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I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 244: The Mountain
The eastern continent tore through the cloud line on the morning of the tenth day. It was absolutely nothing like the gilded, floating spires Zenith had conditioned Vane to expect.
The Sunrise Embassy back on the island was polished black basalt and blood-red cedar. It was a carefully curated diplomatic mask built to project sophisticated, ancient power. This brutal place wore no mask.
The Razar seat resolved as the leviathan plummeted through the freezing mist. It began with a jagged, towering mountain range. Standard maps labeled these specific peaks impassable. The fortress itself was not simply built on the rock. It was carved directly into the mountain’s throat, looking as though the black stone had organically grown around the iron walls over centuries of tectonic violence. The accumulated mana was so terrifyingly dense it visibly warped the freezing air above the compound. It was three hundred years of violent, concentrated cultivation permanently staining the atmosphere.
Zenith Academy was desperately designed to overwhelm you on the first encounter. Every floating tower and manicured courtyard demanded your awe. This brutal compound demanded absolutely nothing. It simply existed, immovable and indifferent, the way ancient apex predators simply exist.
Ashe stood rigid at the forward glass. She had been anchored there for the last hour, watching the continent aggressively rise to meet them. Her knuckles were bone-white against the window frame. Her jaw was locked tight. She was not managing her face for anyone’s benefit. She was just staring at the heavy architecture that had forged her, caught in a suffocating web of bitter nostalgia and deep resentment.
Vane stayed quiet. He did not say a single word to break it.
Lancelot stood at the opposite window. He was methodically dissecting the compound’s lethal geometry. His flat red eyes tracked across the steep defensive angles and the concentric ring layout. He catalogued choke points, blind spots, and kill zones with the mild, detached interest of a machine casually updating its internal maps. 𝐟𝕣𝗲𝕖𝕨𝗲𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝗲𝚕.𝗰𝚘𝐦
The leviathan slammed heavily into the mountain harbor. It was a raw, narrow platform sheared straight out of the cliff face. There were no banners and no welcoming ceremony. It was built purely for function.
They marched down the metal gangway. The air at this extreme altitude was brutally thin and freezing. It smelled sharply of cold mineral water and a heavy, metallic tang that coated the back of Vane’s throat. He would slowly learn over the coming weeks that this metallic taste was exactly what three centuries of concentrated, Sentinel-tier violence smelled like when it permanently saturated solid bedrock.
Ryuken stepped off the gangway and strolled straight through the massive iron gates. He did not bother to look back.
They followed him into the belly of the mountain. The compound unfolded in three massive, concentric rings. The outer ring was a sprawling expanse of pale stone, heavily gouged and deeply scarred from decades of blunt, localized impact. The middle ring was tighter, the floor plating twice as thick, the stone walls burned black with the specific scorching that only came from sustained, high-output Authority detonation.
The inner sanctum sat dead in the center. Its massive doors were sealed tight. The ambient mana radiating from it was so violently dense that Vane felt it pressing physically against his fractured ribs. It was not a temperature change. It was sheer atmospheric pressure.
Ryuken offered no grand tour. He strolled up to the inner sanctum, placed a hand flat on the sealed doors, and threw a single glance over his shoulder.
"Tomorrow we begin. Tonight, you rest."
He vanished inside. The heavy doors slammed shut behind him.
Kaito materialized from the shadows of the outer ring and silently led them to their assigned quarters. Vane’s stone room was severely functional. It smelled faintly of dry cedar and damp earth. The bed was a firm, low pallet in the strict eastern style. The single, narrow window looked directly down into the sprawling outer ring.
Vane dropped his heavy travel bag onto the floor with a dull thud. He leaned his spear carefully against the cold stone wall. He stood at the window and let out a long, ragged breath.
The outer ring was completely empty in the fading afternoon light. The jagged mountain peaks looming behind the compound were already bleeding into dark silhouettes as the sun dropped rapidly behind them. The air pressure sitting heavily on Vane’s chest was a physical weight. It was the crushing combination of high altitude, absurd ambient mana, and the suffocating ghosts of this place. Generations of Razar monsters had lived, bled, and died inside these walls. Every martial breakthrough they had ever violently ripped from the world was permanently burned into the stone, the exact same way thick smoke permanently ruins a ceiling.
He was going to live inside this crushing pressure cooker for twelve weeks.
He left the cold room to find Ashe.
She was standing dead in the center of the outer ring. Of course she was. She had lasted approximately four minutes in her quiet quarters before the walls drove her out to the exact place she had been bleeding since childhood. She was not running forms. She was just standing perfectly still, her hands hanging empty at her sides, staring blankly at the scarred northern wall.
Vane walked down the stone steps and stood quietly beside her.
She did not try to mask the raw, unguarded exhaustion bleeding through her posture. Her shoulders were slumped. She stared at the wall for a long, heavy minute.
"The spiderweb crack in the north wall," she murmured, her voice hollow. "I put that there. I was exactly eleven years old. My father was watching from the stairs. I was desperately trying to show off. I put way too much kinetic weight into the strike, my form collapsed entirely, and the wall caught the rest of it." She swallowed hard. "He made me repair the masonry myself. It took me four agonizing days with my hands bleeding."
Vane followed her gaze. The deep crack was filled and patched, but it was barely concealed. It was the sloppy, desperate masonry of a crying child who was learning a brutal lesson, rather than a professional fixing a wall.
"The pale stones under our boots," Ashe continued, her voice dropping to a harsh whisper. "My mother trained in this exact spot every single morning until the day she died. The stone dead in the center is worn down by two full centimeters from her specific footwork patterns."
Vane slowly shifted his weight. He instantly felt the unnatural, subtle dip in the solid bedrock under his soles. The stone had been literally ground smooth by a lifetime of relentless, repeating violence. He could clearly see the ghostly, circular pattern of her stances if he looked closely enough.
He said absolutely nothing. There was no combination of words in the human language that could adequately address the crushing weight of that legacy.
"I absolutely hate coming back here," Ashe confessed to the empty ring. "And I always, desperately want to come back." She slowly turned her head and stared at the sealed doors of the inner sanctum. "It is the exact same feeling. Every single time."
Vane looked around the brutal compound. He looked up at the black mountain threatening to swallow them whole. He looked at the first, cold stars piercing the edge of the violet sky.
"Twelve weeks," he stated quietly.
"Twelve weeks," she echoed, her voice finally hardening. She looked down at her own calloused hands, the same hands that had shattered solid stone at age eleven. "We are going to come back to the Academy completely different, Vane. Absolutely nobody on that island is going to be ready for it."
"That is the entire plan," Vane said.
She looked at him sideways. A tiny fraction of the tension finally bled out of her face. The corners of her eyes softened in that rare, specific way they did when he managed to say the exact right thing. Then, she aggressively punched him in the bruised shoulder. It was her strict, unsentimental version of total agreement.
She turned on her heel and marched toward the mess hall.
"Dinner is in one hour," she called over her shoulder. "My father’s private cook is vastly better than your dining hall staff. Please do not embarrass yourself with the chopsticks."
Vane rubbed his aching shoulder. He looked around the silent, towering compound one last time. He stared at the worn depression in the stone beneath his boots. He stared at the sloppy, repaired crack in the northern wall.
He turned and walked inside.


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