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The Legendary Method Actor-Chapter 164: The Fury of the Indebted

Chapter 167

The Legendary Method Actor-Chapter 164: The Fury of the Indebted

The sound of Darian’s armored boots scuffing the floor broke Ray’s concentration.
Ray turned, his eyes unfocused, still cycling through variables. He saw Darian looming over the pedestal, reaching out for one of the heavy Runic Chisels.
“It’s a demolition job,”
Darian said. His voice wasn't arrogant this time. It was respectful, but thick with an eager, nervous energy.
“You handled the thinking, Croft. That’s your strength. But this? Breaking things? Let us handle the heavy lifting. I can smash these walls.”
Ray blinked, the Eccentric Scholar trying to process the intrusion.
“Wait, Darian. The riddle isn’t binary. ‘Not ahead’ implies direction, but the mechanism seems too obvious. If we strike the wrong wall…”
“We don’t have time to debate philosophy,”
Darian interrupted, his hand closing around the cold iron of the chisel.
“We have a time limit. If it’s not ahead, then it’s the flanks. Standard breach protocol. I’ll take the North.”
He hefted the tool, testing its weight. It felt good in his hand. Simple. Direct. A problem he could solve with muscle.
Ray’s Gritty Detective screamed in his mind.
Detective: “Trap! It’s too clean! The academy doesn’t put the solution on a pedestal for you to pick up! The chisels are the bait! A room with no monsters is the most dangerous room of all!”
“Darian, stop!”
Ray warned, his voice sharpening into a command. He stepped forward, reaching out.
“Don’t touch the walls yet! We need to analyze the mana flow! It could be a structural collapse trigger!”
Darian looked at Ray. He saw the hesitation. He saw the caution. And in his desperate, bruised ego, he interpreted it as paralysis.
He’s freezing up,
Darian told himself.
He’s scared of making the wrong choice. I have to act. I have to show him I’m valuable.
“I’ve got this, Ray,”
Darian said, a forced, desperate grin stretching across his soot-stained face.
“You did the thinking. Let me be the muscle.”
He didn't wait for permission. He didn't wait for Ray to finish his sentence.
Darian turned to the North Wall. He activated the rune on his gauntlets, enhancing his strength. He roared, swinging the Runic Chisel with all the power of a boy trying to reclaim his own heroism.
He drove the tip of the chisel into the center of the glowing ‘Break Point’ rune.
CLANG.
The sound wasn't the crumbling of stone. It was the chime of a triggered bell, deep, resonant, and terrifying.
The chisel sank an inch into the wall, and then stopped, vibrating violently in Darian’s grip.
The runes on the North Wall didn't break. They didn't fade. They flared a deep, angry orange, the universal color of hazard.
“See?”
Darian grinned breathlessly, stepping back, expecting the wall to collapse into a tunnel.
“Path clear. It just needed a little force.”
The stone began to dissolve. But it didn't crumble into rubble. It sublimated into a thick, sulfurous mist that poured out of the wall like smoke from a dragon’s nostrils.
The temperature in the room spiked instantly. It went from cool and dry to blistering in a heartbeat.
Unauthorized usage: this narrative is on Amazon without the author's consent. any sightings.
Ray felt the heat wash over him, instantly drying the sweat on his face.
Scholar: “Thermal spike detected. Ambient temperature increasing by fifty degrees per second. That is not a hallway. That is a rift.”
“Back!”
Ray shouted, grabbing Eliza and pulling her behind him.
“Darian, get back!”
Darian froze. The grin faltered. The mist swirled, glowing with an internal magma light. It didn't reveal a way out. It revealed a massive, complex Summoning Circle etched into the floor of a hidden alcove, a circle that was already spinning.
WHOOSH.
A pillar of fire erupted from the circle, reaching the ceiling. The shockwave of heat singed Darian’s eyebrows.
From the flames, a nightmare stepped out.
It stood twelve feet tall, broad as a siege tower. Its body was composed of jagged, floating plates of black obsidian, held together not by muscle or tendon, but by a core of roiling, liquid magma. The heat radiating from it was intense enough to distort the air in the room.
In its right hand, it held a tower shield made of black iron that hissed as magma dripped onto it. In its left, it gripped a spear tipped with white-hot metal.
A Magma-Core Centurion.
The construct turned its helmetless head toward them. Two eyes of burning blue fire flared to life in the obsidian slag of its face.
Darian’s chisel slipped from his numb fingers, clattering to the floor.
“I… I thought it was the side… I thought…”
Darian stammered, backing away, his shield raised instinctively.
