The hum of the Nexus Gateway cut off with a sharp snap, leaving the Gateway Hall in a silence that felt heavier than the stone walls themselves.
Auditor Zenus Landa was gone. The threat had departed.
But the formation did not break.
The Masters of the Academy, Headmaster Adrade, Master Elias, Master Osmin, Master Malin, and Master Namara, did not return to their duties. They did not call for the guards to secure the room. Instead, as if pulled by a single, invisible thread, they converged on Ray.
Ray stood near the pillar, his hand still clutching the black card Landa had pressed into his palm. He felt hollowed out, the adrenaline of the "dinner performance" crashing into the cold reality of what he had just learned.
Terminal and non-contagious. A resource allocation issue.
The words echoed in Ray’s mind.
"That..."
Master Elias broke the silence first, his voice trembling not with fear, but with a vibrating, incandescent rage. He paced a tight circle around Ray, his robes flapping.
"That is… bureaucratic blasphemy!"
Elias threw his hands up, gesturing at the empty space where Landa had stood.
"Did you hear him? 'Not of National Strategic Interest?' The Royal Physicians wrote off a person capable of stabilizing the Genesis Crystal because of a formality?"
"It was not a formality, Elias,"
Master Osmin rumbled. He stepped forward, his heavy boots echoing in the hall. Usually, Osmin looked at Ray with disapproval, a traditionalist eyeing a reckless variable. Today, his eyes held something else.
Respect.
Osmin placed a hand on Ray’s shoulder. The weight was grounding.
"I read the reports on the Wasting Sickness. The Void Soul. It is a death sentence. To survive it... to endure the cold that eats you from the inside out..."
Osmin shook his head slowly.
"I thought you were an arrogant boy. I thought your refusal to follow institutional norms was vanity. I see now it was survival... No it is Stubbornness,"
Osmin corrected himself, a faint, grim smile touching his lips beneath his beard.
"The stubbornness of someone with iron will. Your father... he refused to let the fire go out."
Ray swallowed hard, gripping the card tighter.
"He did what he had to."
"We didn't know."
Master Malin whispered. She stepped past Osmin, standing close to Ray. She didn't touch him, but her presence was a shield, warm and steady.
"Ray, we treated you like a prodigy who was breaking the rules for fun. We didn't know you were fighting a war just to exist."
"I..."
Ray started, but his voice cracked. He cleared his throat, forcing the Method Actor to take a backseat to the genuine exhaustion he felt.
"I didn't know about the petition either. My father never told me about it."
Headmaster Andrade stepped into the circle. She looked weary, the lines on her face deepened by the night’s siege, but her eyes were clear.
"The Kingdom makes mistakes,"
Andrade said softly.
"Tonight, we corrected one of them."
She looked around at her staff.
"This conversation does not leave the inner circle. Is that understood?"
The Masters nodded in unison.
"Good,"
Andrade said.
"Come. The Nexus Gateway Hall is too cold for this. We need a drink."
The Faculty Lounge was a place students never saw. Tucked behind the library, it smelled of old leather, pipe tobacco, and very expensive brandy.
Ray sat in a plush armchair that felt like it was trying to swallow him. His hands were wrapped around a mug of hot, spiced cider, a concession to his physical age, while the Masters held glasses of amber liquid that smelled like fire.
The mood had shifted from outrage to forensic curiosity.
"We need the truth, Ray,"
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Headmaster Andrade said, setting her glass down.
"Not the story you told Landa. Medically speaking, you should not be able to channel mana. If you suffer from Wasting Sickness, a 'cup with a crack' as the diagnosis usually goes, how are you not dead? How did you ‘fix’ a metaphysical leak?"
Ray took a sip of the cider, buying time. He had to thread the needle carefully. He couldn't reveal the Argent Hand. He had to use the narrative he had planted long ago.
"I didn't know I was suffering from the Wasting Sickness until I was nine,"
Ray began, reciting the backstory he had shared with Master Gideon and Master Elias before.
"My father... he shielded me from it. With the information from Auditor Landa, I deduce that after the Royal Physician denied my father’s petition, he probably bought tonics from travelers and possibly other questionable sources."
"Desperate measures."
Master Namara murmured, swirling her drink.
"It kept me alive,"
Ray said.
"But it didn't cure me. I was still... leaking. Until the incident in the Genesis Crystal Chamber."
The room went still.
"The Fraying."
Master Osmin whispered, his eyes widening.
“During the stabilization of the Genesis Crystal,"
Ray said smoothly, connecting the dots.
"The amount of raw Aether in the chamber was... very abundant. I was not just exposed by it. It felt like it filled the crack. It was like cauterizing a wound with a lightning bolt. Since that day... the cold is gone. And the side effect is I am now able to manipulate mana. I can now use it."
Master Namara leaned forward, her gaze sweeping over him.
"It is... theoretically possible. The Genesis Crystal is a creation-engine. If your physiology was exposed to that level of uncoded potential, it might have rewritten your baseline aetheric density."
"It’s a miracle,"
Master Malin said softly.
"A chaotic, reckless miracle."
"I agree,"
Ray said, looking down at his cider.
"That's why I research the Aetheric Science so obsessively. I'm not just studying it. I'm trying to see if what happened to me can be replicated."
