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I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 21: What You Broke
The fog in the garden was thicker today, heavy with moisture that clung to Vane’s skin and slicked the flagstones.
"Again," Senna commanded. Her voice was tighter than usual, strained.
Vane reset his stance. His legs were past burning; they were a dull, throbbing landscape of misery. He held the training spear—a real one he’d checked out from the armory, not a broom—leveled at the chalk mark on the distant pillar.
"Keep your back straight. You are hunching like a beggar," Senna snapped. She was sitting stiffly in her chair, her hands gripping the armrests so tight her knuckles were white.
Vane stepped and thrust. The movement was getting smoother. The phantom weight of the ’wall’ he was supposed to be holding felt a little more real each time.
The spear tip struck the chalk mark dead center with a satisfying thak.
"Sloppy recovery," Senna spat. "You are lingering at full extension. If I were a real opponent, I would have taken your arm off. Pull it back. Snap it."
Vane gritted his teeth and pulled the spear back into guard position. He opened his mouth to ask for a water break.
The sound Senna made wasn’t a scream. It was worse. It was a sharp, strangled gasp, like all the air in her lungs had been suddenly replaced with broken glass.
Vane dropped the spear.
He spun around. Senna was doubled over in her chair, her body seized in a violent, rigid spasm. Her hands were clawing at her own chest, tearing at the thin fabric of her hospital gown.
"Senna!"
He rushed to her. The chair was tilting dangerously close to the edge of the balcony as she thrashed. He grabbed the handles and pulled it back, then knelt in front of her.
"What is it? What do I do?"
She couldn’t answer. Her jaw was locked tight, teeth grinding audibly. Her eyes were rolled back in her head, showing mostly whites.
He grabbed her shoulders to steady her, and the cold shocked him through his uniform. She wasn’t just cool to the touch; she felt like she had been lying in snow for hours.
Under the collar of her gown, he saw them. Thick, black veins, darker than old ink, pulsing sluggishly against her pale skin. They were creeping up her neck, branching out like lightning burns across her collarbone.
It was the dead mana corruption. He had seen the status effect in his analysis, but seeing it live, watching it try to strangle her from the inside out, was horrifying.
"Breathe," Vane urged, uselessly. He instinctively tried to push some of his own mana into her, a clumsy attempt at reinforcement, but her body rejected it violently. The black veins flared, and a shock of freezing pain kicked his mana back into his own hand.
The seizure lasted for an agonizing minute. Then, slowly, the rigidity left her frame. She slumped forward, gasping for air, coughing wetly. A thin trickle of black fluid leaked from the corner of her mouth.
Vane didn’t let go of her shoulders. She felt incredibly fragile now, like a bundle of dry sticks held together by stubbornness.
"I am taking you inside," Vane said.
She was too weak to argue. He scooped her up—she weighed almost nothing—and carried her off the balcony, kicking open the rusted door of the attached brutalist building.
The inside was dusty and smelled of mildew and abandonment. He laid her down on the least disgusting rusted metal cot.
She lay there, eyes closed, breathing shallowly. The black veins on her neck were slowly receding, fading back down toward her chest like a retreating tide.
Vane pulled up a rusted metal stool and sat next to the cot, his heart hammering.
"You should have left me on the balcony," Senna whispered, her eyes still closed. Her voice was wrecked, a husk of sound.
"And let you twitch yourself over the edge?" Vane asked roughly. "Not happening."
She opened her eyes. They were dull, the terrifying sharpness gone for the moment. "It happens. The tide comes in. It hurts. Then it goes out."
"That wasn’t normal pain," Vane said. "You are an Expert. Your body should be practically immortal. What the hell did that to you?"
Senna stared at the dusty ceiling for a long time.
"Expert," she repeated bitterly. "Yes. That is what they put on the certificate."
She turned her head slowly to look at him.
"You want to know about foundations, boy? You want to know what lies underneath the art?" She tapped her own chest, right over the sternum where the black veins had retreated.
"Two years ago. The deepest dungeon break on the western continent. The Void-Hydra’s lair. I was the rearguard. My team retreated. The Academy sealed the blast doors... but they sealed them in front of me, not behind me."
Vane felt a chill that had nothing to do with the fog. "They locked you in."
"They made a tactical decision," she corrected, her voice devoid of emotion. "The Hydra was coming. A mountain of corrupted muscle and dead mana. It broke my spear. It broke my legs. It started to eat me."
Her eyes snapped open, and for a second, the terrifying fire was back.
