©NovelBuddy
I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 240: What Watches
The training ring in Villa 3 had a crack in it.
It ran from roughly the center of the floor toward the northern wall in a jagged, branching line. It was exactly the way stone cracked when the kinetic force applied to it vastly exceeded what it was engineered to survive. The maintenance staff had been called that afternoon. They had stood over it, noted the impossible depth and spread of the damage, exchanged a long, silent look between themselves, and quietly submitted a repair request marked urgent.
The dampening rune on the northern wall remained entirely dark. The whole ring smelled faintly of discharged, burned mana and something significantly older. It was a dry, mineral scent that only seeped up through the bedrock when the deep foundations of the island had been violently stressed.
Anastasia came down to look at it that evening.
She stood at the entrance for a long moment, her arms hanging loosely at her sides, and stared at the ruined floor. Then, she stepped inside and walked to the exact center of the ring. From here, she could see the branching pattern clearly. She could trace the way the destruction radiated perfectly from a single, concentrated point of origin.
She had seen the strike that produced it. She had been standing right at the entrance, watching the very foundation of her villa change.
She thought about Ryuken’s face.
She had read enough powerful, dangerous people in her privileged life to know what their faces looked like when they were actively performing composure, and what they looked like when they were not performing anything at all. She had watched Ryuken’s face across an entire morning of intense conversation and terrifying demonstration. His face had done exactly one thing the entire time, which was absolutely nothing.
And then, it had done something else.
The shift was not theatrical or dramatic, but it was unmistakable if you were educated enough to watch for it. A man who had spent forty years seeing everything the world had to offer had suddenly seen something he did not expect. That was what she had witnessed in this room.
She stood alone in the cracked ring and let the silence settle over her.
She walked to the far end of the ring and lifted her slender rapier from its polished stand. She began to run the form she had been drilling for weeks. It was a complex sequence built entirely around the Blessed by Mana’s terrifying precision. It required the absolute, lethal commitment of intent on every single strike rather than the controlled, political half-measures she was forced to use in practical combat. She had been grinding this specific sequence because it harbored a microscopic flaw in the seventh transition.
She ran it once. Her footwork felt strangely light. The flaw caught her wrist like a snag in silk.
She ran it again. Still there.
She ran it a third time. Somewhere right in the middle of the seventh transition, she abruptly stopped. She stood perfectly still, the rapier held out steadily in front of her at the very end of its lethal extension.
She waited.
The ruined ring was suffocatingly quiet.
Normally, a subtle shift in the air pressure from the far corner would tell her exactly how far she had overextended. She was entirely accustomed to measuring her own lethal geometry against the absolute, static gravity of the boy standing in the shadows. There was a specific indentation on the northern wall of this ring, worn into the stone over the last four months at Zenith. It perfectly mirrored a hundred similar, older indentations worn into a hundred different walls across the sprawling Imperial estates over the years.
She slowly lowered the weapon. She turned her head and looked at the northern wall.
The indentation was empty. 𝗳𝐫𝚎𝗲𝚠𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝘃𝚎𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝗺
Her grip on the rapier tightened until the leather wrap creaked. Her pulse felt obnoxiously loud in her own ears, a frantic, erratic rhythm that had lost its steady, mechanical metronome. She stood amidst the cracked stone and allowed her perfectly manicured fingernails to bite sharply into her palm.
She stared at the empty shadow for a full minute. She did not give the hollow feeling in her chest a name. She simply let it burn.
Then, she calmly wiped the blade, placed the rapier back on the stand, and walked upstairs to return to her paperwork. The crushing volume of her work was the one reliable thing that always answered when she showed up for it.
The light in the office of Villa 3 remained burning until very late that night.
Nyx was sitting on the steep roof of the eastern clock tower.
She was up there because she liked the vertigo, because absolutely nobody else ever came up here, and because the Academy in the hollow quiet of the summer break was a vastly different creature from the Academy in session. She had simply decided she wanted to see what that difference looked like from a lethal height.
She had been out of the bright, sterile medical ward for exactly three days. Physically, she felt essentially like herself. The frantic healers had explicitly told her she should not feel fine, a warning she had politely ignored when they finally released her. Arguing with Imperial healers about their own flawed assessment criteria was a tragic waste of a perfectly good morning.
Her shattered jaw was fully healed, leaving no scar. Her burned mana channels were running clean and cool. More importantly, the Dreamscape was fully operational in terrifying new ways that the healers would have found deeply alarming had she bothered to demonstrate them.
She sat on the cold stone parapet, dangling her legs over the dizzying drop, and let the light summer wind pull at her lavender hair while she studied the sleeping Academy far below.
