I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities

Chapter 84: The Perfection Trap


The training hall was an iron and concrete bunker that smelled of scorched air and the faint, bitter scent of ozone. High above, the mana scrubbers hummed with a desperate, vibrating intensity, trying to pull the excess heat out of the atmosphere. Vane stood at the edge of the circular arena, his back to the reinforced wall. He kept his hands in his pockets, his posture relaxed, but his eyes were fixed on the two women in the center of the floor.

He felt the familiar phantom itch behind his ears. It was followed immediately by the sensation of a cold, wet hook dragging across the surface of his brain, a feeling that always preceded the activation of his authority. The world did not display a menu or a list of stats. Instead, it fractured.

A memory of Oakhaven surged through his mind, unbidden and sharp. He was seven years old, watching a master carpenter try to force a piece of warped oak into a frame. The man was strong, his muscles bulging as he hammered, but the wood wouldn't yield. It was the wrong shape for the job, and eventually, the stress caused the oak to splinter, a sharp shard catching the man in the eye.

Usurper pulled the logic of that memory and overlaid it onto the scene before him.

In the center of the arena, Valerica Sol was a pillar of golden light. She was not using the simple gravitational crush she had shown in the arcade. She was reaching for something far more complex. Around her, the air distorted into a violent, violet sea. She raised her palm, and the moisture in the air began to ionize, condensing into a spear of white gold plasma.

'She is forcing it,' Vane thought, the cold hook in his brain tightening. 'She is a Rank 3 Elite trying to pull a star through a needle's eye.'

The spear of plasma hummed with a sound like a distant furnace. It was a high grade arrangement of mana, a skill that should have belonged to a much higher rank, but Valerica was using her authority as a bridge. She wasn't a Master, her total output was still restricted by her Rank 3 capacity, but the quality of the energy was terrifying. She released the lance, and it struck a heavy obsidian target at the far end of the room. The stone didn't just break; it evaporated, leaving behind a glowing, molten void.

Valerica lowered her hand, her white gold hair settling back onto her shoulders. She wasn't panting, but the skin around her eyes was tight with the effort of holding that much density within a Rank 3 frame.

Across the arena, Ashe Razar was a crimson blur. She had picked up a heavy iron rod from the rack, a tool meant for basic reinforcement drills. She moved with a kinetic violence that made the air smell of iron. She lunged forward, her silver hair jagged with static. She didn't just strike; she communicated a conceptual edge into the dull metal. The rod passed through a solid granite block as if it were water, the cut so smooth it was almost invisible.

'She is a comet,' Vane mused, his authority showing him the turbulent wake of her mana. 'But she is burning up in the atmosphere. She is pushing the linear velocity to the breaking point.'

Ashe stopped, the iron rod still glowing with a dull, menacing red. She looked over at Valerica, then at Vane. Her expression was the same predatory grin she always wore, but there was a flicker of restlessness in her red eyes.

"The targets are dead, Rat," Ashe rasped, leaning the iron rod against her shoulder. "Why are you still standing in the shadows? Are you waiting for a written invitation to start moving?"

"I am looking at the waste," Vane said, stepping away from the wall. He adjusted the strap of his bag, the star steel spear still collapsed at his side.

Valerica turned her molten gold eyes toward him, the violet distortion around her fading into a low hum. "Waste? The performance was absolute, Vane. The target was disintegrated. There is no counter to a strike of that magnitude."

"The target was disintegrated, but you were stationary for three seconds while you gathered the mass," Vane said, walking toward the center of the floor. "And Ashe, your speed is incredible, but your friction is off. I could hear your joints popping from the recoil. You are both using these high grade manifestations that your authorities provide, but you are playing a game of all or nothing."

"Victory is all or nothing," Valerica replied, her voice cooling to a regal edge.

"In a duel, maybe," Vane countered. "In the Hollows, it is a siege. You fire a lance of that caliber and then you have to reset. You become a blade for ten seconds and then your mana channels have to cool down. You are Rank 3 Elites trying to play a game of Master level output. It is a perfection trap. You are so focused on the absolute nature of your authorities that you have no middle ground."

