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The Legendary Method Actor-Chapter 160: Truth and Lies

Chapter 163

The Legendary Method Actor-Chapter 160: Truth and Lies

Darian marched up to the silver wall. His reflection appeared, chest puffed out, arrogant. The wall became solid again.
“Dammit!”
Darian kicked the wall. The reflection kicked back, jarring his foot.
“You have to bow, Darian,”
Ray called out from the other side, his voice echoing.
“You have to yield.”
Darian turned purple.
“I yield to no one!”
“Then you stay there, the clock is ticking.”
Eliza said.
It took two full minutes of cursing and pacing before Darian finally, gritting his teeth so hard Ray could hear it, offered a stiff, jerky bow to his own reflection. The wall opened. The Ramsey brothers followed suit, looking sheepish.
Team SIS stumbled into the antechamber, looking battered and humiliated. Darian brushed past Ray, refusing to make eye contact, his armor still smoking faintly from his own reflected spell.
“Let’s go,”
Darian growled, heading for the heavy iron door at the far end of the room.
“We wasted enough time on your parlor tricks.”
Ray watched him go, his expression impassive.
Courtier: “He is wounded. His pride is bruised. He will be desperate to reassert dominance in the next trial. Expect recklessness.”
Ray turned to Eliza, giving her a small nod. They fell into step behind the hulking Valor students.
Ray’s mind drifted to Rina’s .
Three clues. They had passed the Mirror. That was one down.
Scholar: “Next on the list: ‘Ancient Golems with runes on their chests.’ Rina’s intel was specific. We should expect constructs.”
High above the labyrinth, in the cool, velvet-draped darkness of the Observation Deck, the air hummed with the soft drone of scrying crystals.
A dozen large, floating panes of magical glass displayed the progress of the various squads. Most showed scenes of frantic spellcasting or brute-force combat. But the central pane, the largest of them all, was fixed on the squad that had just cleared the ‘Reflective Gate.’
Master Osmin Nobeos, the Head of Runic Inscription, let out a sound that was half-sigh, half-sneer. He adjusted his pristine robes, his hawkish face twisted in distaste as he watched Darian Varrus pick himself up from the floor, smoke rising from his exquisitely crafted, and now scorched, breastplate.
“Grotesque,”
Osmin muttered, his voice dry as dust.
“Did you see that gauntlet? A Star-Ruby Capacitor. That is a tool meant for a siege mage, not a first-year Initiate. The boy is walking around with equipment way above his level, and he uses it to launch a 2nd-Circle Flaming Sphere at a mirror.”
He shook his head, offended by the lack of artistry.
“The Varrus line was once known for tactical discipline. That boy fights like a drunk in a tavern. It is the height of vulgarity. He is an Initiate trying to wear the skin of an Archmage. It is like watching a toddler try to wield a greatsword.”
To his left, slumped deep into a plush armchair with his straw hat pulled low, Master Caleb Zipkin gave a noncommittal grunt. He had a half-eaten apple in one hand and looked for all the world like he was watching a boring play.
“He’s young,”
Caleb drawled, taking a bite.
“Youth and Destructive spells. It’s a classic combination. Usually it cures itself after the first few burns. He thinks the gear makes a spellsword. He just blew up an expensive enchantment to open a door, and the door hit him back. That’s not combat; that’s just bad economics.”
Caleb pointed a lazy finger at the screen, where Darian was shouting at his teammates.
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“He lacks finesse,”
Osmin agreed sharply.
“And his leadership is nonexistent. He commands with volume and expensive toys, not authority.”
On the screen, the image shifted. Ray Croft stepped forward. He didn't activate a gauntlet. He didn't draw a weapon. He simply bowed.
The room went quiet as the silver liquid parted.
Headmaster Salome Andrade leaned forward, her emerald eyes narrowing as she watched the small boy guide his team through the barrier. Her expression was unreadable, a mask of cold calculation.
“A parlor trick,”
Osmin dismissed, though his voice lacked its earlier venom.
“Philosophical nonsense. But… admittedly cleaner than the Varrus boy’s attempt.”
“I don’t know,”
Caleb said, tossing his apple core into a waste bin with a lazy flick of his wrist.
“I call it efficiency.”
Osmin turned to glare at him.
“Efficiency?”
“Look at the result,”
Caleb said, shifting his hat to peek at the screen with one eye.
“Varrus spent a fortune in mana gems and durability to fail. Croft spent… what? Three seconds? And zero mana. That’s good resource management. Smart.”
“It is passive,”
Osmin argued.
“The academy trains mages, Master Zipkin, not courtiers.”
“The academy trains survivors,”
Headmaster Andrade cut in, her voice silencing the two men instantly.
She picked up a stylus and made a precise mark on the slate hovering before her.
“Look at the squad,”
she said, pointing to the image.
