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I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 210: Day of Concord
A full week passed in the floating terrarium of Zenith Academy.
The oppressive winter that had gripped the continent finally began to break. The high-altitude winds howling across the white-gold spires lost their biting edge, replaced by a heavy, humid dampness. The pristine snow covering the cobblestone paths actively rotted, turning the academy grounds into a treacherous landscape of grey slush and melting ice. Spring was forcing its way in, and the transition was ugly, wet, and relentless.
Inside the climate-controlled halls of the main academic building, the elite first-year class settled into a tense, highly functional rhythm. Instructor Rowan pushed them through brutal combat evaluations, preparing them for the shifting environment of the outdoor sectors. Professor Vyla lectured on the thermodynamic properties of high-density ether.
Vane attended every class. He took meticulous notes and continued to train in the freezing, muddy dark of the Villa 1 courtyard every night.
His fractured left arm had finally finished knitting together. The blood-root paste they retrieved from Mourn Hold worked exactly as promised. He discarded the dark sling, regaining full mobility and restoring his physical balance. He needed it.
Vane had not made a move on either Valerica or Isole. He had not pulled them aside for a deep emotional conversation, and he had not actively rejected their quiet, intense devotion. He simply maintained his pragmatic, grounded focus on surviving the upcoming evaluations. He let them build their safe, comfortable walls around him.
The daughter of House Sol and the exiled High Elf continued their terrifyingly polite siege of his personal space. Valerica always secured his right flank. She preemptively managed any physical obstacle in his path with subtle, localized gravity adjustments, ensuring he never slipped in the melting slush. Isole anchored his left side, her Duality silently flaring in the shadows to intimidate anyone who looked at him for a second too long.
Nyx made the situation infinitely worse.
The undisputed apex of the Second Year class had apparently decided her new favorite hobby was destabilizing the emotional equilibrium of the first-year Vanguard. She would randomly drop out of the Dreamscape at the most inconvenient times.
During a quiet study session in the grand library, Vane would suddenly find a petite, lavender-haired girl sitting directly on his lap. She would whisper a provocative comment about widening his mana channels, smile brightly at the murderous expressions on Valerica and Isole’s faces, and then warp reality to vanish before the localized gravity and necrotic shadows could destroy the bookshelves. 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂
Vane allowed it to happen. He found the sheer absurdity of the situation weirdly grounding. Navigating the lethal jealousy of an Imperial noble, a High Elf, and a Low Justiciar kept his survival paranoia incredibly sharp.
The shifting dynamics of the academy were not entirely centered around Vane.
During the midday break on the seventh day of the thaw, Vane sat on a stone bench in the central courtyard. He was eating a plain bread roll, watching the crowds of students navigate the wet paths.
A few yards away, Isaac Glacium was leaning against a white marble pillar. The Ice Mage was deeply engrossed in a thick, leather-bound textbook on atmospheric pressure. Isaac was a recognized prodigy and the heir to a major house. Since the brutal events of the practical evaluations, he had lost his unbearable, untouchable arrogance. He just looked like a quiet, highly focused academic.
This subtle shift in his demeanor had an immediate and highly visible effect on the female population of Zenith Academy.
A group of three second-year girls approached the pillar. Their uniforms were tailored perfectly. They whispered and giggled amongst themselves as they closed the distance, their eyes fixed on the platinum-haired mage. The girl in the front reached out, opening her mouth to speak.
She did not get the chance.
Lyra stepped out from behind the adjacent pillar. The blue-haired strategist did not shout. She did not boast about her perimeter. She simply stepped directly into their path, completely blocking their line of sight to Isaac.
She held her glowing glass ledger flat against her chest like a shield. She pushed her wire-rimmed glasses up the bridge of her nose and stared at the three older girls with a fierce, unblinking, mathematically precise glare.
"His mana recovery cycle requires absolute silence," Lyra stated. Her voice was flat, cold, and completely devoid of any social tact. "Move."
The three older girls stared at Lyra in shock. The leader of the group scoffed quietly, attempting to step around her, but Lyra perfectly mirrored the movement, her hand dropping subtly toward the recurve bow strapped to her back. The sheer, aggressive intensity radiating from the strategist was a physical wall.
The girls exchanged uneasy glances, turned around, and quickly walked away down the paved path.
Isaac did not even look up from his textbook. He turned a page slowly.
"The ambient heat signatures in my immediate vicinity just dropped to an acceptable level," Isaac murmured to the empty air, completely oblivious to the fact that his strategist was aggressively chasing off every single person who found him attractive.
