I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 288: Lancelot and Anastasia



Chapter 288: Lancelot and Anastasia

Anastasia had been watching Lancelot move for sixteen hours.

This wasn’t unusual. She’d been watching him move for over a year now. In evaluation sectors, in the Academic District, in the SMS hall where Thorne ran his assessments. In the ceremonial spaces the Academy required them to occupy together.

She’d built a thorough model across all that time. More detailed than anyone else’s because she had more data than anyone else had. More observation hours logged than anyone else.

She’d learned early that the space between what Lancelot looked like and what Lancelot was doing required sustained observation to read correctly.

The model she’d built in first year was accurate. She’d been confident in it.

The model was wrong now.

Not completely wrong. The technical elements were the same. The efficiency of movement was the same. The minimum output principle was the same. The complete absence of performed physicality was the same. If you hadn’t watched him before the compound, you’d look at him in the Ashfield and see what you’d always seen.

The surface was unchanged.

What was underneath the surface was different.

She couldn’t name the difference precisely, and the inability to name it sat in her chest like a stone. She’d been attempting to name it since the leviathan docked in September. She’d watched him walk off the gangway without looking back at the eastern continent, and she’d understood from the specific quality of how he moved through the pier crowd that something had changed in the twelve weeks she’d spent in the capital while he was on a mountain.

She’d filed it as a variable requiring more data.

Sixteen hours had not produced a name. They had produced a clearer picture of what the name would need to describe.

He moved through the northern forest as though the forest were not a problem to be navigated but a condition he was operating inside. Most pairs she’d observed moved with some version of the terrain’s resistance. Adjusting, recalculating, treating the undergrowth and poor visibility as obstacles to overcome.

Lancelot didn’t treat anything as an obstacle in the way that implied resistance.

He moved and the terrain accommodated the movement. Which wasn’t a description of the terrain but of the quality of attention he was bringing to it.

The compound had done something to the relationship between his body and the ground it was standing on.

She thought about Iron Root and didn’t say it.

They reached the twenty-first objective at hour seventeen, six minutes.

The northern forest’s deepest position. The marker tucked inside a stand of old growth where the canopy was solid and the light came through in narrow angled bars. The position had that specific stillness of somewhere few pairs had reached. The approach was long, the undergrowth heavy. The natural circuit lines ran elsewhere.

Pairs who wanted objectives took the accessible ones first.

Lancelot had not been taking the accessible ones.

Anastasia had noticed this at hour four and had not commented on it. He was running a route that consistently chose the markers other pairs were not choosing. In the short term this produced lower accumulation rates. What it produced in the long term she was still reading.

No contact. No engagement residue. No pair had found them because he was not going where pairs went.

The twenty-first marker’s points began running.

Anastasia looked at the old growth above them. The light bars moved. The forest was quiet here in the way that deep terrain was quiet.

"You have been to every marker in the northern third," she said.

Lancelot looked at the terrain ahead, reading the next approach with those flat red eyes.

"Fourteen of them," he said.

"In seventeen hours."

"Yes."

Anastasia considered this. The mathematics of it, the route efficiency required. "The remaining markers are in the central terrain and the eastern edge. The central terrain is busier."

"The central terrain is busier than it was at hour one." He looked at the approach geometry, his gaze moving across sightlines and elevation changes. "It is less busy than it will be at hour thirty."

She understood the logic immediately. The central terrain would thin on the same curve the southern third had thinned. Fast pairs finding each other, eliminating each other, creating gaps in the coverage. The optimal time to take the central terrain’s markers was the window between the current busy phase and the later phase when the remaining pairs had consolidated into defended positions.

He’d been running the northern third while the window opened. Timing it. Waiting for the moment when the risk-reward calculation shifted.

Anastasia looked at him. He was reading the next approach with that quality of attention she’d spent a year learning to recognize. Not evaluation, not analysis in the usual sense. More like recognition. The terrain registering as a set of conditions rather than a set of problems.

This was what had changed. This specific thing.

"The compound," she said.

He looked at her.

