©Novel Buddy
I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 183: The West Ridge
The air at the West Ridge was different. It didn’t just smell like rot; it felt heavy. The fog was thick enough to swallow the light of Isole’s staff. It clung to their clothes like damp wool. Vane moved through the mist without a sound. He was a shadow among shadows. His spear was held in a low, aggressive stance.
Isole followed. She didn’t look at the path. She looked at the small of Vane’s back. She watched the way his shoulders shifted with every step. She watched the way he tilted his head to listen to the vibrations in the rock. She found herself matching her breathing to his. It wasn’t a conscious choice. It was a rhythm her body had adopted without her permission.
"Stop," Vane whispered.
He didn’t turn around. He held up a hand. Isole froze instantly. Her mana hummed under her skin, ready to flare.
"There is no scratching," Vane said.
"Is that good?" Isole asked.
"No. It means they aren’t working. They are waiting."
The ground erupted ten feet ahead of them. This wasn’t a Soldier. It was a Guardian. It stood fifteen feet tall, its carapace coated in a layer of jagged, crystalline resin. Its mandibles didn’t click; they ground together like tectonic plates. It was a Rank 4 Peak. It was the absolute limit of what a drone could become before evolving into a Queen.
Two more rose from the mud behind it.
"Triangulation," Vane said. He didn’t sound worried. He sounded bored. "They are learning our patterns. Isole, the lattice. Now."
Isole raised her staff. She pushed her Holy mana into the air.
’Lumina Shield.’
The golden barrier snapped into existence. It was beautiful. It was perfect. It was also translucent and thin. Isole felt the familiar burn in her chest as she filtered the raw, heavy pressure of her core into the "pure" light the Academy demanded. She felt like she was trying to scream through a gag.
The first Guardian slammed its weight against the shield.
The impact sent a shockwave through Isole’s arms. The shield cracked. She gritted her teeth, pouring more mana into the filter. She forced the gold to shine brighter. She wanted Vane to see her as capable. She wanted him to see the Saintess who didn’t break.
"Don’t stabilize it," Vane barked.
He didn’t wait for her to respond. He launched himself.
Combat Art: Argent Horizon, 3rd Form – Falling Star.
Vane leapt into the air. He spun his entire body like a drill, funneling his silver mana into the star-steel tip. He slammed into the Guardian’s crystalline back. The resin shattered. The silver light of the [Silver Fang] flared, a matte and silent rejection of the beast’s durability.
He carved a furrow through the creature’s spine. Black ichor sprayed the fog.
But the other two Guardians were already moving. They ignored Vane. They saw the source of the light. They saw the bottleneck.
They lunged for Isole.
Isole saw the serrated claws coming. She saw the madness in their multifaceted eyes. She didn’t move. She couldn’t. She was too busy holding the shield together. She was too busy being "pure."
"Isole! Drop it!"
Vane didn’t have time to reach her. He was mid-recovery from the Falling Star.
He did the only thing he could. He engaged a high-risk maneuver. 𝘧𝑟𝑒𝑒𝘸𝘦𝘣𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝓁.𝘤𝘰𝓂
Combat Art: Argent Lash.
He threw the spear. But he didn’t let go. He channeled the silver mana into a tether, whipping the weapon in a violent, horizontal arc. The star-steel blade whistled through the air, decapitating the nearest Guardian just inches from Isole’s face.
The force of the maneuver sent a backlash of conceptual recoil through Vane’s arm. Isole heard the snap of his radius.
Vane didn’t scream. He didn’t even flinch. He caught the spear on the return and stood between Isole and the final beast. His left arm hung limp at his side. His right hand held the spear steady.
"Close the gap," Vane said.
Isole’s breath hitched. She looked at his arm. She looked at the blood dripping from his knuckles. She felt a spike of cold, sharp terror in her chest. It wasn’t terror for herself. It was for him.
She abandoned the shield. She stepped forward, her staff glowing with a frantic, desperate intensity.
’Absolute Restoration.’
The white-gold pillar swallowed Vane. She didn’t care about the mana-cost. She didn’t care about the bottleneck. She poured everything into the spell, her eyes fixed on his shattered arm.
She watched the bone knit. She watched the bruising fade. She watched the way he exhaled as the pain vanished.
Vane didn’t thank her. He didn’t have to. He moved.
He utilized the Argent Horizon, 1st Form – Quicksilver Thrust.
The final Guardian didn’t even have time to hiss. The silver mana deleted its head. The massive body slumped into the mud, twitching as the nerves died.
The West Ridge went silent. The fog began to dissipate, thinned by the heat of the combat.
Vane stood over the corpses. He rolled his left shoulder, testing the repair. He turned to look at Isole.
Isole was leaning on her staff. Her hands were shaking so hard she had to grip the wood until her knuckles turned white. She was staring at him. She wasn’t looking for approval. She was checking the seam of his tunic. She was checking the way he breathed.
"You were late on the drop," Vane said. He walked toward her. His boots made a wet, heavy sound in the blood-soaked mud.
"You broke your arm," Isole whispered.
"It was a calculated trade," Vane said. He stopped a foot away from her. He looked down at her. "The restoration was faster this time. You didn’t hesitate."
Isole looked up at him. She saw the soot on his jaw. She saw the cold, grey depth of his eyes. She felt the urge to reach out and touch the spot where his bone had snapped. She wanted to pull him closer. She wanted to tell him that the "calculated trade" was a horror she didn’t want to witness again.
"Don’t do that again," she said. Her voice was steady, but her eyes were burning.
"Do what?"
"Don’t trade your body for a second of my time."
Vane studied her face. He saw the flicker of something in her emerald eyes that wasn’t exhaustion. He saw the way she didn’t look away.
"We are partners, Isole," Vane said. "The mission requires both of us. If you die, I lose my eyes. If I lose my eyes, I die eventually. It is simple math."
"It isn’t math, Vane," Isole said softly.
She turned away before he could respond. She began to walk toward the cave where they had left their supplies. She moved with a strange, new confidence. The fear of the Maws was gone. It had been replaced by a different kind of resolve.
Vane watched her go. He looked at his hand. He could still feel the warmth of her restoration spell. It felt different than the ones at the Academy. It felt heavy.
He looked at the ground.
The vibration was gone. The West Ridge was clear.







