Chapter 108: The Second Understudy’s First Lesson - The Legendary Method Actor - NovelsTime

The Legendary Method Actor

Chapter 108: The Second Understudy’s First Lesson

Author: BabyFlik
updatedAt: 2025-11-15

Ray met Eliza’s curious gaze, his own expression turning serious. His decision was made. He gestured for her to follow him to a more secluded stone bench, away from the prying ears of the common room.

“Eliza,”

he began, his voice low and firm.

“My patron was… impressed by the clarity of your philosophy. He has authorized me to share a gift with you.”

He used his established cover story, the words a familiar, well-worn mask.

“It is a way to enhance your natural talents for observation, to help you see the truth behind the words people speak.”

He paused, holding her gaze, and delivered the warning she herself had prescribed.

“But I must be brutally honest, just as you advised. Accepting this will make you a target. It will draw you deeper into a world of secrets and danger that I inhabit. There is no turning back.”

Eliza, now faced with the real-world application of her own philosophy, did not flinch. She took a moment, her sharp, intelligent eyes searching and absorbing the full weight of the offer. Her expression was serious, her usual witty smile gone, but a determined fire ignited in her eyes.

“I accept,”

she said, her voice quiet but unwavering.

Ray gave a solemn nod.

“Then close your eyes.”

He stepped before her and gently placed his hand on her forehead.

System, initiate Understudy Protocol. Designate Eliza Vance as Understudy Two. Impart skill: Gritty Detective's Lie Detection (Body Language).

A wave of intense cognitive energy, a familiar, draining pull, flowed from him. For Eliza, the experience was a sudden, sharp, almost painful rush of clarity. The world didn't sound different; it looked

different. Her memory flashed on the faces of the students she had encountered before they were no longer just faces. She could suddenly see the subtle, almost invisible tell and flicker of fear behind a bully's sneer as a professor passed, the tension of a lie in a friend's forced smile as she gave a compliment. It was as if a filter had been removed from her eyes, and she could now see the raw, unfiltered emotional data of everyone around her.

As she gasped, her eyes flying open, a final notification bloomed in Ray's mind, displaying the profile of his new, empowered ally.

[RESONANCE LINK ESTABLISHED. SKILL SHARED WITH UNDERSTUDY: ELIZA VANCE]

[UNDERSTUDY PROFILE: ELIZA VANCE]

[Age: 12]

[PHYSIOLOGICAL STATS (Relative to Peer Average)]

[Strength: 10 / (Peer Average: 11)]

[Stamina: 11 / (Peer Average: 12)]

[Constitution: 10 / (Peer Average: 11)]

[IMPARTED SKILLS:]

['Lie Detection (Body Language)' (Gritty Detective) - LEARNING SYNERGY BOOST: ACTIVE]

[DETECTED APTITUDES:]

[Latent Logical Acuity: Subject displays an unusually high capacity for deductive reasoning and spotting logical fallacies. This provides a natural synergy with skills from the Eccentric Scholar and Gritty Detective archetypes.]

From his post in the shadowed alcove across the common room, Sergeant Svane Orben watched the exchange with the stoic patience of a career soldier. He saw his young charge step closer to the girl and place a hand on her forehead. For a single, absurd moment, Svane thought the boy was making a clumsy, romantic gesture. A rare, almost imperceptible crack appeared in his stony facade, the corner of his mouth twitched into a shadow of a smile.

The smile vanished instantly.

He saw Ray stumble back a step, his face suddenly pale, a sheen of sweat on his brow. The boy subtly braced himself against the wall, his breathing momentarily uneven. It was a flicker of weakness, a sign of distress so subtle that no one else would have noticed. But Svane saw it. He didn't know what had just happened, but his professional instincts screamed that his charge had just done something that had cost him, something that had made him vulnerable. The sergeant's posture straightened, his hand drifting instinctively closer to the hilt of his sword.

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His weight shifted, his body coiling as he prepared to cross the room to intervene. But before he could take a single step, Ray, who was still leaning against the wall, briefly met the sergeant’s gaze across the crowded room. He gave a single, almost imperceptible shake of his head, a silent, clear command to stand down.

Svane froze, his hand dropping from his sword hilt. He returned to his post, but his relaxed observation was gone, replaced by a sharp, vigilant watch. The boy was not just a mystery; he was a commander, even in his moments of weakness. The mystery of the boy he was assigned to protect had just deepened once again.

Eliza, still reeling from the sudden, sharp clarity of her new perception, saw his distress immediately. Her own shock was replaced by a wave of concern.

"Ray, are you alright?"

she asked, her voice low and worried.

"You look... pale. Did that 'gift' hurt you?"