"I have optimized the perimeter," Lyra replied smoothly. She stepped backward, melting perfectly into the shadow of the pillar once more.
Vane watched the exchange from his bench. He took a bite of his bread roll and shook his head slowly. The sheer lack of self-awareness possessed by the prodigies of Zenith Academy was truly a marvel. They could calculate the exact kinetic force required to shatter a mountain, but they could not read the basic emotional intent of the people standing right next to them.
The loud chime of the central clock tower echoed across the floating continent, signaling the end of the midday break. Vane finished his food, dusted the crumbs off his dark trousers, and headed toward the academic wing.
The afternoon schedule dictated a mandatory lecture on etheric density under Professor Vyla. Vane walked into Lecture Hall 4B and navigated the steep basalt stairs down to the middle tier.
He took his usual seat at the heavy stone desk. The room was already filling up with the rest of Class 1A. The air was cold, smelling faintly of ozone and crushed lavender. Vane opened his leather-bound notebook and placed his fountain pen neatly on the right side of the page. He was completely focused on the upcoming lesson. He needed to understand the thermodynamic properties of mana if he was going to safely execute the highly unstable skill combinations he was developing.
Valerica Sol walked down the stairs. She moved with her usual silent, heavy grace. She took the seat immediately to his right.
Isole Sylvaris arrived a moment later. Her dark green hair fell perfectly over her shoulders. She took the seat immediately to his left.
Vane nodded to both of them in greeting. "Afternoon."
"Good afternoon, Vane," Valerica replied smoothly.
"The atmospheric pressure is stable today," Isole noted, opening her own ledger.
Vane looked forward, waiting for Professor Vyla to enter the room. He mentally reviewed the formulas from the previous Chapter, preparing his mind for the dense theoretical math. He assumed this was going to be a completely normal, grueling academic lecture.
Then, two identical motions occurred at the exact same time.
Valerica reached into the pocket of her uniform. She placed a small, perfectly square box wrapped in deep crimson paper directly onto the center of Vane’s notebook.
Isole reached into her dark mantle. She placed a small, perfectly square box wrapped in pale silver paper directly onto the center of Vane’s notebook, right next to the crimson one.
Vane stopped thinking about thermodynamic math.
He looked down at his desk. The two boxes sat there side by side. They were identical in size, but fundamentally opposite in aesthetic. The crimson box radiated a very faint, warm heat. The silver box smelled subtly of sweet pine and cold sugar.
Vane looked to his right. Valerica was sitting with perfect, rigid posture. She was staring straight ahead at the empty obsidian podium. Her bottomless dark eyes were completely blank, but a very faint, almost imperceptible flush of pink touched the high angles of her cheekbones.
Vane looked to his left. Isole was also sitting with perfect posture. Her mismatched red and emerald eyes were locked onto the chalkboard. Her hands were folded neatly in her lap, but her pale knuckles were completely white from how hard she was gripping her own fingers.
Neither of them said a word. The silence at the desk was so dense it felt like a physical object.
The cold, tactical logic in Vane’s brain stalled entirely. He stared at the two boxes of premium, meticulously wrapped chocolates sitting on his notes. He had spent his entire morning anticipating monster attacks, rogue dungeon spawns, and the looming threat of the Transcendent witch. He was entirely unprepared for baked goods.
He desperately searched his memory for any context. He ran through the academy rulebooks, the aristocratic etiquette guides he had stolen from the library, and the general calendar of the continent.
Then, the realization finally hit him.
Today was the Day of Concord.
It was an ancient tradition that predated the current Empire, tracing back to the end of the brutal Age of Wars that had once fractured the entire world. When the grand treaties were finally signed, the paranoid warlords and high elves needed a way to prove they would not assassinate one another at the peace tables. The solution was the exchange of handmade food, consumed in front of one another to prove it lacked poison.
Over the centuries, that grim survival tactic had evolved. The Day of Concord was now celebrated universally across the human and other racial territories. It was the one day of the year where the rigid, polite rules of magical society were temporarily suspended. Mages exchanged meticulously crafted sweets with the people they trusted implicitly.
In the slums of Oakhaven, giving someone food on the Day of Concord simply meant you weren’t going to slit their throat in their sleep.
But in the high society of the noble houses, offering a handmade confection was a profound vulnerability. It symbolized offering someone your blind spot. It was a genuine, undeniable declaration of deep affection and absolute trust.






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