I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 195: The Architect of Silence
The iron fingers crushing Vane’s throat were cold and devoid of pulse. The Grave Warden lifted him higher into the stagnant air. Vane’s boots kicked uselessly over the flooded flagstones. The blue vertical slit of Kavor’s mask stared directly into his eyes. The construct did not feel anger or pain. It only recognized an error in its crypt that needed to be erased.
Kavor drew its massive right fist back. The rusted iron knuckles were the size of boulders. The strike was aimed directly at Vane’s skull.
Vane could not breathe. His vision tunneled into a tight circle of grey static. His left arm hung useless and fractured at his side. He still gripped the shaft of the Silver Fang with his right hand, but the blade was lodged deep inside Kavor’s chest plate. He had no leverage to pull it free.
The iron fist descended.
Vane stopped fighting the grip on his throat. He poured the last reserves of his silver mana into his core. He did not try to block. He brought both of his knees up to his chest and planted his heavy boots directly against the Grave Warden’s rusted torso.
He used the construct’s own mass as a fulcrum. Vane kicked outward with absolute brutal force.
The kinetic explosion snapped Kavor’s elbow joint straight. The Grave Warden’s grip faltered for a fraction of a second. It was enough. Vane twisted his neck violently. The iron fingers tore the leather gorget from his armor and scraped a layer of skin from his throat, but he broke free.
He fell backward toward the black water. As gravity took him, he kept his right hand locked on the spear shaft. His falling weight ripped the star steel blade free from Kavor’s chest.
Vane slammed into the freezing water. He rolled immediately, coughing violently as oxygen rushed back into his bruised windpipe.
The Grave Warden’s fist missed Vane’s head by an inch. The rusted iron slammed into the stone wall of the corridor instead. The impact pulverized the ancient masonry. A shower of granite shards rained down into the water.
Kavor tried to pull its arm back for a second strike, but the mechanism failed.
The Grave Warden staggered. The massive construct took a heavy, uneven step backward. The sound of grinding metal echoed through the crypt. Black sludge poured freely from the massive puncture wound in its chest.
Vane forced himself onto one knee. He spat a mouthful of blood into the muck. He looked up and analyzed the logic of the battlefield.
Kavor was dying.
The grey energy of Isole’s Divine Judgment that Vane had forced into the wound was acting like a conceptual acid. It was burning through the necrotic strings that held the Grave Warden’s massive frame together. Kavor’s right arm twitched erratically. The blue light in its iron mask was no longer a steady, terrifying gaze. It was flickering wildly, struggling to maintain the spark of false life.
Isole pushed herself up from the far wall. She was leaning heavily against the stone. Her silk robes were ruined. The pristine white fabric was stained with dark sludge and her own blood. She looked at Vane. Her pale, mismatched eyes met his. They shared a single, silent conclusion.
The monster was broken. The math was solved. They just needed to execute the final equation.
Kavor let out a low, hissing sound. Escaping steam and necrotic pressure vented from the gaps in its armor. It tried to raise the iron shovel with its left hand, but the grey rot had already spread to its shoulder joint. The massive weapon dragged against the floor. The construct was too heavy. It had lost the structural integrity to support its own conceptual weight.
"Now," Isole whispered. 𝒇𝒓𝒆𝒆𝙬𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝒎
She did not have the mana to cast another spell, but she did not need to. She simply watched him finish it.
Vane stood up. He ignored the agonizing throb in his fractured left arm. He ignored the burning in his sealed lung. He was a weapon forged in the slums of Oakhaven and sharpened on the marble floors of Zenith Academy. He knew how to kill a wounded animal.
He gripped the Silver Fang with his right hand. He rested the middle of the shaft on his right shoulder to stabilize the heavy star steel. He funneled every remaining drop of silver mana he possessed into the tip of the blade. The absolute severance manifested as a blinding, frictionless point of pale light.
He locked his eyes on the flickering blue slit of Kavor’s mask. That was the core. That was the anchor keeping the nightmare tethered to the physical world.
Vane launched himself forward.
He did not use Flash Step. He did not need it. The Grave Warden was practically immobile. Vane crossed the flooded corridor in three long, splashing strides. He channeled the kinetic energy from his boots, through his hips, and directly into his right shoulder.
He thrust the spear.
The Silver Fang blurred. It was a perfect strike. The trajectory was flawless. The star steel tip was an inch away from piercing the rusted iron mask and shattering the blue light forever.
Then, the world simply stopped.
Vane did not hit armor. He did not hit a magical shield. All the kinetic energy, the momentum, and the absolute severance of his strike vanished into a void of absolute stillness.
He was suspended in the motion of the thrust.
A hand had caught the blade.
It was not an iron gauntlet. It was a bare, pale hand. Two slender fingers were pinching the flat of the star steel blade.
Vane looked past the tip of his spear.
A woman was standing in the dark water between him and the Grave Warden. She had not stepped out of the shadows. She had simply manifested, as if the crypt itself had birthed her in the space of a single heartbeat.
She was breathtakingly beautiful, and entirely terrifying.
Her skin was as pale as bleached porcelain, stark and flawless against the gloom of the lower levels. Voluptuous curves were barely contained by a sleek, midnight blue dress that clung to her figure like a second skin. Her hair was a cascade of light blue silk that drifted around her shoulders, completely unaffected by the damp, heavy air of the tomb.
But it was her eyes that froze the blood in Vane’s veins. They were a deep, luminescent violet. They did not hold the mechanical coldness of the Grave Warden. They held an ancient, crushing amusement.
She held the Silver Fang effortlessly. Vane tried to pull the spear back. He tried to push it forward. The weapon did not move a millimeter. It was locked in a physical absolute that his logic could not comprehend.
The woman tilted her head. A soft, perfectly red smile touched her lips.
"That is enough playing in the mud, little vanguard," she said. Her voice was velvet over cracked glass.
Behind her, the Grave Warden fell to its knees and bowed its rusted head.







