I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 41: Ashes and Witnesses


Vane didn't know how long he lay there in the dark listening to the silence.

Eventually the cold reality of the room pressed in. The smell of the corruption... no longer held back by a living will... began to thicken in the stagnant air.

He sat up his body feeling stiff and incredibly heavy like gravity had doubled in the last hour. He looked down at Senna. In death the fierce tension was gone from her face leaving her looking terrifyingly young. The black web of necrosis was already spreading rapidly claiming the vessel that had fought it for so long.

"Not here," Vane whispered to the empty room.

He wouldn't leave the General to rot in a mildewed storage closet.

He climbed out of the narrow cot and bundled her ruined body in the rough infirmary blankets. When he lifted her the dead weight was shocking. She had been light in life wasted away by energy expenditure but now she felt heavy with the sheer mass of the history she carried.

He carried her out of the ward kicking the rusted door open. The fog outside was thick and freezing. It was a welcome relief from the stagnant air inside. He walked the familiar path up the external stairs to the balcony where she had broken him down and built him back up.

He laid her gently on the cold flagstones near the railing where the wind could reach her.

Then Vane went to work.

He scavenged the derelict sector like the slum resident he was. He dragged broken wooden pallets. He found splintered furniture from abandoned offices and stacks of dried brittle manuals from a forgotten supply closet. He built a pyre in the center of the balcony stacking the wood in a rough ugly mound.

It wasn't a warrior's funeral pyre of scented oil and ironwood. It was a trash fire built on a concrete slab. Senna would have appreciated the efficiency.

He placed her body on top of the wood. He reached for the star-metal spear leaning against the railing. Her spear. For a second he thought about placing it in her hands letting it burn with her.

Weapons are meant to be used rat.

He heard her voice as clearly as if she were standing next to him. That rasping cynical command.

Vane pulled his hand back. He picked up the spear and gripped it tight. It was cold and heavy and utterly unforgiving. It was his now.

He pulled a handful of cheap low-grade fire crystals from his pocket. He had stolen them from a supply closet weeks ago for heating rations. He crushed them in his fist sparking the volatile mana dust and sprinkled it over the dry wood and old paper.

The fire caught slowly coughing out thick acrid smoke before flickering into orange life.

Vane stood back leaning on the spear watching the flames lick at the blankets wrapping her form.

He didn't hear Isole arrive. She just appeared out of the fog like a pale ghost her pristine academy robes a jarring contrast to the grime of the balcony.

She stopped a few feet away her mismatched eyes reflecting the growing fire.

"The connection snapped at 0300 hours," Isole said quietly. It wasn't an accusation. It was a timestamp. "The reversion was complete. The collapse was instantaneous."

"She didn't scream," Vane said his voice rough granite.

"Good." Isole looked at the pyre her expression clinical yet somber. "I have studied soul structures my entire life Vane. I have never seen a human core sustain that level of conceptual pressure for so long. She held back an apex-class dungeon corruption with nothing but stubbornness."

She paused offering a slight respectful bow toward the flames.

"That is not a small thing."

A heavy footstep on the metal stairs announced the second arrival.

Valerica Sol loomed out of the mist. The Gravity Titan wasn't wearing her usual training gear. She was in a dark heavy coat that made her look even broader. She stopped near the doorway looking uncomfortable as if she wasn't sure why her feet had brought her here.

She looked at the burning pyre then at Vane then at the spear in his hand. She didn't say anything. She just nodded once. A slow tectonic movement of her head. She stood silently against the wall her sheer presence adding a gravitational weight to the vigil.

The fire grew hotter consuming the wood and the body it held. The smell of burning cloth and ozone cut through the fog.

Vane watched it burn. Inside him deep beneath his sternum something settled.

It wasn't a surge of power. It wasn't a System notification. It was a cold hard knot forming in the center of his being. It felt like a drop of liquid mercury suspended in the void. Heavy. Toxic. Beautiful.

He focused on it and for a split second the world shifted.

The edge of the balcony railing seemed to change. It didn't look like rusted iron anymore. It looked soft. It looked like butter waiting for a hot knife.

The concept whispered in his mind. It wasn't a refusal. It was a promise.

Everything breaks, the concept murmured. You just have to be the thing that doesn't.

He looked down at his free hand clenched around the spear. He realized with a jolt why the Headmistress had given him that ridiculous title when he arrived. SA 1. Special Admission One. The Usurper.

When he arrived he was nothing. A hollow parasite running cheap scams terrified of his own shadow. He was weak and empty and desperate. He had no business being in the same class as monsters like Valerica or prodigies like Isole. He was an experiment. A gamble that a desperate enough rat dropped into a pit of vipers would either die quickly or learn how to eat snakes.

He wasn't hollow anymore. He had a foundation built of broken concrete and brutal lessons. And now he had the Silver Fang inside him.

The fire began to die down leaving only glowing embers and ash. The fog started to reclaim the balcony.

Isole turned silently and faded back into the mist without a goodbye. Valerica lingered a moment longer her stone-colored eyes fixing on Vane.

"You look heavier," she grunted.

Then she turned and lumbered away the sound of her heavy boots fading down the stairs leaving him alone with the ashes.

Vane sat down on the cold flagstones placing the star-metal spear across his knees. The metal was freezing against his skin. He stared into the dying embers his eyes dry and burning.

He didn't promise to make her proud. He didn't promise to be a hero.

He ran his thumb along the razor-sharp edge of the Silver Fang's spearhead.

"I will use it," Vane whispered to the smoke. "I promise."

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