Chapter 35: The Serpent Unmasked - The Legendary Method Actor - NovelsTime

The Legendary Method Actor

Chapter 35: The Serpent Unmasked

Author: BabyFlik
updatedAt: 2025-11-15

The next month was the most intellectually stimulating and emotionally exhausting period of Ray’s two lives. The daily lessons with Master Gideon were a thrilling dance on a razor’s edge. Gideon, with his vast knowledge, would lead Ray through the labyrinthine histories of the Eldorian peerage or the complex philosophies of the First Kingdom. Ray, in turn, would parry, using the full breadth of his archetypes’ knowledge, carefully filtered through the persona of a gifted eleven-year-old.

He learned more in that month than he had in years of formal schooling in his past life. Gideon, for his part, was perpetually baffled. The boy was a ghost. One moment, he would display a grasp of magical theory that rivaled a Lyceum graduate; the next, he would ask a question with such profound, childish simplicity that Gideon was left speechless. He was trying to map an ocean with a teaspoon, and the sheer, maddening inconsistency of his student was the greatest academic puzzle he had ever faced.

While the Master was engrossed in his puzzle, Ray was focused on his own. Jonas, the quiet assistant, was the real threat. The man was a phantom, his efficiency a perfect camouflage. But Ray’s Gritty Detective had been watching, cataloging the tiny, almost invisible tells. The way Jonas’s eyes would track Rina whenever she entered a room, assessing her as Ray’s closest confidante. The way he would subtly angle himself during lessons to hear every word. The almost imperceptible way his hand had formed the Argent Hand’s sign.

Ray knew he had to force the man’s hand. He couldn't live with a viper in the house, waiting to strike. The trap he devised was one of pure, simple misdirection, a classic Conman gambit. He spent an evening meticulously crafting a "coded" message on a scrap of parchment. The code was gibberish, a random assortment of the runic-style letters he had invented for the Lumina coin, but it looked authentic. He then "accidentally" dropped this note in the hallway on his way to the library, making sure it landed near a corner he knew Jonas often passed.

He didn't wait to see if Jonas found it. Instead, he went to his lesson with Gideon. Halfway through a discussion on the economic impact of the Valorian expansion, he feigned a sudden realization.

“Oh no!”

He gasped, his eyes wide with childish panic.

“My notes!”

“I was practicing the ancient script Master Gideon showed me, and I think I dropped the page in the hall!”

Gideon, seeing the boy's distress, sighed.

"Jonas is out there. I will have him look for it."

“No, please!”

Ray insisted, playing his part to perfection.

“It is a secret of my patron’s teachings! No one else can see it!”

It was the perfect bait. He had just declared the "lost" note to be a piece of valuable, secret intelligence from the Magus. As Ray had predicted, Gideon, ever the scholar, couldn't resist.

“Stay here, I will find it myself,”

He said, rising from his chair.

“Jonas is likely in the kitchens, we will not be disturbed.”

Gideon left the library. Ray immediately crept to the door, peering through the sliver of a crack. He watched as his tutor found the note on the floor. At that exact moment, Jonas rounded the corner, holding a tray with tea.

“Master Gideon? Is something amiss?”

Jonas asked, his voice calm and deferential.

“Nothing, Jonas,”

Gideon said, quickly pocketing the note.

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“Just a misplaced page of the boy’s, continue with the tea.”

This was the moment of truth. A normal assistant would have nodded and moved on. But Jonas was an agent, and the potential of acquiring a direct sample of the "Magus's" secret language was too valuable to ignore. As Gideon turned his back to walk back to the library, Ray saw Jonas’s eyes flick down to the pocket where the note now resided. With a speed that was utterly at odds with his servile demeanor, Jonas’s hand darted out, not to attack, but in a textbook pickpocket’s maneuver, attempting to lift the note from his master’s robes. But Gideon, for all his absent-mindedness, was a mage of the Lyceum. He felt the subtle shift in air, the barest whisper of movement behind him. He spun around, his eyes wide with shock as he saw his assistant’s hand frozen mid-air, inches from his pocket.

“Jonas?”

Gideon whispered, his voice full of a stunned, hurt disbelief.

