Chapter 55: The Currency of Secrets - The Legendary Method Actor - NovelsTime

The Legendary Method Actor

Chapter 55: The Currency of Secrets

Author: BabyFlik
updatedAt: 2025-11-18

After securing his contract with Master Elias, Ray woke to a world that was, for the first time, not actively trying to crush him under the weight of poverty. The promise of a weekly stipend was a luxury so profound it felt like a dream, but Ray, ever the pragmatist, knew that dreams didn’t put food on the table. The next payment was still a week away. Although they currently have over five hundred Marks after getting the first weekly stipend from Master Elias he knows that this will be easily consumed if they are not careful. He sat with Rina at their small, rickety table, the early morning light casting long shadows in their spartan room. She had just finished a silent inventory of their meager supplies.

“The stipend from Master Elias is our long-term solution,”

Ray began, his voice a low, serious murmur. His internal committee was already in session, the Scheming Courtier guiding his strategy, the Gritty Detective assessing the risks.

“But our immediate problem is cash flow.”

“We cannot wait a week, we need to act on the other piece of intelligence you gathered.”

Rina nodded, her expression focused. The nervous girl from Greywood was a distant memory; this was an operative receiving her briefing.

“The Arcanum student, Cassian.”

“The commission to organize his research notes.”

“Exactly,”

Ray affirmed.

“It’s a seventy-five Mark task, with a potential bonus.”

“It’s the perfect opportunity, a safe, simple job that will give us our capital a boost to operate and lessen the constant pressure.”

“More importantly, it will give me access to the notes of a senior Arcanum student.”

“That kind of information is priceless, I will prepare your satchel,”

Rina said, her voice full of a quiet, determined competence. There was no question, no hesitation. She was a partner in this, her trust absolute. Their walk to the Student Union was a journey through a sea of whispers. He had thrown a stone into the placid lake of Solhaven Academy, and the ripples were turning into tidal waves. As they crossed the grand lawn, a group of Valor students practicing sword forms fell silent, their movements growing stiff. Ray watched them from the corner of his eye. They didn’t sneer or posture; they simply watched him, their expressions a mixture of fear and hostile curiosity. He heard one of them mutter his new moniker, “Heritic Mage", just loud enough for the wind to carry.

Detective:“They’re like dogs who’ve seen a housecat kill a wolf. They don’t understand it, so they fear it. Good. Fear keeps them at a distance.”

Courtier:

“This status is a double-edged sword. It offers protection from direct physical threats but invites scrutiny from intellectual ones. We must continue to project an image of quiet, harmless scholar.”

As if on cue, Eliza Vance intercepted them near the library steps, her own expression one of friendly amusement.

“Morning, Ray,”

She said, falling into step beside him.

“Enjoying your new celebrity status?”

“I heard a third-year Arcanum student arguing that your light wasn’t Aether-based at all, but a psychic projection given form.”

“It’s the leading theory of the week.”

“I wouldn’t know,”

Ray replied, offering a small, tired smile.

“I don’t listen to gossip.”

“You don’t have to,”

Eliza grinned.

Love this story? Find the genuine version on the author's preferred platform and support their work!

“It follows you around like a lost puppy, just be careful.”

“When people can’t explain something, they tend to either worship it or want to dissect it.”

“I’m not sure which is worse.”

Her warning hung in the air as they entered the Student Union. They found Cassian in a reading lounge, holding court with a small group of admirers. He was tall and slender, with a shock of untamed black hair and the brilliant, distracted eyes of a man who lived more in the world of theory than reality. When his audience dispersed, Ray approached.

“Senior Cassian.”

Cassian looked down, his gaze unfocused before snapping into place.

“Ah you’re him, the prodigy. the ‘Heretic Mage.’”

His expression wasn’t hostile, just filled with pure, academic curiosity.

“Vorlag won’t shut up about you, says you’ve broken his understanding of runic syntax.”

“Fascinating, how did you stabilize the life-force conduit without it extinguishing itself?”

“A secret of my patron, I’m afraid,”

Ray said politely, smoothly sidestepping the question.

“I am here about your commission.”

Cassian blinked, his mind pulled from the arcane back to the mundane.

“My notes, Yes!”

“A dreadful business.”

A flicker of doubt crossed his face.

“You are a child, my work is… advanced.”