"Middle ground is for those who cannot achieve the peak," Ashe teased, though she didn't move from her spot. "Are you going to lecture us on the beauty of being average, Vane?"

"I am going to lecture you on the beauty of staying alive," Vane said.

He took a basic Argent Horizon stance, the one he felt he had spent years perfecting under Senna's brutal supervision. His feet shifted into a neutral low guard. He began a sequence of thrusts and pivots, his movements clean and efficient. This was the foundation of linear velocity and momentum conservation. It was perfect, martial logic.

Then, he channeled the Silver Fang.

The silver mana flooded his system, but it didn't flow like a river. It hit his muscles like a series of erratic, high frequency explosions. As he moved, the vibration caused his hand to hum with lethal intent, but the recoil sent a jolt of pain through his wrist. He executed a high speed lunge, but his lead foot slipped a fraction of an inch on the smooth tiles. The internal vibration disrupted his friction with the floor, a tiny error that would have been a death sentence against a real opponent.

Vane stopped, his breath coming in a sharp hiss. He looked at his hand, which was trembling from the resonance.

"See?" Valerica noted, her voice dripping with a calm, intellectual irony. "You judge us for our perfection trap, yet you are caught in an improvisation loop. You have your foundation, but you have no stable bridge for your authority. You are a Rank 3 Elite who fights like a talented scavenger. You have the fuel, but you have no engine."

'She is right,' Vane admitted to himself, his hand tightening on the collapsed spear. 'I am the bottleneck.'

He realized that while he was managing the two most dangerous women in the first year, he had become the weakest link in their synergy. Valerica and Ashe had stable, formalized ways to use their power, even if they were limited by their mana ranks. Vane had a collection of tricks and improvised maneuvers. He was vibrating his mana on the fly, solving problems as they appeared. It was exhausting and inconsistent.

"You're right," Vane said, lowering his guard. "I have been surviving on instinct. But I haven't made the Silver Fang mine. I have been using it as an external tool instead of a formalized skill."

"The Rat wants to be a scholar," Ashe laughed, but there was a flicker of genuine respect in her eyes. "Are you going to go back to the library and read more books about vectors?"

"No," Vane said. "I am going to the Old Gym. I need to find the formula."

He looked at the three of them. Valerica, the Sun who was too heavy to move. Ashe, the Comet who was too fast to stay stable. And Isole, the Moon who watched the cycles of their failure with a silent, emerald gaze.

"We are going into Sector 9 in twenty days," Vane said. "The ledger won't save us if the strategist is the one who trips in the dark because his own mana is fighting him. I need to formalize the pulse. I need to turn the Argent Horizon and the Silver Fang into something that doesn't burn me every time I use it."

"Then go," Valerica said, waving a hand in a dismissive, yet expectant gesture. "We have our own foundations to stabilize. If you are going to be the anchor of this squad, Vane, make sure your chain doesn't have any rust on it."

"I'll see you in the morning," Vane said.

He walked out of the training hall, the heavy iron doors sealing with a dull, resonant thud behind him. The night air was crisp and smelled of rain, a sharp contrast to the ionized atmosphere of the bunker. As he walked toward the North Wing, he felt the phantom itch of Usurper fading. It was a quiet night, but the silence felt like a countdown.

He reached the Old Gymnasium and pried open the side door. The air inside was stale and thick with the dust of centuries. He stood in the center of the rotted floorboards, the moonlight filtering through the high, cracked windows. He didn't turn on the mana lamps. He didn't need to see. He needed to feel the vibration.

He thought about the logic he needed. A way to move without the slip. A way to overload the senses without a tuning fork. He needed to find the exact frequency where his bones became turbines and the air became his weapon.

'Internal Pulse,' Vane whispered to the dark. 'And the Resonance Cascade. No more guessing. No more improvising.'

He took a breath and began the Spiral Circulation. The silver mana began to spin in his marrow, heavy and dense. He didn't let it explode. He didn't let it vibrate his skin. He kept it deep, kept it tight, and waited for the first beat of a formalized heart.

The training session in the hall had shown him the wall. Now, in the dark of the ruin, the Rat was going to find a way under it. He closed his eyes, and the sound of his own mana began to hum in the silence of the gymnasium.

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