“What are you doing?”

The game was over. Jonas’s face, usually a mask of bland servitude, went cold and hard. The deference vanished, replaced by the flat, dead-eyed gaze of an operative whose cover was blown.

“My apologies, master,”

Jonas said, his voice losing its warmth, becoming a cold, precise instrument.

“My employers have an interest in your student’s unique… curriculum.”

Gideon stared at him, the pieces clicking into place with horrifying clarity. The convenient job offer, Jonas’s insistence on accompanying him, the rumors… It was all a lie. He, a master scholar of the Lyceum, had been used as a stalking horse for a criminal syndicate. A wave of pure, intellectual fury washed over his face.

“The Argent Hand,”

Gideon snarled.

“You would dare use my research as a cover for their filth?”

Jonas didn't answer. His mission had shifted from "observe" to "contain." With a fluid, terrifying motion, he dropped the tea tray, it crashed to the floor, scattering porcelain shards, and drew a thin, wicked-looking blade from his sleeve. He lunged at Gideon. Ray watched, his heart frozen in his chest. Gideon was a scholar, not a warrior. But he was also a mage.

“Scutum!”

Gideon shouted, his hand moved very fast writing symbols in the air and throwing his other hand forward. And for the first time, Ray saw real magic. The air in front of Gideon shimmered, coalescing as if the light itself was being woven into a solid object. A complex, glowing blue sigil, a beautiful web of intersecting lines and runes, flared into existence. Jonas’s blade struck the sigil with a loud CLANG, as if hitting a wall of solid steel. The impact sent a shower of blue sparks into the air. Ray stared, his mind utterly captivated. It was nothing like his own internal, symbiotic power. This was external, structured, scientific. It was the art of imposing one’s will upon the world. The sight of it, the raw data of a real spell being cast, flooded his senses. The system responded instantly.

[NEW ENERGY SIGNATURE DETECTED: MANA-BASED]

[ANALYZING… Spell structure is sigil-based, drawing on external ambient energy. Classification: Eldorian Defensive Weaving.]

[New Sub-Skill Unlocked: 'Arcane Analysis' (Eccentric Scholar). Allows for the basic identification and analysis of structured magical phenomena.]

The fight was fast and brutal. Jonas was a trained killer. He abandoned his attack on the shielded Gideon and immediately changed targets, lunging toward the library door to cut off any escape or cry for help. He was too fast. Gideon, his focus on maintaining the shield, wouldn't have time to cast another spell. In that split second, Ray acted. He didn't activate a full immersion. He didn't have time.

He relied on instinct, on the thousands of hours of training. He grabbed the heaviest object on the table, the thick, leather-bound Eldorian Herbal and, with a desperate roar, hurled it with all his might. He wasn’t aiming for Jonas; he was aiming for the floor in front of him. The heavy book spun through the air, a clumsy, awkward projectile, and slammed onto the flagstones right in Jonas’s path. The agent, his eyes focused on the door, didn’t see it coming. His foot caught the corner of the book, and his sprint turned into a wild, flailing stumble. It was the only opening Gideon needed.

“Vinculum!”

The scholar roared, his hands weaving a new, more complex pattern in the air. A chain of glowing blue energy shot from his fingertips, wrapping itself around the stumbling Jonas, binding his arms and legs. The agent crashed to the floor, completely immobilized, the magical chains burning with a cold blue light. Silence descended upon the hall, broken only by the sound of heavy breathing. Rina, alerted by the crash, appeared at the end of the hall, her hands flying to her mouth in shock.

Gideon stood over his former assistant, his chest heaving, his face a mask of cold fury. He then turned his gaze to Ray, who was still standing by the library door, his own small chest rising and falling rapidly. The scholar’s angry expression slowly melted away, replaced by one of profound, utter astonishment. He had just been saved from a trained assassin by an eleven-year-old boy throwing a book. He looked at Ray, at the boy who had engineered this entire confrontation, at the boy who had faced it with an impossible calm, and he finally understood. His academic curiosity transformed into a fierce, protective loyalty. The question was no longer "Is the Magus real?" The only question that mattered now was how to protect his Herald.

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