I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 207: The Second Anomaly

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Chapter 207: The Second Anomaly

The kiss ended. The physical heat of Nyx pulled away from his lips. Vane felt the familiar phantom itch flare violently behind his ears. It was followed by the sensation of a cold, wet hook dragging across the surface of his brain.

The world fractured.

For three seconds, Vane was not lying on the thick rug of the living room in Villa 1. He was a small, pale girl sitting in a cramped, rotting wooden shack. The air smelled of cheap coal and stale cabbage. The world outside the dirty window was grey and utterly devoid of color. The sheer, crushing boredom of the environment felt like a physical weight pressing down on her small chest. It was intolerable. She reached deep inside her own mind, pulling a vibrant violet canvas from her imagination. She forced the drab walls of the shack to dissolve into a field of glowing flowers simply because she refused to accept the dreary reality she was born into.

Vane gasped. His eyes snapped open.

The vision vanished. The phantom chill lingered in his bones. The heavy, suffocating weight of the copied power settled into his silver core. The Usurper fed the knowledge directly into his instincts. It was a localized manifestation of the Dreamscape. He now understood how to temporarily blur the line between illusion and reality. This would allow him to turn an incoming physical attack into a harmless phantasm that would pass right through him. It was a terrifying, absolute rejection of physics, but he could already feel the massive toll it would take on his mana reserves.

Nyx shifted her weight off his chest. She sat back on her knees, smoothing the wrinkles of her loose academy uniform. Her eyes, previously a swirling vortex of deep violet, were now shifting into a brilliant, amused gold. She watched him process the new weight in his soul. Her perfectly symmetrical face was illuminated by the dying embers of the hearth.

"You actually swallowed it," Nyx noted. Her syrupy voice was laced with genuine approval. "Most people would have their minds completely shatter just trying to comprehend a sliver of that logic at Sentinel-rank. You really are built differently, little rat."

Vane did not answer immediately. He stared up at the wooden ceiling of the villa. His fractured left arm throbbed violently in its sling. The bone ached in protest as his core expanded to accommodate the sheer density of a Justiciar’s concept born from an EX-rank authority.

Alongside the rush of new power, a cold, heavy realization began to settle deep in his gut.

He had just been handed a lifeline by a bored Justiciar. He had survived the crypt in Mourn Hold purely by the skin of his teeth. He had been heavily reliant on Isole draining her massive mana reserves and Valerica stepping in front of him to absorb the kinetic shockwaves.

He thought about the blue haired witch. He thought about the absolute, paralyzing terror that had gripped him when she materialized in the dark of the crypt. He remembered watching her pinch the blade of his star steel spear between two pale fingers. She had stopped all his kinetic momentum without even blinking.

In Oakhaven, terror was a trigger for survival. Whenever he encountered a threat in the slums, his absolute first instinct was to activate Target Analysis. It did not matter if the opponent was a drunken mercenary stumbling out of a tavern or a seasoned gang leader looking for blood. He always checked their stats. He always measured the depth of the water before he jumped in. He never engaged blindly.

Target Analysis was his most powerful tool. It was a flawless, unbreakable diagnostic skill. It bypassed all stealth runes, all suppression rings, and all cloaking spells. It could read a Transcendent just as easily as it could read a beggar in the street. It gave him the name, the rank, the Authority, and the danger level of anything standing in front of him.

But in the crypt, staring down the architect of a Grave Warden, he had completely forgotten to use it.

Vane felt a sickening wave of self disgust wash over him. He had spent six months in the pristine, climate controlled halls of Zenith Academy. He had been eating warm meals every day. He had been sleeping in a soft bed that did not leak when it rained. He had been playing tactical games with noble heirs. He had allowed the heavy, suffocating pressure of the terrarium to lull him into a false sense of security.

He remembered the bitter cold of the Oakhaven alleys. He remembered how his boots used to leak freezing water. He remembered how he had to steal scraps of bread from the bakeries just to keep his stomach from cramping. Back then, survival was not a theoretical exercise. It was a daily, brutal reality. The Usurper was his ultimate weapon, but Target Analysis was his shield. Without Target Analysis, he would have tried to steal from the wrong mercenary. He would have picked a fight with a hidden Sentinel and ended up dead in a ditch. He relied on the diagnostic skill to map out the power dynamics of the entire town. It told him who to avoid, who to extort, and who to run away from.

When he first arrived at Zenith Academy, he had kept that exact same mindset. He had analyzed Instructor Rowan. He had analyzed Kael. He had even analyzed the cafeteria workers. But slowly, the sheer abundance of resources had corrupted him. He had stopped looking over his shoulder because there were no gang leaders waiting to ambush him in the hallways. He had stopped scanning the environment because the academy wards were supposed to keep the monsters out. He had traded his razor sharp survival instincts for the illusion of safety.

