I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 202: The Vector of Affection
The morning air of Zenith Academy was crisp and painfully thin. Vane walked down the wide white marble pathways toward the main academic building. His fractured left arm was bound tightly against his chest in a secure sling. The dull rhythmic ache deep in his radius was manageable, a testament to the blood root paste they had retrieved from the mountains.
Valerica Sol walked beside him. Normally the daughter of House Sol carried a crushing silent authority that naturally cleared the path ahead of them. Other students would instinctively step aside to avoid the heavy gravitational pressure she passively radiated. She was the anchor of their squad. Steady and immovable.
Today however the silence between them was not steady. It was brittle.
"You are stepping slightly heavy on your right foot," Vane noted glancing at her profile.
Valerica did not turn her head. She kept her dark violet eyes fixed straight ahead on the towering vaulted arches of the academic wing. "The paving stones are slick with morning frost. I am merely adjusting my center of gravity to maintain optimal balance."
Her voice was clipped. It lacked the usual calm grounded rhythm she used when speaking to him. When a group of second year students passed too close, she did not expand her aura to push them back. Instead she simply sidestepped, physically creating more distance between herself and Vane. She kept a rigid three feet of space between them for the entire walk.
They reached the heavy oak doors of Class 1A. This was their homeroom presided over by Instructor Rowan. The room was a steep amphitheater of basalt desks designed to intimidate. Isole was not in this section. The High Elf had been assigned to a different homeroom based on her dual aspect core, separating their squad for the first hour of the day.
Vane walked down the steps and took his usual seat in the middle tier. Valerica, who almost always sat at the desk immediately to his right to maintain tactical proximity, paused in the aisle. She looked at the empty seat next to him. Her jaw tightened for a fraction of a second. Then without a word she walked past him. She took a seat one row further up and two desks to the right.
Vane frowned. He placed his notebook on the cold stone desk. He had survived assassins, gang leaders, and monsters by learning how to read intent. Valerica Sol did not retreat from anything. She faced threats head on. But today she was actively building a wall between them.
Instructor Rowan entered the room exactly at zero eight hundred. The scarred vanguard did not waste time with pleasantries or roll call. He immediately launched into a brutal dissection of the previous week’s combat drills. He brought up holographic replays to highlight the structural failures in the students’ stances.
Vane listened mechanically but his focus was fractured. He kept glancing up at Valerica’s back. She was sitting with perfect posture taking meticulous notes, but her shoulders were locked with tension. She never looked back. She never offered the subtle nods of agreement they usually shared when Rowan criticized the other noble students.
When the bell finally rang, Rowan dismissed them with a grim warning about the upcoming practical evaluations. Vane stood up intending to ask Valerica if her core was destabilizing. He thought perhaps the fight in the crypt had damaged her mana channels.
Before he could even grab his bag, she was already moving. She packed her things with rapid uncharacteristic haste and walked out the door. She blended into the crowd of exiting students before Vane could reach her.
Vane exhaled slowly. The cold air of the room bit at his lungs. He slung his bag over his right shoulder and headed for his next block.
Advanced Mana Theory was held in the central pavilion. It was a massive hall presided over by Professor Vyla. The air here was heavily climate controlled, smelling strongly of crushed lavender and ozone to stabilize the volatile spell formulas demonstrated during the lectures.
Vane walked down the steep tiers to his designated spot. Isole was already there. The High Elf sat with her textbooks perfectly aligned on the edge of the basalt desk. Her dark green hair fell loosely over her shoulders, framing her pale face.
Vane took the seat next to her, dropping his bag to the floor. "Morning."
Isole jumped slightly. Her mismatched red and emerald eyes snapped toward him. They were wide and startled before she quickly looked down at her open ledger. A faint flush crept up her neck.
"Good morning, Vane," Isole said. Her voice was incredibly formal. It completely lacked the quiet cynical warmth they had established over the last few weeks. She pulled her notebook an inch closer to herself, subtly shifting her body weight so she was angled slightly away from him.
Vane watched her for a moment. "Did you finish the reading on third circle resonance?" he asked trying to establish their normal rhythm. "I think the textbook skipped a step on the elemental decay rates."
"I did finish it," Isole replied quickly. She did not offer to share her notes. She did not offer a sharp critique of the author’s logic as she usually would. She just kept her eyes glued to the blank pages in front of her. Her knuckles were turning white where she gripped her fountain pen.
