Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 254: Rest Day (2) from I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities, a Fantasy novel by WhiteDeath16.

"I am Ryuken’s terrifying daughter, who used to violently steal green apples from this exact market at age nine." She stopped abruptly in front of a rickety wooden stall selling sothing steaming wrapped in broad green leaves. "Old Shen caught every single ti. He made sweep his entire stall for an hour as punishnt. He never once snitched to my father." She pointed at the steaming display. "Two of those."

The stall owner, who Vane wildly estimated was approximately eighty years old and seemingly carved entirely out of weathered driftwood and pure, unfiltered opinion, narrowed his dark eyes at Vane.

"Who is this one," the old man demanded. It was not unfriendly, but it was incredibly direct.

"Western student," Ashe replied easily. "Ryuken is currently attempting to teach him."

Old Shen stared at Vane for a long, heavy mont. It was the specific, terrifying assessnt of a man who had watched monsters walk out of Ryuken’s compound for decades and deeply understood exactly what it ant when the old man actually chose to teach soone. He slowly handed over the steaming, wrapped parcels.

"Do not break any of my rchandise, westerner," Old Shen grunted.

"I will do my best," Vane said evenly.

"He said exactly that too." Old Shen jabbed a crooked finger at the empty air where Kaito presumably was not standing. "Shattered my entire display cart in his second year. He paid for it in gold, but it still absolutely counts against him."

Ashe was already unwrapping hers and taking a massive bite.

They eventually ended up sitting on a roof.

It was not by any grand design, but simply by the organic logic of the market’s twisted geography. The stall selling the heavily spiced grilled at on iron skewers was conveniently located right next to a brick building with a rusted external staircase. That staircase led up to a second-floor storage level, which conveniently possessed a wooden ladder granting access to the flat roof. Ashe had clearly been up here hundreds of tis before. She walked straight to the eastern corner with the clearest, unobstructed sightline of the towering mountain and dropped down, sitting with the comfortable unselfconsciousness of a girl returning to her favorite childhood hiding spot.

Vane sat heavily beside her, groaning slightly as his bruised ribs protested the hard clay tiles.

The massive mountain fortress lood directly above them, its dark, iron-colored stone violently piercing the thin morning clouds that had settled partway down the jagged range. From this specific angle, the compound looked entirely different from how it felt on the inside. From the inside, it was a suffocating, isolated training space. From the sky, it was a tactical military structure. From down here in the dirt, looking up, it was sothing organic that had aggressively grown, accumulating centuries of bloody history in its scarred surfaces.

Ashe was chewing the grilled at without looking at it. She was staring up at the fortress with the exact sa complicated, hollow expression she had worn in the outer ring on their very first evening.

Vane finally unwrapped the fish the vendor had forced upon him. It was cold, heavily smoked, and undeniably incredible.

"Do you miss it when you’re trapped at the Academy," Vane asked quietly.

She chewed slowly, keeping her eyes locked on the mountain for a long mont before answering. It was not her usual, rapid-fire register. She was usually brutally direct, completely skipping the thoughtful pause.

"Yes and no," she finally murmured. "In the exact sa way I deeply miss the Academy when I’m stuck here." She took another bite. "I used to think that ant I didn’t fully belong anywhere. That I was broken. Now, I think it just ans I belong to both of them, which is vastly different from belonging to neither."

Vane looked up at the black stone of the mountain.

"The na is infinitely heavier here," she confessed, her voice dropping. "Razar. Back at the Academy, it is just political currency. It is a weapon I can wield. Here, it is a living history that these people actively rember from long before I was even born. Old Shen knows things about my dead grandfather that I don’t." She looked down at the half-eaten parcel in her hands. "That is deeply uncomfortable. But I am also incredibly glad it exists."

Vane thought about this. He thought about the rotting gutters of Oakhaven. He thought about what it ant to be from a place that was completely, utterly gone, not because the physical city had actually changed, but simply because the desperate, starving boy he had been there was not the violent weapon he was now. He had no Korreth. He had no grumpy old man who had known his family for thirty years and fondly rembered his childhood embarrassnts. He had nothing but ghosts.

"There is nowhere I could ever go back to like this," Vane admitted softly. It was not spoken with self-pity. It was just a cold, accurate tactical assessnt.

She turned her head and looked at him. "I know." She looked back at the fortress. "That is exactly why you keep moving violently forward, Vane. Because for you, there is only forward."

A heavy, comfortable silence settled over the clay roof.

Far below them, the chaotic market moved with its own loud, desperate logic. The sprawling noise of it reached the roof as a general, comforting hum of life rather than individual, distinct voices. Sowhere nearby, a rchant was aggressively arguing about the price of iron with the theatrical, screaming outrage of a man who had no real objection to the price but considered the violent negotiation a mandatory part of the transaction. A laughing child was desperately chasing sothing small and fast through the maze of stalls.

"Lancelot didn’t co down," Vane noted into the quiet.

"No."

"He is probably standing on the eastern defensive wall."

"Almost certainly." She finished her food and wiped her hands on her pants. "He doesn’t know what to do with physical spaces that aren’t strictly ant for training or waiting for orders. To him, everything in the universe is either a specific task or a holding pattern." She stared down at the bustling market. "I used to be deeply annoyed by it. Now, I just think it is exactly what happens when a human being has never once been given a single hour of ti that didn’t have a bloody purpose attached to it."

Vane thought about Lancelot standing completely alone on the eastern wall in the dead of night, thodically checking the dark sky the exact sa way he checked everything else: perfectly, chanically, and without a single shred of apparent emotional investnt in the actual result.

"We should bring him with us next ti," Vane said firmly.

She shot him a highly skeptical look. "He absolutely will not co if you just ask him."

"I know."

"So how, exactly, do you plan to manage that."

"We casually leave the compound at a specific ti, and we leave a trail he can choose to follow if he decides he wants to."

She thought about this absurd tactical maneuver. "That is incredibly, shockingly patient of you."

"It is highly tactical," Vane corrected smoothly.

She made a sharp sound that was the very beginning of a genuine laugh, violently suppressed before it could fully arrive. "Right." She stood up and aggressively dusted off her knees. "We have three more specific stalls I need to hit before the afternoon training window. The ancient spice rchant near the south gate has a specific blend that Ren doesn’t stock at the Academy, and I have literally been thinking about it for a solid month."

Vane groaned, his ribs aching, and forced himself to stand up.

"You are still carrying the dead fish," she reminded him cheerfully.

He looked down at the greasy paper parcel in his hand. "The massive honor of the guest."

"Exactly." She was already swinging her legs over the edge to reach the roof’s rusted ladder. "Do not drop it on the way down, westerner."

He didn’t drop it.

You are reading I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities Chapter 254: Rest Day (2) on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Blade Over Magic cover
Same genre

Blade Over Magic

BjOmonobi4986 ·Fantasy

XanderwashailedasTheSwordmasteronearth.Whenitcametoblades,heheldnoequal.Itdidn'tmaterwhatcategoryorhowexperiencedhisopponentwas.Hewasjustbetter,and...

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Trending now

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.