©NovelBuddy
I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 201: The Terrarium
The silence in the foyer was absolute
For exactly half a second, the Headmistress of Zenith Academy was not a monarch. She was not the untouchable apex of the continent’s military hierarchy. She was simply a woman staring into the face of a ghost she believed had been buried long ago. Her pristine, aristocratic features were completely drained of color. Her piercing blue eyes were wide, the pupils dilated with an emotion Vane had never expected to see on her face.
It was pure, unadulterated terror.
Vane did not move. He kept his breathing shallow and his posture entirely neutral. His combat logic recorded the micro expressions on Evangeline’s face with cold precision. He cataloged the slight tremble in her hands and the erratic spike in her usually flawless mana signature. She knew the witch. The blue hair and the violet eyes meant something specific and devastating to the ruler of the academy.
Then, half the second expired.
The steel vault of Evangeline’s mind slammed shut. The transformation was instantaneous and terrifying to witness. The color returned to her pale cheeks. The trembling in her fingers ceased. The chaotic, spiking mana signature smoothed out into a suffocating, perfectly controlled aura of absolute authority.
She blinked once, erasing the terror from her eyes, and replaced it with the cold, calculating gaze of a warlord.
"You and Cadet Sylvaris have survived an anomaly that you had absolutely no business walking away from," Evangeline stated. Her voice was perfectly smooth again, carrying not a single trace of the breathless shock from a moment prior.
Vane nodded slowly. "We utilized every resource available to us, Headmistress."
"I am aware of your resourcefulness, Vane," Evangeline said. She adjusted the collar of her white wool coat. "Your debriefing tomorrow will be a mere formality. You will report a structural collapse and a hyper condensed kinetic blast from Cadet Sylvaris. You will not mention the Grave Warden. And you will absolutely never speak of the woman in the midnight blue dress to anyone."
"Understood," Vane replied.
"The academy rewards exceptional survival," Evangeline continued, turning her back to him and placing her hand on the heavy iron latch of the front door. "And in this case, more than just merely placing first, believe me on that."
She pulled the heavy oak door open. The freezing winter wind roared into the foyer, whipping her silver braid over her shoulder.
"Rest your arm, Vane," Evangeline ordered without looking back. "The true curriculum has not even begun."
She stepped out into the swirling snow. Vane closed the door behind her, throwing the deadbolt and engaging the localized wards. He stood alone in the quiet foyer for a long time.
He walked back into the living room and sank into the heavy leather armchair near the dying fire. The adrenaline of the unexpected interrogation was fading, leaving behind a profound, analytical exhaustion.
He stared at the glowing embers and thought about Evangeline. He thought about the academy she had built.
Zenith was hailed as the premier educational institution in the world. It was supposed to be a place where the next generation of commanders, vanguards, and grandmagi were forged through rigorous instruction. But as Vane sat in the quiet dark, the pristine illusion of the academy fractured entirely.
Zenith was not a school. It was a terrarium.
Vane thought about his classes. The instructors here barely cared about teaching their students in any traditional sense. Professor Vyla handed out mathematical formulas with minimal context. The combat instructors stood on the sidelines of the sparring rings and simply watched the students tear each other apart. They barely bothered to correct stances. They did not offer gentle guidance on mana efficiency. They gave them the absolute bare minimum of theoretical knowledge and then threw them into active dungeons.
The curriculum was not designed to instruct. It was designed to apply pressure.
Evangeline had gathered the most volatile, terrifyingly talented youths on the continent and locked them in the same cage. She had brought the Sun of the Imperial line, the Star of the high nobility, the Warlord of the East, the Ice Mage of the Northern Glaciers, and the corrupted Moon of the Silver Woods. She had thrown a pragmatic, ruthless thief from the slums of Oakhaven right into the center of them.
The academy did not teach them how to grow. It forced them to grow by proximity. They sharpened themselves against each other. They survived because the alternative was death in the dark. Evangeline was not a headmistress running a university. She was an architect building a localized warzone, cultivating apex predators by letting them feast on the pressure of their environment.
But why?
Vane closed his eyes. The image of the blue haired witch catching his star steel spear flashed behind his eyelids. The sheer, incomprehensible disparity in power made a mockery of the academy’s ranking system. Evangeline was preparing them for something massive. The skirmishes in the Iron Groves and the Old Crypts were just the opening moves on a board Vane could not even see yet.
