Chapter 26: The Second Echo - The Legendary Method Actor - NovelsTime

The Legendary Method Actor

Chapter 26: The Second Echo

Author: BabyFlik
updatedAt: 2025-11-15

Weeks bled into one another. The rhythm of life at Greywood Keep settled into a new, tense normal. Lady Eileen’s recovery was the talk of the household staff. Her laughter, a sound unheard for years, now occasionally graced the halls. She took over the management of the household stores with a sharp mind and a gentle hand, bringing a semblance of order to the quiet decay. Lord Alistair watched his wife’s miraculous improvement with a mixture of profound relief and deep-seated terror, as if she were a beautiful vase that had been glued back together and might shatter at the slightest touch. He knew, on some level, that this recovery was another anomaly in a house suddenly full of them, and it frightened him.

Ray played his part with the flawless consistency of a seasoned professional. He was the quiet, bookish nine-year-old, his health "improving" but still fragile. He spent his days in the library, absorbing knowledge, and his nights in his room, enduring the grueling, secret conditioning of his archetypes. The progress was slow, a battle fought in millimeters. His mastery of martial stances was still laughable, but his control over the Sleight of Hand was becoming remarkably fluid. The Stoic Assassin’s meditative discipline had become his greatest shield, allowing him to maintain a placid exterior while his mind raced with conspiracies. The gilded lie of the Fletcher's Coin had faded into local folklore, a strange tale for a tavern fire. The second seed, the glowing silk fragment, lay dormant, lost somewhere in the keep, abandoned to fate. Ray knew he could not rush its discovery. A hunter who checks his traps too often alerts his prey. He had to wait.

The waiting ended on a blustery autumn afternoon. Ray was in the library, ostensibly reading about Eldorian siege tactics, when he heard a frantic, excited gasp from the courtyard below, followed by hurried footsteps. A few moments later, Rina burst into the library, her cheeks flushed, her eyes wide with an emotion he had never seen on her before: pure, unadulterated awe. She was clutching something tightly in her hand.

"Young master,"

She breathed, rushing over to him.

"You will not believe it! You will not believe what I found."

She looked around, ensuring they were alone, before slowly uncurling her fingers. Lying in her palm was the small, ragged scrap of ancient silk he had created. In the dim, dusty light of the library, it looked like nothing more than an old piece of cloth with a strange marking on it.

"I was sweeping the flagstones near the west parapet,"

She explained, her voice a hushed, reverent whisper.

"The wind must have uncovered it, it was caught in the moss between the stones."

Ray looked at it, his face a perfect mask of childish curiosity.

"What is it?"

"I don't know,"

She said,

"But look."

She led him away from the windows, into the darkest, most shadowed aisle of the library, between towering shelves of forgotten books. In the deep gloom, the magic took hold. The symbol painted in Moonpetal dust began to glow. A soft, silvery, ethereal light emanated from the fabric, the unblinking eye and its seven rays shining with a gentle, otherworldly pulse. It didn't illuminate the aisle so much as it seemed to hold the darkness at bay. Rina stared at it, utterly transfixed.

"It's… it’s like the flower,"

she whispered, her voice trembling.

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"The Moonpetal, the same light, but this… this is woven into the cloth itself."

She looked from the glowing symbol to Ray’s calm, watching face, and a conclusion, both terrifying and wondrous, bloomed in her mind.

“The stories the guards tell… about the fletcher’s coin… a strange, pale gold.”

“And now this, a cloth that weaves moonlight, these are not normal things, young master.”

Her gaze was no longer just one of friendship or even awe. It was one of devotion. In her mind, the sickly, strange little boy she cared for was undeniably connected to these miracles. He was not just special; he was touched by a hidden, ancient magic. She had become his first, unwitting believer. Before Ray could respond, another voice cut through the silence.

"What is the meaning of this?"

They both jumped. Lady Eileen stood at the end of the aisle, having come in search of her son. She stared at the softly glowing object in Rina’s hand, her eyes wide with disbelief. Rina, terrified she would be accused of possessing some dark artifact, quickly curtsied.

"My lady, I… I found it in the courtyard.”

“I was just showing the young master."

Lady Eileen drifted closer, her gaze fixed on the glowing eye. She didn't look afraid. She looked… hopeful. In a house defined by decay and fear, this small, impossible light felt like a sign, a forgotten prayer answered.

"Old magic,"

She breathed, a wistful smile touching her lips.

"I thought all the old magic had fled these lands."

She looked at Ray, her eyes full of a new, gentle wonder.

"Perhaps some of it still remains."

[SKILLED APPLICATION DETECTED]

[EVENT: SECONDARY EVIDENCE DISCOVERY]

[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: ADEPT]

[The untraceable placement of the artifact was a success. The discovery by a trusted party who then revealed it to a secondary target created a powerful, organic narrative ripple. The host's passive, observational role was the correct tactical choice.]

[Mastery Gain: Deception +5%.]

The discovery of the "Lumina Silk," as the servants began to call it, changed the atmosphere in the keep. It became a treasured object, kept by Lady Eileen in a small wooden box. It was a secret source of hope for her, a tangible piece of wonder in a world of grim reality. For Lord Alistair, it was the opposite. It was another terrifying anomaly, another piece of evidence that his house was spiraling out of his control. He saw the coin and the silk not as miracles, but as omens. He became more withdrawn, his temper shorter, his gaze even more suspicious. The two pieces of evidence had successfully created a deep fracture in the household’s perception of reality.

Ray knew it was only a matter of time before word of this new anomaly reached the Argent Hand. Their response, when it came, was faster and far more direct than he could have ever anticipated. It happened a week later. There was a commotion in the courtyard. Ray, watching from his window, saw two of the household guards carrying something between them. It was a man. His leg was bent at a sickening, unnatural angle. It was Hobb, the burly guard who had been gossiping about Fletcher's coin. They carried him past the window and towards the small room that served as the keep's infirmary. Rina, who had seen the whole thing, rushed to Ray’s room later, her face pale.

"It was horrible!"

She said, wringing her hands.

"Hobb was on patrol near the old quarry, he said a boulder just… came loose from the cliffside.”

“It missed him by inches, but the force of it sent him tumbling, his leg shattered."

Ray’s blood ran cold. The Gritty Detective’s mind flared to life, cold and analytical.

“A loose boulder? In a quarry that’s been stable for a hundred years?”

“There are no coincidences, the strangest thing,"

Rina continued, her voice dropping.

"Hobb said right before the rock fell, he heard a sound, a bird call he didn't recognize.”

“And when the other guards found him, they found this item on the ground next to him."

She held out her hand. Lying in her palm was a single, black raven's feather, tied with a thin, silver wire. The message was as clear as if it had been written in blood. The Argent Hand wasn’t just watching anymore. They were interacting. They had heard the rumors, the talk of lucky coins and glowing silks. They knew Hobb was one of the sources of that talk. This wasn’t an assassination; that would be too overt. This was a message. It was a meticulously calculated "accident," designed to silence a loose tongue and to send a chilling warning to the Lord of the keep. The silver wire on the feather was the signature.

“We see the ripples you are making. Stop!”

Ray felt a profound, icy calm settle over him. His plan was working. He had provoked the beast. He had made them believe something new and unpredictable was happening in this forgotten corner of Eldoria. He had their full attention. But the message was also a promise. They had targeted a guard this time. The next "accident" could be closer to home. It could be Rina. It could be his mother. It could be him. He looked at the black feather in Rina’s hand. The time for planting subtle clues was over. The game of whispers had to end. The next time the Argent Hand came calling, his phantom patron could no longer be a ghost. He had to be real.

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