The dust from the shattered gargoyle settled, but the tremors inside Ray refused to cease. He was alone, wrapped in the profound silence of the ruined watchtower, his small body shaking with a violence that had nothing to do with the chill in the air. The shard of slate lay on the ground, a mundane object that had, moments before, felt like a lethal extension of his own hand. He wasn't Alex anymore. He wasn't even Ray. In that horrifying moment of survival, he had been a thing of pure, cold efficiency. A monster wearing a child's face. The Stoic Assassin.
"I didn't choose that,"
He thought, a frantic, desperate scream in the confines of his own mind.
"It was chosen for me. It moved my body. It looked through my eyes."
He curled in on himself, hugging his knees to his chest, trying to make himself as small as possible. He had spent his first life hiding his true, unremarkable self behind masterful performances. Now, he found himself terrified of the performances hiding inside of him, afraid they might devour what little of his true self remained.
It was this spiral of terror, this visceral rejection of the very power that had saved him, that provoked a response. A new series of translucent blue windows materialized before his eyes, stark and clinical against the grey stone.
[SYSTEM ERROR: Host's psychological stability compromised.]
Ray flinched.
" Compromised?"
"That's putting it mildly."
"I think the warranty on my sanity just expired."
[Detected acute fear response directed at System Archetype: The Stoic Assassin.]
[Analysis: Risk of personality fragmentation under continued use of Full Immersion protocols is critical.]
The words hung in the air, cold and definitive. Personality Fragmentation. The term was sterile, technical, but to Ray, it sounded like a death sentence for the soul. He wasn't just losing control; he was in danger of shattering into a dozen jagged pieces of other people's lives.
[RECOMMENDATION: Initiate Emergency System Upgrade - Conscious Control.]
Before he could even process the meaning, another window popped up.
[NEW FEATURE UNLOCKED: IMMERSION SETTING]
Slowly, shakily, Ray pushed himself to his feet. His terror was still there, a cold stone in his gut, but it was now joined by a sliver of something else: defiant curiosity. He was an actor. Managing personalities was his entire craft. He'd spent decades switching between roles, holding onto the core of Alex Chen while draping himself in the cloaks of villains and fools. He refused to be a passive vessel for his own talent.
He scurried away from the scene of his near-death, his small legs carrying him back towards the keep. He avoided the main halls, sticking to the servant's passages, his mind racing. He needed a private space, a "backstage" for an actor like him to regroup. He found it in his own small, sparse bedroom. He slid the bolt on the thick oak door, the sound echoing with a comforting finality. He was safe, for now. Taking a deep breath, he focused his intent on the system.
"Show me,"
He whispered.
"Show me this... Immersion Setting."
The system responded instantly. A menu appeared, displaying his unlocked archetypes. This time, however, when he focused on one, a new submenu appeared beside it. He mentally selected 'The Charismatic Conman'. He couldn't bear to even look at the Assassin right now, and the Conman felt like the furthest thing from that lethal coldness.
[ARCHETYPE: THE CHARISMATIC CONMAN]
[SELECT IMMERSION LEVEL]
[Full Immersion (Default)]
[Partial Immersion (Selectable)]
Partial immersion, That was it. That had to be the key. With a sense of trepidation, he selected the second option.
For a moment, nothing happened. He didn't feel the slick confidence or the manipulative worldview crash down on him. There was no personality bleed. Instead, a new voice echoed in his mind. It wasn't a thought, not exactly. It was too distinct, too separate from his own consciousness. It was smooth, amused, and dripped with an easygoing confidence.
"Alright, kid, so you wanna learn to drive instead of just getting taken for a ride?"
"Smart move, the chauffeur on this rig is a bit of a psycho."
Ray blinked, startled by the sheer clarity of the Conman's persona. It was like having a co-star in his head.
[Partial Immersion Active: The Charismatic Conman]
[The Archetype will now function as an internal advisor.]
[Select a skill to practice.]
Ray scanned the Conman's skill list. Misdirection, Performance, Lie Detection... one stood out as a testable, physical skill.
"Misdirection... Sleight of Hand,"
He murmured.
"An excellent choice!"
The Conman's voice purred in his head.
"The cornerstone of any good grift, you gotta make 'em look at the pretty birdy while you're lifting their wallet."
"First lesson: you need a prop, something small, something simple, something the mark won't miss until it's too late."
Ray looked around the room. There was nothing. Just a bed, a small wardrobe, and a wooden chest. He walked to the window, peering down into the overgrown garden below. His eyes landed on a small, smooth, grey stone near the path. Perfect. He unlatched the window, climbed out onto the thick stone sill, and shimmied down a lattice of ivy with a nimbleness that surprised him, a lingering gift from the Assassin's physical awareness, perhaps. He snatched the stone and clambered back up, his heart thumping with exertion. Back in his room, he held the stone in his palm. It was cool and solid. A piece of reality.
"Okay,"
Ray muttered, addressing the voice in his head.
"Now what?"
"Whoa there, eager beaver, you're holding that thing like it's a rotten egg."
The Conman responded.
"Relax, the first rule of sleight of hand is that your hands can't look like they're hiding something."
"They need to be casual, expressive... part of the show."
"Now, try to palm it, just a simple palm concealment."
"Let it nestle right there in your flesh."
