I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 218: The Pressure Valve

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Chapter 218: The Pressure Valve

The spring thaw dragged out into a grueling, suffocating month of paranoia.

The first week following the attack on the Low Justiciar felt like holding a breath underwater. Students from all fifty first-year classes walked the academy corridors in tight, nervous clusters. The arrogant noble heirs from the Empire and the proud martial prodigies of the Eastern Continent entirely stopped their petty political squabbles. They were united by a sudden, primal fear of the dark.

By the second week, the ankle-deep slush in the courtyards dried into hard, cracked mud. The immediate, frantic panic settled into a heavy, unbroken exhaustion. The administration offered no answers. The Imperial Inquisitors remained locked outside the territorial wards. The academy Wardens maintained their silent, imposing patrols.

By the fourth week, the terrarium had simply adapted. The thousand first-year students accepted that there was an unidentified monster lurking in the western woods. They learned to walk faster at night, and they learned to keep their defensive wards primed at all times.

Vane sat at the small wooden desk in his bedroom on the second floor of Villa 1.

The humid night air drifted through the open window, carrying the scent of damp earth and blooming pine. He was methodically polishing the dark metal shaft of his star-steel spear with an oiled rag. His knuckles were permanently bruised. It was a physical testament to his nightly, brutal sparring sessions in the freezing basement of Isaac Glacium’s estate.

His physical vessel had changed over the past twenty-eight days. The grueling, sub-zero conditioning had forced his Low Sentinel core to adapt to extreme environmental stress. His muscles were leaner, packed with a dense, highly efficient kinetic tension. He was pushing his Rank 4 limits, desperately trying to build a body that could react faster than conscious thought.

He set the oiled rag down on the desk.

His red eyes drifted toward the top shelf of his bookcase. Resting there, carefully preserved under a minor stasis charm he had purchased from a third-year alchemy student, were the two small boxes from the Day of Concord.

The crimson box from Valerica Sol sat directly next to the silver box from Isole Sylvaris.

For an entire month, the daughter of the Sun and the exiled Moon had maintained a terrifyingly flawless siege of his personal space. They did not ask for an answer to their gifts. They did not push for a romantic confession. Instead, they channeled all of their complex, volatile emotions into aggressively securing his survival.

They had turned their affection into a tactical fortress. It was an incredible advantage on the field, but Vane knew it was fundamentally unsustainable.

He leaned back in his wooden chair, brushing his dark hair out of his eyes. He was a slum rat. He was entirely used to transactional relationships built on pure utility and basic survival. But Valerica and Isole were not tools. They were the closest things he had to actual anchors in a world filled with highborn predators.

Stringing them along, hiding behind the excuse of the academy’s lockdown to avoid dealing with their feelings, was a coward’s tactic. It was unfair to them. Furthermore, the unresolved tension was a massive distraction he could not afford in a live combat scenario.

But he could not resolve it now. Not while the board was completely broken.

Nyx was still lying in a magically induced coma in the Arcanum. Mara had been slipping into the medical wing’s kitchens every few days to gather intel from the gossiping staff. The trauma healers had successfully mended the Justiciar’s shattered jaw and fractured ribs. However, her core remained dangerously dormant. She had not woken up.

Until Nyx opened her eyes, Vane was entirely blind. Until he knew exactly what kind of nightmare had bypassed a Dreamscape and put a Rank 5 apex predator in a hospital bed, he could not afford to drop his guard. He needed his friends completely focused on lethal vectors, not emotional fallout.

Vane made a quiet, ironclad vow in the empty room.

The moment Nyx woke up and named her attacker, the moment the board stabilized and the immediate threat was neutralized, he would sit them down. He would give them a real, honest answer. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝐰𝚎𝕓𝐧𝚘𝘃𝗲𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝕞

He picked up his star-steel spear, the cold metal grounding his thoughts, and headed downstairs for the morning drills.

Sector 4 was no longer a crater of melting snow. It was a massive expanse of hard-packed dirt and jagged obsidian outcroppings. The humid morning air was already thick with the smell of ozone and sweat.

Instructor Rowan stood on a raised stone platform, his scarred face impassive as he looked out over the massive crowd.

