Chapter 249
Discover the story in "Chaotic Craftsman Worships The Cube" Chapter 249: Waking up far earlier than he needed to for the contest after his illuminating conversation... Continue exploring!
Waking up far earlier than he needed to for the contest after his illuminating conversation with his god, Ben got to work preparing breakfast, an outrageously large one at that. He not only had the supplies that the embassy provided for its guests at his disposal, but all of the ingredients heâd bought at the market the previous day as well, and it was all put to use, making enough to feed dozens of people and taking hours to cook and pack up after.It was only by the time the contest was about to open up again for the day that he knocked on the doors of both Thera and his teacher to get them to come out, with Thera making her way first, a golden blush spreading through her cheeks as she looked at him.
âSomething wrong?â He asked, having his own guesses on the matter as he handed her a plate.
âI don't think Iâm cut out for girls' nights,â She said as she looked away and started eating. âHey, can I ask you something?â
âOf course, whatâs up?â
âDo youâŚâ She started before trailing off. âNo, itâs nothing. Actually, Yuzu mentioned that something looks weird about how your mind skills are interacting with your soul, you should probably ask your god about that.â
âOh cool, thanks for letting me know. Hey Myriad, did you hear that?â He called out, while also directing a silent thought to the heavens as well.
For both questions though, he got nothing but silence. His god had said that Helori was going to be keeping him pretty busy for a while, but it was already feeling pretty inconvenient.
âNo answer, but itâs probably fine,â He said with a shrug. âHe looked at my soul before, and a different goddess did less than a week ago. Iâm sure it will be okay.â
âI told you all of your mind skills would eventually give you the weirdest brain in existence,â She tried to joke while still avoiding his eyes. âLooks like itâs going to give you the weirdest soul too.â
He laughed it off as Falk finally came out of his room, eating a plate of food before the both of them were recruited to bring it all down to the contest area, handing it out to all of the invited tables as they were setting up for the day.
âSo whatâs this for?â A dwarf asked as she picked away at her plate, happy to eat it regardless of the reason and unable to keep herself from devouring it after the first bite.
âYou all tried to help when I was attacked,â He told her happily. âGiving you all some breakfast was really the least I could do.â
âHa, well we might not have been so quick if we understood who was attacking you,â She said as she laughed. âDonât go making any powerful enemies during a silly contest, you hear?â
âLoud and clear,â He told her as he went to distribute the food he made to the other tables, giving them his thanks as he went and exchanging a few friendly words before he went to set up for the day himself.
Heâd gotten a few sales the day prior, but even more importantly he now had a direction to go as he began to make his items. He needed something for someone that could use anything, and with that in mind he took a seat and began sketching out ideas on a piece of paper as he did, letting the time pass as Falk and Thera watched him while chatting, both worried about him after the day prior.
It was only after two hours there without a single sale to his name that he was pulled from the notes he was making, both by his teacher's growl and the sound of tisking coming in front of him.
His first thought was that he got too absorbed in his work and had ignored a customer, but as he looked up and saw the beast of muscle before him, a creature that looked like a centaur, only instead of a horse's body it was more akin to a rhinoâs with an eagle-like head instead of something more human.
âHey there, looking to buy something?â He asked cheerfully with his best salesman's voice, only for Falk to answer for the man.
âHeâs not,â The yeti said bluntly. âWhat do you want, Olop? Canât you see my apprentice is busy?â
âPff, you say that as if you didnât just find him off the street,â The man said, dismissing Ben entirely. âReally, Are you so against working for me that youâd resort to this? Even the excuse that this is some sort of graduation test is ludicrous. If you were going to pull that you might as well as found an entire team like everyone else has to back him up, it would have made it at least a bit more believable. Honestly, why would you choose someone with the crafting skill of all people?â
âFinding anyone to help him would have just held him back, now off with you already. Iâm not working for you, and my boy is going to blow your judges away.â
With a loud hmph, Olop stomped off, leaving an uncomfortable atmosphere as he did.
âWell, he seems⌠nice?â Ben said, trying to break the silence the other man had created with his presence.
