I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 297: The Villas



Chapter 297: The Villas

The villa door was unlocked.

Vane had not locked it when they left for deployment six days ago. The Academy’s hill was the safest address on the island for most of the year and he’d stopped locking it the way people stopped locking things when nothing had ever come through the door.

He pushed it open now and the kitchen was empty.

The lamp was still burning from whenever Mara had last adjusted it, the flame at the reading height she used in the evenings. Burning into a room that nobody was sitting in.

Vane’s chest tightened.

The tea was cold on the counter. He touched the cup. Longer than an hour. The ceramic cool under his fingers, no residual warmth at all.

The household ledger was open on the counter beside it. Not the accounts one—the other one, the one she’d started in July and never explained. It was open to a recent page and there was writing on it in her clean deliberate hand.

The writing stopped mid-sentence.

The ink trailing slightly where the quill had been lifted fast. Not set down. Lifted. The specific mark of something that interrupted a word rather than a thought.

He read the sentence. It stopped before it finished saying anything.

His throat was tight. He forced himself to read the room.

The staff had gone. Their coats were missing from the hall hooks and the service door to the lower path was unlatched, which meant they’d gone in a group and in a hurry. Gone toward the Academic District because that was what the protocol said and the protocol was what people followed when they didn’t know what else to do.

Mara would not have gone with them.

He’d known this before he opened the door.

He found her in the training ring.

The ring occupied Villa 4’s eastern wing, a private space that had smelled faintly of Ashe’s Warlord mana since September. It was dark except for the ambient light from the island outside the high window.

Which was wrong. The Academic District’s towers were usually visible from this window at the evening frequency and they were not visible now. Their specific white light absent. The window showing a darkness that should have had light in it.

Mara was in the far corner.

She’d taken the corner that was furthest from both entrances and had a wall at her back and partial sightlines to both doors. The ninety-degree angle she’d been using to position herself in rooms since she was nine. Tactical instinct that had never left her even after two years of safety.

She was sitting with her knees pulled up and the ledger—not the accounts one, the other one—held against her chest with both arms. She wasn’t reading it. She was holding it.

She looked at him when he came through the door.

She didn’t move immediately. She held very still for one second in that specific way of someone whose body had been running a threat assessment continuously and needed one second to update the assessment before it released the tension.

The second passed.

She didn’t relax. The tension didn’t release into relaxation, it released into a different kind of stillness. The stillness of someone who’d been waiting for something and was now looking at it.

"You came here first," she said.

Her voice was even. She’d been working on keeping it even. Vane could hear the working in it, the effort.

His chest ached.

"Yes," he said.

Mara stood. Her legs were stiff—she’d been in the corner for a while, that specific stiffness of a body that had been very still for a long time. She was a centimeter taller than she’d been in June. Vane noticed this the way he noticed things, automatically. The Oakhaven habit of tracking children’s growth because it meant they were eating and not sick.

She looked at the window. At the absent light from the Academic District.

"The staff went toward the Academic District," she said. "I watched them go from the kitchen window. They went in a group." She looked at the floor. "I thought about going. The protocol says the assembly points are in the Academic District."

A pause.

"But the lights in the towers went out before the alarm finished sounding. In that order. I saw it from the window."

She’d watched the towers go out from the kitchen window while the protocol alarm was still sounding. She’d read the sequence and made a decision that contradicted the protocol. Alone. At twelve years old. In the ninety seconds between the alarm activating and the staff leaving through the service door.

Vane looked at her. Something in his chest pulling tight.

She was looking at the window. Her jaw was set in the way it was set when she was managing something she didn’t intend to show. She was managing it. She was managing it the way she managed everything—completely, within a controlled window, before returning to baseline.

The baseline was not her normal baseline.

Her normal baseline was the flat executive composure of someone who’d decided a long time ago that being unreadable was the correct default. This baseline was quieter. Smaller. The specific smallness of someone who’d been alone in a locked corner of a dark room for an indeterminate period listening to sounds from outside that she couldn’t identify or contextualize or do anything about.

Vane crossed the ring and sat against the wall beside her.

Not in the corner. She needed the corner at her back. He sat near it, close enough that the proximity was information without requiring her to move.

Mara sat back down.

For a moment neither of them said anything. Outside the window the island was wrong in every direction at once. The wrong light, the wrong sounds. The specific ambient quality of a space that had been a particular kind of place for two years and had stopped being that place some hours ago.

Mara was looking at the far wall of the ring. Her arms were still around the ledger.

"I heard things," she said.

Not explaining. Stating. That Oakhaven quality of reporting information accurately rather than performing a response to it.

"From outside. I did not look. I decided not to look because looking would not have helped and it would have made things harder to manage." She paused. "I do not know what I heard."

Vane’s throat closed. Twelve years old. Alone in the dark. Hearing things she couldn’t identify and choosing not to look because looking wouldn’t help.

"You made the correct decision," he said.

"I know," she said quietly. "It does not make it easier to not know what I heard."

She held the ledger tighter for a moment. Then she looked at it—at the cover, at the thing she was holding against her chest—and something in her expression moved.

Not cracking. She didn’t crack. Something small and real shifting in the controlled surface. The way the managed thing showed itself for one second before she managed it back.

Vane looked at the spear leaning against the ring wall.

He thought about the eastern path. About what the evacuation stream was moving toward. About the weight of knowing what he knew and being unable to redirect eight hundred students.

He thought about the ledger and the sentence that stopped mid-word and the staff going through the service door in a group.

"The window," Mara said.

He looked at her.

"In the corner. When it started." She was looking at the floor. "I could see the hill from the corner of the window. There were students on the lower paths."

She stopped.

"Some of them were moving correctly and some of them were not. I watched the ones who were not."

She didn’t say what happened to the ones who were not moving correctly.

She didn’t need to say it.

Vane didn’t ask her to.

His hands were clenched. He forced them to relax.

"Come with me," he said.

Mara stood. She tucked the ledger inside her jacket—not the accounts one, the other one, the one that had been against her chest for however long she’d been in the corner. She straightened her jacket over it with the deliberate care of someone securing something that mattered.

She looked at the window one more time. At the absent light from the Academic District.

"The bird," she said.

Vane looked at her.

"Before I came to the ring I looked at the garden wall." She said it with that flat evenness she used for all information that required accuracy rather than emotion. "The bird was gone. It had been on the wall every day since September. It was not there."

A pause.

"I do not know where birds go when something like this happens."

Vane didn’t know either.

The bird that had been there every morning. That Mara had watched from the kitchen window while she made her ledger entries. That had been one small constant in the routine she’d built here.

Gone.

"Come with me," he said again.

She came.

He brought her up the hill to the second tier where Ashe and Isaac were holding the approach paths. The most defensible position between the Academic District and the upper villas. He found the corner with the best wall geometry and the clearest sightline to both approach paths.

He told her to stay in it.

Mara sat down. She opened the ledger—not the accounts one—and looked at the page with the sentence that stopped mid-word. She held the quill that she’d taken from the kitchen counter without him seeing her take it.

She didn’t finish the sentence.

She sat with the page open and the quill in her hand and didn’t write.

Vane looked at her once.

He went back down.


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