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I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 263: Last Morning
He was in the outer ring before dawn.
Not because he had planned to be. He woke at two in the way he had been waking at two since week three, the compound’s rhythm embedded in him now, and he lay in the low bed for a few minutes and then got up and got dressed and went to the outer ring because there was nothing else to do with the last morning except use it.
He ran the full system.
All six forms, the complete sequence from the Quicksilver Thrust through to the eastern third form, with Iron Root and Water Spine and Heaven Gate running simultaneously as the base condition, the Silver Fang in its natural direction, the Storm Step in the footwork, the Mid Sentinel core carrying everything at its new weight.
He ran it at dawn pace, which was not slow and was not full output. The pace of maintenance rather than development, the way you handled something that was no longer being built and had become simply what it was.
The forms moved through the morning dark and the outer ring was quiet and the mountain above was the same dark shape it had been every morning for twelve weeks and the compound stone was cold under his feet in the specific way it had been cold every morning for twelve weeks and he ran the sequence and it ran clean.
He ran it again.
And again.
Ryuken was on the outer wall.
He had not heard him arrive. He was sitting with his hands on his knees in the position he used when he was watching rather than assessing, the Iron Heaven at low or no output, just a man on a wall watching something in the dark.
Vane ran the sequence a fourth time.
He finished. He came back to neutral. He looked at the wall.
Ryuken said nothing for a long moment. The mountain was beginning to lighten above them, the sky doing its slow work.
"Come find me," Ryuken said.
That was all.
He stood and walked back toward the inner sanctum and went inside and his lamp came on in the high window and the outer ring was quiet.
Vane stood with the spear and looked at the space where Ryuken had been. Come find me. Not come back. Not return when you have the foundation. Come find me, which was the instruction of a man who expected the person it was directed at to know where to look and what to bring.
He ran the Quicksilver Thrust one more time alone.
The Silver Fang arrived clean.
He went inside for breakfast.
Kaito was already at the table. He had his tea and his morning expression, which was the same as his afternoon expression and his evening expression, the consistent quality of someone whose exterior did not change much regardless of what the day held.
He looked at Vane when he sat down. He looked at the spear leaning against the wall.
"The fourth form," Kaito said.
"Ryuken mentioned it."
"He mentions it to everyone he teaches seriously. He has mentioned it to three people in twenty years." He drank his tea. "The fourth form is not something he can show you. You understand that."
"Yes."
"What he can show you, the fifth, that is what makes the fourth possible. The fifth gives the foundation a direction." He set down the cup. "You will not find the fifth here. You will find it in second year when he comes." He looked at the table. "When he says come find me he means it specifically. He will come to Zenith. He has not been to Zenith since the Academy’s founding committee asked him to serve on the Practical Evaluation board and he declined by not responding to any of their correspondence."
Vane: "He declined by ignoring them."
"For three years." Kaito refilled his tea. "He will not ignore you." He drank. "My sister found her third form in a fight. She was fourteen and she was in the middle of a sparring match against a Red Tower senior and it was simply there, and she won the match and came off the floor and did not know what had happened for two weeks." He looked at the window. "She ran the form every morning for those two weeks trying to find it again before she understood that it was not something she was doing. It was something she had become." He paused. "The important things announce themselves. They do not wait for you to be ready."
Vane sat with this.
Ashe came in from the outer ring with chalk on her boots and the post-form quality she had every morning, the specific settled energy of someone who had already done the most important thing and the rest of the day was secondary. She looked at the table.
"Are there more of the spiced eggs," she said.
"Ren made extra," Kaito said. "He knew you would ask."
She sat. She loaded her plate with the efficiency she brought to all food-related decisions. She looked at Vane. She looked at the spear against the wall.
"Ready," she said.
"Yes."
She ate. He ate. Kaito drank his tea. The morning moved through the dining hall the way last mornings moved, with the specific quality of time that is being paid attention to.
Then Ryuken walked in.
He was not dressed for training. He was wearing the plain dark traveling clothes he had arrived in at Villa 1’s foyer twelve weeks ago, which meant he had already made his own preparations for the day, and the preparation did not include the sanctum.
He sat down.
He reached for the teapot and poured a cup. He set it in front of him and did not drink it immediately, just let it sit.
Nobody spoke.
Kaito looked at his own cup.
Ashe looked at her plate and then at her father and then at her plate, and her expression did the thing it did when something was happening that she was still finding the right response to.
Ryuken drank his tea. He looked at the table. He looked at the window where the mountain was visible, fully light now, the compound in the particular quality of morning that would not be the same tomorrow because tomorrow they would be gone.
He said nothing for several minutes. Nobody asked him to.
Then he said to Vane: "The intent layer will continue to develop. Do not force it. The development happens in use, not in training." He drank. "The Storm Step’s fifth beat will compound into something in second year when the foundation settles fully. You will know it when it happens because the watching part and the striking part will stop feeling like two things."
Vane: "Yes."
Ryuken looked at Lancelot’s empty chair. He had not come to breakfast, which was consistent with his attendance record across twelve weeks, which was approximately forty percent. He looked at it for a moment.
He said nothing about it.
He finished his tea. He stood.
He looked at Ashe. Something moved in his face that was very small and very real and was gone quickly. He nodded once.
She looked at him with the red eyes steady.
"Father," she said.
He walked out toward the inner sanctum. His lamp came on in the high window a few minutes later.
Kaito watched the window. He picked up his cup. He said, not looking at either of them: "He is not good at goodbyes. He has never been good at goodbyes." He drank. "He said everything that needed saying in the sanctum. That was his goodbye." He set the cup down. "The tea was so you would know it was a good run."
Ashe looked at her plate. She picked up her chopsticks. She ate.
Her jaw was set in the specific way it was set when she was managing something she did not intend to show, and she managed it completely within thirty seconds, which was faster than most people managed most things.
Vane looked at the window where the lamp burned.
He thought about come find me and the two forms and the fourth beyond them and twelve weeks of the mountain and the outer ring and the stone that had been here for three hundred years.
He picked up his chopsticks. He ate.
The leviathan would lift in two hours. The mountain would disappear into the cloud cover. The compound would become a memory and then a foundation, which was the correct order.
He ate breakfast and the morning light came through the window and the lamp burned in the inner sanctum and the mountain stood above them, exactly as it had always stood, requiring nothing, offering everything.







