I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 157: The Thinning Crowd
The morning chimes of Zenith Academy tolled.
The sound was different this semester. Before the winter break, the bells had fought against the roar of a thousand students, struggling to cut through the noise of gossip, panic, and ambition.
Now, the chimes ruled the air.
They rang out with a hollow, crystalline resonance that swept across the floating island without resistance. The high-altitude winds carried the sound, rattling the heavy quartz window panes of the transit corridors.
Vane walked down the central thoroughfare.
His boots struck the stone floor. Click. Click. Click.
The rhythm was steady. The hallway was a ghost town.
One hundred and fifty names had been struck from the ledgers during the break. The purge had been administrative, brutal, and silent. Staff members had packed belongings into crates. Maintenance crews had scrubbed villas clean. The lower tiers were gone.
The absence was a physical weight. The corridors felt wider. The stone felt colder. The air tasted thinner, stripped of the desperate heat of the Adepts who had failed to make the cut.
Valerica walked beside him.
She kept her hands in the pockets of her high-collared academy coat. She stared straight ahead.
The distance between them had collapsed. In the autumn, she had walked like a planet expecting everything else to orbit her. Now, she moved with the efficiency of a warship. The breakthrough to Rank 4 sat heavy in her skin. It gave her a gravity that pushed the few passing students toward the walls.
They didn’t speak. They didn’t need to.
They had spent the last week in the quiet of Villa 1. They had watched Mara adjust to a life that wasn’t made of iron scraps and shadow. They had shared coffee in silence while the snow fell on the peaks. The need for constant verbal sparring had died in the Iron Groves.
"The list at the transit docks was long," Valerica said.
Her voice was level. The arrogance was gone, replaced by a clinical observation.
"Class 1-D is a graveyard. The Academy stopped pretending. The path to the Spire isn’t wide enough for everyone."
"It makes the walk to class tolerable," Vane said. He adjusted his cuff. "The signal-to-noise ratio is finally optimized."
Valerica glanced at him. A small smile tugged at the corner of her mouth.
"You always preferred the silence."
They reached the Academic Wing.
The architecture changed here. The soft limestone of the residential blocks gave way to obsidian and basalt. This was the heart of Zenith.
The structure of the semester had shifted. The large, generic lecture halls were locked. The introductory masses were gone. In their place, the Academy had instituted a cell-based structure. Smaller groups. Direct oversight. High pressure.
Vane approached the massive oak door marked 1-A.
It was a random assignment in name only. The students inside were the survivors. They were the ones who had justified their existence through blood and mana stability.
Vane paused for a fraction of a second before the handle.
’I barely scrambled to the top of the hill,’ Vane thought, his hand resting on the brass. ’And I bet the rest of them just took the elevator.’
He pushed the door open.
The room was an amphitheater built from polished basalt. It looked down on a central podium of volcanic glass. The lighting was harsh, designed to expose flaws rather than provide comfort.
Seventeen students sat inside.
Their white and gold uniforms stood out against the dark stone.
When Vane and Valerica entered, the conversation died. It was immediate. It was the silence of a jungle when a predator stepped onto the path.
Vane scanned the room.
He saw the empty seats near the windows. He saw the nervous posture of a Rank 3 Elite in the third row. He saw the way eyes tracked him, fear mixing with calculation.
Then he looked at the front row.
Anastasia Aurelia sat in the center.
She was a statue of gold and white silk. Her silver-blonde hair was coiled in a tight, regal braid that exposed the nape of her neck. She sat perfectly still. She didn’t turn around. She didn’t acknowledge the door opening.
Valerica didn’t wait.
She walked up the tiers. Her steps were heavy, deliberate. She took her usual seat in the back corner, claiming the high ground.
Vane chose the middle tier. He sat near the side wall. It gave him a clear firing line to the door and the podium. It was a habit from the slums: never sit with your back to an exit you couldn’t control.
He sat down.
A small, stiff envelope rested on the basalt surface of his desk.
It was sealed with silver wax. The stamp was the stylized eye of the Headmistress.
Vane froze.
He hadn’t seen a courier. He hadn’t sensed a delivery. The letter had simply materialized. 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺
He broke the seal. He unfolded the thick paper. The handwriting was sharp, angular, and rushed.
Vane,
The student body is wasting energy investigating the girl in your villa. They believe she is a lever. They believe they can pull you down by pressing on her.
Let them try.
I have placed a Divisional Ward on the peak of the residential district. No student, instructor, or external contractor has the clearance to cross the secondary gate without my direct command. The girl is safe. Focus on your training.
If you spend your time looking over your shoulder, you will find yourself back in the mud of Oakhaven before the spring thaw.
E.
Vane reread the note.
The reassurance was cold. It was transactional. Evangeline wasn’t protecting Mara out of kindness; she was protecting an asset’s stability. She needed Vane focused, and a distracted Vane was a useless Vane.
He folded the paper. He tucked it into the inner pocket of his jacket, next to his heart.
A knot of tension in his chest loosened.
Mara was safe. The Headmistress was a monster, but she was a monster of her word. If she said the peak was locked, then God himself would need a visitor’s pass to get in.
Vane exhaled. He turned his attention to the battlefield in front of him.
He looked at the students.
Most of Class 1-A had solidified their power over the winter. They were Elites. They were stable. They had solidified their foundations. But they were standard. They were the infantry of the future Vanguard.
Then he looked at Anastasia again.
He focused.
[Target Analysis]
Name: Anastasia Aurelia
Rank: 4 (Low Sentinel)
Authority: [Blessed by Mana] (SSS)
Danger: Very High
Vane’s eyes narrowed.
’Of course,’ he thought.
For four months, he had been the runt. He had scraped and clawed his way from a Rank 1 defect to a functional threat. The Iron Groves had been his moment. That was where he had finally broken through, creating a gap between himself and the rest of the class.
