I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 296: Against the Current



Chapter 296: Against the Current

The evacuation stream moved past them like a river with a fixed destination.

Eight hundred students filing through the sector threshold and turning toward the Academic District, toward the assembly points, toward the direction the protocol said to go. It was not panic—it was worse than panic. It was trained compliance, the specific orderly motion of people executing a known response.

And the response was wrong, and most of them did not know it yet.

Vane’s chest tightened as he watched them pass. Hundreds of students moving in that controlled urgency, trusting the protocol, trusting that the Academy knew what it was doing.

He moved against it.

Ashe was at his left shoulder. Nyx was three steps ahead, moving at the fastest pace he’d seen from her. Not running—she never ran—but the performance of ease entirely stripped away. The opal eyes open and doing something he hadn’t seen them do before. Not watching. Reading.

The Dreamscape at full sensitivity, pointed outward at the island’s mana field like a hand pressed against a wall. Feeling for what moved and what was absent and what had stopped being either.

The eastern path from the threshold to the spiral hill was the most direct route.

At the first junction Nyx turned north without explanation.

Vane followed immediately. The detour added time but she had turned before he could ask and she wouldn’t have turned without a reason. He ran the Usurper’s passive sweep across the path ahead and read partial signatures that refused to resolve.

Movement patterns with no cultivator’s footwork in them. Directional data pointing toward the evacuation stream. The sweep fragmented against whatever these things were, the analysis breaking down the way it had in the Hollows.

He stopped trying to complete the analysis and read what was resolvable instead: present, multiple, oriented on the stream.

Hunting the students.

The island smelled wrong.

Vane noticed it at the second junction and couldn’t name it precisely. Something beneath the familiar mana-and-stone smell of the sector’s outer terrain. Something cold and salt-heavy that didn’t belong to any part of the Academy he’d walked in two years.

It sat in the back of his throat. It didn’t go away.

His pulse quickened. The wrongness of the smell making something instinctive trigger in his awareness.

Nyx stopped.

Not hesitation—she’d stopped because the path ahead had changed in the last few seconds. Something in the mana field shifting in the way she read shifts. She turned her head once, a micro-adjustment, and then moved east instead of north.

"Two," she said quietly. "Thirty seconds."

Vane didn’t ask how she knew. She wasn’t reading futures. She was feeling the specific warmth of their presence against the ambient field. The way you felt a body in a dark room before you saw it. The Dreamscape perceiving what was absent around something that was there.

The path opened into a junction.

He saw them.

Vane’s stomach dropped.

Human-scaled, approximately. That was the first thing. He’d prepared himself for obvious wrongness and what was in the junction was roughly the size of a person, which was wrong in its own way. The specific horror of a threat that fit inside a familiar frame.

They moved through the junction with a quality that took a moment to fully understand. No micro-pauses. No weight-shift between steps, no loaded moment before the next movement. They moved the way water moved, continuous. The concept of stopping not present in their mechanics.

The cold light was the second thing. Blue-black, running just under their surface, pulsing at a rhythm that matched nothing biological. It lit the junction walls in the color of something that had spent a very long time where the sun had never reached.

They hadn’t seen the three of them yet. Their orientation was fixed on the path beyond the junction where the evacuation stream’s eight hundred Authority-signatures moved in a warm, dense column.

Ashe stepped forward.

She didn’t announce it. Didn’t reach for her blade. She walked three steps into the junction and she opened the Warlord.

The Killing Intent didn’t announce itself either. It simply arrived.

A pressure that wasn’t physical and couldn’t be blocked because it wasn’t attacking the body. It was attacking the fact of being alive in the presence of something that had decided you should not be.

Vane had been standing next to Ashe for two years and he’d felt this before and it still moved through him like cold water. His breathing went shallow. His hands clenched involuntarily.

The two beasts stopped.

Their orientation broke.

Not because they felt fear in the way a person felt fear—they weren’t people. But they were mana-sensitive. The Warlord’s Killing Intent wasn’t emotion. It was a statement about reality, written in the specific mana of absolute conflict. Their orientation systems read it as a target signature of sufficient density to supersede the stream.

The Authority of war told the mana field around them that something in this junction was more worth killing than eight hundred students moving in the wrong direction.

They turned.

Ashe drew.

The blade came out with Weapon Communion already running. The killing energy coating the steel in a dark crackling layer that had nothing to do with fire or cold or any element and everything to do with the specific concept of a thing that ended other things.

She ran the third form.

