I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 189: Big Queen

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Chapter 189: Big Queen

"That is a big Queen," Vane muttered, adjusting his grip on the spear. "The sludge is fresh."

"It is quiet," Isole whispered. "Too quiet. Even the Echo stopped."

She was right. The moment they stepped across the threshold, the rhythmic thrumming from the ground had ceased. It was as if the massive machine beneath the earth had been switched off, or was holding its breath.

"It is waiting for us," Vane said. "Stay sharp. Eyes on the ceiling."

They moved deeper. The corridor widened into a massive antechamber. The light from Isole’s staff pushed back the heavy, stagnant shadows, revealing rows of stone sarcophagi that stretched into the darkness.

Vane felt a prickle on the back of his neck. It wasn’t the [Usurper] warning him of a specific attack. It was a primal instinct. It was the biological imperative of a prey animal walking into a room where it did not belong.

He stopped. He held up a fist.

"Isole," Vane whispered. "Flare."

Isole didn’t ask why. She pushed a surge of mana into the crystal. The light expanded, doubling in intensity, flooding the antechamber with a blinding white radiance.

The light hit the far wall.

It wasn’t a wall. It was a barricade.

A massive pile of debris blocked the passage to the lower levels. It was made of stone, iron, and something else.

Vane squinted through the lenses of his mask.

"Is that..." Isole started, her voice faltering.

It was chitin.

Hundreds of Grain-Maw carapaces were stacked like bricks. Heads, legs, thorax plates—all stripped of their flesh, all cleaned and dried, and stacked with geometric precision to form a perfect seal. It wasn’t a nest. It was a trophy wall.

Vane lowered his spear slightly. The logic of the mission was fracturing in real-time. Bugs didn’t build walls out of their own dead. Bugs didn’t clean the meat off the bones before stacking them.

"This isn’t a hive," Vane said. The realization hit him with the force of a physical blow. "Isole, back up. Slowly."

"Vane," Isole whispered. She pointed her staff toward the top of the barricade. "Look."

Perched on top of the wall of dead insects was a single, massive skull. It belonged to the Alpha Queen. It was the size of a carriage, its mandibles spread wide in a silent scream. But the faceted eyes were gone. The brain was gone. It was just a hollow shell, displayed like a warning.

Or an invitation.

Vane took a step back, pushing Isole behind him. The silence of the crypt pressed against his eardrums. The metallic taste in his mouth got stronger, bypassing the filters of the mask. It tasted like ozone and ancient dust.

"We are leaving," Vane said. "Now."

But as they turned to retreat, the massive iron portcullis behind them slammed down.

It didn’t fall with the slow, rusted groan of centuries. It slammed down with the speed of a guillotine, driven by a sudden, violent surge of kinetic mana. The boom echoed through the crypt like a thunderclap, shaking dust from the vaulted ceiling.

They were sealed in.

Vane spun around, his spear leveled at the darkness beyond the portcullis. The silence returned, heavier than before.

"It wasn’t a siege," Vane whispered, the cold truth settling in his stomach like lead. "It was a trap."

Isole moved closer to him. Her staff was shaking, the light flickering in time with her pulse.

"What is this, Vane?" she asked. "The Academy report said Rank 4 infestation. It didn’t say anything about... intelligence."

Vane didn’t answer. He was staring at the trophy wall. He was staring at the impossible precision of the stack. A Grain-Maw was an animal. It ate, it bred, it died. It did not display the corpses of its kin. It did not build monuments to its own slaughter.

"Something cleared the hive," Vane said. "The ’Echo’ we felt wasn’t the colony digging. It was the exterminator."

Scrape.

The sound came from behind the wall of chitin.

It was the sound of heavy metal dragging across stone. It was rhythmic. Deliberate. Slow.

Scrape. Thud. Scrape.

Vane felt a sensation he hadn’t felt since the Iron Groves. It was the specific, freezing dread of realizing the scale of the threat had just shifted categories. He remembered the constructs Valerica had described—entities that didn’t feel pain, didn’t bleed, and didn’t stop.

"Get behind a sarcophagus," Vane ordered. His voice was flat. "Turn off the light."

"Vane?"

"Turn it off, Isole! Now!"

Isole killed the flare. The antechamber plunged into darkness, illuminated only by the faint, grey light filtering through the high ventilation shafts and the bioluminescent fungus clinging to the ceiling.

They crouched behind a heavy granite tomb. Vane pressed his shoulder against the cold stone. He controlled his breathing. He forced his heart rate to drop.

The wall of chitin shifted.

The massive skull of the Alpha Queen toppled forward. It crashed onto the stone floor, shattering into a thousand pieces of bone and dried resin.

Through the gap in the wall, a figure emerged.

It was humanoid, but the proportions were wrong. It stood nearly ten feet tall, its shoulders broad enough to block the corridor. It was draped in tattered, heavy robes that looked like burial shrouds, stained with centuries of grave-dirt, oil, and black ichor. The fabric hung heavy on its frame, motionless despite the draft in the room.

It didn’t carry a weapon. It carried a tool.

A massive, rusted shovel rested on its shoulder. The shaft was made of black iron, thick as a tree trunk. The blade was as wide as Vane’s torso, the edge honed to a razor sharpness that gleamed even in the dark.

The figure stepped into the antechamber. It moved with a slow, grinding gait, as if its joints were made of ungreased iron.

It dragged something behind it.

Vane peered over the edge of the sarcophagus.

The creature was dragging the lower half of the Alpha Queen. The massive, segmented body—tons of chitin and meat—was being pulled across the stone like a ragdoll.

The figure stopped in the center of the room. It dropped the carcass. It raised the shovel.

Thwack.

The blade came down. It severed the Queen’s thorax with a single, casual strike. The sound was wet and absolute.

Vane’s [Usurper] interface remained silent. There was no red warning. No tactical overlay. The system didn’t register the entity as an enemy. It registered it as a force of nature. Like a landslide or a storm.

"Rank 5," Vane breathed.

It wasn’t a biological mutation. It wasn’t a beast.

The figure turned slowly. The hood of its shroud fell back slightly.

There was no face. There was only a smooth, iron mask welded to the skull. No eyes. No mouth. Just a single, vertical slit that glowed with a pale, necrotic blue light.

The Grave-Warden.

The entity tilted its head. The blue light scanned the room. It didn’t look like it was searching for prey. It looked like a gardener searching for weeds.

The light passed over the empty floor. It passed over the shattered skull.

Then, with mechanical precision, the iron mask turned. The blue slit locked onto the sarcophagus where they were hiding.

The pressure in the room spiked. It wasn’t just fear. It was the crushing weight of a high-tier Authority. Vane felt his [Silver Fang] recoil in his core, the silver mana retracting like a frightened animal.

The Grave-Warden raised the shovel. It pointed the blade directly at the stone tomb.

It had seen them.