âHeâs a right asshole is what he is,â Falk said angrily before getting it under control. âOn the plus side though, he didnât seem to pay you any mind so youâll blow that prick away when it comes time to judge.â
âYouâre really raising the bar here Falk, Iâve seen what the other tables have to sell, itâs good.â
âAye, but youâre no worse. More importantly, youâre working alone. Thatâs already enough to make you stand out at the end of this, even if you donât place at all.â
âWell, I guess Iâll just do my best,â Ben told him confidently. âJust to be clear, he was the one to send out the invite, right?â
âYeah but donât pay him any mind, I doubt heâll stop by again before itâs time to judge.â
It was another hour after that that Ben was sitting with his face down on the table, unable to keep himself positive. As other stalls were swarmed with customers, his alone hadnât had a single sale yet that day, something pulling him into despair.
It was only as a shadow fell across his eyes that he shot up, ready to greet whoever was looking at his work and convince them to empty their pockets for him, when his mood got to crash again. It was someone heâd been expecting, along with three tagalongs.
âHey, ready for a fun day of figuring out what to make you?â He asked Amy with forced cheer as Jake, Yuzu, and Uliel stood by her side, with the archmage in particular picking up one of his knives and looking it over.
âI can spare at least a few hours anyway,â She said. âWhat did you have planned?â
âHop on over to my side of the table and weâll get started.â
âAnd you can leave,â Falk told Uliel with a pointed look that she dismissed.
âItâs my job to ensure the safety of these three,â She told him as she put the knife down to look at a flail instead. âThey are some of the most important individuals on the world you know. Will you take responsibility if something happens?â
âSure, if youâll take responsibility for the fact that my apprentice hasnât gotten a sale all day,â Falk told her in a voice filled with anger. âWords got around that he got on your bad side and now everyoneâs too scared to come by.â
âWait, thatâs why I havenât had a single sale?â He yelled, being ignored by both of them.
âIâll admit my guilt in that, but you shouldnât be supporting this fraud either,â She told them as she put the flail down. âThe enchantments on his items are based on the principles of ritual magic. One person couldnât make them alone, you shouldnât be presenting them as if theyâre his work.â
As interested as he was that she apparently had a good enough understanding of something as uncommon as ritual magic to spot its touches in his enchantments, he wouldnât put up with being accused of stealing credit for another's work and spoke up to challenge her.
âSo then if I prove that I made these youâll buy all of my work?â He asked. âI made a lot for this, if Iâm missing out on sales because of you then you should take responsibility.â
âFine,â She said easily enough, doubting however he intended to argue that the items before her were made through his own efforts would prove convincing. Sheâd already heard from Amy and Jake earlier that he didnât have any real magic affinities, making the enchantments on his items impossible for him to produce.
Happy to have her agreement and seeing dollar signs in his eyes when he considered just how marked up his items were compared to any that he normally sold in the shop, he picked up a smaller knife, only to stop. There was one more thing he wanted, something she was uniquely suited to help him with.
âWait, Iâm going to be a little greedy and ask for one more thing if I prove myself.â
âShameless.â
âDamn straight,â He said, giving her his cheekiest grin. âBut I have a skill I want to learn some of the deeper mechanics behind and youâre uniquely suited to help me, so long as you awakened your archmagic skill from the magic skill and not by having it combine with all the attributed magics that is.â
âIf thatâs all then fine,â She didnât expect to be proven wrong, but his continued confidence caught her interest. How did he intend to prove he made them? What argument would he bring? She supposed it was possible heâd gained access to the skills taker or borrower, but she was almost certain that without having the affinities needed for it, it wouldnât show its effects for those magics or any affinitied skills anyway.
Instead though, he went for the simplest way of proving it he could. Looking at the knife in his hands, he stripped it of its enchantments as Uliel and the other three summoned watched in curiosity, seeing the magic inscribed on it taken apart with quick efficiency until he had nothing but a standard knife again.
Once it was free of any enchantments though he activated his connect, reaching deep into the enchantments on his ever-present rings and started to the use mana he felt, blending and weaving it all as he worked to recreate the enchantment the item originally contained before their eyes, only needing a few minutes to get it perfect and enjoying the shocked looks of everyone but Jake.
âTold you, I never doubted him for a second,â He said happily, seeming more pleased than Ben was to be proven right as Amy just came across as confused.
âHow though? I thought you couldnât use magic at all. Wasnât that your biggest issue behind your skills when you got here?â
âThatâs something I want to know as well,â Uliel said. âOn top of how youâre able to create such a complex ritual as a single person.â
âAnd Iâd be happy to explain both things,â He said in a voice filled with cheer. âThe moment you buy all of my stuff that is.â
âFine,â She said as she held out her card. Looking at the prices it wouldnât be cheap, but then she was plenty wealthy anyway from her various work.