For two weeks, he had been the apex.
But winter break was a powerful thing when you had the resources of a Great House.
Anastasia had caught up.
She had spent her month in a sanctuary, surrounded by tutors, elixirs, and mana-dense environments. While Vane was teaching Mara how to hold a spoon, Anastasia was refining her core.
Vane gripped the edge of the basalt desk. The stone was cold under his fingers.
Valerica was Rank 4. Anastasia was Rank 4. Isole and Ashe was Rank 4. And Isaac... Vane hadn’t seen him yet, but he doubted the Ice Sentinel had spent the winter making snowmen.
’The gap is gone,’ Vane thought. ’Back to square one.’
The realization didn’t irritate him. It made him smile.
He had spent his life fighting from the bottom. The idea of being challenged by someone who didn’t need to scream to be heard was exciting. It was a new metric. It was a new ceiling to break.
The clock struck eight.
The door at the front of the room opened.
Instructor Rowan Draeven walked in.
He looked like a man forged from scrap iron and bad intentions. He wore a standard instructor’s uniform, but on him, it looked like combat armor. He had short, steel-grey hair. A jagged scar ran from his temple to his jaw, disappearing into his collar. It was a souvenir from a war most of the students had only read about in history books.
He carried no books. He carried no tablet.
He walked to the volcanic glass podium. He stood there. He let his presence fill the room like expanding gas.
"This is Class 1-A," Rowan said.
His voice was rough. It sounded like stones grinding together in a mixer.
"One hundred and fifty of your peers are currently being processed for departure at the lower docks. They failed. You did not. That is the only reason you are sitting here today."
He leaned forward. He placed his scarred hands flat on the glass.
"Your ranks from the previous semester have carried over. Do not mistake this for permanent status. The first semester was a test of potential. The second semester is a test of utility."
Rowan’s eyes were the color of oxidized iron. They settled on Vane. They lingered for a second, weighing him. Then they moved to Valerica. Then to Anastasia.
"Most of you are Elites," Rowan continued. "A few of you have managed to reach Rank 4. Good for you. It means you survive the first ten seconds of a real fight."
He tapped the podium.
A holographic display flared to life. It listed twenty names. Vane was at the top.
"The curriculum for the next few months shifts focus," Rowan said. "We are moving beyond the basic arts of mana manipulation. We are done with theory. We are moving to environmental combat and advanced tactical execution."
The hologram shifted. It showed a map of the Zenith Archipelago. Red zones highlighted the sectors with unstable mana storms.
"You will be expected to operate in the high-mana zones of the island," Rowan said. "If you cannot maintain your composure when the air is trying to crush your lungs, you will be discarded. Zenith is a crucible. My job is to turn up the heat until only the gold is left."
He straightened up.
"I am not here to coddle you. I am not here to be your mentor. I am here to make sure you don’t die when the Empire sends you to the front lines."
Rowan gestured to the door.
"Review your new training schedules on your tablets. If you are not in the sparring halls by noon, do not bother showing up tomorrow. Dismissed."
Rowan turned. He walked out.
The heavy door slammed shut. The silence returned, but now it was heavier.
Vane stood up.
The silver mana moved through his body. It felt denser than before. It felt responsive, eager.
He looked toward the front row.
Anastasia stood up.
She turned around.
Her movement was graceful, precise. She turned until she faced the middle tier. Her gaze passed over the Elite students, dismissing them as background noise.
Her eyes landed on Vane.
They were blue. Not the pale, icy blue of Isaac, but the deep, saturated blue of the deep ocean.
She didn’t speak. She didn’t offer a nod.
She looked at him. She let her aura flare—just a fraction. It was a golden, heavy pressure that washed over the room. It was a statement.
I am here.
Then she turned and walked out of the room. Her white cloak snapped behind her.
"She caught up," Valerica said.
She walked down the tiers. She stopped beside Vane’s desk.
"She did," Vane replied.
"Does that bother you?" Valerica asked. "Being part of the pack again?"
Vane adjusted his collar. He picked up the wax seal from the desk and crushed it between his fingers.
"It makes the win mean more," Vane said. "If she was still Rank 3, it wouldn’t be a fight. It would be a chore."
They walked out.
The hallway was cold. The second semester had started. The circle had tightened. The stakes were raised. The King of Rats had a rival who was finally looking down from the same height.
"Coffee," Vane said.
"Coffee," Valerica agreed.
They headed toward the campus cafe.
It was a small glass structure perched on the edge of the floating island, overlooking the cloud sea. It was expensive. It was exclusive. It was one of the few places where students could buy silence.
They sat down at a corner table. Vane ordered black coffee. Valerica ordered tea.
The atmosphere was surprisingly peaceful. Without the constant chatter of the lower tiers, the Academy felt like a different world. It was serious. It was professional.
Vane looked out the window.
Below, the clouds drifted in slow, massive currents. Above, the sky-dragons circled the Spire, their scales glinting in the morning sun.
He took a sip of the bitter coffee.
’Isole and Ashe will have crossed the threshold too,’ he thought, tracing the rim of the cup. ’And Isaac... if his mother is half as terrifying as he implies, he probably hit Rank 4 weeks ago.’
The brief window where Vane was the only heavy hitter in the first year had slammed shut.
He checked the time.
"We should go," Vane said. "The others will be waiting at the junction."
Valerica finished her tea. She set the cup down.
"Ready to see if Isaac survived his mother?" she asked.
Vane stood up. A smirk crossed his face.
"I’m betting he looks healthier than us."
They walked out of the cafe, stepping into the sharp midday air. Their boots struck the flagstones in a synchronized rhythm. They moved toward the junction, ready to assemble the circle.







