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The Legendary Method Actor

Chapter 12: The Quiet Work

Chapter 12: The Quiet Work

Aug 17, 2025

The days that followed the system’s return bled into one another, each a perfect copy of the last, painted in shades of grey stone and quiet suspicion. Ray’s world had shrunk to the size of his bedroom, the adjoining library, and the small, walled garden where his mother insisted he take the air for his "health". He was a prisoner in his own home, serving a sentence for a crime no one could prove he’d committed. The role of the "frail, simple child" was one he inhabited with the weary professionalism of a seasoned actor on a long-running, soul-crushing play. He smiled wanly when his mother fretted, looked down with appropriate timidity when his father’s cold gaze swept over him, and ignored Corbin’s venomous whispers with a practiced air of childish oblivion. Inside, however, a quiet revolution was taking place.

The roaring void in his mind had been replaced by the steady, comforting hum of the 'Cognitive Aegis.' The fear and panic of the previous week had receded, replaced by a cold, hard determination. His father had been right about one thing: his survival depended on how well he played his part. But Ray knew something his father didn't. The greatest actors don't just play their part; they use the quiet moments backstage to prepare for the next, more demanding scene. His confinement was not a prison; it was a rehearsal space.

He began his training on a damp, overcast afternoon, with the rhythmic drip of rain outside his window providing a somber beat. His father and Corbin were occupied with a visiting steward, and his mother was resting. He had the room to himself.

Objective one: The body is a liability. 

He thought, his internal monologue crisp and clear. 

The system can provide the knowledge, but this nine-year-old frame is the instrument, and it is awfully weak and woefully out of tune.

He stood in the center of the room, closed his eyes, and activated Partial Immersion with The Grizzled Veteran.

The cool buffer of the Cognitive Aegis worked perfectly. There was no headache, only the familiar sensation of a second consciousness layering over his own. A voice, rough as whetstone and smelling faintly of cheap ale and old leather, grumbled in his head.

“Alright, you mewling kitten, you want to learn how to stand without falling over? First lesson: the ground is your mother, love her, but don't trust her to catch you! Find your center!"

Ray, dressed in a simple linen shirt and breeches, attempted to spread his feet into the basic horse stance the Veteran was projecting into his mind. His short, chubby legs began to tremble almost immediately.

“Pathetic,” 

The Veteran grumbled. 

“My grandmother could hold a better stance, and she's been dead for twenty years. Lower! Sink your weight! Are you a boy or a dandelion puff?”

Gritting his teeth, Ray forced his legs wider, trying to sink down. A nine-year-old’s sense of balance is a precarious thing at the best of times. After about ten seconds, his left leg gave out, and he tumbled onto his backside with a soft thump.

[SKILL ATTEMPT: MARTIAL STANCES (GRIZZLED VETERAN)] 

[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: CRUDE] 

[Physical limitations of the host body prevent proper execution. More practice required.] 

[Mastery Gain: Martial Stances +1%]

“Get up!"

the Veteran snapped. 

“Pain is just weakness leaving the body. In your case, you've got a lot of weakness to get rid of… Again!”

For the next hour, Ray’s bedroom became a secret boot camp. He held stances until his legs felt like jelly. He used a discarded broom handle, which was as tall as he was, as a practice sword, the Veteran’s voice guiding him through rudimentary blocks and thrusts. To any outside observer, it would have been an adorable, comical sight: a small boy wobbling around, waving a stick with intense concentration. Inside Ray’s head, it was a grueling session on a muddy training field, the air thick with insults and the promise of brutal conditioning.

“Your parry is a floppy embarrassment!” 

The Veteran roared internally as Ray nearly toppled over from the weight of the broom handle.

“You’re inviting the enemy to kill you! Are you trying to get killed? Because there are easier ways, you could just lie down and take a nap in the middle of a battle!”

By the end of it, Ray was drenched in sweat, his muscles ached, and he had accumulated a grand total of 1.2% Mastery in Martial Stances. It was grueling, inefficient, and absolutely essential. His second training regimen began that evening, after Rina had brought him his meager supper. This time, he called upon the Charismatic Conman.

“Alright, kid, let's see the goods,” 

The Conman’s voice purred, smooth and encouraging. It was a stark, almost dizzying contrast to the Veteran. 

“Fighting is for chumps and heroes, a real artist doesn't need a sword when he's got his wits and a fast pair of hands. Show me what you're working with.”

Ray produced a small, flat river stone he had pocketed from the garden. His prop. He had been trying to learn a simple palm concealment, but his hands were still frustratingly small and clumsy.

“No, no, no,” 

The Conman sighed theatrically as the stone clattered onto the floor for the third time. 

“You're holding your hand like you're trying to hide a stolen pie. It’s got guilt written all over it, the art of the grift is to look like you’re doing nothing at all. Relax...let the stone be a part of you. It's not a rock; it’s a secret you’re sharing with your palm.”

[SKILL ATTEMPT: MISDIRECTION (SLEIGHT OF HAND)] 

[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: ADEQUATE] 

[Mastery Gain: Sleight of Hand +5%]

“Better than the last guy,” 

The Conman offered generously. 

“I once taught a troll who tried to palm a whole chicken. Now that was a mess. You just need finesse. Let's try a knuckle-roll. It’s flashy, useless for actual stealing, but it’s fantastic for building dexterity.”

