I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 160: The Shape of a Mark
The wind at the peak didn’t just blow. It screamed.
High altitude gales battered the basalt cliffs, stripping away the silence usually afforded to the elite. Vane walked the stone path to Villa 1, his boots striking a rhythm against the stone. The heavy iron gates loomed ahead, standing guard over a sanctuary of white marble and silver wards.
It was quiet up here. Too quiet.
Below, the residential blocks were empty. The recent purge had gutted the lower ranks, leaving the academy feeling like a hollowed-out carcass. The absence of the hundred and fifty failed students created a physical void. The silence wasn’t peaceful. It was heavy.
The group breached the foyer, shedding the cold like a second skin. The unified front of the Sentinel Circle fractured immediately.
Ashe didn’t speak. She just cracked her knuckles and vanished toward the lower training cellar. A moment later, the faint, rhythmic thud of impacts against automated dummies vibrated through the floorboards.
Isaac and Lyra turned right, heading for the library wing. They had mentioned the Tactical Kinetic Resonance module earlier. Vane watched them go. They moved with the easy grace of people who belonged here.
Valerica lingered.
She stood by the coat rack, her fingers brushing the fur lining of her cloak. She watched him. There was no subtlety in her gaze. She looked like she wanted to finish the conversation from the cafe, or perhaps she just wanted to verify that he hadn’t cracked under the pressure of the return.
Vane ignored the opening. He kept his face blank, stripping his expression of any invite.
Valerica held his gaze for a second longer, then let out a sharp breath through her nose. She turned on her heel and marched toward the kitchen. The clang of a kettle hitting the stove burner echoed down the hall.
Vane was left alone in the central living space.
Or almost alone.
Mara sat on a low velvet stool near the hearth. She looked small. The massive scale of the villa swallowed her whole. She watched the others leave with the darting, nervous eyes of a stray cat waiting for a boot to fly its way. When the room cleared, her eyes locked on Vane.
She straightened her spine. She didn’t speak. She just waited.
"The desk," Vane said.
Mara stood instantly. She followed him to the heavy oak table in the corner. It was a conqueror’s desk, scarred by the pens of previous generations and smelling of cedar and old ambitions.
Vane pulled out a fresh sheet of cream parchment. He laid it flat. Beside it, he placed a single stick of charcoal.
He sat in the high-backed chair and tapped the wood beside him. Mara climbed up. Her movements were precise, minimizing the noise she made. She looked absurd against the backdrop of luxury—a fragment of Oakhaven mud transplanted into a palace of glass.
"I told you at lunch," Vane said. His voice dropped to a low rumble. "You need to read the world."
He picked up the charcoal.
"This isn’t about being clever," he said. "It’s about survival. In the Empire, the illiterate are fuel. They sign papers that sell their organs. They walk into wards they can’t see. You will not be fuel."
He held the stick out.
Mara reached for it. Her fingers brushed his.
Her skin was warm.
Vane’s hand twitched. The heat was shocking against the perpetual cold of his silver mana. A rational part of his brain screamed to pull back, to recoil from the contact. Intimacy was a liability. It was a grappling hook that someone could use to drag you down.
He clamped his jaw shut and forced his hand to stay still.
"Hold it properly," he ordered. The temperature in the room seemed to drop a degree. "Don’t grip it like a shank. If you break the tip, you waste the charcoal. If you waste the charcoal, you write with nothing."
Mara adjusted her grip. Her brow furrowed. She bit her lip, staring at the black stick as if it were a bomb she had to defuse. Her arm shook with the effort of trying to be perfect.
Vane watched the tremor.
He sighed, a short, sharp exhale. He reached out and covered her hand with his.
His hand engulfed hers. His skin was rough, mapped with callouses from the spear and scars from the gutter. Hers was soft, fragile. The contrast made his stomach turn.
"Like this," he muttered.
He guided her fingers. The proximity was suffocating. He could feel the rapid rabbit-pulse in her wrist. He could smell the faint scent of soap Valerica had given her.
Vane stared at the side of her neck. It was so thin. A single Authority flare would snap it. A stray bolt from a second-year duel would vaporize her. She was a soap bubble floating in a room full of needles.
Fear, cold and sharp, spiked in his chest.
He pressed down on her hand, harder than he intended. The charcoal ground against the parchment with a harsh rasp.
"The letter M," Vane said. His voice sounded hollow. "Start with the vertical pillar. It’s the anchor. Without the pillar, the rest of the marks collapse. Draw it."
Mara moved. Her hand was stiff under his guidance. The charcoal dragged a jagged black line down the pristine white paper.
She stared at the mark. It was ugly. Crooked.
"It is messy," she whispered.
"The world is messy," Vane said. "Don’t look for beauty. Look for meaning. Meaning gives you power. Again. Five more pillars."
The sun died outside.
The light in the room shifted from gold to a bruised purple, then to the clinical white of the mana lamps. They sat there for an hour.
Vane didn’t move away. He stayed close, correcting her angle, adjusting her wrist. He taught with the same grim efficiency he used to disassemble a rifle. He spoke of angles, pressure, and economy of motion. He refused to acknowledge the way she leaned into him as the room cooled.
Snap.
Mara’s concentration slipped. She pressed too hard. The charcoal stick fractured in her grip, the top half skittering across the desk.
A black smudge of soot bloomed across her palm.
Mara gasped. She flinched, her shoulders hunching up to protect her ears. Her eyes darted to Vane, wide and terrified.
She waited for the hit.
Vane looked at the broken charcoal. Then he looked at her face.
He saw the Oakhaven docks. He saw the child hiding under the boardwalks, terrified that breathing too loud would attract the gangs. The fear in her eyes wasn’t new. It was ancient. It was the same fear he had buried under layers of cynicism and mana.
Vane reached into the drawer.
He pulled out a fresh stick.
He didn’t yell. He didn’t scold. He took her hand.
With the cuff of his white uniform sleeve—silk, expensive, pristine—he wiped the soot from her palm. The black stain transferred to his clothes instantly. He didn’t even look at it.
"It’s a tool, Mara," he said. The harshness was gone from his voice. "Tools break. You find a new one. You keep moving. The only failure is stopping."
Mara stared at his sleeve. The black smudge stood out like a wound on the white fabric. She looked up at him. Her eyes searched his face, looking for the monster he claimed to be.
She didn’t find it.
For a second, the air in the room changed. The distance vanished. The silence wasn’t heavy anymore; it was companionable. There was a pull, a gravity that had nothing to do with Authorities. It was the terrifying, seductive pull of belonging.
Vane’s chest tightened.
The warmth of the room, the trust in the girl’s eyes, the domestic quiet—it was a trap. It was trying to convince him that he could have this. That he could be a brother, a guardian, a person.
But people died. Weapons survived.
He stood up.
The chair scraped loudly against the stone floor. The sound cracked through the room like a gunshot.
Mara jumped. She shrank back into the velvet chair.
"That is enough," Vane said.
His voice was back to the rasp. Cold. jagged. He turned his back on her, staring out at the pitch-black window where his reflection stared back—a pale, silver-eyed ghost.
"Finish the page of pillars," he commanded. "If they aren’t straight by morning, you start the alphabet over."
"Vane?" she asked. Her voice was barely a whisper.
Vane closed his eyes. He flared his mana.
The room temperature plummeted. Frost crystallized on the edges of the window pane. The air grew heavy, suffused with the suffocating pressure of a Sentinel. He built the wall back up, brick by frozen brick.
"I have work in the yard," he snapped. He didn’t turn around. "Do not disturb me."