Headmaster Andrade studied him for a long moment. She saw a boy who had been broken by the world and had put himself back together with sheer will.
"Thank you, Ray,"
Andrade said.
Ray looked up, surprised.
"Headmaster?"
"For tonight,"
she said.
“for the stabilization of the Genesis Crystal and the Sunstone Bloom. You have saved this Academy many times now. You saved my administration. We are in your debt."
She raised her glass.
"To House Croft. May they never again be underestimated."
"To House Croft,"
the Masters echoed.
Later, back in the Headmaster’s Office, the atmosphere turned clinical.
Ray placed the black card on the heavy oak desk. It sat there, an innocent rectangle of matte paper embossed with a silver eye.
"He gave me this before he left,"
Ray said.
Master Elias hovered over it, casting a sequence of detection spells.
"Fascinating. No explosive runes. No curses. It’s an Auditor’s Token."
"What does it do?"
Ray asked.
"It is a key,"
Andrade explained, standing behind her desk.
"And a leash."
She pointed to the silver embossing.
"This carries a specific signature of the Department of Magical Regulation. If you keep this in your possession... the Inquisitor Vanguards will see you as 'Authorized.' You could walk into the City Archives, past the curfew checkpoints, perhaps even into the lower levels of the Ministry, and no alarm would sound."
"An all access pass?"
Ray muttered.
"Precisely,"
Andrade said.
"But look at this rune."
She tapped the desk.
"It is a two-way rune. it records its own usage. Every time you use this card to open a door that should be locked, Zenus Landa will know."
"He wants me to use it,"
Ray realized.
"He’s tempting me."
"He is betting on your curiosity,"
Elias said.
"He is counting on you being a researcher. He knows you hunger for knowledge. He is giving you the keys to the library, waiting to see which forbidden books you try to access."
Ray reached out and took the card. It felt cold against his skin.
"Keep it,"
Andrade advised.
"To throw it away would be an insult to the High Inquisitor, and we cannot afford to insult Landa any further. Keep it in your possession, but never ever use it unless the alternative is death."
The walk back to the Spire of Sages was a blur. Captain Svane is now with him again.
"Get some rest, Lord Croft,"
Svane said, offering him a sharp, respectful nod as he reached for the handle.
"You look like you've gone twelve rounds with a Troll."
"Feels like it,"
Ray managed a tired smile.
"Goodnight, Captain."
Ray unlocked the door and stepped into the warmth of his suite. The heavy oak door clicked shut, locking out the politics, the Auditors, and the lies.
"Young master!"
Rina greeted warmly.
"You're back,"
she breathed out, the tension leaving her shoulders.
"I made tea. I put extra honey in it. Are you hurt? Do you need a healer?"
"I'm okay, Rina,"
Ray said softly, letting her fuss over him. It was grounding. After battling Zenus Landa’s mind games, Rina’s simple, honest worry felt like a warm blanket.
Suddenly, a patch of darkness on the floor rippled.
The shadow cast by the armchair didn't just move; it peeled itself away from the ground, rising up into three dimensions. It coalesced into the shape of a small, lean house cat, but one made entirely of smoke and ink.
It was Nox.
Nox didn't meow. It projected a sudden, sharp image directly into Ray’s mind:
An empty food bowl and a feeling of profound, dramatic starvation.
Ray chuckled, the sound rusty in his throat.
"I haven't forgotten you, buddy."
Nox solidified, shifting from his shadow form into warm, sleek fur. He trotted over with the arrogant swagger of a creature that believed it owned the building. He wound himself around Ray’s ankles, headbutting his shin not with affection, but with a demanding, proprietorial shove.
Impatience. Guardian-indignation.
The creature looked up, those swirling golden eyes narrowing. A new feeling hit Ray’s mind:
Now feed me.
Ray reached down, scratching the creature behind its smoky ears. Nox leaned into the touch purring.
"I missed you too,"
Ray whispered.
"I'll get the tea."
Rina smiled, wiping a relieved tear from her eye as she hurried to the kitchenette.
Ray walked to his bedroom, Nox trotting at his heels like a shadow-bound bodyguard.
He stood before the mirror. He looked at his reflection. He saw the face of Ray Croft.
For a long time, Alex Chen had thought of Alistair Croft as a desperate man who made a deal with the devil. But tonight... tonight the picture had changed.
National Strategic Interest.
Ray closed his eyes. He saw the memory Landa had described. Alistair Croft, proud and stubborn, writing to the Kingdom’s government. Begging for help.
Alistair had stripped his house bare. He had sold his honor. He had sold his legacy. All because the ‘Righteous’ Kingdom had looked at a baby and saw a broken tool.
Ray opened his eyes. They were cold.
The Argent Hand was evil; Ray knew that. They were loan sharks of the soul. But at least they had offered a trade. The Kingdom, the ‘Good Guys,’ had offered nothing but a grave.
He opened his desk drawer. He placed the black card inside, right next to the letter from his father.
He wasn't just a student anymore. He was a piece on the board. A piece the kingdom had thrown away, and the Argent Hand had picked up.
Ray shut the drawer.
"Let them audit me,"
Ray whispered to the empty room.
"I've been surviving them since the day I was reborn in this body."
END OF ACT 4.
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