“An advanced problem,”

Ray countered, letting the Courtier polish his words,

“often requires a novel perspective. Allow me to review one page.”

He gestured to a messy pile of parchment on the table.

“If I cannot offer you a useful insight into its organization in the first five minutes, I will trouble you no further.”

It was a confident, low-risk gambit. Intrigued, Cassian handed him a page covered in a chaotic web of diagrams and equations. Ray’s mind went to work, Activating two archetypes at the same time the Arcane Scribe and Eccentric Scholar working in perfect harmony.

“Your foundational theory on resonant frequencies is sound,”

Ray said after a moment,

“but your supporting proofs are out of order, this equation here,”

He pointed with a small, steady finger,

“is meant to be the conclusion, but you’ve used it as a premise.”

“If you restructure the argument to build towards this, and pair it with this diagram from the third paragraph, you create a far more linear and defensible argument against the theory of harmonic decay.”

Cassian stared at the page, then back at Ray, his eyes widening in sudden, dawning comprehension.

“By the gods… you’re right. It… it clarifies the entire premise.”

He looked at Ray as if seeing him for the first time, not as a strange magical anomaly, but as a kindred spirit, an island of order in his sea of chaos.

“You’re hired!”

He declared, a broad, relieved grin spreading across his face.

“Seventy-five Marks, and a bonus if you can have it done by the end of the week!”

That night, after a day spent making initial headway on Cassian’s intellectual cyclone, Ray faced his own internal crucible. His muscles screamed from the humiliation of Body Tempering 101, a raw, physical reminder of his fragility. In the darkness of his room, he forced his body into the agonizing “Unmoving Mountain” stance.

He channeled the memory of the day's pain, consciously activating the synergy he had discovered. While the Grizzled Veteran encased his mind in iron, the Serene Cultivator guided the shimmering Aether he drew from the air into the pathways his training had forged. The pain was immense, but it was productive. It was the fire of the forge, burning away weakness.

[CULTIVATION SESSION COMPLETE. SYNERGY BOOST ACTIVE.]

[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: ADEPT]

[MASTERY GAIN: Martial Stances +0.7%, Internal Circulation +2.8%]

[HOST STATUS: +0.02 added to Constitution. Aetheric Leak rate reduced.]

He collapsed in a pool of sweat, his body aching, but his mind filled with a cold, hard satisfaction. The next two days were a blur of focused work. His position with Master Elias granted him access to the restricted senior stacks of the library, a quiet, dusty realm of ancient knowledge where he could work undisturbed.

He sat at a secluded table, Cassian’s chaotic notes spread before him, and began the monumental task of bringing order to a brilliant mind’s chaos. It was a fascinating puzzle. The Arcane Scribe delighted in redrawing the flawed diagrams with perfect precision. The Eccentric Scholar eagerly debated Cassian’s more radical theories in the margins. He was not just organizing; he was learning, absorbing advanced magical theory at a staggering rate.

He was working on a section detailing the academy's own power source, the Genesis Crystal, when he found it. Tucked into a page of complex equations about dimensional stability and arcane resonance was a footnote, a citation for one of Cassian’s arguments. It was a reference to a research paper, one that Cassian had clearly been unable to find himself, judging by the frustrated question mark scribbled next to it. The title of the paper was,

“The Fraying of the Genesis Crystal: A Study of the Resonance Cascade Failure.”

The paper has some words erased, the author’s name was not clear, he can see there was an effort of trying to write it off. Ray uses Scholar and Scribe persona's to try and restore the author's name of the paper.

“Master Thaddeus.”

The name was elegant, powerful. It resonated with an importance that had nothing to do with the text itself. His archetypes reacted instantly.

Detective: “A possible banned paper. A vital topic. An unknown author. This is interesting."

Courtier: "The name carries the weight of a Master of the academy. A man of this stature, writing on such a dangerous topic and it looks like his work was suppressed… this is a mystery indeed.”

Ray stared at the name, his mind racing, connecting the disparate threads. The whispers of a silenced professor. The dangerous talk of containment breaches. The academy’s obsessive secrecy around its power source. And now, a name to anchor it all. Thaddeus, he didn't know who this man was, or what had happened to him. But he knew, with absolute certainty, that he had just found the first ghost in the academy’s pristine, well-ordered machine.

Novel