I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 39: The Corridor


The white light of the transit gate did not fade into a cave. It dissolved into a nightmare.

Vane felt the transition hit Senna's body like a physical blow. The atmospheric pressure in the Void-Hydra's lair was crushing. The air did not smell like earth. It smelled like ozone, ancient rot, and the metallic tang of blood that had been boiling for centuries.

The geometry of the place was wrong. The walls of the vast cavern seemed to shift and breathe, glowing with nauseating violet veins. The ground was slick with an oily residue that hissed beneath their boots. There was no time to get their bearings. The screaming Vane had heard in the transition was waiting for them.

"Contact front!" Senna roared, her voice the only steady thing in the chaos.

Vane felt the adrenaline flood her system, sharpening her senses to a painful degree. He was a passenger in a perfectly honed killing machine. Senna moved in a blur. She initiated the Spiral Circulation, her mana surging through her marrow to strip away the atmospheric friction.

She decapitated a loping, multi-limbed horror that lunged from the shadows. The star-metal tip, enhanced by her Rank 5 Justiciar aura, sheared through chitin and bone without resistance.

It was a slaughter, but not the kind they had planned for. The vanguard team was being chewed apart. Standard spells fizzled in the corrupted air. Shields buckled under attacks that seemed to ignore physical laws.

Vane felt the sickening lurch in Senna's stomach as she watched her squad commander get swatted by a massive shadowy tendril. He did not fly backward; he simply dissolved into a mist of blood and armor scraps.

"Retreat!" the second-in-command screamed over the roar of the horde. "Fall back to the extraction shaft! Signal the gate!"

It was a rout. The squad broke formation, sprinting back toward the narrow obsidian corridor that led to the transit point. Vane felt the cold calculation hit Senna's mind even as her feet kept moving. The horde was too fast. If they all ran, the monsters would overrun them before the gate could charge.

Someone had to stop the tide.

They reached the mouth of the corridor. It was narrow, barely ten feet across, carved from volcanic glass. Senna stopped.

"Torin, take the lead!" she shouted to her friend, shoving the big Earth-mage forward.

"Senna, what are you—"

"Go!" she snarled, slamming the butt of her spear into the ground and turning to face the oncoming wave of nightmares. "Tell them the wall is holding!"

Torin hesitated for one agonizing second, then turned and ran with the rest. Vane felt the profound, terrifying silence that settled over Senna as she stood alone at the mouth of the tunnel.

The horde was closing in. She dropped into the Argent Horizon stance, her feet wide and her center of gravity anchored. She initiated a maximum-output Spiral Circulation.

'I am the wall.'

The first wave hit her. It was brutal. Vane felt the impacts rattling her bones. Her spear moved with desperate economy. She wasn't a static object; she was a thresher.

Second Form: Lunar Deflection.

She spun the spear in a blurred figure-eight. The frictionless sleeve made the claws and teeth of the nightmares slide off the shaft, guiding their own momentum into the floor and walls. Minutes passed. It felt like hours. She was bleeding from a dozen small wounds, but she held the mouth of the tunnel.

Then, behind her, down the long corridor, there was a sound that drowned out the monsters.

THOOM.

It was the sound of massive, dwarven-forged blast doors slamming shut. Vane felt Senna's heart stop. She risked a glance over her shoulder. The tunnel behind her was sealed. The arcanic ward-lines on the obsidian walls flared to life, glowing with the harsh, impenetrable blue of a quarantine seal.

They had not needed her to hold the line so they could escape. They had needed her to bait the trap so they could lock the door.

The betrayal hit Vane harder than any physical blow. He felt the bottom drop out of Senna's world. The rage. The despair. The sickening realization that she was the stone they had stepped over.

The horde in front of her suddenly stopped attacking. The smaller monsters whimpered and scattered, retreating into the shadows. Silence fell. A heavy, wet silence that vibrated in the teeth.

From the darkness of the lair, something massive emerged. It was the Void-Hydra.

