Chapter 34: The Oracle Box - The Legendary Method Actor - NovelsTime

The Legendary Method Actor

Chapter 34: The Oracle Box

Author: BabyFlik
updatedAt: 2025-11-15

The weeks under Master Gideon’s tutelage passed in a blur of intense, nerve-shredding focus. A strange but functional relationship formed between the boy and the two men who had invaded his life. With Jonas, the quiet assistant, it was a silent, cold war. The man was a ghost, his presence marked only by the sudden tidiness of a room or the feeling of being watched. Ray and the Gritty Detective persona within him treated Jonas as a hostile operative, tracking his movements, noting his habits, and maintaining a constant state of high alert whenever he was near. With Master Gideon, however, the relationship was far more complex and dangerous.

The man was a brilliant teacher, and his genuine passion for knowledge was infectious. Ray, or rather the Eccentric Scholar who was now a constant companion in his Ambient Presence, found himself looking forward to their lessons. Gideon pushed him, challenged him, and introduced him to concepts in mathematics, history, and rhetoric that were exhilarating. For the first time, Ray had found an intellectual peer, and the temptation to drop his mask and engage in a true meeting of minds was a daily battle. But the real purpose of the lessons was never far from the surface. Gideon’s probing about the "Magus of House Lumina" was relentless and subtle.

“The principle of Aetherial Resonance you mentioned last week is fascinating, Ray,”

Gideon might say, polishing his spectacles.

“It implies a connection between somatic components, hand gestures and the vibration of ambient magic. Did your patron ever mention how they overcame the harmonic decay that plagued the mages of the Second Kingdom?”

The questions were scalpels, designed to peel back the layers of Ray’s fabricated knowledge. He was being tested by the world’s foremost expert on a subject he had invented. The pressure was immense. He would have to use a Concurrent Immersion of the Courtier and the Conman to formulate answers that were vague enough to reveal nothing, yet esoteric enough to sound authentic. The mental strain left him exhausted each day, the "minor backlash" of a pounding headache a constant companion. He knew he couldn’t sustain the defense forever. A legend built only on words would eventually crumble under expert scrutiny. He needed another prop. Another piece of impossible evidence. The idea came to him not from his archetypes, but from a flicker of memory from his own past life. A rainy afternoon spent in a museum with his parents, a science exhibit on the history of optics. An idea so simple for his world, yet so utterly alien here.

That night, he began to plan. The Conman loved the theatricality of it. The Scholar was fascinated by scientific principles. The Detective assessed the risks. He needed to create a new relic, something that would baffle Gideon completely, a piece of ‘magic’ that operated on principles the tutor couldn't possibly comprehend. He would build an Oracle Box. The first challenge was acquiring the materials for this new deception. His needs were simple, but obtaining them without raising suspicion was a heist in itself. He needed a small, light-proof box. He remembered seeing his mother’s old, disused jewelry box in a storage chest. It was made of dark, heavy wood and lined with black velvet perfectly. He also needed a thin, perfectly flat piece of metal and something to pierce it with. He used his well-practiced Sleight of Hand to procure a small sewing needle from Rina’s mending kit while she was distracted. The metal sheet was harder. He found his prize in the library: an ancient, crumbling tome whose cover had been decorated with thin, beaten sheets of tin. He carefully peeled one off, the Grizzled Veteran’s voice in his head grumbling about the desecration of historical artifacts.

The most dangerous part of his preparations involved Jonas. As Ray was returning to his room with the metal sheet tucked in his tunic, he heard quiet footsteps approaching down the corridor. It was the assistant. Ray instantly flattened himself into a shallow stone alcove, holding his breath. The Stoic Assassin’s discipline took over, slowing his heart, silencing his fear. Jonas walked past, his steps even and silent. He didn't even glance in Ray’s direction. But as he passed, Ray, peeking from the shadows, saw the man’s hand brush lightly against the stone wall, his fingers tracing a faint, almost invisible mark that had been left there in chalk. It was a patrol sign, a signal to another unseen agent. Ray’s blood ran cold. The keep wasn’t just being watched by Jonas; it was under active surveillance by a network.

[SKILLED APPLICATION DETECTED] [EVENT: COVERT OBSERVATION]

[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: ADEPT]

[Host successfully utilized stealth and environmental concealment to evade detection by a hostile agent, while also discovering critical intelligence regarding enemy operational methods. Standard Mastery Gain.]