“Initiate Varrus is shouting orders, but look at who they are following. Look at who Initiate Vance looks to for confirmation. Look at who the Ramsey brothers are watching.”
On the screen, Darian was storming ahead, but the team’s formation had subtly shifted. They were checking Ray’s position before moving.
“Varrus has the title and the equipment,”
Andrade noted coolly.
“But Croft has the command. He solved the puzzle. He secured passage. Leadership is not about who has the shiniest sword, it is about who gets the squad through the door.”
She sat back, her gaze lingering on Ray’s image.
“However, clever tricks will only carry him so far. The next chamber does not respond to politeness.”
She said with a note of warning in her voice.
On the screen, the heavy iron door slammed shut behind Team Chimera and Team SIS, sealing them inside the black obsidian room of the Second Trial. The red and blue lights of the Golems flared to life.
Caleb Zipkin leaned forward slightly, the laziness dropping from his posture for just a fraction of a second. He knew this test. It was a logic puzzle. A test of intellect, not power, and certainly not one you could buy your way out of.
This is his playground,
Caleb thought, a hint of a smirk touching his lips.
Don’t disappoint me, kid.
“The Trial of the Runic Censors,”
Andrade announced softly.
“Let us see if his mind is as sharp as his manners.”
Darian reached the heavy iron door at the end of the antechamber. He didn't check for traps; he simply shoved it open with a grunt of exertion.
They stepped through into a vast, circular chamber carved from dark, seamless obsidian. The ceiling was lost in the shadow high above. The moment the last member of the squad stepped across the threshold, the heavy iron door slammed shut behind them with a deafening
CLANG
, sealing seamlessly into the wall as if it had never existed.
The only light in the room came from two imposing figures standing on opposite sides of a central dais.
They were Golems. Massive, ten-foot-tall constructs of stone and metal, standing silent and motionless.
The one on the left began to glow with a deep, ominous Red light, runes flaring to life across its chest.
The one on the right hummed with a cold, piercing Blue light, identical runes etching themselves across its stone surface.
Ray’s eyes narrowed. Rina’s second clue had just stepped out of the shadows.
Veteran: “Contacts front. Two heavies. Color-coded. This isn't a fight, kid. It's a game.”
Darian hefted his mace, looking from the Red Golem to the Blue one, a savage grin returning to his face.
“Finally,”
Darian spat, cracking his neck.
“Something I can hit.”
Darien pointed his mace at the Red Golem.
“Kogar, take the Red one. Kima, flank the Blue. I’ll drive to the center. We smash them into gravel and the door opens.”
“Wait,”
Ray said, his voice sharp.
Darian whipped around, his patience gone.
“Shut up, Croft. You had your moment at the gate. This is combat. This is my world.”
“It’s not combat,”
Ray warned, pointing at the glowing chests of the constructs.
“Look at the runes. They aren't defensive wards; they’re syntax. This ‘Golems with runes are locks.’ If you smash the lock, the door stays sealed forever.”
Before Darian could argue, a disembodied voice, magically amplified and devoid of emotion, filled the chamber, echoing from the obsidian walls.
“Welcome to the Trial of the Runic Censors.”
The air in the center of the room shimmered. A circle of light appeared on the floor in front of the dais, large enough for only one person.
“Five souls. Five judgments.”
A monotonous voice intoned.
“One by one, you must stand before the Censors. Speak a Falsehood, and the Red Censor shall claim you. Speak a Truth, and the Blue Censor shall claim you. To pass, you must remain free.”
Darian blinked, processing the words.
“That’s it? Speak and be claimed?”
He let out a bark of laughter.
“It’s a loyalty test,”
Darian declared, his confidence surging back.
“Blue is the color of Truth, it is the virtue of a knight. Being ‘claimed’ by the Blue Censor means being accepted.”
He shoved past Ray, marching toward the circle.
“Watch and learn, Croft. This is how a leader steps up.”
Darian stepped into the circle. He puffed out his chest, the scorched metal of his armor glinting in the blue light. He looked directly at the Blue Golem.
“I am Darian Varrus!”
He shouted, his voice ringing with pride.
“And I fear nothing!”
It was a statement of absolute conviction. It was, in his mind, the Truth.
The Blue Golem roared to life. Its eyes flared with blinding azure light. It raised a massive stone hand.
Darian grinned, waiting for the door to open.
ZHOOM.
A beam of blue light shot from the Golem’s palm. It didn't open the door. It struck Darian in the chest.
Darian’s grin vanished. The light hardened instantly into a translucent, crystalline prison. In the blink of an eye, the leader of Team SIS was encased in a block of blue stasis crystal, frozen mid-gloating, looking like a fly trapped in amber.


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Chapter 160: Truth and Lies

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