"I'm fine,"

Ray said, his voice a little breathless. He pushed himself off the wall and, to her utter surprise, reached into a small leather pouch at his belt.

"It just... takes a lot of energy."

He produced a dense, honey-sweetened nut-bar, something Rina had started packing for him, insisting he needed it for his ‘strenuous studies.’ He took a large, almost desperate bite, his eyes closing for a moment as he focused on chewing. The Crimson Weaver's Neural Gastronomy skill immediately went to work, converting the calories into a soothing wave of mental stamina that began to push back his exhaustion.

He broke off a piece and offered it to her.

"Want some?"

Eliza stared at the offered piece, then back at his serious, munching face. A look of baffled amusement crossed her features.

"I... no, thank you,"

she said, a small, incredulous smile playing on her lips.

"You are a very strange boy, Ray Croft."

Later that day, Ray and Eliza were walking through a crowded courtyard near the College of Valor, Sergeant Svane behind them giving them space silently following them while assessing the surroundings as well. The air filled with the boisterous shouts of students heading to the training yards. Ray decided to give her a simple test. He discreetly pointed to a senior Valor student who was loudly boasting to a group of admirers about a recent sparring victory.

"Look at him, Eliza,"

Ray said, his voice a low murmur.

"But don't just look. Use your new... instincts. Tell me what you really see."

Eliza focused on the student. For a moment, she just saw a bragging warrior, his arms gesturing wildly as he recounted his triumph. Then, her new Lie Detection skill kicked in. The world seemed to sharpen, the background noise fading as she saw the subtle tells the Gritty Detective's skill was now showing her.

She leaned closer to Ray, her voice a shocked whisper.

"He's bragging about his victory... but his smile doesn't reach his eyes. His shoulders are too tense, and he keeps touching the hilt of his sword, like he's seeking reassurance. He's lying. Or... not the whole truth. He didn't just win; he was terrified. He probably barely survived."

Eliza looked away from the student, her own face a little pale. She had just effortlessly deconstructed a person's entire emotional state from a few subtle gestures. She then turned her gaze to the wider courtyard, and a wave of dizziness washed over her as she was assaulted by a silent, screaming cacophony of tells. Every person in the crowded space was a torrent of unfiltered data: the nervous flicker of a first-year's eyes, the arrogant sneer of a senior, the deep, hidden weariness in a passing professor's slump.

"It's... too much,"

she whispered, her voice a little shaky as she turned back to Ray.

"Everyone is... so loud. I can see the envy behind a compliment, the fear behind a boast... How do you live with this?"

Ray saw her distress and felt a pang of empathy. He remembered the early days with the system, the overwhelming chaos of his archetypes' voices before he had learned to manage them. He offered a quiet word of advice, drawing not from the cold, clinical discipline of the Stoic Assassin, but from his own hard-won experience.

“I know. The first time... it's like a dam breaking. You'll drown if you try to process all of it. Let's start small.”

For the next couple of hours, Ray stayed with her, becoming a quiet, patient mentor. He didn't leave her to struggle alone. He walked her through the initial, overwhelming stages of her new perception, giving her simple, practical exercises to find her focus.

“Don’t look at the crowd,”

he instructed, his voice a low, calming murmur.

“Look at that bench over there. It’s empty. It’s not lying. It has no ambition. Focus on it. Let it be your anchor. Feel how quiet it is.”

She did as he said, her breathing slowly steadying as she focused on the mundane, truthful object, letting the silent screams of the crowd's tells fade into the background.

“Good,”

he said after a long moment.

“Now, from that quiet, choose one person to listen to. Just one. Let the rest of the crowd be a blurry painting. You're not trying to read the whole library at once; you're just picking out a single book.”

She tried, and after a few failed attempts where the noise rushed back in, she finally succeeded. She was able to isolate the boastful Valor student again, her perception a focused lens rather than a chaotic flood. A look of dawning control and wonder crossed her face.

Ray saw that she was beginning to adjust. He knew the path to mastering the skill would be long, but she had taken the first, most difficult step. He gave her a small, encouraging smile.

“You’re a natural, Eliza. It will take time, but you’ll master it. We’ll work on it more. For now, just... try to read one book at a time.”

He stood, offering a hand to help her up from the bench.

"Come on. That's enough for one day. I'll walk you back to your dormitory."

The walk back to Fenwood dormitory was a quiet one, Eliza still processing the profound shift in her perception of the world. When they reached her door, Ray simply gave her a small, understanding nod before turning to leave. Eliza watched him go, her expression a mixture of awe, deep gratitude, and a new, steely determination. She had been given a powerful, terrifying gift, and a friend who was not only willing to teach her how to wield it, but who was also patient and kind enough to walk her home afterward.

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