I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 234: Rank
The first thing he registered was the ceiling.
White stone, domed, with the soft blue light of monitoring crystals running along the upper curve of the arch. The medical ward. He knew it by the hum before he opened his eyes fully, the subsonic vibration of high-grade recovery systems running through the air and through the bed frame and into the back of his skull.
He catalogued his body with the eyes still closed. The fractured ribs had been addressed, the bone-deep pain replaced with the medicinal numbness of high-tier healing, the kind that cost more per hour than a Rank 3 adventurer made in a month. His mana channels were cool and saturated, the channels themselves intact. He was functional. He would be sore for a week in the specific way that healed bones were always sore, a phantom memory of the break living in the tissue even after the tissue was repaired.
He opened his eyes.
Nyx was sitting in the chair beside the bed.
She had her legs crossed and her hands folded in her lap and she was looking at him with the opal eyes that swirled violet and shadow at rest. Her lavender hair was loose around her shoulders. She was wearing the Academy’s standard medical discharge uniform, the plain white one that the ward issued when they released patients, which meant she had been discharged recently enough that she hadn’t been back to her rooms yet.
She looked entirely like herself. That was what hit him first. Thirty-one days of watching her lie in the center of a glowing runic array with her jaw healed and her eyes closed and the medical charts floating at the foot of the bed, and now she was sitting upright in a chair looking at him with the expression she used when she had decided to enjoy something at someone else’s expense.
"You are an idiot," she said.
Her voice was the same. The syrupy cadence, the absolute lack of deference to anything. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝚠𝚎𝚋𝗻𝗼𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝚘𝐦
"He picked a fight with me," Vane said.
"My letter was very specific."
"Your letter said not to go looking for it. It came to me."
Nyx looked at him for a moment with the particular quality she used when she was deciding whether an argument was worth entertaining. She decided it wasn’t. She turned her head toward the ward’s high window, where the spring afternoon was showing pale and clear through the glass.
"The others," Vane said.
"Recovering. Valerica was discharged this morning. Ashe and Isole are still in the ward but functional. Isaac is." She paused. "Isaac’s recovery is proceeding at an efficient rate, according to the healers. I believe that means he is making the healers feel inadequate."
Vane lay back against the pillow. The monitoring crystal above his bed pulsed once with soft blue and then settled.
"The rankings," he said.
Nyx looked at the ward’s far wall, where a small administrative display crystal was mounted near the door. The fourth practical standings were already posted on it, the same as they would be on every public board in the Academy. She didn’t gesture toward it. She just waited for him to look.
He unfolded it.
Rank 1: Lancelot.
Rank 2: Anastasia Aurelia.
Rank 3: Isaac Glacium.
Rank 4: Vane.
Rank 5: Valerica Sol.
Rank 6: Isole Sylvaris.
Rank 7: Ashe Razar.
He read the list twice.
"He held a stronghold, destroyed six coordinated squads, and still ranked first," Vane said.
"Yes."
"While carrying an injury from you."
Nyx’s expression did not change. "A minor resonance in the right leg. Residual from the Phantom Dagger feedback. It was not minor when it was fresh." She looked at her hands in her lap, the ones that had been shaking on a rooftop in the spring thaw. "It matters less than it should have."
The ward was quiet for a moment. Somewhere further down the hall, a clockwork automaton was running its maintenance cycle, the clicking sound rhythmic and patient.
"How," Vane said.
She looked at him.
"How is he that strong. At Rank 4. No Authority. Explain it."
Nyx studied him for a long moment with the swirling opal eyes. The violet in them deepened slightly.
"Before," she said, "I didn’t understand it. I understood what I saw but not what it meant." She paused. "Now I understand what it means."
"Then tell me."
"No."
He looked at her.
"You are Low Sentinel," she said. "You will be Mid Sentinel soon. When you reach Justiciar rank, I will tell you." She said it with the flatness of someone stating a condition that was not negotiable and did not require justification.
"That is a long way."
"Then you have a long time to think about it." She stood from the chair, smooth and unhurried, and straightened the discharge uniform with the automatic precision of someone who maintained their presentation as a matter of principle. She picked up her glass ledger from the floor beside the chair. She moved toward the ward exit.
At the door she paused.
"You are close," she said, not turning around. "To Mid Sentinel. Closer than you know. The fight accelerated something in your channels." She tilted her head slightly. "It usually takes a significant amount of pressure to produce that kind of compression in the mana pathways. Apparently getting your ribs broken by something that put me in a coma for a month qualifies."
She walked out. The door closed behind her with the soft, definitive click of a quality hinge.
Vane looked at the white stone ceiling.
He exhaled.
The ward hummed around him. The monitoring crystal pulsed its quiet blue.
He thought about the courtyard. The two fingers on the spear shaft. The instant strike arriving before he registered movement. The broadsword coming through Isaac’s spatial field the way a stone goes through still water. Six months of Argent Horizon refinement, everything Senna had put into him, everything the Usurper had added on top of it, the full stack burning through his channels — and two fingers on the shaft.
The despair was real. He sat with it for a moment and did not pretend it wasn’t.
Then he thought about the first form. The Quicksilver Thrust carrying intent at Sentinel rank, the spear not just fast but conceptually loaded, mana and will running as a single thing through the strike. He thought about what it would look like at the level Lancelot operated at, where physical and mystical were not two things converging but one thing expressed, where a body could compress all of itself into a single point of absolute density and release it at a velocity that the nervous system could not prepare a response to in time.
He thought about standing in the same room as that and being the same rank.
The despair and the other thing existed at the same time, and the other thing was older and more familiar. It was the thing that had gotten him out of Oakhaven and into this building and up through three practical evaluations and into a fight he had no business surviving intact. It did not have a name exactly. It was just the feeling of a ceiling that was still visible.
Ceilings were workable.
He reached over to the bedside table. He picked up the folded result notification.
He read his name on it. Rank 4.
He put it back down and looked at the ceiling and thought about what Mid Sentinel would feel like, and below that thought, running quietly like a current, the image of a dark iron broadsword moving through geometry that had decided to stop being meaningful.
He had work to do.