"But I wouldn’t die. My family motto is ’We are the wall.’ I refused to let that thing pass me. But I had no weapon left. So I used the Authority." 𝒻𝑟ℯℯ𝑤𝑒𝑏𝑛𝘰𝓋𝑒𝓁.𝒸𝑜𝘮
She grabbed the front of her gown, bunching the fabric over her heart.
"You still think small, freshman. You think an Authority is just a big spell. It isn’t. The Silver Fang is an engine. It converts your soul into terrain law. I didn’t just block the Hydra. I redefined the corridor. I imposed a Sovereign Law on that space that forbade it from passing."
She let out a shaky breath.
"But engines burn fuel. When you force a monster of that magnitude to obey your rules, the friction is catastrophic. I ran out of mana in seconds. So the engine started burning me. It’s called conceptual recoil. I shattered my own channels trying to enforce a law that my body wasn’t strong enough to hold."
She looked at Vane, her gaze piercing him.
"That is how you reach Expert the hard way. You turn yourself into fuel for a concept that is bigger than you are. The corruption backwashed into me because I burned away the parts of me that kept it out."
Vane sat frozen.
Inside him, the [Usurper] Authority stirred. It wasn’t a ping. It was a sensation.
For a terrifying second, Vane didn’t feel the cold room. He felt the heavy, grinding vibration of a massive machine spinning up in the center of his chest. He felt the terrifying need to be grounded—to sink roots into the earth—because the weight resting on his shoulders was heavy enough to crush a mountain.
It wasn’t just pain. It was the crushing, industrial pressure of a law that demanded total obedience from the world itself.
I define the path.
The sensation vanished as quickly as it had come, leaving Vane gasping, sweat popping on his forehead.
He realized with a jolt of cold fear that he had almost triggered his own power. The intimacy of the moment—holding her through the seizure, the shared breath—had nearly opened the bridge.
He could have copied it right then. He could have stolen the Silver Fang while she lay helpless.
But looking at her now, understanding the sheer conceptual weight of the engine she carried... trying to steal the legacy of that corridor with a cheap trick felt repulsive.
It felt insufficient. Like trying to put a siege engine in his pocket.
He wasn’t big enough to hold that kind of power yet. If he tried to take it the easy way, the recoil would crush him just as surely as it was crushing her.
"The Silver Dragon Art isn’t just a fighting style, Vane," Senna whispered, her voice fading. "It’s the cooling system for the engine. It’s the structure that keeps you from melting down when you turn the key. Without the anchor—without the stance and the spear—the Authority will eat you alive before you even swing."
Vane looked down at his hands. He had come here for a shortcut. He had found a roadmap to suicide.
"You okay to move?" Vane asked.
Senna blinked. "I’m breathing."
Vane stood and moved to the side of the cot. He slid one arm behind her thin shoulders and another under her knees. He lifted her. It was terrifying how light she was; she felt less like a person and more like a collection of dried bones held together by resentment.
He carried her out of the ward, moving carefully back onto the rusted balcony. The cold, damp fog hit his face, cleansing the smell of sickness.
He lowered her carefully back into the wheelchair. She slumped immediately, gripping the armrests to stay upright.
It took her two full minutes to compose herself. When she finally looked up at him again, some of the old, cold steel had returned to her gaze.
"Well?" she demanded, her voice weak but razor-sharp. "Did the reality of the foundation scare you off, boy? It’s not too late to run back to the main campus and play with daggers where it’s safe."
Vane looked down at the practice spear lying on the wet flagstones where he’d dropped it.
He thought about the easy path. Then he thought about the killing floor in the dark corridor that wouldn’t break.
"No," Vane said quietly. "We’re not done."
He bent down and picked up the spear. He couldn’t learn her Authority—that engine was hers alone. But he was learning the cooling system. He needed to build the chassis before he could ever hope to turn the key.
"Get back in position," Senna ordered, though she barely had the breath to project the command.
Vane stepped to the familiar marks on the cracked stones. His legs throbbed.
He didn’t just drop into the crouch this time. He paused, standing tall for a moment, closing his eyes.
He didn’t just visualize a physical wall anymore. He visualized the Engine she had explained. The Anchor. The need to ground himself so completely that the earth accepted him as a fixture.
He opened his eyes and sunk into the low, grueling stance of the Silver Dragon Bastion. He grounded himself into the stone until his thighs burned. He locked his back straight.
He extended the spear, the tip rock-steady, pointing at the swirling fog as if daring anything—man, beast, or fate itself—to materialize within its reach.
Senna watched him from her chair. Her eyes, sunken in dark circles, widened just a fraction as she saw the subtle shift in his posture—the indefinable difference between mimicking a shape and beginning to embody an intent.
"Better," she whispered, followed by a wet, painful cough. "Hold it. Don’t let them pass."







