The Legendary Method Actor-Chapter 152: Override Protocol
The Great Hall of Solhaven Academy was a cauldron of noise and tension. It was the final hour of registration for the Promotion Trials, and the air was thick with the smell of nervous sweat, polished armor, and the ozone tang of anxious magic.
Students from all three colleges milled about in tight clusters. The Valor students were loud, clashing training swords and boasting about their formations. The Arcanum students were huddled in circles, whispering over spellbooks. The Statecraft students moved like sharks, assessing the competition with cold, calculating eyes.
Ray stood at the edge of the hall, flanked by Eliza and Cassian. They were an odd trio, drawing stares from every direction. Cassian, the disheveled senior, looked like he hadn't slept in a week, clutching a sheaf of paperwork like a shield. Eliza stood with her arms crossed, her expression cool and challenging, her
Lie Detection
skill likely working overtime as she scanned the room. And Ray… Ray stood in the middle, small and quiet, the golden streaks in his hair catching the light from the chandeliers.
“I hate this part,”
Cassian muttered, adjusting his glasses.
“The bureaucracy. It’s always the bureaucracy that kills you.”
“We already registered via the Medallions,”
Eliza said, eyeing the long line at the Registrar's desk.
“Why are we doing this in person?”
“Because of the Scenario,”
Cassian explained, his voice low.
“The default setting for the Trials is ‘Randomized Squads.’
It tests adaptability. If you want to fight together, you have to file a ‘Unit Cohesion Waiver’ in person. Otherwise, the system might pair Ray with a random initiate and you with… well, him.”
Cassian nodded toward the far end of the hall.
Blocking the path to the Registrar’s desk like a boulder in a stream was Darian Varrus.
The bully had grown over the year. He was thicker, broader, his chest puffing out the silver-trimmed tunic of a top-tier Valor initiate. He wasn't alone. He was flanked by two other boys, massive, hulking students who looked like they had been carved out of granite. They were laughing loudly, their eyes scanning the crowd for victims.
When Darian saw Ray, his laughter cut off. A sneer, practiced and cruel, spread across his face. He nudged his companions, and the three of them turned, forming a wall of muscle between Ray and the desk.
“Well, well,”
Darian called out, his voice carrying over the din of the hall.
“If it isn’t the ‘Heretic.’ And he brought his nursemaid and the crazy senior.”
The hall quieted. Conversations died down. The students of Solhaven loved a spectacle, and Ray Croft was always a spectacle.
Ray felt Eliza tense beside him. Through the Resonant Link, he felt a spike of hot, sharp anger from her, a desire to lash out, to verbally eviscerate Darian with a witty retort.
He’s pathetic. I can see the insecurity radiating off him like heat. Let me shut him up.
Ray sent a pulse of calm back through the link, his own mind cool and detached.
No. Hold. Let him talk. He’s giving us data.
Ray stepped forward, his face a mask of polite confusion.
“Hello, Darian. I see you’ve found… large friends.”
Darian bristled, stepping closer until he loomed over Ray.
“They’re my squad, Croft. Real warriors. Not like your little… circus troupe.”
He gestured at Ray’s left hand, where the ‘Theorist’s Glove’ was visible, its intricate silver wiring glinting in the lamp light.
“What is this? A toy??”
The story has been taken without consent; if you see it on Amazon, the incident.
Darian mocked, leaning down. He didn't know what the glove did, but to him, any mage who needed a prop was a failure.
“What’s that supposed to be? A fancy gauntlet to help you hold a quill? Or is that how the ‘Undeclared Scholar’ pretends to be a real mage?”
One of Darian’s goons snickered.
“Maybe he needs it to keep his hand from shaking.”
Eliza opened her mouth, her eyes flashing dangerous, but Ray cut her off with a subtle hand gesture. He looked up at Darian, the Scheming Courtier reacted in his Ambient Presence.
Courtier: “He wants a fight. He wants to prove he’s dominant. Deny him the conflict, but assert superiority through pity. It’s the most damaging social weapon.”
“I am glad you are confident, Darian,”
Ray said, his voice sincere and soft.
“The trials are dangerous. It is good that you have found people… strong enough to carry you.”
The insult was so polite, so gently delivered, that it took Darian a full three seconds to process it. By the time his face flushed red, Ray had already sidestepped him.
“Excuse us,”
Ray said, moving past the wall of muscle.
“We have paperwork to file.”
Darian spun around, his hand dropping to his sword hilt.
“You think you’re clever, Croft? You think you’re special because you hid in a tower all year? In the Scenario, there’s no walls to hide behind. It’s just power. And you’re empty.”
Ray didn’t turn back. He kept walking, Eliza and Cassian falling in step beside him.