Ray spent another hour practicing, the smooth stone clicking and clattering against the floorboards. The Conman was a far more forgiving teacher than the Veteran, offering encouragement laced with amusing anecdotes about past cons and failed apprentices. The practice was less physically taxing but required an intense mental focus that was almost as draining. His final session of the day was the most difficult. He sat cross-legged on his bed, the room lit only by a single candle, and reached for the cold, silent presence of the Stoic Assassin. There was no voice, not in the same way. It was more of a feeling, a presence that exuded an aura of absolute stillness. It offered no encouragement, no insults. It simply presented the objective: 

“Empty the mind. Emotion is a flaw. Fear is a chemical distraction. Thought is a storm. Find the silence in its eye.”

This was, by far, the hardest training. A nine-year-old’s mind is a chaotic carnival of stray thoughts, sensory inputs, and fleeting desires.

“Stillness."

My leg itches.

"Stillness."

I wonder if  Rina will bring honey cake tomorrow.

"Emotion is a flaw."

Corbin is a festering boil.

“Purge it!”

He tried to focus on his breathing, just as the silent instruction guided him. Inhale. Exhale. But the assassin’s standard for mental discipline was absolute. Every stray thought was a failure.

[SKILL ATTEMPT: MENTAL FORTITUDE (STOIC ASSASSIN)] 

[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: CRUDE] 

[Host mind is undisciplined and prone to distraction. Emotional responses are unregulated. Significant practice is required.] 

[Mastery Gain: Mental Fortitude +1%]

He kept at it, fighting his own brain for every precious second of quiet. He was so engrossed in his internal battle that he didn’t hear the heavy footsteps approaching his door. The door flew open with a bang, slamming against the stone wall. Corbin stood there, silhouetted by the hall light, his face a mask of arrogant contempt.

“Still playing the sickly little mouse, brother?” 

He sneered, striding into the room. 

“Father may be fooled by your act, but I’m not, you did something at that dinner. I don't know what, but you ruined everything!”

Ray’s heart leaped into his throat with a jolt of pure panic. The Assassin’s persona, however, didn't recoil. The Partial Immersion was still active, and it met the sudden spike of adrenaline with a wave of absolute, chilling calm. The fear was still there, a distant chemical fizz, but it was caged, observed, and dismissed as irrelevant data. He didn't scramble or flinch.

He simply opened his eyes and looked at his older brother. He was still just a small boy sitting on his bed, but the look in his eyes was something else entirely. It wasn't angry. It wasn't scary. It was… empty. It was the flat, still, emotionless gaze of a predator observing a loud, posturing, but ultimately non-threatening animal. Corbin took another step forward, his fists clenched, but he faltered under that unnerving stare. He had seen that look once before, at the watchtower. It was the look of something ancient and dangerous wearing his brother’s face. It made the hairs on his arms stand up.

“What are you looking at?” 

Corbin demanded, but his voice had lost its confident sneer. Alex remained silent. He didn't need to speak. The Assassin’s stillness was his shield and his weapon. He simply held his brother’s gaze, his small face a mask of perfect, placid neutrality. The silence stretched. Corbin, used to getting a reaction of fear, anger, tears, was completely disarmed. He was the older, stronger brother. He was supposed to be the intimidating one. But right now, he felt like a child trying to shout down a cliff face. It was profoundly unsettling.

“You’re a freak!” 

Corbin finally spat, the insult weak and defensive. He backed away, turned, and fled the room, pulling the door shut behind him with a little too much force. Ray watched the door close, and only then did he allow himself to breathe. The cold presence of the Assassin receded, and the world came rushing back in. His heart was still hammering, but the terror had been contained. A familiar transparent window bloomed in the quiet room, its message glowing with a soft, triumphant light.

[SKILLED APPLICATION DETECTED] 

[SKILL ATTEMPT: PSYCHOLOGICAL FORTITUDE (STOIC ASSASSIN)]

[SITUATION: UNEXPECTED HOSTILE CONFRONTATION] 

[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: INSPIRED] 

[You successfully applied a meditative mental state in a live, high-stress scenario. You maintained perfect emotional control, projecting an aura of unnerving calm that neutralized a superior physical threat without a single word or action. Largest Mastery Gain.] 

[Mastery Gain: Psychological Fortitude +20%. Emotional Detachment +15%.]

Ray looked at the notification, a genuine, tired smile touching his lips. The quiet work was already paying off. He was still a prisoner in the keep, but for the first time, he felt like he was forging a key for escape.

rcbjr81
BabyFlik

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The Legendary Method Actor
The Legendary Method Actor

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All the world’s a stage, but this time, there is no script.

Legendary method actor Alex Chen died in the spotlight, only to wake up in the body of Ray Croft, a frail, sickly boy in a noble house crumbling into ruin. In a world of cutthroat politics, magic, and monsters, Ray is powerless.

But he isn’t alone.

Armed with a mysterious System, Ray can channel the skills, memories, and personalities of every role he ever played. From the tactical genius of The Grizzled Veteran to the silver tongue of The Scheming Courtier, Ray must become a one-man ensemble to save his new family.

To survive the shadows of the Argent Hand and the lethal halls of Solhaven Academy, Ray can’t just play the hero. He has to become one.

What to expect:

- A unique "Acting-based" LitRPG System.

- A clever protagonist who wins through wits, deception, and strategy.

- High-stakes political intrigue and kingdom-building.

- A Zero-to-Hero journey where the "Hero" is whoever Ray needs to be.

If you want to support me and gain access up to 20 advance chapters go to: patreon.com/Babyflik

Chapter release schedule: daily release at 3:00 pm (UTC+08:00)
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136 episodes

Chapter 12: The Quiet Work

Chapter 12: The Quiet Work

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