Ray tried. He cupped his hand slightly, attempting to grip the stone with his palm muscles as he'd seen magicians do in his past life. His four-year-old hand, however, was not cooperative. The muscles were underdeveloped, the coordination lacking. The stone promptly clattered to the wooden floor.
[SKILL ATTEMPT: MISDIRECTION (SLEIGHT OF HAND)]
[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: CRUDE]
[MASTERY GAIN: +0.1%]
The Conman's voice sighed in his head, a sound of profound, theatrical disappointment.
"Ouch. That was painful to watch, kid."
"And I once watched a guy try to sell a three-legged horse as a unicorn."
"You've got all the grace of a falling anvil, try again, and this time don't tense up."
"The stone is your friend., you're not arresting it."
Gritting his teeth, Ray picked up the stone. The internal commentary was both infuriating and, he had to admit, helpful. He tried again, focusing on relaxing his hand. He visualized the movement, the gentle curling of his fingers, the soft pocket of his palm. He held it for a full second before it slipped through his fingers again.
[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: CRUDE]
[MASTERY GAIN: +0.1%]
"Better,"
The Conman said, his tone magnanimous.
"The anvil was slightly smaller that time."
"We might get you down to a dropped hammer by dinner."
"Again. It's all muscle memory, your brain knows the theory, but the little guy's body needs to catch up."
For the next hour, this became Alex's world. A small boy, alone in a dusty room, repeatedly picking up a rock and dropping it, all while a spectral grifter offered sarcastic encouragement in his head. It was absurd. It was humiliating. It was the most hopeful he'd felt since he'd arrived in this world. He was in control. He was the one moving his hand, making the choice, feeling the failure. Each "Crude" rating was a badge of honor. It was his crudeness, not a persona's perfection.
"Okay, stop, stop,"
The Conman's voice cut in after the dozenth failure.
"You're too focused on the mechanics, the trick isn't in the hand, it's in the head."
"Yours and theirs, you gotta distract the mark."
"And right now, the mark is you, you're watching your own hand like a hawk."
"Look somewhere else, look at the door."
"Hum a tune, think about... I dunno, what's for dinner?"
"Anything but the rock."
It was basic actor's training. Occupy the mind with one task while the body does another. Ray took a breath, picked up the stone, and stared intently at the iron bolt on his door. He let his hand hang loosely at his side, humming a tuneless, vaguely familiar lullaby his mother, Eileen, often hummed. He focused on the scratches in the metal of the bolt, the way the light caught its edge. He let his fingers curl naturally, persuading the stone into the hollow of his palm. He held it. It stayed. His hand was relaxed. It didn't look like it was holding anything.
"Well, look at you."
The Conman's voice was laced with genuine surprise.
"There's a little bit of larceny in you after all. Not bad, kid. Not bad at all."
A wave of giddy triumph washed over Ray, so potent it almost made him drop the stone for real. He had done it.
[SKILL ATTEMPT: MISDIRECTION (SLEIGHT OF HAND)]
[PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: ADEQUATE]
[MASTERY GAIN: +1.0%]
A full percentage point. It felt like winning an Oscar. He was so engrossed in the glowing blue window, a wide grin spreading across his face, that he didn't hear the soft footsteps approaching his door. There was a gentle knock.
"Young master Ray?"
It was Rina's voice. Panic, the old, familiar kind, spiked in his chest. He was standing in the middle of the room, grinning like an idiot at nothing, holding a rock he'd just smuggled in from outside.
"Showtime, kid."
The Conman whispered.
"Don't let the mark see the goods, what's the first rule?"
"Distraction"
Ray thought.
"Just a moment, Rina!"
He called out, his voice a little too high. He quickly unbolted the door, turning his body so his rock-holding hand was hidden behind his back. He opened the door with his other hand, giving her what he hoped was a normal, non-suspicious smile. Rina stood there holding a small plate with a piece of honey cake on it.
"Your mother was worried you didn't eat much at midday,"
She said, her kind eyes scanning his face.
"She asked me to bring you this."
"Thank you,"
Ray said, his mind racing. He needed to take the plate, but both his hands were occupied, one opening the door, the other hiding a rock.
"This is it, the real test,"
The Conman chirped.
"No pressure. Just a simple transfer. The eyes, kid, use the eyes!"
Ray looked from the cake, to Rina's face, then back to the cake with exaggerated hunger.
"That looks wonderful! I'm starving."
As her gaze naturally followed him to the plate, he seamlessly transferred the stone from his right hand to his left, the one holding the door, concealing it in his grip against the wood. It wasn't smooth, but in the split second her attention was on the cake, it was enough. He freed his right hand and took the plate.
"Thank you, Rina,"
He said again, his smile feeling a little more genuine this time. She didn't seem to notice a thing. She just returned his smile.
"Enjoy it, young master."
"Lord and Lady Thorne are expected to arrive before supper."
"Your father will be calling for you soon."
With a final, concerned glance, she turned and walked away. Ray closed the door, the bolt sliding home with a click. He looked down at the honey cake in one hand, then opened the other. The grey stone sat innocently in his palm. He hadn't been a passenger. He had been an actor. It was a clumsy performance, a "Crude" execution at best, but it had been his. And for the first time, he felt he might just have a role to play in this world after all.