I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 286: The Ashfield



Chapter 286: The Ashfield

The Ashfield was not the topographical render from the auditorium.

Vane understood this the moment they crossed the deployment threshold. The render had been accurate in structure. Northern forest, open southern ground, ruins on the eastern edge, all exactly where they were supposed to be.

What no render could carry was texture.

Texture was what the ground actually felt like underfoot. What the air tasted like at the sixth hour, cool and sharp. How the sightlines actually ran when you were standing inside them rather than looking down from above.

His tactical awareness sharpened immediately.

The open southern ground was wider than it had looked on the map. Standing at the threshold, Vane could see across the full southern third without obstruction. The render had communicated this as a fact.

Living inside the fact was different.

The exposure was total. From anywhere in the south, you could see everything. Which meant from anywhere in the south, you could be seen by everything.

Vane’s shoulders tensed.

The northern forest was denser than the render suggested. The canopy hung lower, undergrowth heavy at the tree line. Visibility dropped to twenty meters within the first few steps. The forest absorbed you immediately. Once inside you couldn’t read the open ground behind you without coming back out.

It gave and it took in equal measure.

Ashe was at his left shoulder, reading the terrain with flat attention. Red eyes moving across sightlines and chokepoints without making a production of it. Not performing vigilance. Just doing it.

They moved northeast.

The circuit’s first leg ran to the northeastern cluster. Four markers within half a kilometer of each other at the forest’s eastern edge. Lyra had identified it as optimal. Cover on two sides, partial elevation, markers close enough that dwell time could be kept short without sacrificing accumulation.

The terrain corrections proved accurate. The drainage feature between the second and third markers was there. A shallow cut running north to south, invisible from deployment but obvious on the ground.

It forced the approach to the third marker from the north.

They adjusted without discussion.

First marker at hour one, nine minutes.

Vane’s band updated. Points accumulating at the fixed rate per hour. The evaluation’s grammar was different from every previous practical. Not the lump transfer of an elimination, not a one-time key acquisition.

Just steady, patient arithmetic of presence.

The Ashfield rewarded people who stayed and moved correctly. A new language to learn after four practicals of other ones.

He could work with that.

Between the first and second markers he ran the Usurper passively across the sector. The sweep ran in its unfocused mode, not targeting anything specific. Just reading what the ambient field gave back, building a map of mana signatures and movement patterns across the terrain.

At this range most pairs returned only mass and movement. Authority signatures would resolve closer in.

He found Lancelot and Anastasia at the sector’s far northern edge.

Vane’s chest tightened immediately.

The Usurper’s read: the same partial, strange frequency it had returned since the Ashfield breach seven weeks ago. Incomplete. Unresolved. The analysis building without completing, the way it had built without completing every time since the compound. Every time he had run it against that specific pair and received the same answer, which was not an answer.

He watched them for the four seconds the sightline allowed through the thinning forest canopy at the sector’s edge.

They were moving into the northern forest’s far side. Not fast. Not with any visible urgency. That specific, unhurried quality of two people who had already decided where they were going and were going there. For whom the terrain between here and there was simply the terrain, not an obstacle or a problem. Just the space they needed to cross.

Lancelot read the canopy ahead and moved. Anastasia read Lancelot and moved with him.

No consultation. No adjustment visible from this distance. Just perfect synchronization, the kind that came from... something. Training. Understanding. Whatever the compound had built between them in those twelve weeks.

They disappeared into the trees.

The sightline closed. Four seconds total, and Vane’s jaw was tight with tension he couldn’t quite name.

He filed it under the same heading he always filed it. Completely. Without acting on it until he understood what action was correct. The partial frequency, the incomplete read, the thing that had been sitting at the edges of his awareness since the breach.

He moved to the second marker.

The morning moved forward. The circuit ran. Second marker at hour one, fifty-one minutes. Third marker at hour two, thirty. The drainage correction added four minutes to the approach but the route was clean. No forced exposure, forest cover maintained throughout.

The dwell times were short. Just long enough to register meaningful accumulation, not long enough for any pair running a convergence strategy to locate and approach.