It was a High Rank 6 beast, a creature of shifting oily muscle and blackened scales with seven heads that moved with unnatural, fluid speed. Vane felt terror flood Senna's mind. She was a Rank 5 Justiciar. This beast was an entire stage above her.

The Hydra lunged. One of the heads struck faster than thought. Senna tried to perform a Lunar Deflection, but the beast was simply too dense. The impact plowed through her guard like a battering ram.

CRACK.

Vane screamed in the real world as he felt Senna's spear shatter in her hands. The star-metal shaft snapped under the impossible pressure. He felt her ribs break. He felt her body go airborne, smashing against the sealed blast doors. He felt her legs shatter on impact.

She slid down the cold metal door, leaving a streak of bright red blood. She landed in a heap on the obsidian floor, broken and unable to stand. The Hydra loomed over her, its seven heads weaving, tasting her fear.

Vane felt her consciousness wavering. The pain was blinding.

'Insufficient power,' her instincts screamed.

The beast lunged to finish her. But then, beneath the pain and the betrayal, something else ignited. A spark of absolute, spiteful refusal.

'No.'

She reached into her own mana core. She grabbed the dense mana of a Justiciar and she squeezed. She forced a compression event that should have taken years of meditation. She crushed her own soul, demanding it evolve or break. Vane felt the agony of it. It was like swallowing a star.

Her core fractured, then reformed instantly—denser, heavier, and more potent.

Breakthrough.

A shockwave of power exploded from her broken body. She was no longer a Justiciar. She was a Rank 6 Expert. But the mana that flooded her veins wasn't white-gold anymore. It was pure, liquid silver.

She grabbed the shattered remains of her spear shaft. She fed the new mana into the jagged wood.

Authority: Silver Fang.

The aura vanished. In its place, a smooth, silent coating of liquid silver mana enveloped the broken wood. It didn't hum. It didn't crackle. It was eerily quiet, looking like the wood had been dipped in mercury. It was the concept of Absolute Severance.

She didn't stand up. She couldn't. She sat broken against the blast door and initiated a Quicksilver Thrust with the splintered stick.

The Hydra's head snapped down to bite her in half. It didn't hit wood; it hit the silver mana. There was no sound of impact. There was no resistance. The Silver Fang simply slid through the Hydra's scales and flesh as if they were smoke.

The Hydra roared in shock, reeling back. Its snout had been carved open cleanly. The cut was so perfect the beast didn't even bleed for a second. The silver mana had separated the tissue at a fundamental level. It hadn't broken the scales; it had simply ignored their hardness.

The beast hesitated. It realized the prey had teeth. It reared back, and all seven heads opened their maws. A thick violet fog spewed forth. It was a high-grade neurotoxin and necrotic agent designed to liquefy prey.

The cloud washed over Senna. She triggered the Silver Fang, trying to spin the broken shaft to create a severance field, but she was exhausted. The Authority was eating her mana reserves alive.

The poison touched her skin. It seeped into the open wounds on her chest and legs. Vane felt the cold, burning sensation as the toxin entered her bloodstream. It began to rot her mana channels from the inside out.

But she did not die.

She sat in the poisonous fog, coughing up black blood, her body rotting in real-time. She pointed the silver-coated stick at the monster.

'Come on,' she thought, her mind fracturing under the pain. 'Come and take it.'

The Hydra circled. It was wary of the Silver Fang. It decided to wait for the poison to finish the job. So they sat there. The monster and the broken girl.

Hours passed. The poison ate at her. The pain was absolute. But she kept the silver mana active. She kept the line. When the rescue team finally burned through the blast doors twelve hours later, they did not find a corpse.

They found a girl who was half-dead, rotting alive, holding a splintered stick that was still coated in the most beautiful, lethal silver light in the world.

The memory began to dissolve. The darkness swirled, pulling Vane back. He felt the weight of it. The Silver Fang wasn't just a power. It was the ability to hold the knife even when your hand was rotting off.

And now, it was his.

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