He shook his head, pushing the tactical variables away. His logic system was fraying at the edges. He needed sleep to allow the blood root paste to finish knitting his fractured radius.
Vane stood up from the armchair. He checked the locks on the windows, ensured the hearth screen was secure, and walked down the quiet hallway of Villa 1.
He reached his bedroom and quietly pushed the door open. The room was dark, illuminated only by the faint moonlight filtering through the frosted glass of the window.
He stopped in the doorway.
His bed was not empty.
A small lump was curled up in the very center of his mattress, wrapped tightly in his heavy wool blankets. A mop of messy brown hair poked out from the top of the cocoon.
Mara was fast asleep. She had evidently decided that her own bed down the hall was insufficient tonight. After three days of Vane being gone, the little girl from the Oakhaven slums had simply migrated to the safest place she knew in the entire floating city.
Vane stood in the doorway for a long moment. The cold, analytical machinery of his mind went entirely quiet. The crushing weight of the Usurper, the terrifying reality of the Transcendent witch, and the political machinations of the Headmistress all faded into the background.
A small, genuine smile touched the corner of his mouth. It was a rare expression, completely devoid of his usual sharp pragmatism.
He walked quietly into the room. He did not wake her. He carefully pulled back the edge of the blanket and slid onto the mattress, mindful of his recovering chest. He positioned himself on his right side to keep the pressure off his fractured left arm.
Mara shifted in her sleep at the movement. She mumbled something unintelligible about crayons and dragons, rolled over, and pressed her small back against his side. She let out a soft, contented sigh and fell completely still again.
Vane looked at the frosted window. The howling wind of the academy peaks continued to rage outside, but inside the small bedroom, the world was perfectly anchored. He closed his silver eyes and let the deep, heavy exhaustion pull him under.
The next morning arrived with the sharp, crisp clarity of high altitude winter.
Vane woke up precisely at zero six hundred. His internal clock was flawless. He lay still for a moment, running a diagnostic check on his physical condition. The sharp agony in his left arm had subsided into a stiff, manageable ache. The bone had set perfectly under the influence of the herbal paste and his own accelerated recovery. His right lung expanded without the agonizing burn of internal bleeding. He was not at peak operational capacity, but he was functional.
He carefully untangled himself from the blankets, making sure not to wake the little girl currently sprawled across the pillows.
Vane went through his morning routine with mechanical efficiency. He washed the remaining dried paste from his chest and arm, noting the faint, localized bruising that still lingered over his ribs. He dressed in his standard academy uniform, ensuring the dark fabric concealed the bandages wrapping his torso. He strapped the bracer to his left forearm, locking the leather tight to act as a secondary splint for the healing bone.
He walked into the kitchen and prepared a simple breakfast for Mara, leaving the plate on the counter where she could easily reach it when she woke up.
He checked the heavy silver pocket watch resting on the mantle. It was zero six forty five. He had fifteen minutes to cross the residential sector and reach the tactical amphitheater for their morning lecture.
Vane picked up his travel cloak. He grabbed the Silver Fang from its resting place near the door, slinging the heavy star steel weapon across his back. He mentally prepared himself for the day. He had to navigate the false debriefing with the Inquisition and manage the chaotic dynamic of his squad. 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮
He unlocked the deadbolt and pulled the heavy oak door open.
The freezing morning air rushed into the foyer, carrying the scent of fresh snow and pine.
Vane stopped directly in the doorway. He blinked.
He had expected the empty, snow covered stone path leading away from his porch. Instead, he found his exit entirely blocked.
Valerica Sol stood on the left side of his porch. The noble lady was wearing her pristine winter mantle, the deep violet hood pushed back to reveal her cascading hair. Her dark, bottomless eyes were sharp and awake.
Isole Sylvaris stood on the right side of his porch. She wore her dark grey academy cloak, her dark green hair contrasting vividly against the white snow falling around them. Her mismatched red and emerald eyes were bright and focused.
Neither of them was looking at Vane.
They were standing exactly three feet apart, looking directly at each other. The silence on the porch was deafening. It was not a casual, friendly quiet. The air between them was practically humming with opposing atmospheric pressure.







