I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 24: Lines in the Library
Vane skipped lunch. In Oakhaven, skipping meals had been a necessity born of poverty when he was young. At Zenith, surrounded by endless buffets of high-grade nutrient food, skipping a meal to train in a freezing, contaminated fog bank was a choice.
It was a choice that hurt. His stomach growled, a familiar, hollow ache that sharpened his focus.
He was back on the rusted balcony of the forgotten sector. The mist was thinner today, allowing a pale, watery sunlight to illuminate the cracked flagstones.
Senna sat in her chair, the blanket pulled tight around her wasted frame. She looked exhausted, her breathing audibly wet, but her eyes were merciless as they tracked his movements.
"Again," she wheezed. "You’re drifting."
Vane reset. He held the real spear now, the weight of the star-metal tip a constant drag on his exhausted shoulders.
They had moved past just standing still. The Silver Dragon Art was not merely a static pose; it was a complete martial system built around the concept of the unbroken line.
"The root is deep," Senna lectured, her voice barely carrying over the hum of the distant engines. "The Bastion guard is the foundation. But a fortress must have gates, and it must have sallies."
She tapped the balcony railing with a broom handle.
"Show me the Coiling Retreat."
Vane moved. It was agonizingly difficult. He had to step backward, yielding ground physically, but he could not let the concept of the "line" break. As he retreated, he had to rotate the spear in a tight, controlled spiral—the "coil"—keeping the deadly point constantly between himself and the imaginary attacker, daring them to close the distance he was creating.
He stumbled on the third step, his back foot snagging on an uneven flagstone. The spear tip wavered wildly.
"Dead," Senna pronounced flatly. "You let the point drift. An enemy just stepped inside your guard and gutted you. The coil isn’t a fancy twirl, freshman. It’s a moving wall. The point must track the threat."
Vane gritted his teeth, sweat stinging his eyes. "It’s hard to move backward while pushing forward with intent."
"If it were easy, the nobles would do it between wine tastings," Senna snapped. "The Silver Dragon doesn’t just sit in its cave. It claims territory. When you move, the territory moves with you."
She gestured sharply with the broom handle. "Again. From the coil, transition to Sweeping the Perimeter."
Vane executed the retreat again, forcing his screaming thighs to stay low. As he completed the backward coil, he snapped his hips forward, using the momentum to swing the butt end of the spear in a tight, low arc designed to crush knees or clear space in close quarters, before snapping the point back to the center line.
It was clumsy. He felt heavy, slow, a brute trying to perform ballet in iron boots.
He finished the sequence, chest heaving, dropping back into the low Bastion guard.
Senna watched him for a long moment. She didn’t criticize his form this time.
"You have a free block right now," she observed quietly. "According to the schedules I remember, the first-years are currently eating lunch or socializing in the lounges."
"I’m not hungry," Vane lied. His stomach immediately betrayed him with a loud growl.
Senna gave a dry chuckle that turned into a cough. She dabbed her mouth with a stained handkerchief.
"You’re starving," she corrected. "Why are you here, parasite? You proved you could take a beating. You don’t need to be here every spare hour."
Vane looked over the edge of the balcony at the endless clouds below.
"The instructors in the main campus... they’re teaching us how to win duels. How to look impressive for the evaluations," Vane said quietly. "They aren’t teaching us how not to die when things go wrong."
He looked back at her, meeting her sunken eyes.
"You held a line against a nightmare in a locked room. That’s the only lesson I care about right now."
Senna studied him. The cynicism that usually coated her expression thinned just a little.
"Get some water," she murmured, looking away toward the fog. "Then show me the Coiling Retreat again. Try not to trip over your own ambition this time."
That evening, the silence of the Great Library felt suffocating compared to the honest quiet of the fog.
Vane sat across from Isole Vesper at their usual secluded table. His body felt like one giant bruise. Every muscle fiber was twitching from the strain of Senna’s drills and Valerica’s gravity.
He was staring at an open tome on advanced defensive warding theory, the words swimming before his tired eyes.
"Your concentration is fracturing," Isole noted calmly, not looking up from her own studies. The dual aura of green life and red death twisted lazily around her pale hair.
"Just tired," Vane mumbled, rubbing his face. "Vyla’s quiz tomorrow is on dynamic field stability. I don’t get it. How do you keep a defensive ward stable when it’s taking impacts from different angles simultaneously?"
Isole closed her book. She picked up a glass of water sitting on the table and placed it in the center.
"Think of the ward’s mana not as a solid wall, but as this water," she said, her voice wind-chime soft. "If you strike the glass on one side, what happens to the water?"
"It sloshes to the other side," Vane said.
"Precisely. It displaces. If the glass—the structure of the spell—is too rigid, the pressure of the displaced water shatters it. A dynamic ward must be fluid. It must allow the energy of the attack to flow around the protected space, rather than trying to stop it dead."
Vane frowned, trying to translate that into something that made sense to his physical brain. He thought about Valerica punching his guard. If he just stiffened up, she blew right through him.
Then he thought about what Senna said today. The territory moves with you.
"So..." Vane started slowly, gesturing with his hands. "It’s not about pushing back harder against the attack. It’s about... anchoring the line."
He looked up at Isole, his eyes losing focus as he visualized the concept.
"You don’t try to stop the force. You just define the boundary, ground yourself, and let the pressure bleed off around you because you refuse to let it cross the center."
The library went very quiet.
Isole stared at him. Her mismatched eyes—one vibrant emerald, one deep scarlet—narrowed slightly. For the first time since he’d met her, she looked genuinely surprised.
"Anchoring the line," she repeated slowly, tasting the phrase. "That is a remarkably... martial way of describing arcanic displacement theory, Vane."
Vane froze. The paranoia that had kept him alive in Oakhaven snapped back into place. He’d used Senna’s words.
"Just... something Kael yelled during Praxis," Vane said quickly, shrugging it off. "About guard stances. Seemed to fit."
Isole watched him for a beat longer than was comfortable. She didn’t buy it. Kael talked about smashing and breaking, not anchoring conceptual lines.
But the High Elf merely gave a small, enigmatic nod.
"It fits well enough," she murmured, opening her book again. "Keep thinking that way. It may save you from blowing yourself up tomorrow."
She didn’t press him. But as Vane looked back down at his textbook, he felt the weight of her attention linger. He was getting better at holding the line, but he was starting to realize just how many people were watching him do it.