She held his gaze. She’d been holding things for a long time. Across a distance that both of them had chosen and that she had not named and he had not named. A distance that neither of them was going to name today in the middle of a practical evaluation in a forest.

She was not going to name it today.

But she was going to say this.

"It is different," she said quietly. "What you brought back from there."

The flat red eyes. Something running underneath the flatness that was not performance and was not absence. Something real, something she could feel even if she couldn’t name it.

"Yes," he said.

The word hung between them in the quiet of the old growth stand. An acknowledgment. Not an explanation. He wasn’t going to explain it and she wasn’t going to ask him to. Some things couldn’t be explained, only observed.

The Silver Tower pair came at hour seventeen, forty minutes.

Anastasia felt the approach before she heard it. Two mana signatures moving on coordinating vectors, not the organic movement of a pair navigating terrain but the deliberate geometry of a prepared engagement. Two angles. Northeast and northwest, converging on the old growth stand from both sides simultaneously.

Her pulse quickened.

The pair had been tracking their position. Not following them through the forest but reading the marker accumulation pattern and predicting where they’d be. Smart. Patient. The kind of tactical thinking that won evaluations.

It was good analysis. If the target pair had been using a standard circuit model, the prediction would have been accurate enough to matter.

She drew her blade, the familiar weight settling into her hand.

Lancelot looked at the northeast angle.

Northeast: forty meters and closing. Northwest: sixty meters and closing. Both at the pace of pairs who believed they had the geometry and were committing to it. The timing designed to force a simultaneous engagement. Both members dealing with separate threats at the same moment, neither able to support the other.

Standard pincer tactics. Well-executed.

Anastasia had seen him fight in four practicals. She knew what the instant strike looked like at controlled output. She knew the sound it produced, that specific crack in the air. She knew the quality of the space when the speed exceeded what the environment could accommodate gracefully.

She had not seen it run on a decision rather than a technique.

He moved.

The gap between the two approach angles was twelve meters wide. Lancelot was through it before the northeast pair crossed the thirty-meter mark. The instant strike at the lead member’s extraction point, clean and exact. The minimum force required to trigger the band and nothing more. One down.

The pivot took him to the northwest angle in the same motion. Not a sequence of actions but a single action with two endpoints. The lead member of the northwest pair triggered at the same moment the northeast pair’s second member was still processing what had happened to the first.

Eleven seconds total.

Both pairs sat in the undergrowth with their bands lit red and that specific expression of people who had executed their approach correctly and arrived at a conclusion they had not prepared for.

Anastasia looked at the space where the engagement had happened. The old growth was undisturbed. No torn undergrowth, no displaced leaf matter, no mana residue in the ground from Authority output pushing too hard. The forest looked exactly as it had before the Silver Tower pair arrived.

Like nothing had happened at all.

She looked at Lancelot.

He was already reading the next approach. Those flat red eyes moving across the terrain ahead with the quality of attention that did not require acknowledgment of what had just happened. Because what had just happened was simply the current condition of the environment, and the current condition required a next approach.

Anastasia’s chest felt tight.

She put the blade back in its sheath, the movement automatic.

He looked at her.

She held his gaze for a long moment. She thought about the leviathan’s gangway in September, watching him walk down it with that new quality of movement she couldn’t name yet. About the Oath of Continuation, the water flashing blue between them. Two people saying words in the same space and not quite saying them together.

About the specific distance between them that both of them had chosen and that she had maintained with the discipline she brought to everything she considered valuable and fragile.

She thought about eleven seconds in an old growth stand and a pivot that had no gap in it.

The compound had changed him. That much was clear now. Sixteen hours had proven what she’d suspected in September.

She did not say what she was thinking.

"Next objective," she said.

He turned and moved into the forest. She followed, and the old growth closed behind them. Somewhere behind them the two Silver Tower pairs sat in the undergrowth in the specific quiet of people who had been somewhere important and had not been allowed to stay.

The circuit continued. The evaluation ran forward. The gap at first place grew with each marker.

Anastasia watched Lancelot move through the forest ahead of her and did not name what she was seeing.


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