I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 161: The Somatic Threshold
The silver tip of the spear didn’t just cut the air. It screamed.
A high-pitched, whistling hiss sliced through the frigid night, marking the weapon’s trajectory. Vane stood dead center in the villa’s private training circle. His breath punched out in short, controlled bursts of white mist that vanished instantly into the dark.
He was deep in the rhythm.
The Argent Horizon.
It was the spear art he had stolen, adopted, and was now forcing to evolve.
Every movement was a study in lethal economy. There was no wasted motion. No flourish. Just the brutal geometry of killing. The silver mana of his Rank 4 core flooded his veins. It coated the shaft of the weapon in a shimmering, ethereal light that flickered with the instability of a dying star.
Vane shifted into the third form.
Falling Star.
He didn’t just leap. He launched himself.
His body spun. The rotation started at his hips and torqued upward, funneling every ounce of kinetic energy into the spear tip. As an Elite, he had mimicked this move. As a Sentinel, he embodied it. The mana didn’t just coat the weapon anymore. It extended it. A three-foot lance of pure force erupted from the steel, tearing a gouge in the stone floor as he landed.
Impact.
Dust and sparks sprayed against his boots.
Vane pulled the spear back. The silver light died, leaving him in the suffocating darkness of the academy peak.
He exhaled.
His muscles screamed. Lactic acid burned through his thighs and shoulders, a chemical fire that refused to go out. He had been out here for four hours. He had pushed until the silver shroud around his body flickered and threatened to shatter.
It was the only way.
Silence was the enemy. The academy was too quiet after the purge, and the villa was too large. If he stopped moving, the silence would catch him. If his bones didn’t ache, the hollow space in his chest would expand until it swallowed him whole. Pain was a distraction. Exhaustion was a drug.
He wiped the sweat from his forehead with the back of a trembling hand.
He turned toward the villa.
The white stone building loomed like a ghost under the moonlight. The protective wards shimmered, an iridescent oil slick against the night sky. Vane entered through the side door. His boots sank into the thick rugs of the hallway, muting his steps.
The house slept.
Valerica, Ashe, Isaac. They were all behind closed doors, lost in their own nightmares or ambitions.
Vane reached the master bedroom. He paused. His hand hovered over the brass handle. He wanted the room to be empty. He wanted a cold sanctuary, a place where he could collapse and cease to exist for six hours.
He pushed the door open.
The room was not empty.
A small lump broke the flat horizon of the oversized bed.
Mara was buried under the heavy silk duvets. She had abandoned her own room again. The massive, intimidating luxury of the villa frightened her. This was the only square footage in the entire zip code where the air didn’t feel thin.
She was fast asleep. Her breathing was steady, a soft rhythm that filled the silence. Her face was relaxed, stripped of the perpetual, hunted tension she wore during the day.
Vane walked to the nightstand.
The sheet of parchment lay there. It was covered in charcoal marks. Jagged, vertical pillars. Hundreds of them. She had filled every inch of the white space before passing out.
Vane stood by the edge of the bed.
He stared at her.
The rational part of his brain—the part that sounded like a Sentinel—told him to wake her. He needed to reinforce boundaries. He needed to remind her that he was not her brother, and this was not Oakhaven. Safety was a lie. Attachment was a weakness.
Then the memory hit him.
It wasn’t a visual memory. It was sensory.
The biting cold of the Oakhaven winter. The smell of mold in the floorboards. The single, moth-eaten blanket that wasn’t enough for one person, let alone two. The heat of another human being was the only thing that kept the frost from settling in his lungs.
Vane let out a sigh. It was quiet, defeated.
He set his practice spear against the wall. The metal clicked softly against the plaster.
He didn’t have the energy to fight himself tonight.
He moved the duvet aside. He lay down on the absolute edge of the mattress, leaving a foot of empty space between them. He stared up at the dark canopy, his body rigid.
The mattress shifted.
Gravity did the rest.
Mara rolled toward the warmth. Her small body curled against his side. She didn’t wake up. She simply tucked her head under his arm and gripped the fabric of his shirt. Her fingers locked on. Iron-tight.
Vane froze.
His heart hammered against his ribs.
He could feel her pulse. He could feel the softness of her hair against his jaw. The proximity was a physical weight. It was a terrifying responsibility. He had spent years justifying his survival by claiming he only looked out for Number One.
