Chapter 32: The Quiet Years - The Legendary Method Actor - NovelsTime

The Legendary Method Actor

Chapter 32: The Quiet Years

Author: BabyFlik
updatedAt: 2025-11-15

The two years following the Argent Hand’s silent retreat were the most peaceful Greywood Keep had seen in a generation. It was a fragile, unstated peace, built upon a lie so audacious that no one dared to question it. The fear that had once been a suffocating poison in the air receded, leaving behind the quiet, industrious hum of a house slowly, painstakingly putting itself back together. For Ray, these were the most important years of his life. They were the years of the Crucible. His life developed a secret, dual rhythm. By day, he was the Lord’s quiet, intelligent son. He spent his mornings in the library, devouring every book he could reach, his Eccentric Scholar persona absorbing history, philosophy, and science at a prodigious rate.

He spent his afternoons with his mother, whose recovery had been nothing short of miraculous. Lady Eileen, now free from the fog of her addiction and the weight of imminent doom, had blossomed. She had taken over the management of the keep’s finances with a shrewdness that surprised everyone, stretching their meager resources and restoring a sense of order and dignity to their house. But when night fell and the keep grew silent, Ray’s real work began. Behind the locked door of his room, he would walk the “Crucible Path.” The training was a grueling, nightly affair that pushed the limits of his body and mind. The synergy of his archetypes became a well-oiled machine. He would initiate Concurrent Partial Immersion, the strain a familiar pressure now, a sign that the real work was beginning. The Grizzled Veteran would encase his mind in a shell of pure, stubborn discipline. The Serene Cultivator would then open his senses, allowing him to perceive the shimmering aether that filled the room. He would force his growing body into the agonizing stances, the pain a constant, fiery companion.

“Embrace it, kid,”

The Veteran’s voice would grunt in his Ambient Presence.

“Make the pain your boring friend who won’t shut up.”

“You don’t have to like him, you just have to learn to ignore him.”

Then, the Cultivator’s gentle, guiding influence would take over, showing him how to draw in the motes of light, to circulate the raw energy through his body, sealing the microscopic leaks in his own life force. Every session ended with him collapsed on the floor in a pool of sweat, his muscles screaming, but with a tiny, triumphant spark of new energy sealed within him. His progress was slow, a war of attrition fought for every decimal point. But it was progress nonetheless. While Ray walked his secret, internal path, his older brother, Corbin, endured a crucible of his own. For two years, he was a cadet at the Citadel of the Northern Shield, the lesser martial academy his father had sent him to . It was a spartan, no-nonsense institution known for its brutal discipline, a place where a noble name earned you nothing but higher expectations and harsher punishments.

He had arrived as a boy of fifteen, his heart still burning with the humiliation of the "Thorne disaster." The future he had briefly seen, one of immense wealth and power, snatched away by his freakish little brother, became the fuel for a cold, unyielding fire. He channeled all his resentment and ambition into his training. While other noble sons complained and coasted on their lineage, Corbin drove himself with a relentless fury. The arrogance he was born with did not vanish; it was hammered and honed on the training yard's anvil, beaten into the shape of a weapon. He became a formidable swordsman, his skill not born of supernatural grace, but of sheer, punishing effort. On the rare occasions he returned to Greywood for seasonal holidays, he was a different person. The sullen, posturing boy was gone, replaced by a hardened young man of seventeen, his shoulders broader, his gaze disciplined and cold.

He would watch Ray's quiet, bookish existence with a barely concealed disdain. The gap between the "freakish" brother who wielded strange luck and himself, the "true" son who bled for every ounce of strength, had widened into an impassable chasm. His hatred for Ray had evolved from simple contempt into a deep-seated, suspicious conviction that his brother was an unnatural blight on their house that would, one day, need to be purged. And through it all, Rina, now a graceful young woman of twenty, had graduated from caretaker to Ray's indispensable aide and most trusted confidante. She never questioned his increasingly strange requests, her faith in his "specialness" absolute.

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“Young master,”

She’d say, her expression one of polite curiosity as she handed him a small pouch.

“I have the powdered river clam shells you asked for.”

“May I ask what a scholar needs with such things?”

“It’s for filtering impurities in alchemical reagents,”

The Eccentric Scholar would supply, and Ray would translate.

“It’s for an experiment I read about”

“To make a cleaner ink.”

The lie was flimsy, but Rina accepted it with a smile. She didn’t need to understand the details. She only needed to know that she was helping the remarkable boy who had brought a strange and quiet magic back to their dying home. And so, two years passed. The quiet, sickly nine-year-old boy grew into a slender, composed eleven-year-old. He was still slight for his age, but the unhealthy frailty was gone, replaced by a wiry resilience. He checked his Host Status, a ritual he performed every few months.

[Strength: 7 / (Peer Average: 10)]

[Stamina: 8 / (Peer Average: 12)]

[Constitution: 5 / (Peer Average: 9)]

[Current Status: Aetheric Leak (Minor). Life-force is now being lost at a rate of 0.2% per day.]

[Life-Force Capacity: 6 / (Peer Average: 12)]

[Sealant Efficacy: 11% (Degrading)]

He was no longer dying. He was still weaker than a normal boy his age, but he was no longer a broken vessel. He was a weapon being slowly, painstakingly forged in secret.

The fragile peace was finally broken six months before his twelfth birthday. It was the time of year when the great academies of Eldoria began sending out their acceptance letters for the next term. For two years, Lord Alistair had been working tirelessly, leveraging every forgotten connection and ancient family tie to secure Ray a place at a prestigious institution. And for two years, he had been met with polite, but firm, rejections. He summoned Ray to the study. The room was brighter now, the windows clean, the dust gone. But his father’s face was dark with frustration.

“They have all refused,”

Alistair said, his voice tight with barely concealed anger. He gestured to a pile of letters on his desk, each bearing the seal of a powerful noble house.

“Every last one, they offer flimsy excuses, ‘no room,’ ‘prior commitments’, they are lies. Someone is poisoning the well against us.”

Ray didn’t need the Gritty Detective to know who was behind it. The Argent Hand had retreated, but they had not forgotten. They were playing a longer, more subtle game, quietly cutting the strings of House Croft’s political influence, ensuring they remained isolated.

“There is still the open examination for the regional academy at Solhaven City,”

Alistair continued, pacing the room.

“But it is our only chance, the competition will be fierce.”

He stopped and looked at his son.

“The minimum age for acceptance is thirteen, but exceptions are made for those who display extraordinary talent.”

“Or for those whose families can… persuade the examiners. We no longer have that luxury.”

The unspoken truth hung in the air: their name, Croft, was no longer enough. The phantom power of the "Magus" had kept the wolves at bay, but it could not open the doors of high society.

“Your knowledge is vast, but it is… eccentric,”

His father said, struggling to find the right words.

“To pass the academy’s examinations, you will need a formal education.”

“You need to learn how to present your knowledge in a way that they will understand, to shape your talent into a form they will accept.”

He picked up a new, unsealed letter from his desk.

“So, I have taken the final step available to me, I have used the last of the coin from the sale of the tapestries to hire the finest private tutor a house of our standing can afford.”

“We are actually so lucky the Scholar’s Guild branch near our domain has all their tutor contracted already so they sent in a request from their other branch.”

“And the tutor from the guild’s capital branch actually took the request, from what I heard he is highly sought out and he will help you prepare you for the entrance examination.”

Ray felt a cold premonition, a familiar sense of a carefully laid trap about to spring. The Hand had blocked every door, and now, a sudden lucky break? His father might not know of what is to come and willingly invites an agent of The Hand right back into the heart of their home. The game of shadows was about to begin again.

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