I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 152: The Quiet Before the Storm


The transition from the freezing mud of the Iron Groves to the heated marble floors of Sol Manor was a shock that the body struggled to process. Vane sat on a low bench in the guest wing, staring at his reflection in a tall mirror framed in gold leaf. He looked like a ghost that had been roughly dressed in silk. The servants had scrubbed the mercury dust from his skin and treated the necrotic bruising on his arm with expensive tonics, but the exhaustion remained etched into the hollows of his cheeks. He looked like he had not slept in three days. It was a completely accurate assessment.

Valerica sat on the edge of the adjacent bed where Mara was currently curled into a ball, buried under three layers of fine wool blankets. The girl was finally asleep, her breathing deep and rhythmic for the first time since the refinery had collapsed. Valerica had changed into a simple, loose gown of cream silk. She looked back to being the perfect noble daughter, yet she held a wet cloth to her forehead with a trembling hand. The breakthrough to Sentinel rank had left her internally ravaged. Her mana channels felt like they were lined with glass, and every pulse of her heart brought a dull throb of golden heat that refused to settle.

"They are already drafting the official report," Valerica said, her voice barely a whisper in the quiet of the room. "My father is meeting with the Imperial couriers in the solar. He is not happy about two Justiciars dying on his land, but he is framing it as a tragedy of heroic proportions. He is telling the Crown that the Third Division gave their lives to stop a Deep-Grave anomaly and save the Sol heir. It makes the family look vital to the Empire and keeps the inspectors from digging too deep into why the Justiciars were here in the first place."

Vane leaned his head back against the wall, closing his eyes. "He is playing it well. If the Justiciars are heroes, the Crown has to reward the survivors instead of interrogating them. It turns a potential slaughter into a recruitment poster."

"But it doesn't solve the problem of Mara," Valerica said, looking at the sleeping girl. "The healers were asking about her. They noticed her mana signature is irregular. My father is already suggesting we put her up for adoption within one of the subsidiary houses. He thinks he is being kind by giving her to a noble family, but we both know what that means. They will see the way she handles crystalline structures and they will turn her into a siege engine. They will take her childhood and give her a serial number."

Vane opened his eyes and looked at the girl. "Nobles do not adopt children, Valerica. They adopt assets. If we let her go to a subsidiary house, she will be back in a cage within a month. Gareth's work would be finished by men in cleaner suits."

"Then what do we do?" Valerica asked, her fingers tightening on the fabric of her gown. "We are heading to Zenith Academy soon. We cannot exactly hide a Grade S variable in a dorm room. The moment we step onto campus, we are under the eyes of the most powerful people on the continent."

Vane shifted, his broken ribs protesting the movement. He reached out and rested his hand near Valerica's on the bed. He did not grab it, but the proximity was enough to bridge the silence. They had spent the last several hours in a state of hyper-vigilance, and the sudden safety of the manor felt like a trap. The closeness between them had shifted from tactical cooperation to something more grounded and silent. They were the only two people in the world who knew exactly how many bodies were buried under the Star-Forge.

"We need a third option," Vane said. "Someone with enough authority to tell the High Lords to go to hell, but enough common sense to keep the girl out of the Imperial labs."

"There is no one like that in the capital," Valerica replied. "Everyone has a leash."

The air in the room suddenly changed. It was not a violent surge of mana or a drop in temperature. It was a subtle shift in the density of the atmosphere, as if the oxygen had become richer and heavier. The heavy oak doors did not creak or bang. They simply slid open as if the locks had never existed.

A woman walked into the guest wing. She did not look like the terrifying legend Vane had imagined. She was not wearing ceremonial armor or the flowing robes of a grandmagus. She wore a simple, loose white shirt with the sleeves rolled up to her elbows and a pair of sensible grey slacks. She looked like a woman in her thirties who spent her afternoons tending to a garden, tired but content. Her hair was pulled back in a messy knot, and there was a faint smudge of dirt on her cheek.

She did not look like a monster, yet Vane's instinct screamed at him to run. His vision flickered, his innate ability struggling to process the presence standing before him.

[Target Analysis]

Name: Evangeline

Rank: 9 (Transcendent)

Danger: [Error]

Authority: Heaven's Fall (SSS)

Vane stood up instantly, his body ignoring the pain of his shattered ribs. He had seen the feeds. He had heard the stories. Evangeline was the ceiling of the world. She was the one holding the leash on every monster the Empire produced. Seeing her here, in a domestic outfit with a watering can probably left just outside the door, was more terrifying than seeing her in full regalia.

"Headmistress," Valerica said, her voice caught in her throat. She stood and performed a deep, formal bow, her heart hammering against her ribs so loudly Vane could hear it. "We were not told of your arrival. We were prepared to report to the Spire in three days."

Evangeline walked into the room, her grey eyes sweeping over the space with a quiet, unreadable clarity. She did not look at the luxury of the Sol Manor. She did not look at the gold or the silk. She walked straight to the small water fountain in the corner of the room, dipped her fingers into the cool water, and wiped the smudge of dirt from her face.

"The Spire is too humid today," Evangeline said. Her voice was quiet, barely carrying over the sound of the falling water. "And the Sol family solar is currently filled with men who think they are cleverer than they are. I have very little patience for your father's spin-doctoring, Valerica."

She turned around and leaned against the stone pillar near the bed. She studied Vane for a long, uncomfortable minute. Vane felt as though his very soul were being laid bare, every secret and every dark thought being sifted through by those grey eyes.

"I watched the feed from the refinery entrance," Evangeline said, looking at Vane. "You took a beating that should have killed a first-year student. And yet, you are standing. Your recovery is as aggressive as your combat style."

"I have a good healer," Vane said, his voice level despite the pressure in the air.

"No," Evangeline corrected. "You have a hunger that refuses to let the body fail. It is an interesting trait."

Valerica stepped forward, her hands clasped tightly. "Headmistress, if you are here for the debriefing, we can explain the events in the groves. The Justiciars—"

"I am not here for your lies, Valerica," Evangeline interrupted softly. She looked toward the bed where Mara was sleeping. Her expression softened, though it remained inscrutable. "The Third Division died because they were arrogant and because they met something they couldn't handle. Whether that was a construct or a boy with a silver spear is a matter for the historians. I am not interested in the ledger of the dead."

Vane felt a chill. She knew. She didn't know the exact numbers, but she knew the outcome was not what the official report would claim. She was a Transcendent; she operated on a level of instinct that bordered on prophecy.

"Why are you here, then?" Vane asked. He didn't bother with the honorifics.

Evangeline walked toward the bed. She looked down at Mara, who shifted slightly in her sleep, a small crystalline flicker appearing near her fingers before fading away.

"You and Valerica are worrying about what to do with the girl," Evangeline said. "You think the nobles will weaponize her. You think the Empire will hollow her out. You are correct on both counts."

She reached out and adjusted the blanket over Mara's shoulder, her movements surprisingly gentle for a woman who could level a city with a thought.

"I am here for the girl, Vane," Evangeline said, her eyes meeting his. "She is coming with me to Zenith. Not as an asset of the Sol family, and not as a variable for the Imperial labs."

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