The Legendary Method Actor-Chapter 161: Five Words to Victory
“BOSS!”
Kogar yelled, raising his shield.
The Ramsey brothers panicked. They watched their invincible leader get turned into a statue in a split second.
“He told the truth!”
Kogar shouted, turning to Ray.
“He said his name and the Blue thing got him! It’s a trap!”
“It’s not a trap,”
Ray said calmly, his eyes scanning the frozen Darian.
“The rules were literal. ‘Claim’ didn't mean accept. It meant capture. Truth triggers Blue. Falsehood triggers Red.”
“Then we lie!”
Kogar yelled. He ran into the circle, terrified but determined. He looked at the Blue Golem, sweating profusely.
“I… I am not afraid!”
Kogar stammered.
It was a lie. He was terrified.
The Red Golem roared to life. A beam of crimson light shot out.
ZHOOM.
Kogar was instantly encased in a block of red crystal, his face frozen in a mask of panic.
Kima, the younger brother, stared at the two statues. He backed away, shaking his head.
“I’m not saying anything,”
Kima whispered.
“I won’t speak. If I don’t speak, they can’t claim me.”
He stepped into the circle and clamped his mouth shut, crossing his arms.
The seconds ticked by. The Golems waited.
Then, a voice devoid of emotion boomed.
“Silence is a deception of the void.”
The Red Golem fired.
ZHOOM.
Kima joined his brother, encased in red crystal.
Three down. Two left.
Eliza Vance stepped forward, her face pale but her eyes sharp with calculation. She looked at Ray.
“It’s a binary trap,”
she whispered.
“Every objective statement is either True or False. If I say ‘The sky is blue,’ the Blue one gets me. If I say ‘The sky is green,’ the Red one gets me. There is no winning move.”
“There is always a move,”
Ray said.
“But you have to stop playing by their rules.”
Eliza shook her head.
“No. I can outsmart the rules. Truth and Falsehood are absolute, but ‘belief’ is subjective. If I state a subjective opinion, it cannot be proven true or false.”
She stepped into the circle. She took a deep breath, composing herself like a diplomat.
“I believe that we have the capacity to pass this trial.”
Eliza announced clearly.
She waited.
The Red Golem activated.
To a machine logic, a statement is evaluated on its factual basis at the moment. Had they passed the trial? No. Therefore, the statement was false.
ZHOOM.
Eliza gasped as the red light hit her. She was frozen instantly, her hand half-raised in protest.
Ray stood alone in the center of the obsidian chamber. He was surrounded by four crystal statues, his entire team, captured by the binary logic of the ancient machine.
The silence in the room was heavy. The hum of the Golems seemed to deepen, waiting for the final victim.
“One soul remains.”
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A detached voice echoed.
“Speak, or be claimed by the silence.”
Ray walked to the edge of the circle. He didn't step in yet. He looked at the Red Golem, then the Blue.
His internal committee was running hot.
Scholar: “Analysis confirmed. These are not sentient beings. They are Logic Engines. Simple binary processors. If Input A (Truth), then Output B (Blue Bind). If Input C (Lie), then Output D (Red Bind).”
Detective: “Eliza tried to argue philosophy with a calculator. You saw what happened. You can’t persuade a machine. You can’t trick it with nuance.”
Veteran: “So we fight? No. We’re alone. If we draw a weapon, they both fire. Game over.”
Conman: “If you can’t win the game, you flip the table. We need an input that isn't A or C. We need something that crashes the system.”
Ray took a deep breath. He adjusted the strap of his glove. He looked small standing before the massive stone constructs, but his posture was relaxed.
He now knew the answer. It wasn't about being smart; it was about being impossible.
He stepped into the circle.
The Golems turned their stone heads toward him. The lights on their chests flared, Red and Blue, waiting to judge his words.
Ray looked directly at the Red Golem, the construct designed to bind Liars.
He spoke clearly, his voice echoing in the silent chamber.
“I will be bound by the Red Censor.”
The room seemed to freeze.
The Red Golem’s processor engaged. It analyzed the statement.
Is this a lie?
Currently, Ray is free. Therefore, the statement ‘I will be bound’ was factually false at that moment. It was a lie. The Red Golem roared to life, raising its hand to bind the liar.
CLUNK.
But the instant the Red Golem moved to bind him, the statement, ‘I will be bound by the Red Censor,’ became the Truth.
The Red Golem froze in mid-motion. Its internal logic gate slammed shut. It could not bind someone who had spoken the truth. The red light flickered and died.
The Blue Golem’s processor engaged.
Is this the truth?
Since the Red Golem had stopped, the statement was technically true he
would
be bound if it continued. The Blue Golem roared to life. It was the Blue Censor’s job to bind those who spoke the Truth. It raised its hand.
CLUNK.
But the instant the Blue Golem moved to bind him, the statement, ‘I will be bound by the
Red
Censor,’ became a Lie.