Rowan had recognized the boiling, dangerous tension building among the thousand first-year students. The paranoia of the past month was turning them brittle. To bleed off the pressure before they started killing each other in the dormitories, Rowan had organized a massive, multi-class melee drill.

There were no structured duels today. There were no kinetic constructs. It was a chaotic, sprawling skirmish in the hardened mud of the arena. Every class was thrown in together. The rules were simple. Survive, fight, and do not cause permanent maiming.

"The paranoia is making you sluggish!" Rowan barked, his voice magically amplified to cut over the hundreds of students. "You are jumping at shadows! Remember how to take a hit! Begin!"

The arena erupted into absolute chaos. Spells flashed across the dirt. Battle cries echoed off the obsidian walls.

Vane stepped directly into the fray.

He did not play defensively. He did not hang back near the perimeter to conserve his stamina. He used the sheer scale of the massive drill as a hunting ground. He actively sought out the heaviest hitters from the other randomized classes. He wanted to push the board. He wanted to hit someone hard enough that they would accidentally reveal the impossible physical density described in Nyx’s medical report.

A massive student from Class 1D charged him, wielding an earth-infused war hammer.

Vane side-stepped smoothly. He felt the air pressure shift a fraction of a second before the hammer fell. He drove the butt of his star-steel spear into the boy’s knee, sweeping his legs out from under him. The boy crashed into the dirt heavily. There was no impossible speed. It was just standard, predictable Sentinel-rank output.

Vane moved to the next target. A girl wielding dual wind blades tried to flank him from the left.

Before Vane could even raise his spear to intercept, the localized gravity around the girl spiked violently. She slammed face-first into the dirt, pinned flat against the earth by an unseen, crushing weight.

Valerica Sol walked past a few yards away. Her bottomless dark eyes were scanning the perimeter for the next threat. She did not say a single word to Vane. She did not seek his approval. She simply secured his flank with absolute, terrifying efficiency and kept moving forward.

On his right side, a trio of upper-tier fire mages prepared a combined, high-density spell aimed at his blind spot.

Jagged, pitch-black shadows rose instantly from the ground beneath their boots. The necrotic decay of Isole Sylvaris flared with a silent, lethal warning. The fire mages scattered in pure panic, their spell fizzling out completely as they scrambled to avoid the rotting touch of the Duality.

The exiled High Elf stood in the periphery. Her mismatched red and emerald eyes ensured his other blind spot was completely clear.

Vane utilized their flawless, unspoken protection to push deeper into the chaotic melee. He fought continuously for two grueling hours. He clashed with beast-blood descendants who possessed naturally enhanced strength. He fought Imperial knights trained in heavy armor combat. He dodged the rapid strikes of Eastern martial artists.

He battered them with the blunt end of his star-steel spear. He tested their reaction times. He analyzed their kinetic output with his red eyes, looking for any trace of an anomaly.

Every single opponent operated strictly within the established laws of magical physics.

No one moved fast enough to break a Dreamscape. No one struck with the pure, unadulterated kinetic horror required to shatter a Justiciar’s jaw before she could blink. The students were talented, dangerous, and elite, but they were entirely normal.

The loud, piercing shriek of Rowan’s whistle finally cut through the arena.

The massive melee was over. Hundreds of students collapsed into the dirt, exhausted, bruised, and panting for air. The crushing tension of the past four weeks had successfully been bled out of their muscles. They were too tired to be paranoid anymore.

Vane leaned heavily against his star-steel spear. He wiped a mixture of sweat and dust from his forehead.

The cold paranoia in his chest remained completely untouched. He looked across the sprawling field of exhausted students. His breathing was heavy, but his mind was running through the tactical failure of his hunt.

The anomaly was not stupid. The predator walking the academy grounds was not going to reveal itself in a supervised sparring match surrounded by vigilant instructors. They were perfectly disciplined. They were hiding flawlessly within the terrarium.

Vane looked up at the heavy, overcast spring sky.

If he wanted to catch the monster that broke Nyx, a controlled arena drill was never going to work. He was going to need a much bigger stage. He needed an environment where the rules were suspended, where the predator felt comfortable stepping out of the shadows to hunt.

Vane gripped his spear tightly. He just had to wait for Headmistress Evangeline to provide one.