The form that had appeared in a fight when she was fourteen and that she still didn’t fully understand except that it was the most naturally correct movement in the sequence. The heel correction invisible now, just the way the form went. And underneath the form the compound’s instruction running clean: conviction rather than mana delivery.

The blade hit the nearest beast.

The sound was wrong. Not the clean impact of steel on resistant material but something that splintered outward. The Weapon Communion eating through whatever the beast’s surface was made of the way it ate through everything, because the Warlord didn’t negotiate with durability.

The beast went down hard. The cold light in it going out in patches from the point of contact, bleeding away from the wound toward the extremities. Then going dark entirely.

The second beast was already on her.

It had learned something from watching the first one die, or the part of it that wasn’t thinking had adjusted its approach in the way that reflexes adjusted. It came low and fast from the left angle, the blue-black light spiking at the edges.

Ashe was inside its reach before it completed the approach. She’d read the angle before it committed the same way she read everything—early and completely—and she stepped inside it and the second strike was shorter and harder.

The beast went down into the stone of the junction floor and didn’t come back up.

Four seconds. Both of them breathing hard. Not from the effort of two beasts but from the Warlord output. The Killing Intent burning mana while it burned the air. Ashe’s hands were shaking slightly, her jaw tight with the expenditure.

Nyx was at the junction’s far edge with her back against the wall and her arms loose at her sides. She’d done nothing during the engagement.

She didn’t need to have done anything.

Vane looked at her, and something registered in his awareness that he hadn’t consciously noticed during the fight.

"You disappeared," he said.

It wasn’t a question. He’d lost track of her the moment Ashe opened the Warlord. Not visually—he’d known where she was standing. But the Usurper’s passive read of her presence had gone flat. The way a room went flat when there was no one in it.

"The Dreamscape makes me absent," she said quietly. "When the field reads nothing here, they read nothing here." She looked at the two beasts on the junction floor. "It is not useful for fighting. It is useful for not being found."

Vane held this. Held the implications of it. An Authority that made you absent from the mana field entirely, undetectable to anything that oriented through mana perception.

Nyx looked at the junction floor. Looked at where the evacuation stream had been. Still moving somewhere past the junction entrance, the sound of it audible as a general direction rather than specific footsteps.

"Two more on the southern path," she said. She felt it the same way she’d felt these two. Not futures. The present. The specific warmth of presence against the ambient field that the Dreamscape read like fingers reading a surface in the dark. "We cannot take the southern path."

"How close is the northern route to the hill," Vane said.

"Four minutes. Maybe five." She looked at the island beyond the junction. "It is getting harder to read. There are too many of them and the field is loud."

Vane understood what that meant. The Dreamscape reading the mana field like a hand pressed against a wall, and the wall vibrating from too many directions simultaneously. The signal-to-noise collapsing.

He looked at the evacuation stream’s direction.

He could not stop it.

The weight of that limitation settled into his chest. Eight hundred students following a protocol toward assembly points that were already gone. He couldn’t redirect eight hundred students. Couldn’t shout loudly enough, couldn’t move fast enough to reach the front of the stream and turn it around.

What he could do was fight what was in his immediate path and move toward the hill and keep moving toward the hill.

That was the complete available action.

He turned north.

They moved through the detour at the pace of people conserving output. Not running—running cost mana and the next engagement was coming and the one after that. The Dreamscape routing them by feel rather than sight. Nyx adjusting twice in four minutes as the field shifted, the route bending around presences she registered as warm before they came into view.

The hill’s lower access path opened ahead.

Nyx stopped.

"The path is clear to the second tier." She said it the way she said things that were true in the present moment and might not be true in the next. "After that—"

She paused. The Dreamscape finding something.

"After that I cannot give you reliable information. The field is too loud."

Vane looked at her. The lightness entirely gone. The opal eyes doing the thing they did when she wasn’t performing anything. Fully present, fully in the moment, none of the coat she wore over everything.

"The clock tower," he said.

She looked at him.

"You can feel the whole island from there. The Dreamscape reads presence and absence—from the tower you can route people away from concentrations." He held her gaze. "That is what you do in this."

Nyx looked at the tower. Looked at the island below them. The Academic District dark at the tower level, things moving in the lower paths that were the wrong color against the stone. The evacuation stream still visible as movement in the distance, still heading toward the compromised shelter points.

She looked at him for one more second.

"Yes," she said quietly.

She went.

Vane watched her for the specific moment it took to confirm the direction—watched her move toward the tower with that strange grace she brought to everything even now—and then turned to the hill and moved upward.

Ashe at his shoulder, the cold wrong smell of the island still in the back of his throat, the mana field loud in every direction.

The hill waiting above them with everything it contained.


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