The Blue Golem froze. It could not bind a liar.
The Red Golem reactivated.
Lie.
It stepped.
True.
It froze.
The Blue Golem reactivated.
True.
It stepped.
Lie.
It froze.
The two constructs began to jerk back and forth, their massive stone limbs twitching in a violent, staccato rhythm. The lights on their chests strobed wildly, shifting from Red to Blue to Red in milliseconds.
The magical hum in the room rose to a piercing, mechanical whine. The system was trapped in an infinite feedback loop, processing thousands of contradictions per second.
Detective: “They’re crashing. The logic core is overheating.”
ZZZ-CRACK.
A loud, electrical snap echoed through the chamber, smelling sharply of ozone. Sparks showered from the chest of the Red Golem.
With a groan of grinding stone, both Golems powered down. Their lights died. Their arms slumped to their sides, lifeless.
CRASH. CRASH. CRASH. CRASH.
The stasis crystals holding the squad shattered simultaneously, dissolving into motes of light.
Darian, Eliza, and the Ramsey brothers fell to the floor, gasping for air as they were released from the suspension.
Across the room, the heavy iron exit door unsealed. A bright green rune flared above it: TRIAL COMPLETE.
Darian scrambled to his feet, his mace clattering on the stone. He looked around wildly, expecting to see the Golems attacking.
Instead, he saw Ray standing calmly in the center of the circle, dusting off his tunic.
“What…”
Darian wheezed, looking at the deactivated constructs.
“What happened? Why aren't we frozen?”
Eliza pulled herself up, rubbing her arms. She looked at the Golems, then at Ray, her eyes widening as the realization hit her.
“The Paradox,”
she whispered.
“You fed it a self-referential paradox. If it binds you, it’s wrong. If it doesn’t bind you, it’s wrong.”
“Logic is a mechanic,”
Ray said simply.
“Just like a gear. If you throw a wrench in it, it stops.”
He walked over and offered a hand to Kima, pulling the stunned brute to his feet.
The silence in the room was profound. Team SIS wasn't mocking him anymore. The Ramsey brothers looked at Ray with a mix of fear and awe. Darian looked at his scorched armor, then at the small boy who had just dismantled a magical trap with a single sentence.
The arrogance was gone from Darian’s face, replaced by a wary, grudging respect. He realized that his brute force had failed. Eliza’s rhetoric had failed. Only the Engineer had worked.
Ray didn't wait for a thank you. He turned toward the open door.
“Two down,”
Ray said.
“Let’s go. We’re losing time.”
He walked toward the exit.
This time, Darian Varrus didn't shove his way to the front. He hesitated, glanced at his men, and then fell into line behind Ray.
Meanwhile, in the Grand Amphitheater…
A hush fell over the thousands of spectators seated in the tiered stone rows. Above the arena floor, the massive central crystalline screen broadcast the crisp audio of Ray’s voice echoing through the Censor Chamber.
This statement is False.
The crowd watched, expecting the Golems to simply step aside, the standard victory condition.
Instead, the massive constructs began to shudder. The runes on their chests flared violently, cycling between Red and Blue so fast they blurred into violet. With a sound like grinding gears, the Golems collapsed into piles of inert stone.
In the section reserved for the failed Initiates, Baylor, a Valor student who did not get a chance to participate in the ‘Scenario’ part of the promotion trials, stared up at the image, his mouth open.
“I don't understand,”
Baylor muttered, leaning forward.
“The others said both false and true statements at those things and got frozen. He whispers five words and they… die?”
Beside him, a second-year Statecraft student lowered his binoculars, his expression pale.
“He didn't just answer the riddle,”
the older student whispered, awe creeping into his voice.
“He fed them a logical recursion loop. He attacked the enchantment’s syntax directly.”
“Syntax?”
Baylor frowned.
“So it was a spell?”
“No,”
the Statecraft student said, shaking his head slowly.
“It was just logic. But he wielded it like a warhammer.”
“Who is that kid?”
a noble asked his wife.
“That,”
a nearby Arcanum master replied grimly,
“is the anomaly.”
The murmur spread through the crowd. They realized they weren't watching a student take a test. They were watching an execution.
Team Chimera and Team SIS moved into the final corridor.
Ray checked his mental inventory. They had solved the Mirror. They had solved the Censors. Rina’s intel has been useful so far.
But as they approached the final door, Ray felt a chill.
The third trial. The Chamber of Perspective.
Rina had given no specific intel on this room. All she had said was that there was a hidden room somewhere near the start. But the mechanics of the final test? They were flying blind.
Scholar: “We are entering the variable phase. No data. No map. Just the prompt: ‘Creative Problem Solving.’”
Ray stepped through the doorway, ready to face whatever the First Sage had left for them.
Chapter 161: Five Words to Victory
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