I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities
Chapter 315: Protocol (2)
"It will not be pleasant," she said.
"I know."
She turned to face him properly and she opened the Warlord at the specific low register that was not the Killing Intent but was the Authority’s foundational pressure, the base layer of it, the thing that existed underneath the specific technique she was about to run. The air in the outer ring changed quality. Not dramatically. The specific heaviness of it arriving in the ambient field the way it arrived whenever the Warlord was genuinely present rather than contained.
She ran the Iron Current.
He felt it immediately. Not as a physical force. As a quality in the transmission chain’s midpoint, a pressure arriving at exactly the juncture where the form moved from the hip into the shoulders, the specific location where the Silver Fang’s efficiency lived. It did not disrupt the chain. It sat against it.
He took three steps toward her and ran the Quicksilver Thrust at half output.
The chain ran correctly at half output. He felt the pressure sitting against it without fully engaging.
He ran it at three quarters.
The pressure engaged. Not stopping the form. Arriving in the midpoint with a quality that required active management rather than the clean automatic transmission the form usually produced. He felt the management cost in real time, the attention required to maintain the chain through the pressure, the attention that was not going toward reading the fight.
’Ninety seconds,’ he thought. ’And he will be doing other things while the accumulation is running.’
He stepped back. He looked at her.
She released the Iron Current. The outer ring’s air returned to its normal quality.
"Now you know," she said.
"The Silver Fang’s severance principle," he said. "Can it sever the accumulation itself."
She thought about this. Not performing the thinking — actually thinking, her eyes going to the middle distance with the specific quality they had when she was running a genuine tactical analysis.
"I do not know," she said. "I have never seen anyone attempt it. The accumulation is a field property rather than a technique output. Severing field properties is not the Silver Fang’s primary function."
"It is not its primary function," Vane said. "It severed the reading Authority’s model in the Ashfield. That was a field property."
She looked at him.
"Different architecture," she said. "The reading Authority was a constructed field with identifiable nodes. The Iron Current is an ambient accumulation without nodes." She paused. "But."
"But," he said.
She looked at the ring floor. She looked at her hands. "If the accumulation has a source," she said slowly, "a point in his transmission chain where it originates rather than simply a field that exists around him. If you can locate that point."
"Then it has a node," Vane said.
She looked at him. Something in her expression had the quality it had when something had surprised her and she was deciding whether to show that it had surprised her.
"Yes," she said. "Then it has a node."
The afternoon light was going long through the compound’s upper sections, the October sun finding the western face of the inner sanctum’s wall and moving across it slowly. The outer ring was cooling faster than the rest of the compound, the open stone releasing its day’s warmth quickly, the mountain’s cold coming down through the air above.
Neither of them moved toward the residential corridor.
"The Dren house challenged you," she said. Not for the first time. But the register was different from this morning’s register, the edge of the argument gone from it, what remained was simply the fact stated.
"Yes," he said.
"Because of me," she said.
He looked at her. She was looking at the ring floor with the expression she used when she was being accurate about something at a cost to herself, the specific honesty she brought to things she would rather not have to be honest about.
"Because of me," she said again. "You are going to stand on basalt in October in front of eastern judges and an eastern crowd and fight a cultivator who has been preparing for exactly this because you are here and I brought you here and I have not—" she stopped. She looked at the mountain above the compound. "I have not been careful about what that means for you."
He looked at her profile. The jaw set, the horns catching the last of the afternoon light, the specific quality of Ashe being honest about something in the flat direct way she was honest about things that cost her. 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝙚𝔀𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝒐𝒎
"I know what it means," he said.
She looked at him.
"I knew before we boarded the leviathan," he said. "I knew in Korreth when the fish vendor said Lady Ashe without looking surprised and three other vendors did the same thing in the same hour." He held her gaze. "This is your world. Coming into it means being read through the lens of what it thinks of you. I knew that."
She looked at him for a long moment.
"You knew," she said.
"Yes."
The outer ring was quiet around them. The mountain cooling the air. The lamp in the inner sanctum’s high window burning with the specific steadiness of something that burned regardless of what was happening outside it.
Ashe looked at him.
Not the assessment look. Not the tactical read. The other one, the one that appeared in the compound’s outer ring at two in the morning when there was nothing to perform for and nobody requiring a particular version of her, the look she had when she was simply looking at him without a purpose attached to the looking.
"Tomorrow," she said. "I will show you the Iron Current’s source point." She picked up her blade from the ring wall. "It is in the right shoulder’s loading sequence. Subtle. You will not find it without knowing what you are looking for."
She walked toward the residential corridor.
At the entrance she stopped.
She did not turn around.
"Vane," she said.
He waited.
"The fish vendor." The words coming out with the quality of something that had been held at a careful temperature for a while. "When he said Lady Ashe. The way you looked at that."
A pause.
"I saw it," she said.
She went inside.
He stood in the outer ring alone in the cooling afternoon with the mountain above him and the city far below and the lamp burning in the high window and the specific weight of what she had just said sitting in his chest in the way that things sat in the chest when they were true and had been true for a while and had finally been acknowledged out loud.
He ran the Quicksilver Thrust one more time.
The Silver Fang arrived at the tip clean and complete.
He went inside.