The Legendary Method Actor
Chapter 46: The Trials of Solhaven
The morning of the examinations dawned crisp and clear. The city of Solhaven was already alive with a nervous, electric energy. Carriages bearing the crests of minor noble houses and wealthy merchant guilds clogged the streets leading up the hill to the academy, all ferrying their hopeful sons and daughters to the trials. Ray stood before a full-length mirror in their room at the inn, Rina carefully adjusting the fit of his new tunic. It was simple, but made of fine, dark blue wool, the best their house could afford. He looked, for all intents and purposes, like any other well-to-do boy preparing for the most important day of his young life. He touched his mother’s keepsake; the signet ring was a cool, hidden weight on a leather cord beneath the tunic, a secret source of strength.
“You look very smart, young master,”
Rina said, her voice full of a nervous pride. Her own Survival Instincts, a parting gift from Ray, were a low hum at the back of her mind, making her acutely aware of the crowds and the unfamiliar city, her gaze constantly scanning for threats her conscious mind couldn’t name.
“Thank you, Rina,”
Ray said, his own heart pounding a steady, controlled rhythm, courtesy of the Stoic Assassin’s meditative discipline. He had spent the night not sleeping, but in deep focus, preparing his mind for the trials ahead. They walked to the academy with Sergeant Borin as their stoic, silent escort. The gates were a throng of anxious parents and even more anxious children. Ray saw boys in finery that cost more than Greywood Keep’s entire yearly budget, and girls who carried themselves with the practiced arrogance of those who had never been told "no." The air was thick with ambition. The examinees were separated from their families and guardians and led into a large, echoing registry hall. They were each given a wooden plaque with a number on it. Ray was number seventy-three.
The first trial, as Master Lorian had warned, was physical. They were led to a vast, open training field. A series of instructors, their faces hard and uncompromising, barked out orders. The tests were simple, brutal, and designed to weed out the weak. They ran laps until their lungs burned. They did push-ups until their arms gave out. They navigated a grueling obstacle course of ropes, walls, and mud pits. For Ray, it was hell. The Crucible Path had mended his body, but it had not yet made him strong. His Host Status was still a grim reality.
[Strength: 7 / (Peer Average: 10)]
[Stamina: 8 / (Peer Average: 12)]
He activated the Grizzled Veteran in Partial Immersion, not for its skill, but for its sheer, stubborn refusal to quit.
“Pain is a conversation, you don’t have to answer,”
The Veteran’s voice growled in his mind as his lungs burned on the third lap. He was not the fastest. He was not the strongest. In fact, he was consistently near the back of the pack. He saw the instructors making notes on their clipboards, their expressions unimpressed. Other boys, barrel-chested sons of northern lords, finished the laps with ease and sneered at the pale, slender boy struggling to keep pace. On the obstacle course, he fell from the rope climb, his underdeveloped arms giving out. He hit the muddy ground with a hard splash that sent a wave of derisive laughter through the other examinees. He got up, his face a mask of mud and grim determination, and finished the course. He was last, but he finished. It was a miserable, humiliating performance, and he knew he had failed this portion spectacularly.
The second trial was academic. They were led, exhausted and mud-spattered, into a vast, silent lecture hall. Each student was given a sheaf of parchment and a quill. The questions covered history, mathematics, geography, and philosophy. This was Ray’s arena. He sat down, his body aching, and let the Eccentric Scholar’s persona bleed into his Ambient Presence. The world of physical exertion faded away, replaced by the cool, clean, beautiful world of pure data. He read the first question:
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“Discuss the economic ramifications of the Silver Treaty of the Fourth Century on trade between Eldoria and the city-states of Solara.”
A slow, genuine smile touched Ray’s lips. This wasn't a test. This was a feast. For two hours, he wrote. His hand, guided by the Scholar’s precision, flew across the page. He didn’t just answer the questions; he deconstructed them, analyzed them, and presented his answers in flawless, structured essays filled with historical precedents and logical proofs. He finished with nearly half an hour to spare, his work a masterpiece of academic rigor. He looked around and saw other students still sweating over the first few questions, their faces contorted with strain. The final trial of the day was the one Ray dreaded and anticipated the most: the Mana Attunement test. They were led one by one into a small, quiet chamber. In the center of the room was a pedestal, and on it sat a flawless, fist-sized crystal sphere that seemed to drink the light from the room. Master Lorian was there, along with another severe-looking woman in a mage’s robes.
“Place your hands on the Attunement Sphere, child,”
The mage said, her voice devoid of emotion.
“Clear your mind and try to… feel the energy in the room.”
“If you have the gift, the Sphere will react.”
Ray knew from Gideon’s lessons that this was a standard attunement test. The Attunement Sphere was an artifact that glowed in the presence of someone capable of perceiving and channeling external Mana. He stepped forward and placed his small hands on the cool, smooth surface of the crystal. He closed his eyes. He didn't try to use the Serene Cultivator. That was for internal Aether. This was a test for something else, something external. He simply… reached out with his senses, just as the proctor instructed. He felt… nothing. A faint, static-like background hum, perhaps, but there was no river of power, no grid to tap into. The world outside his own body was, to his magical senses, almost entirely silent. He opened his eyes. The Attunement Sphere remained dark, its crystalline depths as inert as a common rock. The proctor made a note on her parchment and waved him away dismissively.
“Next.”
As he walked out of the chamber, he heard her mutter to Master Lorian,
“No potential whatsoever, as magically inert as a block of wood.”
Ray’s heart sank. He had failed the physical test miserably. He had failed the magical test completely. His entire chance now rested on the academic portion. The examinees were gathered in the main hall at the end of the long, grueling day to hear the initial results. Master Lorian stood before them, holding a long scroll.
“The entrance examinations for Solhaven Academy are designed to test the whole student body, mind, and spirit,”
He announced, his voice echoing in the hall.
“Few possess the balance required, many of you will be going home today.”
He began to call out numbers. With each number, a boy or girl would either sigh in relief or slump in defeat. Ray stood perfectly still, his face a neutral mask, his hands clenched into fists at his sides.
“Number sixty-one… pass.”
“Number sixty-seven… fail.”
“Number seventy-two… pass.”
His heart was pounding. He had to have passed. His academic score must have been high enough to offset his other failures.
“Number seventy-three,”
Lorian called out. Ray’s number. He held his breath.
Master Lorian paused, looking up from his scroll. His eyes scanned the crowd and locked directly onto Ray’s. A strange, unreadable expression was on his face.
“Number seventy-three,”
He repeated, his voice carrying across the silent hall.
“Ray Croft of House Croft.”
“Your physical assessment was, to be frank, the lowest score recorded in a decade.
“Your Mana Attunement was non-existent.”
A wave of snickers rippled through the nearby students. Ray felt his face flush with a hot, bitter shame.
“However,”
Lorian continued, his voice cutting through the whispers, silencing them instantly.
“Your score on the academic examination was not just a pass, it was a perfect score.”
“A score so flawless that the grading masters initially assumed it was a work of plagiarism.”
“A subsequent review has confirmed its authenticity.”
The hall was utterly silent now. Every eye was on Ray. Lorian looked down at the small, slender boy who stood before him.
“Solhaven Academy does not just seek strong bodies or powerful mages, it seeks exceptional minds.”
“And your mind, Lord Croft, is more than exceptional, it is an anomaly we are very keen to study.”
He rolled up his scroll.
“Welcome to Solhaven Academy.”