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I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 260: The Dinner (1)
Ryuken announced the third rest day at the beginning of week eight. He delivered the news with his usual brutal efficiency at the start of breakfast—no ceremony, no lengthy explanation.
And then, he actually stayed at the table.
This was entirely different.
On the first two rest days, the old master had completely vanished before anyone else even finished half their bowl. This time, he calmly reached out and poured himself a second cup of tea. It was a microscopic, mundane action, but it landed with the heavy, specific weight of a tactical shift. Inside this suffocating compound, every single one of Ryuken’s movements carried vital information.
Kaito stared blankly at the steaming tea. Ashe slowly turned her head and looked at Kaito. Vane watched Ryuken lift the ceramic cup with the hyper-focused attention he reserved for things that possessed absolutely no established precedent.
Lancelot just kept eating.
Ryuken took a slow sip of his tea. He stared thoughtfully at the scarred wood of the table.
Nobody dared to speak. Speaking first required a solid understanding of the tactical situation, and the current situation was Ryuken Razar willingly sitting at a communal dinner past the point of absolute, caloric efficiency. It was a scenario completely lacking any established protocol.
"The deepwater carp is significantly better this week," Kaito finally offered, testing the ice.
"Yes," Ryuken agreed smoothly.
"Old Shen finally changed the baseline spice ratio."
"I know," Ryuken murmured, taking another sip. "I explicitly told him to."
Kaito stared at his empty bowl. "You told him."
"Early last spring. He finally got around to doing it." Ryuken picked up his heavy iron chopsticks and casually ate a piece of the dark carp. "He is an incredibly stubborn old man. It took him three full seasons to admit I was right."
Ashe was watching her father closely. Her amber eyes held the specific, guarded expression she used when an event was unfolding that she lacked the full context for, but was meticulously filing away for later analysis. She kept chewing. She did not say a word.
Ryuken slowly turned his heavy gaze to Vane.
"The Silver Fang," the old master prompted quietly.
Vane stiffened slightly. "Yes."
"How does the integration currently sit? We are exactly three days out from the violent reversal."
"It runs flawlessly as the default state on the first four forms," Vane reported, his tone strictly professional. "It still violently reverts during the Falling Star under sustained, maximum load."
"The Falling Star fundamentally adds a complex vertical rotation," Ryuken analyzed smoothly. "That specific rotation forcefully reintroduces the old, flawed channel habit, simply because your nervous system learned the rotation before it learned the correct integration." He took another slow drink of his tea. "Give it one more week of grinding. The rotation will eventually submit and integrate."
He lowered his cup and stared deeply into the dark liquid.
"The core severance principle living inside your Authority is conceptually linked directly to your conscious intent layer," Ryuken lectured. It was the exact same low, resonant tone he used inside the sanctum. It was the unhurried, heavy delivery of vital information that had been thoroughly dissected before ever being spoken aloud.
"When your lethal intent is complete, the physical severance is complete. When your intent is only partial, the severance remains partial. You have successfully corrected the physical direction of your strikes. However, the mental intent behind those strikes was also fractured, and it is only now beginning to correct itself as your three physical states slowly complete."
He paused, letting the heavy concept settle over the table.
"By the time your upper joints finally learn to transmit properly—your spine, your heavy shoulders, your elbows, and your wrists—the Silver Fang will no longer be a conscious technique you desperately deploy over a strike. It will simply become an inherent property of every single strike you throw, regardless of the form. Eastern or western. The physical direction does not matter in the slightest when the mental intent layer is absolute."
Ryuken finished the last drop of his tea. He set his black iron chopsticks down with a sharp click.
"The intent layer," Vane repeated, his brow furrowing. "What exactly makes my intent partial?"
Ryuken looked at him. "Divided attention. Every single fraction of your awareness that lives outside the physical form is a fraction of lethal intent that fundamentally fails to arrive at the tip of your spear."
He shifted his gaze to the flickering brass lamp in the center of the table.
"You have been fighting your entire life with a detached part of yourself constantly watching the fight, rather than truly being submerged inside it. That hyper-vigilant, watching part is exactly the part of you that survived the gutters of Oakhaven. It is incredibly useful. It has undoubtedly kept you alive this long. But it also currently costs you a massive percentage of kinetic output on every single strike you throw."
Vane swallowed hard and said nothing. It felt like a surgical knife sliding directly between his ribs.
"The eastern training does not attempt to foolishly eliminate that surviving part of you," Ryuken clarified gently. "It simply gives it a vastly different, more efficient function. The Storm Step formally gives that watching part a dedicated job that does not actively interfere with the striking part. The watching part simply reads the geometry, and the striking part completely commits to the violence. They no longer aggressively compete for the exact same mental bandwidth."
Ryuken looked back at Vane, his eyes gleaming in the lamplight.
"That is the true, hidden purpose of the Storm Step, Vane. It is not about mastering five physical beats on the floor. It is about the complete, internal reorganization of what watches and what acts."
He stood up from the low table. 𝒇𝒓𝒆𝒆𝙬𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝒎
He had been sitting there for exactly twenty-three minutes. It was vastly longer than every single prior dinner of the last eight weeks combined.
He turned and walked out into the dark.
The dining hall was suffocatingly quiet. The oil in the center lamp hissed, burning with that sharp, pine-resin smell. The jagged mountain outside the narrow window was fully, heavily dark. Kaito slowly drank his cold tea, possessing the deep, patient quality of a predator entirely accustomed to waiting for muddy water to finally clear.
Ashe stared blankly at the empty wooden doorway where her father had just been sitting.
"That," she whispered, her voice completely hollow, "is the absolute most he has spoken at a dinner table in six years."
Kaito set his cup down softly. "He genuinely likes the western boy."
She snapped her head around to look at Vane. Vane stared intensely down at the dregs in his bowl.
"More accurately, he genuinely likes what the western boy is rapidly going to become," Kaito corrected smoothly, reaching for the iron teapot. "There is a massive difference. He occasionally likes talented students. That is merely a professional, academic interest. What I am describing right now is something else entirely."
He poured the hot tea.







