I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 274: Partners



Chapter 274: Partners

The joint session was Ashe’s idea.

She said it the way she said most practical things, which was directly and without ceremony, finding him in the corridor outside Thorne’s hall as the afternoon session ended and the students were filing out into the September light. "Villa 4 ring tonight. We should see what the compound produced when there is something real to test it against."

He said yes. That was the entire conversation. She went her way and he went his and neither of them felt the need to add anything to it.

He was in the ring when she arrived, twenty minutes into his own work, running the fifth beat exit sequence that had been inconsistent across the week. Not because he had planned to be early. He had come down after dinner to run the forms and the exit sequence had been there waiting for him the way unfinished things were always waiting, patient and slightly reproachful.

She came through the door with the post-session quality she always had in the evenings, settled and unhurried, the specific version of Ashe that existed when the day’s obligations had been met and what remained was only what she had chosen. She had chalk on her boots from wherever her afternoon had ended. She went to the far side of the ring without comment and ran the third form twice through at her own pace, the heel correction invisible now, just the way the form went. He watched the end position her hands came to and looked away before she finished.

He ran the Quicksilver Thrust three times and noted where the elbows were in the transmission chain. Still not completely there. Another few days. He filed this and set it aside.

"Ready," she said.

They began.

The first twenty minutes were calibration. Not hostile, not rough in the way of people who had forgotten how to share a space, but the specific friction of two complete systems learning how to operate in proximity under conditions that were not the compound sanctum. At the compound the joint sessions had happened organically, Ryuken directing them at constructs and standing back to watch what the two systems produced together. Here there were no constructs and no Ryuken, just the Villa 4 ring and the lamp and the two of them working out the translation.

She moved through an approach sequence and he read the trajectory two beats early and repositioned and she adjusted for the adjustment and they arrived at the same point from different angles with nothing wasted between them. They stopped. They looked at each other. They ran it again.

The second run was cleaner. The third cleaner still. By the time the first hour had passed the calibration had settled into something that had a shape, the Silver Fang’s second principle running alongside her corrected third form the way it had in the compound sanctum, the boundary carrying the conceptual weight of the Silver Fang’s threat while her third form found the geometry the boundary created and hit into it. Not the seamless product of six weeks of compound work. But the direction was right and the direction was enough.

She called a stop. She walked to the ring’s edge and got water from the jug on the shelf and came back and handed him some and sat against the wall with the blade across her knees. He sat on the floor across from her.

The ring held the warmth it had accumulated through the day. The lamp burned at its evening setting. Outside the window the hill was going to its end-of-day dark.

"The fifth beat," she said.

"I know."

"You dropped it twice on the exit. Once coming off the boundary sequence and once at the end of the third combination." She looked at the blade across her knees. "Coming off the attack. Always coming off the attack."

He thought back through the sequences. She was right on both counts.

"The fourth is your natural beat," she said. "You attack better than you defend. You commit better than you withdraw. The fourth beat addresses the commitment and you find it easily because it suits the way you move." She turned the blade over once. "The fifth is the exit off the attack. The body wants to telegraph where it is going after the strike the same way it used to telegraph where it was going before. Different moment, same instinct."

"The instinct is older than the Storm Step," he said.

"Yes. The Storm Step retrains the nervous system for the entry. The exit is still running the older pattern underneath it." She looked up at him. "You cannot drill the fifth directly. You have tried and it produces the performing quality, the same way the first beat produced the performing quality when you were walking the sanctum floor for six hours in week five." She paused. "You remember what fixed the first beat."

"I stopped thinking about it."

"You stopped thinking about it and listened to my forms through the stone." She looked at the ring floor. "The fifth will arrive the same way. When the fourth is completely right and the body has nowhere left to go, the fifth will simply be the next thing." She paused. "You are close. The fourth has been right more consistently this week than any week before it."

He sat with this.

She was quiet for a moment. The lamp burned. The ring was warm.

"How is the watching part," she said.

He looked at her.

"Ryuken’s dinner speech," she said. "Week eight at the compound. What watches and what acts. He said the Storm Step’s true purpose was not five beats on a floor. He said it was the internal reorganization of what watches and what acts." She looked at him steadily. "How is it."

"Quieter," he said. "Since this week. Still present. Still doing its job. But it has the job and it is not trying to do the other job at the same time."

She ran the reading on him that she ran when she was checking something against an existing model. She found what she was looking for. She nodded once, the small precise nod that meant the data matched.

"Good," she said.

She stood. She picked up the blade. "Again. I want to work the exit sequence specifically. Fifty repetitions of the third combination exit, alternating which angle we come off. Not trying to find the fifth beat. Just working the sequence."

They ran the exit sequence for the remainder of the session. He dropped the fifth beat six more times across the fifty repetitions, found it cleanly on fourteen of them, and the rest were somewhere in between, present but performed rather than natural. By the end the found-to-dropped ratio was better than when they had started and worse than what the fifth beat would eventually be. That was the correct state for something that was not finished yet.

She left without ceremony. He stayed in the ring for a few minutes after, not running anything, just standing with the spear in the warm quiet. He was thinking about the fourth beat and the natural exit and what it would feel like when the fifth arrived the way the first had arrived, not found but simply present.

He put the spear against the wall and went inside.

Mara had left food on the counter. A bowl covered with a cloth and a note underneath it that said the cloth is to keep it warm not decorative, do not lose the cloth. He lifted the cloth and set it aside and ate standing at the kitchen window. The garden was dark. The bird was a shape on the wall, present and still and entirely unbothered by the fact that it was almost the tenth hour.

He looked at it.

It looked back at him with the patience of something that had decided the wall was the correct place to be and was going to be there until further notice.

He finished eating. He washed the bowl. He went to bed.


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