This was heavy.
He didn’t pull away.
Slowly, his arm relaxed. He let her settle. The heat of her body seeped through his sweat-dampened clothes. It melted the frost that had settled in his marrow during the training session.
Vane closed his eyes.
For the first time in weeks, the cathedral didn’t wait for him in the dark.
The sun broke through the high windows.
It was a cold, unforgiving light. It illuminated the dust motes dancing in the air and the sharp reality of the day.
Vane woke before the chimes. His internal clock was tuned to the cycle of the wards.
Mara was still there. Her grip hadn’t loosened. She was an anchor, holding him to the bed.
He disentangled himself. He moved with the practiced silence of a thief, sliding out from under her arm without shifting the mattress. He stood up and watched her for a moment. She frowned in her sleep, sensing the loss of heat, but she didn’t wake.
Vane turned his back on her.
Ten minutes later, he was armor.
The formal academy uniform was a shell. The white fabric was pristine, the silver buttons polished to a mirror shine. His collar was stiff. He looked in the mirror and saw a Sentinel. The Rat was buried deep beneath layers of starch and mana.
He walked out.
Valerica and Ashe waited in the foyer.
They were dressed for the new curriculum. Somatic Mana Synthesis.
"Ready to bleed?" Ashe asked.
Her eyes were bright. Too bright. She bounced on her heels, the floorboards creaking under the latent pressure of her excitement. Her mana hummed around her, restless and sharp. She was a Rank 4 flicker-mage looking for an outlet.
"It’s a class, Ashe," Vane said. He adjusted his cuffs.
"The Academy merged the years," Valerica said. She stepped up beside him. "They don’t do that for lectures. They do that for cullings."
She looked at him. Her dark eyes swept over his face, searching for cracks. She looked for the fatigue, the withdrawal, the shadow of the man she had seen in the Iron Groves.
She found nothing. The mask was perfect.
Valerica offered a small, sharp nod.
They walked.
The path to the new training wing took them past the central library. The atmosphere on campus had mutated. The herds of lower-ranked students were gone. The groups that remained were smaller, tighter.
The pressure in the air was higher.
The remaining students didn’t walk; they prowled.
They reached the Somatic Synthesis hall.
A group of older students blocked the entrance.
Second Years.
They were taller. Their uniforms bore the double-silver piping of the upper tier. Their mana signatures were dense, settled, and heavy. There were ten of them.
As Vane approached, the conversation died.
The silence wasn’t awkward. It was heavy.
The Second Years turned. They didn’t look curious. They looked clinical. They dissected the First Years with their eyes, stripping away the reputation and looking at the meat beneath. It was the look a butcher gave a carcass.
Vane didn’t slow down. He walked straight through the center of their formation.
He led his group into the hall.
The room was a massive, circular arena of reinforced basalt. The floor was etched with complex geometric patterns, runes designed to ground high-intensity mana flares. There were no desks. No chairs. No safety rails.
The air smelled of ozone, old sweat, and iron.
A man stood in the center of the arena.
He looked like he had been carved out of a mountainside.
He didn’t wear robes. He wore a sleeveless Vanguard tactical vest over a dark tunic. His arms were tree trunks, covered in a network of thick, jagged scars that told stories of bad decisions and survived battles. His hair was cropped short, military style. His eyes were the color of cold flint.
He didn’t move. He stood with his hands behind his back, a pillar of absolute physical authority.
Vane took his place on the edge of the circle. Ashe and Valerica flanked him.
The ten Second Years filed in. They took the other half of the ring.
A clear divide formed. First Years on the left. Second Years on the right. The air between them crackled with static.
Vane ignored them. He focused on the man in the center.
[Target Analysis]
Name: Thorne
Rank: 6 (Expert)
Danger: Extreme
Vane’s chest tightened.
It wasn’t a flare. Thorne wasn’t projecting mana. This was just gravity.
The man radiated the terrifying weight of a core that had been refined to its absolute limit. It was a density that made the air taste like metal. This wasn’t a teacher. This was a weapon of the Vanguard, unwrapped and placed in a room full of children.
The instructor opened his mouth. 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
His voice was a low, gravelly rasp. It vibrated in the stones of the floor.
"My name is Instructor Thorne," he said.