Lyra’s model was holding.

At hour four the board updated for the first time.

Vane read it from the fourth marker’s position at the northeastern cluster’s anchor. The best elevation, the longest sightline available from inside the forest. The ruins on the eastern edge were visible from here, intact walls rising above the tree line about three hundred meters east.

Two pairs were already settled inside them. Finding the enclosed spaces and the natural defensive geometry and treating them as the solution to a seventy-two hour problem.

They were wrong, but they’d figure that out eventually.

The board told a story. Several pair values had already gone static since deployment. All of them in the southern third. The fast pairs had found each other exactly as predicted. The collisions had been expensive in both directions.

The pairs that won the early southern engagements were now showing reduced accumulation rates. They’d taken the points and spent the mana and the mana wasn’t coming back quickly in an evaluation with no recovery windows.

The southern third was thinning fast.

Vane felt a cold satisfaction at the accuracy of the prediction. Lyra’s model was reading the evaluation correctly.

Ashe was at the forest’s edge looking at the open ground below. From this position they could see across half the southern third. The figures still moving in it had that deliberate, controlled quality of pairs who had survived the first hours and were now recalculating.

The ones who had moved fast and met each other were already gone from the board or going static.

She watched the south for a long moment, and Vane could see her processing what she was seeing. Not just tactically, but emotionally. Feeling the weight of it.

"Different," she said quietly.

Vane looked at her, waiting.

"From the others." She looked at the forest floor, and something shifted in her expression. "No construct wave coming. No timer. No fixed thing to beat." She turned a piece of bark over with her boot, a small unconscious gesture. "The silence between threats sounds different when the threat is a person."

Vane held what she said, feeling the truth of it settle into his own awareness. She wasn’t complaining. She was naming something accurately. The specific quality of a threat that thought, that planned, that could change its approach based on what it learned about you.

Constructs ran scripts. Predictable, deadly, but ultimately following programmed patterns.

The pairs still active in the southern third were running calculations. Adapting. Learning. Becoming more dangerous the longer they survived.

"Yes," he said.

Ashe looked back at the sector through the trees. "In the Embrasure the silence meant the wave wasn’t here yet. You knew what was coming and you knew when it would arrive. Here the silence means nothing. They could be one minute out or one hour out and the silence is identical."

The observation made something cold settle in Vane’s stomach. She was right. The uncertainty of it, the constant low-level tension.

"That’s the format," he said.

"I know what it is." She looked at him, and those red eyes were serious. "I’m telling you what it feels like. Those are different things."

Vane held her gaze. She was right that they were different things. He’d been treating them as the same thing since deployment. The tactical read and the felt experience running in the same channel, the way they’d always run in Oakhaven, where there was no space to separate them.

Here there was space. She was using it. Naming the emotional reality of what they were doing while still executing the tactical plan.

It was the compound in her. The thing Ryuken had built. The ability to be present in the moment while still moving through it with purpose.

"The compound helps," he said quietly.

She looked back at the sector, and something in her posture relaxed slightly. "The compound helps," she agreed.

The fourth marker’s accumulation ran its course, points ticking up at their steady rate. Vane looked at Lancelot and Anastasia’s position on the board. First place. Accumulation rate already higher than any other pair. The margin from second wasn’t yet large but the rate of change was clear enough to project.

He looked at it once.

His jaw tightened. His chest felt tight with something he didn’t want to examine too closely.

He didn’t look at it again.

Instead, he looked at the next approach. Updated the circuit in his mind. Checked the timing against Lyra’s model. The second leg would take them deeper into the forest’s interior, into the dense sections where visibility dropped and the tactical complexity increased.

He turned north, feeling the weight of what was ahead settle into his bones.

Lancelot and Anastasia were out there somewhere. Moving through the sector with that strange, incomplete frequency. Building a lead that would become insurmountable if the trend continued.

But that was a problem for later. For after the evaluation, when Ashe had marked the time. Thirty-two hours from now, when everything would change and he’d have to confront what the compound had built in Lancelot.

For now, there was just the circuit. The markers. The steady accumulation of points.

The second leg began.


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.