Professor Vyla entered the pavilion. She tapped her obsidian desk bringing up the glowing blue holographic diagrams that served as her visual aids. The lecture began immediately. It was a dense abstract breakdown of etheric drag coefficients and localized environmental suppression. Vane tried to follow along, pulling out his own notebook and attempting to copy the diagrams with his uninjured right hand.
He struggled. Without the use of his fractured left arm, the thick leather binding of the ledger stubbornly kept folding back onto itself obscuring the page. He tried to press it down with his elbow but it kept slipping on the polished stone desk. 𝚏𝕣𝕖𝚎𝚠𝚎𝚋𝚗𝐨𝐯𝕖𝕝.𝕔𝐨𝕞
Usually this was the exact moment his squad would seamlessly intervene. Isole would casually slide a heavy inkwell over to pin his pages, or Valerica, sitting a few rows away, would apply a localized micro gravity well to flatten the book without a word.
Today neither happened.
Valerica sat two rows ahead. Her back was completely rigid as she stared intently at the holograms. Isole sat right beside him rigidly focused on her own perfect handwriting, completely ignoring his quiet struggle. She was staring at her paper with such intensity that she looked like she was trying to burn a hole through it.
Vane finally managed to pin the book by leaning his chest against the edge of the desk. He stopped trying to copy the math. He looked at Valerica’s tense posture. He looked at Isole’s white knuckled grip on her pen.
The scattered pieces of data began to fall into a clear undeniable picture.
He thought about the small cabin in Mourn Hold. He thought about the vulnerability Isole had shown him in the dark, revealing the terrifying nature of her dual core. He remembered the absolute trust they had forged when he promised to keep her secret. He thought about Valerica stepping in front of him time and time again. She had used her own body as a shield to protect a slum rat she had no obligation to save.
They were not acting like rivals fighting for the tactical leadership of the squad. They were not acting like noble heirs who had suddenly realized they were associating with a commoner.
They were acting like people who were terrified. They were acting like people who had encountered a variable they could not calculate and could not punch.
They were completely standoffish because they did not know how to exist in the same space as him anymore. The dynamic had fundamentally shifted. The professional survival focused distance of a combat squad had been compromised.
Vane stopped breathing for a second. The realization hit him towards the end of the lecture, landing with the cold heavy weight of a physical blow.
They had feelings for him. Both of them.
His combat logic was a finely tuned machine. It was honed to process kinetic vectors, mana densities, and kill angles in a fraction of a second. But presented with the emotional variables of his own teammates, that logic stalled out completely. He stared blindly at Vyla’s glowing blue math seeing nothing but meaningless shapes.
Why him? He was a fraud wearing a standard issue uniform. He was a thief who survived by siphoning the pain and trauma of actual warriors. Valerica carried the conceptual weight of a dying star. Isole wove the absolute cycle of life and death. They were genuine terrifying anomalies destined to shape the politics and the wars of the entire continent. He was just a boy from the mud trying to find the man who murdered his mother.
The standoffish behavior made perfect sense now. For a girl who viewed herself as a walking calamity waiting to explode, and a girl who viewed herself as a cursed outcast waiting to be banished, affection was a terrifying liability. They were pulling away because pulling away was safe. They were building walls because walls protected the people on both sides.
Vane felt a dull complicated ache behind his eyes that had absolutely nothing to do with his fractured arm or his bruised ribs.
The bell rang. It was a sharp metallic chime that cut through the heavy silence of the amphitheater.
"Read Chapter twelve before the practical lab tomorrow," Vyla commanded, erasing the complex holograms with a single wave of her hand. "If you come unprepared I will use you as live targets for the spell reflection drills. Dismissed."
Valerica was the first person out of her seat. She grabbed her bag and walked up the steep stairs toward the exit with brutal efficiency, never once looking left or right.
Isole stood up a moment later. She gathered her heavy books with jerky uncoordinated movements that lacked her usual elegant grace. "I need to review the library archives for the upcoming ecology assignment," she said to the empty desk in front of her. She refused to meet his eyes. "I will see you at the villa tonight, Vane."
"Yeah," Vane said. His voice sounded a little too quiet even to his own ears. "See you tonight."
She turned and practically fled up the aisle, her dark green hair swaying behind her.
Vane sat alone in the rapidly emptying classroom. The cold basalt desk offered no comfort. He leaned back in his chair and stared at the high vaulted ceiling.
He had spent his entire life learning how to navigate violence, deception, and survival. He knew how to break a man’s knee in an alleyway and he knew how to lie to a Headmistress. He knew how to adapt to monsters.
But he had absolutely no idea what to do with this.