He had started believing that the academy’s structured evaluations and controlled dungeon dives were the pinnacle of danger. He had assumed that because he was keeping up with prodigies like Isaac Glacium and Valerica Sol, he was ready for the real world.

He had lost his edge. His paranoia, the very thing that had kept him breathing for sixteen years, had dulled. The rat had gotten comfortable in the golden cage. He had faced a monster that could erase the academy off the map, and he had fought her completely blind because he was too scared to look at her. He had been a fool.

"You are finally seeing it," Nyx said softly.

Vane turned his head to look at her. She was still sitting on the rug beside him. The golden hue in her opal eyes shifted to a cool, calculating pink. The residual mana of the Dreamscape was still thick in the air. It allowed her to easily read the violent shift in his surface thoughts.

"You got swept up, Vane," Nyx said. The playful mockery was completely gone from her tone. She sounded like a veteran commander assessing a fatally flawed recruit. "You survived the Iron Groves. You fought the Ice Mage to a standstill. You built a functional squad out of the most volatile elements in the first year class. You started thinking you had mastered the board."

Vane pushed himself up into a sitting position using his uninjured right arm. He did not deny it. There was no point in lying to a mind reader, and there was no point in lying to himself.

"I froze," Vane admitted. His voice was a harsh, self deprecating rasp. "I had the tool to measure her, and I did not use it. I let the pressure blind my instincts. I fought an unknown variable without gathering the data first."

"Comfort is lethal," Nyx agreed. She reached out with a pale hand and gently poked his bruised chest. "You forgot that you are a commoner who has to fight for every single breath. The moment you start acting like one of these pampered Imperial nobles, the moment you start trusting the walls of this academy to keep you safe, you are going to die. You cannot afford to lose your paranoia. That paranoia is exactly what makes you useful."

Vane looked at the dying fire. She was absolutely right. The Usurper was a terrifying Authority, but Target Analysis was what allowed him to survive long enough to use it. Knowing the exact rank and Authority of an enemy was the ultimate tactical advantage. He had surrendered that advantage in Mourn Hold. He resolved in that moment, with cold, iron clad certainty, that it would never happen again.

"Do not look so grim," Nyx said. A faint, mysterious smile returned to her perfectly symmetrical face. "You recognized the flaw. That is more than I can say for the rest of the sheep in your class. They still think the instructors are here to protect them. They still think the walls of Zenith Academy will hold back the dark."

She stood up smoothly. Her movements possessed that strange, underwater grace. She stretched her arms above her head, letting out a soft, sleepy yawn that completely contradicted the heavy Justiciar aura she carried. The lavender waves of her hair floated slightly around her shoulders.

"You are a very fascinating creature, Vane," Nyx said. She looked down at him. The pink in her opal eyes swirled back into the deep, mesmerizing violet. "You are the second anomaly I have found in this place. You are the second most interesting person I have ever met."

Vane frowned. The cold logic in his mind immediately caught the specific phrasing. Zenith Academy was filled with generation defining prodigies. Valerica held the crushing weight of a star in her chest. Isole commanded the absolute duality of life and death. Isaac could freeze a continent. Ashe was a walking engine of war.

Yet Nyx, a bored Low Justiciar who viewed reality as a blank canvas waiting to be painted over, considered him only the second anomaly.

"Who is the first?" Vane asked. He looked up at her, genuinely curious. His tactical mind immediately searched for the identity of this unknown threat or ally. "Who is the most interesting person you have met?"

Nyx stopped stretching. She blinked down at him. The sleepy, detached expression on her porcelain doll face cracked into genuine, unadulterated surprise. She stared at him for three full seconds, as if trying to determine if he was making a terrible, tasteless joke.

"You really do not know?" Nyx asked. Her syrupy voice dropped to a disbelieving whisper.

"Know what?" Vane pressed. His brow furrowed as he ran through a list of every student and instructor he had interacted with.

Nyx stared at him a moment longer. Then, she let out a slow, heavy sigh. She shook her head. The lavender and midnight blue waves of her hair shifted around her shoulders.

"You are a brilliant tactician, little rat," Nyx murmured. Her tone was a strange mix of pity and deep amusement. "But sometimes, you are incredibly blind to the things standing right in front of you."

She did not explain further. She did not offer a name. She left the mystery hanging in the warm air of the living room.

Nyx took a step backward. She did not walk toward the front door of the villa. She simply stepped into the shadows near the edge of the hallway. The air around her rippled like water disturbed by a heavy stone. The physical reality of the room warped. It bent around her petite form until she simply folded into the darkness and vanished completely.

The heavy, suffocating pressure of her Justiciar rank vanished with her. The ambient temperature of the room returned to a normal, comfortable warmth.

Vane was left sitting alone on the rug. The fire in the hearth popped loudly. A small shower of orange sparks rose into the stone chimney.

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