Unauthorized usage: this tale is on Amazon without the author's consent. Report any sightings.

[Mastery Gain: Stealth & Silent Movement +5%.]

Once Jonas was gone, Ray slipped back to his room, his heart pounding. The stakes were even higher than he’d thought. He set to work, his movements precise and hurried. He took the wooden box and, using a small knife, cut a square hole in one side. He then took the tin sheet and the needle. Bracing the tin on a block of wood, he used the needle and a rock as a makeshift hammer and punch, creating a single, tiny, perfectly round pinhole in the center of the metal. He affixed this over the hole in the box. On the inside of the box, opposite the pinhole, he taped a piece of thin, translucent parchment he had taken from the study. He had built a camera obscura. A pinhole camera. An object of simple, beautiful physics.

The next day during his lesson with Gideon, he chose his moment. Gideon was pressing him again, this time on the nature of scrying magic.

“Conventional scrying requires a reflective medium, a bowl of water, a crystal and a significant expenditure of mana to bend light and space,”

Gideon lectured.

“How does your patron observe events from afar?”

“What is his medium?”

Ray met his gaze, his face a mask of serene innocence.

“My patron does not bend the light,”

He said, his voice soft.

“He says the light bends itself, for those who know how to watch.”

He reached into his satchel and produced the plain wooden box.

“He has taught me the first principle, this is a meditative tool.”

“An Oracle Box.”

Gideon took the box, his expression one of pure academic skepticism. He examined it, turning it over in his hands.

“It’s a wooden box, Ray.”

“With a hole in it.”

“The hole is the key,”

Ray said simply.

“Take it to the window, point the hole at the courtyard.”

“Look inside through the opening, but shield your eyes from the light.”

Gideon, looking thoroughly unconvinced but willing to humor the strange child, did as he was told. He walked to the tall library window, aimed the pinhole at the bustling courtyard outside, and peered into the large opening on the opposite side, cupping his hands around his eyes to block out the ambient light. Ray watched his tutor’s face. He saw the initial skepticism, then a frown of confusion, followed by a sharp, audible intake of breath. Gideon’s eyes, when he finally pulled his head back from the box, were wide with utter, dumbfounded disbelief.

“What… what is this sorcery?”

he whispered, his voice trembling slightly.

“It is not sorcery,”

Ray said calmly.

“It is merely… watching.”

Gideon looked back into the box, then out the window, then back into the box again. He was seeing the impossible: a perfect, moving, full-color image of the courtyard projected upside-down onto the parchment screen inside the box. He could see guards walking, birds flying, clouds drifting. It was a perfect, silent scrying mirror. But it broke every rule of magic he had ever studied. It used no runes. It required no incantation. It drew no mana from the ley lines, he could feel that with his own senses. It consumed no aether. It was a magical artifact that operated on principles completely alien to him. The boy claimed it was a meditative tool, but to Gideon, it was a piece of impossible, terrifyingly advanced arcane science.

He looked at Ray, no longer as a tutor looks at a student, but as a provincial priest might look upon an angel of a new and incomprehensible god. His skepticism was not just broken; it was annihilated. This boy, this Herald, was connected to a power that was playing a completely different game, using rules that no one in Aethelgard even knew existed.

[SKILLED APPLICATION DETECTED]

[OPERATION: 'THE ORACLE BOX']

[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: INSPIRED]

[Host successfully leveraged knowledge from a previous life to create a simple technological device that appears to be a powerful magical artifact in the current world. This act of cross-contextual invention represents a new paradigm of deception. Largest Mastery Gain.] [Mastery Gain: Deception +15%. Performance +10%.]

[INSPIRED RESULT: Your creative application of disparate knowledge fields has forged new neural pathways. You have unlocked the Eccentric Scholar skill: 'Inventive Engineering'. Allows for the creation of simple mechanical devices and understanding of basic physical principles.]

Ray met his tutor’s astonished gaze, his own expression serene. He had presented his second piece of evidence. The Magus of House Lumina wasn't just a name from history; he was a master of a form of magic beyond the understanding of even the capital’s finest minds. The gilded lie had just been reinforced with a trick of the light.

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