I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities Chapter 20

Vane woke up the next morning feeling like his legs had been replaced with rusted iron pipes. Every muscle from his hips down to his ankles screamed in protest when he moved. The simple act of walking from his bed to the bathroom in Villa 1 was an ordeal of grit and suppressed groans.

He went to his morning classes—History, then Mana Ballistics—moving stiffly. The other students noticed his pained gait and whispered. The prevailing theory was that Kael had finally broken him in a private session. Vane let them talk.

By the afternoon, when he returned to the forgotten sector, the fog felt almost welcoming.

Senna was waiting on the balcony. She didn’t ask how he was. She just tossed him the broom.

"Did your legs fall off?" she asked.

"No," Vane grunted, catching the broom.

"Then assume the stance. Yesterday was standing still. Today, we learn how to walk without falling over."

Vane dropped into the low, grounded crouch she had beaten into him yesterday. His thighs instantly caught fire. He held the broom steady, tip pointed at her throat.

"A wall that cannot move is just a target for siege engines," Senna lectured, rolling her chair slowly backward along the balcony. "You have to hold the line, but you also have to dictate where the line is."

She gestured with a bony hand. "Advance. Keep the point steady. If I see that broom tip wobble more than an inch off-center, we start over."

Vane took a step forward. It was agonizing. He had to keep his center of gravity low, sliding his lead foot forward and dragging the rear foot to maintain his base, all while keeping his upper body perfectly still.

It felt incredibly slow. Clumsy. Every instinct he had from dagger fighting screamed at him to spring up, to dash, to move laterally.

"Stop bouncing," Senna snapped. "You’re not dancing. You’re moving a fortification. Smooth. Heavy. Inevitable."

Vane tried again. Step. Drag. Step. Drag. The sweat stung his eyes.

As he focused entirely on the broom tip, trying to force his rebellious body to obey the rigid geometry Senna demanded, something strange happened.

"The spear doesn’t chase," Senna’s voice seemed to come from far away. "My family’s motto was ’We are the wall.’ We didn’t run after glory. We stood in the gap so others didn’t have to die. The Silver Dragon Art isn’t a hunting weapon. It waits. It lets the enemy break themselves against the point."

As she spoke, the fog around Vane seemed to darken. The smell of ozone and damp earth faded, replaced for a split second by the acrid tang of torch smoke and old copper blood.

He felt a phantom weight settle onto his shoulders. Not the light academy uniform, but something heavy. Plate armor. A mantle of responsibility.

For a heartbeat, he wasn’t standing on a rusted balcony holding a broom. He was standing in a narrow, dark stone tunnel, holding a real spear, its tip gleaming in flickering torchlight. Behind him, he could feel the presence of others—frightened, exhausted people depending on him to not take a single step backward.

The feeling was suffocating, but it was also incredibly stabilizing. It was a righteous, stubborn heaviness.

Hold the line.

Vane took another step. This time, the broom tip didn’t wobble at all. His movement was slow, grinding, and perfectly stable.

"Better," Senna murmured, bringing him back to reality. The visions faded, leaving only the burning in his legs. "Again. Don’t lose the weight."

That evening, Vane sat in a secluded corner of the Great Library across from Isole Vesper.

The table was covered in heavy tomes filled with arcanic diagrams that still made Vane’s eyes cross. But Isole had abandoned the books for now.

"You are trying to understand the flow of mana like a scholar reading poetry," Isole said softly, her mismatched eyes watching him. "But your mind is practical. You understand leverage. Pressure."

She tapped the diagram of a Third-Circle resonant loop.

"Stop thinking of it as ’etheric resonance.’ Think of it as plumbing."

Vane blinked. "Plumbing?"

"Your body is a system of pipes," she explained patiently. "Right now, your pipes are very wide, and the water pressure—your mana—is very high. When you try to cast a delicate spell, it is like trying to water a potted plant with a fire hose. You destroy the flower."

She traced the lines on the diagram.

"These formulas? They are just instructions for building valves and regulators. This symbol here," she pointed to a complex rune, "is just a pressure release valve. If the pressure gets too high, it vents excess mana before the spell explodes."

Vane looked at the diagram again. Suddenly, it wasn’t abstract art. It was a blueprint.

"So... to stop Vyla’s [Fire Lance] from blowing my arm off when it gets disrupted," Vane murmured, tracing the line, "I don’t need more power. I need to open this valve here to bleed off the turbulence."

Isole nodded slowly. "Precisely. You do not fight the river. You divert it."

Vane leaned back. It still gave him a headache, but for the first time, it didn’t feel impossible.

"Thanks," he said genuinely.

Isole just gave a small, enigmatic nod and turned back to her own book, the dual energies around her twisting in their endless, sickening cycle.

The next day in Combat Praxis, Kael was running team drills in the main arena. Vane was paired against a Rank 3 noble specializing in sword-and-shield—a defensive fighter meant to frustrate aggressive opponents.

Usually, Vane would have tried to use his speed, darting around the shield, looking for a gap to use a dagger skill.

Today, he held the training spear. His legs were still sore, but the stance felt... familiar now. Heavy.

The noble charged, shield raised, sword ready to thrust from behind cover.

Vane didn’t use a Skill. He didn’t dash. He just dropped into the low stance Senna had taught him. He planted the butt of the spear against his back foot and angled the tip directly at the noble’s throat.

He held the line.

The noble faltered, realizing that to close the distance, he would have to impale himself. He tried to circle. Vane used the step-drag footwork, rotating slowly, keeping the point tracked perfectly on the noble’s center mass.

Every time the noble tried to advance, Vane’s spear tip was there, an immobile barrier. It wasn’t flashy. It was boring, grinding, and incredibly frustrating for his opponent.

Eventually, the noble got impatient and made a sloppy lunge around his shield. Vane simply stepped forward—a heavy, inevitable advance—and thrust the blunt spear past the shield, tagging the noble hard in the ribs.

"Point, Vane," Kael barked from the sidelines. He sounded surprised.

From the upper viewing deck, Valerica Sol watched the sparring match. She stood with her arms crossed, her dense presence making the students near her edge away.

She watched Vane reset his stance. His form was still rough around the edges, and he looked stiff. But the frantic, flailing energy he’d had a few days ago was gone. He looked planted.

"Huh," Valerica grunted softly.

It wasn’t pretty. But it was solid. And in Zenith, solid was the only thing that lasted.