The spiral hill was mostly dark. The leviathan dock on the far eastern edge showed only a few running lights in the distance. Kaito’s heavy vessel was already somewhere far beyond the thick cloud cover. She watched the empty space where the ship had been moored for a long moment, thinking about five people trapped together on a ten-day crossing, and wondering exactly what twelve weeks in the legendary eastern compound was going to produce.
She thought about Lancelot.
She had been obsessively thinking about him for a solid month. That was simply what happened when you spent thirty-one days trapped in a medically induced coma, your jaw wired together by runic plating, while your Rank 5 core desperately tried to knit itself back together.
The Dreamscape did not fully switch off in induced sleep. It merely ran slower, looser, and without the sharp precision she could normally bring to it consciously. But it ran. And what it had been endlessly running through for thirty-one dark days was the impossible question that Lancelot had casually shown her in the western woods right before he ended the conversation with a blade.
She knew what he was now. Or, at least, she knew the terrifying shape of it.
What she had witnessed in his Mirage World before he effortlessly shattered it was not a nightmare. She had gone aggressively hunting for his deepest terrors and had found something else entirely. She had found an absolute emptiness. It was not the tragic absence of an interior life, but the deliberate, thorough, and surgical management of one. It was exactly like standing in a massive room that had been meticulously cleared of all furniture, where you could still see, from the heavy indentations left in the floorboards, exactly where each piece used to stand.
Those indentations were incredibly old. And they were not all the same shape.
She had understood, staring at those ghostly marks in his mind, that some of what lived inside him had been there long before the Empire ever touched him. Other parts had been brutally installed by the Empire later, handled with the specific, paranoid care of an engineer who needed the installation to last for a century. The difference between the original boy and the manufactured weapon was not at all obvious from the surface. The Empire had been terrifyingly good at their bloody work.
But she also knew things the Empire absolutely did not know about what they had made. She was Nyx. She made her living reading the things people desperately tried not to show. What Lancelot had not shown anyone for four months at Zenith was the one thing that was going to matter most when the board finally flipped.
He had been quietly building toward something since long before he ever set foot on the island. It was not a grand plan, and it was certainly not a political strategy. It was a direction. It was the way a river has a direction, not because the water makes a conscious choice, but simply because the heavy landscape it runs through makes one specific path lower than all the others.
She reached a hand into her jacket pocket. She pulled out a small, sharply folded piece of parchment she had been carrying every single day since she woke up in the ward. She unfolded it carefully and stared at it in the low silver light.
It was not a letter. It was a name. Two words, written in her own hasty handwriting from a night long before the woods, before the blood, before the coma. It was from a night when she had done something she almost never did. She had written down dangerous information she was not yet ready to act on, simply because she was terrified she might forget it.
She had instantly recognized the name when Lancelot said it aloud in the woods. She had not learned it from the official history books or the Academy records. Those contained absolutely nothing about it, because the official records were carefully managed by the exact same people who needed nothing about it to exist.
She had recognized the name because she had her own dark reasons to know the specific things the Empire tried to erase.
She folded the parchment back up, the paper crisp under her fingers, and slid it deep into her pocket.
Far below her, the Academy was perfectly quiet. The spring night was warm, the stars were violently clear, and somewhere very far to the east, a leviathan was carrying a boy with platinum hair and dead red eyes toward a man who had just called him a masterpiece. Ryuken Razar had absolutely no idea what he was actually looking at.
She wondered sometimes what would have happened if she had just stayed out of the western woods that night. She wondered what her life would look like right now if she had done what every single reasonable survival instinct screamed at her to do and kept her distance from something she instantly recognized as categorically dangerous.
She had not stayed out of the woods because she was Nyx, and staying out of dangerous things was fundamentally not in her nature. She had also gone because she had known, from the very moment she saw his impossible first evaluation result, that there was something hidden in him genuinely worth understanding. She was simply incapable of leaving a puzzle like that alone.
She looked up at the dark, sprawling sky. She thought about their second year. She thought about what twelve weeks of isolation would produce in all of them. She thought about the heavy thing she had not yet told Vane, the secret she would fiercely guard until he was finally strong enough for it to mean something.
She thought about the forbidden name written on the parchment.
Then, with practiced ease, she shoved it all completely out of her mind. She was incredibly good at this.
The night was warm. The Academy was quiet.
She sat on the high parapet, let the wind move through her hair, watched the spinning stars, and felt something entirely new bloom in her chest for the first time since she had woken up in the medical ward three days ago. It was not quite peaceful contentment, but it existed in the exact same neighborhood.
She was alive. Lancelot had let her be alive. These were massive, terrifying facts she was still trying to arrange into a tactical framework she could actually use.
She would figure it out.
She always did.