“That was… restrained,”
Cassian whispered, sounding relieved.
“He’s a brute,”
Ray replied quietly.
“A brute force weapon without a purpose. He’ll break himself against the first puzzle he can’t punch.”
They reached the Registrar’s desk. The clerk, a bored-looking woman with ink-stained fingers, didn't look up.
“Team name?”
she droned, her quill hovering over the parchment.
“We are filing a Unit Cohesion Waiver,”
Cassian said, stepping forward.
“Initiates Croft and Vance. I am acting as their Senior Sponsor.”
The clerk sighed, finally looking up.
“First-years are not permitted to pre-form squads for the Scenario. It violates the adaptability criteria. Unless you have a faculty endorsement.”
“We do,”
Ray said. He reached into his pocket and produced the crumpled, slightly sticky parchment Caleb had signed that morning.
He placed it on the desk.
The clerk picked it up by the corner, her nose wrinkling.
“Is this… boysenberry jam?”
She scanned the signature at the bottom. Her eyes widened.
“Master Zipkin?”
she asked, incredulous.
“Caleb Zipkin signed this? He hasn’t sponsored a student in many years. He probably wouldn't even sponsor himself to get out of bed.”
“He takes a… special interest in my education,”
Ray said, keeping his face straight.
“It’s valid,”
the clerk muttered, clearly baffled.
“But it’s irregular. A single faculty sponsor usually isn’t enough to override the randomization protocol for a two-person team of Initiates. You need a Department Head’s approval to finalize a fixed squad roster.”
She pushed the paper back.
“Without a second signature from a Chair, I can’t process this.”
Ray didn’t reach for the paper. He stood perfectly still, his hand in his pocket brushing against the cool metal of the Custodian’s Crest. He didn't pull it out. That would be clumsy.
Instead, he focused his will.
System… interface with the Academy Administrative Network via the Custodian Crest. Authorize ‘Unit Cohesion Waiver’ for Initiate Croft and Vance. Authorization Code: Special Research Fellow. Mask the source as ‘Classified Department Head Approval’.
A cool blue notification bloomed in his mind.
[NETWORK INTERFACE ACTIVE...]
[AUTHORIZATION SENT. SOURCE MASKED.]
[STATUS: APPROVED.]
Ray looked at the clerk, his expression polite but firm.
“Please check your registry slate again, ma’am,”
Ray said softly.
“I believe a second sponsorship was filed… electronically. Just moments ago.”
The clerk frowned, annoyed.
“I just checked, there was nothing…”
She glanced down at the glowing crystal slate on her desk. A new line of text had appeared, pulsing with a high-level gold command sigil.
[WAIVER APPROVED.]
[AUTHORITY: CLASSIFIED - GENESIS PROJECT DIRECTORATE.]
[MANDATORY UNIT INTEGRITY CONFIRMED.]
The clerk’s jaw dropped. She looked at the slate, then at Ray. The authorization level on her screen was higher than anything she usually saw, higher than Master Vorlag it was on the same level as Master Osmin. It was a command that came from the very top of the academy’s hierarchy.
She swallowed hard, her boredom vanishing instantly. She didn’t ask questions. When an order came down with that kind of clearance, you simply obeyed.
“I… I see,”
she stammered.
“The registry has… updated. Everything seems to be in order.”
She stamped the paper.
THUD.
“Team Name?”
she asked, her voice shaking slightly.
Ray looked at the form. He thought about their group, a disparate collection of outcasts, liars, and secret geniuses. A mixture of parts that shouldn't work together, but somehow created a monster.
“Team Chimera,”
Ray said firmly.
The clerk recorded it.
“Team Chimera is now registered.”
As Ray turned away, he felt a sudden, heavy pressure on the back of his neck. It was the sensation of being watched, not by a student, and not by a spy. It was heavier.
He didn't turn. He activated the Gritty Detective’s ‘Observation’ skill, expanding his senses upward.
High above, on the viewing balcony overlooking the hall, two figures stood in the shadows. One was Headmaster Andrade, her aura a controlled storm of emerald light. The other was Master Osmin, his presence sharp and critical. They were watching him. They knew exactly who had sent that digital authorization.
Veteran: “The brass is watching. They expect a show.”
Conman: “Then let’s give ‘em one.”
Ray turned to his team.
“It’s done,”
he said.
“We’re in.”
Eliza let out a breath she seemed to have been holding.
“Team Chimera,”
she mused, a small, sharp smile playing on her lips.
“I like it. It sounds… unpredictable.”
“It sounds dangerous,”
Cassian corrected, looking at the stamped form as if it were a death warrant.
“It is,”
Ray said, his eyes distant, already running the simulations for the fight against the unknown.
“But so are we.”
.
!
Chapter 152: Override Protocol
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