the Sun and the Moon continued. Valerica ensured Vane’s glass was never less than half full. Isole casually shifted the ambient mana in the room to draft the warm air from the hearth directly over his injured shoulder. They did not glare at each other. They simply executed their support with the terrifying, absolute perfection of apex predators marking their territory.

An hour later, the platters were empty.

Ashe stood up, stretching her arms above her head until her shoulders popped. "I am going to the training grounds. I need to burn this off before I sleep."

"It is freezing outside," Isaac protested, standing up reluctantly. "The wind will literally peel the skin off your face."

"Then walk faster," Lyra suggested, shutting her ledger with a loud thud.

The squad gathered their heavy cloaks by the foyer. Mara ran up to Ashe, demanding a high five, which the tall Warlord provided with a surprisingly gentle slap of their palms.

Vane stood by the door.

"I will see you in the lecture hall tomorrow," Lyra said, stepping out into the biting cold. Isaac followed her, complaining loudly about the altitude. Ashe offered a two fingered salute and vanished into the snowy dark.

Isole and Valerica lingered in the foyer.

Valerica pulled her hood up, hiding her deep violet hair. She looked at Vane. The intensity in her bottomless eyes was absolute. "Rest your arm, Vane."

"I will," Vane promised.

She nodded once, a sharp and crisp motion, and stepped out the door.

Isole was the last to leave. She adjusted her dark grey academy mantle, wrapping it tightly against the draft. Her mismatched eyes met his. The cold logic of the academy vanished, replaced by the quiet, heavy intimacy they had forged in the Hearth Bed.

"Sleep well, Vane," Isole whispered. Her voice carried the weight of their shared secret.

"Goodnight, Isole."

She offered him a final, lingering smile before turning and walking out into the night.

Vane closed the heavy oak door. The latch clicked into place, sealing the freezing wind outside. The sudden silence in Villa 1 was profound. He locked the deadbolt and turned back to the living room.

He helped Mara wash her face in the basin and tucked the little girl into her bed down the hall. She was asleep before he even closed her door.

Vane walked back out to the main room. He picked up the empty plates and carried them to the kitchen sink. He did not mind the chore. The repetitive physical action grounded him. It kept his mind from drifting back to the crushing, absolute gravity of the crypt.

He wiped his hands on a towel and walked toward the hearth to extinguish the remaining mana lamps.

A sharp, authoritative knock echoed from the front door.

Vane froze. His combat logic immediately flared to life. He did not have any expected visitors. The squad had just left. The perimeter wards of Villa 1 had not triggered an alert, which meant whoever was standing on his porch had bypassed the academy’s localized security grid entirely.

He walked to the door. He did not reach for his spear, knowing he was currently too injured to fight anyone capable of bypassing those wards. He unlocked the deadbolt and pulled the door open.

Headmistress Evangeline stood on his front porch.

The ruler of Zenith Academy looked entirely unassuming. She was not wearing ceremonial armor or the flowing robes of a grandmagus. She wore a simple white shirt with the sleeves rolled up to her elbows and a pair of sensible grey slacks. Her trademark silver hair was pulled back into a messy knot. She looked like a woman in her thirties who had spent her afternoon tending to a garden, tired but content. However, the pressure radiating from her form was absolute. Her piercing grey eyes were unreadable. The freezing wind whipped around her, but she did not seem to feel the cold at all.

"Good evening, Vane," Evangeline said. Her voice was quiet, barely carrying over the howl of the wind.

"Headmistress," Vane replied, maintaining a perfectly neutral expression. He stepped aside, opening the door wider. "Please, come in."

Evangeline stepped over the threshold. She stood in the center of his foyer, her presence making the spacious room feel instantly claustrophobic. She surveyed the quiet villa, her eyes lingering on the dying embers in the hearth.

"The purification runes at the relay station nearly cracked when you and Cadet Sylvaris stepped through the portal today," Evangeline stated without any preamble. She turned her piercing grey gaze onto Vane. "They are designed to scrub ambient dungeon residue. But the rot clinging to your clothes was ancient. And your core is currently vibrating with the aftershocks of a massive kinetic impact."

Vane kept his breathing steady. "We encountered a difficult spawn in the lower levels of Mourn Hold."

"Do not insult my intelligence, Vane," Evangeline said softly. It was not a reprimand. It was a cold statement of fact. "A standard crypt spawn does not shatter the radius of a Vanguard who survived the Iron Groves. I know the scent of the deep grave. You fought a Mid Justiciar."

Vane did not react. He did not confirm or deny the accusation.

"You are a pragmatist," Evangeline continued. She took a slow step toward him. "You have likely already constructed a flawless lie to feed your instructors tomorrow. You will claim it was a structural collapse. You will hide the true nature of the fight to protect your squad."

"I protect what is mine, Headmistress," Vane said evenly.

"And I protect my academy," Evangeline countered. The air around her grew heavy with latent, terrifying power. "A Grave Warden is a construct, Vane. A puppet made of bone and sludge. It does not manifest naturally in a place like Mourn Hold. It was placed there. Someone summoned it."

She stopped three feet away from him.

"I need to know who is treating my borders like a playground," Evangeline said, her voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "I need the truth."

Vane looked at the Headmistress. He weighed the tactical variables. Evangeline was not a fool. If she suspected a Transcendent threat was moving near the academy, lying to her would only blind their strongest defensive asset.

He made the calculation. He would omit Isole’s true magic and his own Usurper traits. He would give her the puppeteer.

"We defeated the Grave Warden," Vane said flatly. "We shattered its core. But you are right. It was a summon."

Evangeline’s eyes narrowed. "Explain."

"The summoner was in the crypt," Vane said. The memory of the black water and the suffocating pressure crept back into his mind. "She appeared immediately after the Justiciar fell. She did not cast a spell to enter the room. She simply manifested."

Evangeline went entirely still. "Describe her."

"She was human, or something close to it," Vane recalled, his voice tight. "She stopped the full kinetic force of my star steel spear by pinching the blade between two fingers. She did not even blink."

Vane cursed himself internally. It was a bitter, deeply frustrating regret. When the woman had materialized in the crypt, the sheer, crushing terror of her presence had paralyzed his combat logic entirely. He had been too intimidated, too overwhelmed by the absolute disparity in their existence, to even think about activating his Target Analysis. He had no data on her mana output, her class, or her true rank. He only had visuals.

"Hair and eyes," Evangeline demanded. The smooth, authoritative cadence of her voice had vanished. She sounded breathless.

"Light blue hair," Vane answered, watching the Headmistress closely. "Like silk. It floated around her even in the damp air. And her eyes were a luminescent violet."

The temperature in the foyer plummeted.

Evangeline did not speak. The color completely drained from her pristine, aristocratic face. The Headmistress of Zenith Academy, the woman who commanded the most powerful military institution on the continent, looked as though someone had just driven an ice pick through her heart.

Her perfectly composed expression froze in a mask of absolute, unadulterated shock. She took a clumsy, uneven step backward, her silver hair swaying wildly from the sudden movement.