Seeming to push aside her confidence in how much she would be spending though, Ben reached down and strained himself, bringing a full crate of weapons out from under the table.
âIt will be just a minute as we price all of this out,â He told her. âAnd Iâll even throw in the crate for free. Ainât I sweet?â
â...Has anyone ever told you youâre a miser?â She asked as she looked at the dozens of weapons she wouldnât even need as a mage, deciding to just pass them all off to Amy when they got back.
âHey, youâre the one who agreed to buy everything and I need to get whatever bit of wealth I can. Some of us didnât immediately become rich the moment we came to this world you know.â
Still, he wanted the things he made to receive proper use, so after payment was transferred he explained just what effects were on each item before they got to the main question they all seemed to have.
Slipping on a blank ring, he held out his hand to Uliel while also handing her a hunk of steel. âAlright, do me a favour and float this in the air with your magic, Iâll be able to test out my skillâs effect as you do and then we can all move on happily.â
She did as she was asked without complaint, fulfilling the second part of his request on top of wanting to have her curiosity sated. Taking his hand and using her magic, she felt the moment he connected to her and did her best not to pull away as she felt herself being peered on from all sides as almost a dozen voices filled her head.
It took a moment for her to realize he was talking, explaining for the others exactly how he managed it, the effect of his connect skill, as well as the synergy that existed between complex mind and parallel thought that made his head so crowded for anyone forced to peer within.
It was only as he let go that she was able to breathe comfortably, her head filled with nothing but her own thoughts again as Ben slipped off the previously blank ring, tossing it to his teacher to try and get a bit more evidence for just how connect worked on a deeper level.
âWhat do I have on it Falk?â
He knew it should have the skill at the eighth level, but given that every now and then he got skills at a much lower one than expected he still needed his teacher to confirm it for him, with results adding more evidence to his theory.
âLooks like you were only able to copy it to the fifth level,â His teacher told him after giving it a look and tossing it back.
âInteresting, I guess that matches up with my theory that different skills have weight to them. I had this issue with plant magic and itâs arguably the product of three skills, while this one is the product of ten so maybe thatâs it? But some of the other skills I wasnât able to copy to their full effect weren't obviously combined versions of other skills. Maybe they each have their own size or sub-components that dictate how much I can copy?â He muttered, making a quick note of the result for later as he went. As much as he wanted to figure it out, it wasnât super important, especially when he could just use other skills instead. As handy as it was to get that skill on a ring, he would choose to use his level nine rings any day over it.
Shaking himself from his musings after everything was done he gave Amy a seat to talk about what heâd asked her to come for, doing his best to ignore his curiosity as he noticed Yuzu whispering to Thera off to the side in a largely animated fashion while his friend managed to come off as deeply uncomfortable, even with her cloak to hide her.
âAhem, anyway, letâs get to the heart of this,â He told her. âI know you want to find something that suits you, but since you can use any weapon, are there any in particular you prefer?â
âIt depends what Iâm using it for,â She said, seeming to have no faith heâd be able to make her anything worthwhile. âIâve been trained to fight in a bunch of different situations. In a brawl Iâm happy to use brass knuckles or a knife, maybe a gauntlet too. For anything that takes a bit more distance then swords or spears are good, but then so is an ax or a bat depending on what Iâm up against. Ranged weapons like a javelin or flying disks are fine, though at least in that case I prefer bows since itâs too easy to lose anything I throw if I do it with too much force. Oh, and I guess Iâm not really a fan of flails,â She said, almost as an afterthought.
Ben took note of all of this as he felt ideas begin to come together in his head. âOkay, for now I think weâve got knives, swords, brass knuckles, an ax, and a club in the crate. Want to pull out whichever ones you think suit you best? That is of course if Uliel doesnât mind since theyâre all hers.â
The archmage consented with a wave of her hand, having planned to let Amy use them all anyway as his old classmate dug through the bin to find the sizes that best fit her, and after some prompting she showed how she would use each, taking swings and jabs, treating each attack against the air as if she were in serious combat as she did.
