I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 301: The Plaza



Chapter 301: The Plaza

The central Academic District plaza was the wrong shape for what was happening in it.

Wide, open, the stone flags running unobstructed between the administrative wing and the lecture hall corridor. The kind of civic space designed for eight hundred students moving between buildings at the change of the hour. No elevation. No cover. The ornamental fountain in the center was still running. The sound of it was wrong against everything else the island was producing.

Jax had come through the plaza because the route came through the plaza.

His evacuation from the Ashfield had run the standard second-year assembly path — sector threshold to main approach road to academic district plaza to shelter point access. He had been following it with his partner at the forty-minute mark, moving at the pace of two people who had been in the Ashfield for forty-one hours and were depleted and knew it. The shelter point access was at the plaza’s eastern end. They had been forty meters from it when the shelter point’s external monitoring crystal went dark.

He stopped.

His partner stopped beside him.

The plaza was not empty. There were students in it — a dozen, maybe more, scattered across the wide flags in the specific distribution of people who had arrived at the same destination from different directions and had all found the destination wrong at approximately the same time. Some were moving. Some were not moving in the specific way of people who had run out of the thing that was making them move and were waiting for it to return.

The first small beast came into the plaza from the administrative wing’s east corridor at the forty-three minute mark.

Then two more from the north path.

Then one from the lecture hall corridor entrance.

Jax looked at the plaza geometry.

He looked at the students who were not moving correctly — the first-years and the depleted second-years who were not going to clear the plaza before the beasts closed the distance to the highest Authority concentrations.

He looked at his band.

He looked at his partner.

"Go," he said.

She looked at him. She looked at the plaza. She ran the same calculation he had just run and arrived at the same answer, which was that the answer was wrong, and she looked at him again.

"Go," he said again. The same register. Not angry. Not performing anything. Just the word, with the quality of someone who has made a decision and is not interested in revisiting it.

She triggered her band.

The light went red. She moved toward the plaza’s western exit, which was the only exit still clear, and she did not look back, which was the correct decision, and Jax watched her go for the two seconds it took to confirm she was moving correctly and then turned back to the plaza.

He was good.

The Ashfield had shown this — thirty hours of real competence without the Blue Tower around it, the specific efficient aggression of someone running their actual capability in conditions that did not reward anything except actual capability. The plaza showed the same thing.

He pulled the fire mana up from the depleted reserve and ran the first engagement at the plaza’s northern entrance before the three beasts from the north path had fully entered the open space. The fire caught the first beast at the entrance and it went down hard, the cold light dying in it unevenly from the point of contact outward. Two more at the entrance, simultaneous engagement, the correct calculation on available output rather than the cautious one. Both down.

He turned to the plaza’s center.

The fourth beast had oriented on a first-year student near the ornamental fountain. A girl who had stopped moving, her back against the fountain’s stone lip, her mana signature the flat dim quality of Adept rank with an Authority not yet developed enough to matter. The beast was twelve meters from her.

Jax crossed the plaza.

Not at full speed. At the speed that was available. He came between the beast and the girl and ran the engagement from that position, which kept the beast’s attention on him rather than on the flat dim signature behind him.

The beast went down.

"Go," he said to the girl.

She went.

The plaza was not empty yet.

It was emptier. The students who had stopped moving started moving when the engagements began, the sound and light of the fire mana providing the information that something was being done, which was enough to restart the decision process in people whose decision process had stalled. Most of them were moving toward the western exit now.

Three more beasts entered from the administrative wing’s east corridor.

He looked at them.

He looked at the reserve.

Below a third. The specific number that separated a difficult engagement from a different kind of problem. Not impossible. Different. The mana finding the edges of the channels now, the output quality degrading in the way it degraded when the system was being asked to run past the point it was designed for.

He pulled the fire mana up anyway.

First beast. Down. The cost registering correctly.

Second beast. Down. The cost registering higher than the first, the reserve below a quarter now, the math running automatically in the background the way the math always ran.

Third beast. Harder. The beast was the same as the others — same size, same cold light, same orientation pattern. The difficulty was not the beast. The difficulty was below a quarter at sustained output, the specific arithmetic of what came next.

He filed the arithmetic.

He ran the engagement.

Third beast down.

The plaza was quiet for a moment. The last students moving through toward the western exit, the final ones, the ones who had been furthest from the exit when the beasts arrived. The only sound the fountain, still running, water hitting the stone basin the way it hit it every hour of every day regardless of what the island was doing.

He stood in the center of the plaza and watched the last student clear the western exit.

He looked at his band.

He looked at the eastern entrance where the administrative wing corridor ran.

Two more beasts came through it.

The reserve ran out before the second one went down.

Not suddenly. A graduated thing — the output degrading across the engagement in the specific way it degraded when the system had reached the genuine end of what it had. The fire mana going thin and then thinner. The first beast went down from the last exchange that had sufficient force behind it. The second beast did not go down from anything that came after because nothing that came after was sufficient.

The band triggered from the force threshold.

He went down on the plaza’s stone flags beside the ornamental fountain.

The fountain ran.

The water hit the basin.

The cold light of the beasts faded from the plaza as they reoriented toward higher signatures elsewhere on the island, drawn upward, the plaza no longer containing anything that warranted their attention.

The plaza was empty.

The western exit was clear.

The fountain ran.


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