The Centurion roared. It wasn't a vocal sound; it was the sound of tectonic plates grinding together, a bass rumble that shook dust from the ceiling.
It locked its burning gaze on the boy who had summoned it.
The Centurion moved. For something made of stone and lava, it was terrifyingly fast. It didn't walk; it surged, leaving footprints of molten slag on the floor.
It charged Darian.
“Darian! Move!”
Kogar screamed in horror.
Darian couldn't move. The heat coming off the creature was a physical weight, pressing him down. He barely had time to brace his feet and raise his enchanted shield before the monster was on him.
Ray stood at the back of the room. Time seemed to slow down.
His internal committee was screaming.
Detective: “If Darian is incapacitated, we fail the Leadership criteria. The Scenario ends here.”
Veteran: “The unit is broken. You have a choice, kid. Maintain cover and lose, or break cover and save the mission.”
Ray didn't hesitate. He moved.
He sprinted toward the center of the room, his eyes locked on Kogar, who was standing frozen ten feet away from Darian, clutching his tower shield in terror.
“Shield!”
Ray roared, his voice cracking with urgency.
Kogar blinked, startled out of his paralysis. Before he could process the command, Ray was there. Ray grabbed the rim of the massive tower shield. With a heave that should have been impossible for a scholar of his size, Ray ripped the heavy steel slab from the larger boy’s grip.
Ray didn't stop. With the shield which was nearly as tall as he equipped it and threw himself between the Golem and Darian.
The Centurion didn't stab. It swung the spear like a club, a sweeping blow meant to clear the board.
The Eccentric Scholar flashed a warning in red text across Ray's mind.
Scholar: “Force calculation: 4,000 Newtons. Mass differential is critical. Direct opposition will result in skeletal fragmentation and total crush syndrome. You cannot stop this object.”
Veteran: “We don’t stop it. We turn it. Do not brace flat! Angle the shield forty-five degrees upward! Turn the kinetic energy into the floor! RIDE THE SHOCKWAVE!”
Then the Grizzled Veteran provided the tactical solution.
Ray followed the instruction by instinct. He planted his feet and slammed the shield into the floor at a sharp slant, bracing his shoulder against the steel, to turn his body into an immovable frame.
CRASH.
The impact was cataclysmic.
The white-hot spear slammed into the angled shield. Sparks showered the room like fireworks. For a microsecond, the Golem met resistance that felt like hitting a mountain. Ray’s muscles coiled, absorbing a shock that would have liquefied a normal human’s internal organs.
He held. He felt the terrifying weight, the heat, the raw power of the construct. The Veteran was right, the angle forced the spear to slide down the face of the shield, driving the force into the obsidian floor rather than through Ray’s body.
Courtier: “Too strong! You’re holding too well! Let go! You have to look human!”
Ray realized his mistake. He was standing firm against a blow that would have swatted Darian Varrus like a fly.
Ray adjusted instantly. He relaxed his legs. He let the remaining kinetic energy wash through him. He allowed physics to take over.
WHAM.
Ray was launched backward. It looked like a brutal, uncontrolled impact, but it was a calculated exit. He flew ten feet, tumbling through the air, and landed hard next to Darian, rolling to disperse the force.
The shield, now bent almost in half and glowing red from the heat, clattered to the floor, spinning like a dropped coin.
Ray lay there for a second, grimacing. He wasn't hurt, his durability was too high, but he had to sell the damage. He coughed, clutching his ribs, feigning a wheeze.
Darian opened his eyes. He looked at the smoking Centurion, which was stumbling slightly from having its strike deflected. Then he looked at the bent shield. Finally, he looked at the small, golden-haired boy lying beside him, gasping for air.
Darian’s eyes went wide.
“You…”
Darian wheezed, blood trickling from his nose.
“You blocked it.”
“Deflected,”
Ray corrected through gritted teeth, pushing himself up to a kneeling position.
The Centurion roared again, recovering its balance. It turned toward them, raising the spear for a second strike.
Ray grabbed Darian’s collar.
“Get up, Darian!”
Ray shouted, shaking him.
“I can’t take another one! Form the line!”
The fear in Darian’s eyes vanished, replaced by something harder. Something loyal. The ‘leader’ had just thrown himself in front of a train to save him.
Darian roared, surging to his feet despite his injuries.
“KOGAR, KIMA!”
Darian bellowed, his voice filled with the fury of the indebted.
“GET YOUR ASSESS OVER HERE! SHIELD WALL! NOW!”


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Chapter 164: The Fury of the Indebted

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