Ben watched every movement, trying to look for what might be uncomfortable, how different designs and weights might be affecting her, but finding that no matter what she used she made it look perfect, leaving him nothing to go off of on that front other than asking her opinions on where she thought she was having issues with item weight or balance.
For each review she gave he made notes and sketched designs of different shapes, doing his best to work out what would work better for her, in the end showing her and asking for her opinion.
âThese all look good,â She conceded. âBut these are just items I could get from anyone. Iâm looking for something that would really suit me.â
âHey, this is all a part of the decision-making process. I need to at least experiment a bit and get some ideas. One more thing for today though, do you use shields at all?â
âSometimes, but theyâre pretty situational for me too. I can fight with one well enough, but thereâs plenty of instances where I'd rather have a good weapon in hand and use my augmentations for defense than worry about carrying a shield around.â
âHmm. Okay, well just for the sake of argument, what sort of shield do you prefer when you do use one? Shape, size, anything really?â
âGod, I guess a circular one is what I'll usually go for during practice, maybe two feet across?â
âPerfect, thatâs all I need from you today, but if youâd come back tomorrow Iâll have a few more things to go over.â
Though she didnât seem excited she agreed easily enough, and it made Ben want to make her something worthwhile all the more. The fact that she so clearly didnât believe he could create what she wanted just raised his competitive spirit, not to mention that he desperately wanted the agreed-upon payment as well, and as they left, Yuzu enthusiastically waving goodbye to Thera as she seemed completely drained in return and everyone else worked to carry their new crate of weapons, he tuned out the world to focus on the things he needed to make.
Using the forge provided, he first began heating up large amounts of steel, taking out what he needed each time to quickly make up the items that Amy had already tested, but redesigned to fit her specifications and without any enchantments added. He was planning on melting them all down again after she verified how the changes felt, so there was no need to put in the extra work.
After that though, he moved on to the other items sheâd mentioned, as well as the shield he suggested. The spear and shield were both easy enough, heâd made plenty of each as he worked for Falk during his training, and while the gauntlet was a little more difficult without her there to properly fit it to her, after spending an hour watching her use the various weapons, combined with his observant eye, he was sure heâd managed to put together something that would fit nicely.
The problem was the bow. He had some experience making them, but not much. The typical archer simply didnât go for one made of metal. There were enough high-quality woods in the world that were perfect for the task and kept the weight down enough to keep it manageable, and while his crafting skill left him as proficient at working that material as he was with any other, he didnât want to waste the bit of wood he brought on something like that in case he needed it later.
With that decided he finished it up quickly before starting on the next thing he would need her to use tomorrow, though it was far simpler in its design. He took a square plate of metal and etched in the numbers one to five in a semicircle, keeping it just wide enough that the tips of all of his fingers could comfortably touch each number.
From there he embedded five small pieces of crystal on the plate in a line, creating a different light enchantment for each one that linked with the number and placed his fingers down on it, running mana through each one by one and seeing the appropriate crystal lighted up, getting red, yellow, green, blue and purple shining out as each had the appropriate bit of mana running through it.
âWhatâs that for?â Thera asked, surprising him with how close sheâd gotten without him realizing, despite the fact that she still wasnât looking into his eyes, instead choosing to direct her full attention to the tool heâd made.
âItâs a simple way to measure someone's mana control,â He explained. âHere, give me some numbers, one to five.â
âSure, one, three, two, one, five, four, oneâŚâ
She continued on as he touched the plate, with each number she said the corresponding light went off until she eventually stopped.
âOkay, youâre just showing off at this point,â She told him with a nudge. âHave some sympathy for those of us who would break your little toy there.â
âHa, yeah Iâve got all of this control and nothing to do with it. The point is to see how Amy manages with it though. If she has control as good as mine then that will open up the options a bit for what I can make her.â
âWhat are you thinking?â She couldnât help but be curious. She felt like the only time she ever saw Ben thinking so hard on how to make an item was either when heâd been trying to make her a staff in the past, working on improving her brace, or his current, slightly unsavoury goal of trying to trap a soul. Seeing him work as hard as he was currently, she couldnât help but flash back to times in her youth, watching her uncle work away on whatever project he had with just as much dedication.
He was going to answer, he didnât just have one idea after all and it seemed like it might help to get some opinions on it, but it was as he opened his mouth that he heard a quiet voice seem to yell at him.
âHey legs, you still open?â