I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 311: Korreth



Chapter 311: Korreth

Mara saw it first.

When the coastline appeared at the horizon she did not say anything. She gripped the railing with both hands and looked at it the way she had looked at the ocean on the first morning — the systematic intake, the flat focused attention, building the model from primary observation. But there was something underneath the systematic intake that was not systematic, something in the specific quality of how tightly she was holding the railing.

The eastern continent resolved from a dark line into a coastline into cliffs and then into the specific texture of the eastern territory, the stone dark and dense, the vegetation different from the Academy’s island in ways that were visible even at this distance — lower, more angular, the specific shapes of things that had grown in a climate that did not negotiate.

"Yes."

"Much older."

He looked at her hands on the railing.

The leviathan docked at the eastern port at the eleventh hour.

Mara came down the gangway behind Vane and Ashe and stepped onto the eastern continent’s stone for the first time and stopped.

She looked up at the port. At the dockworkers. At the specific quality of the air, which smelled different from the ocean and different from the Academy and different from Oakhaven, the specific cold mineral smell of eastern stone that Vane recognized from the compound and that Mara was encountering for the first time.

"It smells like the inside of a very old building," she said.

"I like it," Mara said.

The road from the port to Korreth ran through the eastern territory’s lower provinces, a two-day journey by ground transport through terrain that was different from anything Mara had reference for. Not the island’s managed mana-lamp paths or Oakhaven’s crumbling urban density. The eastern territory’s lower provinces were old in the specific way of places that had decided what they were a long time ago and had not been persuaded to change since.

She watched everything. The villages they passed through, the specific architecture of eastern construction, the cultivators visible on the road whose mana signatures registered even at travel distance as something denser and more settled than the Academy’s students. She watched the mountain appear on the first evening, distant at first and then less distant, its specific dark mass visible above the lower terrain.

They arrived in groups, organized by category, delivered with the flat precision of someone who had been holding them until she had sufficient context to ask them correctly.

"It has been Razar territory for eight generations," Ashe said.

"No," Ashe said. "It is not."

Ashe looked at the mountain. Something in her expression was the expression she used when something was true and complicated and she was deciding how much of the complexity was relevant. "The eastern tradition says the mountain chooses," she said. "Which is not a theory so much as an observation that sounds like one."

"The mountain chooses," she said, to herself rather than to either of them, the specific murmur of someone filing information that requires further processing.

Korreth appeared on the second afternoon.

Mara saw it and went completely still.

Not performance. The real thing, the thing underneath all the flat executive competence she had been building since she was old enough to understand that the world did not reward unguarded responses.

Then she looked at Ashe.

"Yes," Ashe said.

"All of it."

Ashe looked at her. The question was not how did you grow up in a city. The question was how did you grow up in a place like this and become a person who could also be comfortable on a floating Academy island and in a forgotten sector and on the upper deck of a leviathan at two in the morning. How did a place this specific produce a person that portable.

Mara looked at the city. She looked at Ashe. She nodded once, slowly, the nod she used when she had received something that required more processing than the immediate moment allowed.

The market hit her first.

What hit her first was the people.

Mara walked through it with her eyes going in every direction simultaneously, the flat systematic intake running at full capacity, occasionally stopping to look at something specific — a spice she did not recognize, a technique a vendor was using, the specific architecture of a stall that had clearly been in the same location for longer than anyone currently alive could verify.

"Lady Ashe." The gravelly voice carrying across the noise with the ease of someone who had been projecting across this market for forty years. "Your western student is back."

The vendor looked at Vane. He looked at Mara. He looked at Vane again with the specific sharp eyes of a man who had been reading visitors to this market his entire life.

"She runs his household," Ashe said.

"How old," the vendor said.

The vendor looked at her for a moment longer. He looked at Vane. "She has the eyes," he said, which was apparently sufficient characterization. He turned back to the display counter. "Mountain trout came up this morning. First good catch in two weeks."

"Smoked elk fin. Same as last time."

Mara watched this transaction with the focused attention she gave all transactions that contained social information beyond the commercial, which was all transactions. When Ashe shoved the parcel across to Vane he caught it and she watched that too, the specific practiced quality of it, the shorthand of two people who had done this before.

She wrote something in the other ledger, quickly, before the moment passed.

"For later," she said, without looking up. "When I understand it better."

Old Shen’s stall was three rows in.

"Another one," Old Shen said.

Old Shen looked at Mara for a long moment with the specific terrifying assessment of a man who had been watching monsters walk out of the compound for decades. Mara looked back at him with the flat steady gaze she had been giving difficult people since she was six years old.

He handed over the steaming parcels without being asked.


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