Chapter 415
Chapter 416 of "Chaotic Craftsman Worships The Cube" starts with thrilling twists: At the dayâs end, Ben found himself slumped over a desk, feeling every bit of... Continue the story!
At the dayâs end, Ben found himself slumped over a desk, feeling every bit of his defeat.His god meant it too. He didnât have a doubt in his mind that Ben would one day break the boundary to create a new legendary item, and from there he was bound to flood the world with them in his ongoing quest to create all he could. He and every other god Ben knew had grown aware of this fact, and he knew that there were many other crafting gods keeping an eye on his apostle for that exact same reason. Everyone wanted to see it happen.
Ben for his part was unaware of the level of confidence that others had in the inevitably of the act, so he took his god's words for exactly what they seemed to be; motivation.
Feeling in a better frame of mind, Ben sat up, catching his teacher as he was packing up and preparing to head out for the night.
âHey Falk, if you donât have plans then letâs grab a bite, on me. Thereâs something I want to talk to you about.â
âBoy, if thereâs something on your mind then we had all day.â
âYeah, but I needed to see what I was capable of today. Now that thatâs done I have time for other things.â
âHa, I suppose I understand. Fine, some food would do me good and I wouldnât mind seeing the niece a bit after everything thatâs happened.â
âEr, itâs a bit of a private talk Iâm aiming for Falk, letâs go to a restaurant instead, come on.â
Before the yeti could ask more, Ben was already dragging him out, forcing them through the streets until they made it to what was a reasonably empty place given the time and took their seats as they waited to order.
It was only as they were left waiting for their food that Falk focused in on him again, wanting to know just what that was all leading up to.
âFalk, I know I donât say this enough, but Iâm thankful for all youâve done for me,â Ben started. âEven if you didnât want to at first, youâve been teaching me diligently these last few years and helped me grow into the craftsman I currently am. I wouldnât have the skill I currently do without you, and the fact that itâs thanks to you I met Thera is another thing I owe you a lot. Youâre someone incredibly important to me.â
He hadnât known what heâd been expecting, but it wasnât that. As Ben finished saying his piece, the yeti could only scratch his head, not knowing how to respond, only for Ben to speak up again before he got the chance.
âIâm also grateful to Sonya,â He went on. âSheâs been giving me a far nicer place to stay than the inn I started at, sheâs treated plenty of my wounds when Iâve needed it and all in all has given me nothing but stability and treated me like family. Between you, her, and Thera, youâre all some of the most important people on the planet to me, so I really want to try and help her be happy, donât you?â
âWhat? Of course I do, boy. Sheâs one of my oldest friends, why wouldnât I want her to be happy?â
âThen why have you been completely ignoring her feelings?â
His teacher just gave him a confused look, leaving Ben to mutter to himself.
âI know youâre not that dumb.â
âHey, watch it boy-â
âAre you really going to tell me you donât know that Sonya is in love with you?â
As the words left his mouth, Falk completely froze, not sure how he was supposed to react to what Ben just said.
âWait, no, no you canât be serious,â Ben complained. âDid you really not know? How could you not know?â
âHold up a minute, it isnât like that,â Falk said, grasping his head as he did. âIâll admit, Iâve found myself suspecting as much every now and then, but boy, Iâve known her for years, decades at this point. Sure, Iâve occasionally thought that maybe she felt somethinâ a bit more than platonic, but sheâs never brought it up, Iâve just been assuming that I wasnât reading her well. Hell, what makes you think youâre right about this?â
âItâs not thinking, I am right. One hundred percent positive. This is an open secret that literally everyone else is aware of and honestly the fact that you really didnât know has thrown me off a bit,â Ben complained as he reevaluated how he was trying to direct the conversation. âSo now that you know, how do you feel about her? Should I assume that since nothingâs happened after all of these years she doesnât have a chance? Is it just a matter of you two being too physically different, because if thatâs the case itâs fine, but you really do need to actually talk with her.â
Ben was sure there were better ways to do this, but he wanted to be blunt about it. This was a one-sided affection that had gone on for years at this point. It was Falkâs choice if he wasnât interested, that was fine, but Ben genuinely believed that Sonya deserved to hear it for a chance to move on with her life.
It was honestly the answer heâd been expecting, but surprisingly, Falk held up his hand to silence him.
âMy kind are particularly fussed about appearance so that has nothing to do with it, and itâs not that Iâd be against Sonya properly pursuing me. Sheâs been an excellent friend over the years, I have no complaints about her, itâs justâŚâ
âJust what? Falk, if you would actually be willing to get involved with Sonya then screw this dinner, go tell her.â
âI have a goal, boy. A goal Iâm not willing to compromise on for something like romance, even if itâs for someone I care about.â
âAlright then, what goal? I donât care if itâs already taken you years, weâll make it happen.â
Heâd thought this talk would be about getting Falk to properly face Sonya about her feelings for him to help them be put to rest, but if there was a way that he could get them paid off instead then he didnât care how hard it would be, he would do all he could for it. Ben had meant what he said, he cared about the two of them, if he could work to make them happy together then heâd do it.
His teacher looked unsure at first, debating with himself long enough for their food to arrive but eventually settled on his choice, and for the first time, Falk took out his card and handed it over to Ben, all options on it displayed for his studentâs eyes.
He tried to keep the excitement from touching his face, even if it was just bubbling beneath the surface. Falk had always been so resistant to letting him know the skills he had, now that he was bearing all, Ben didnât want him regretting that choice as he let his eyes scan over everything.
There was a lot to take in too. While his teacher lacked in titles, he had as many jobs as Ben currently did, which shouldnât have been as much of a surprise as it was. He knew that the average person with a humanâs lifespan might expect around five to eight jobs, but anyone who could cross the boundary to gain an awakened skill was always bound to have more, and Ben was under the impression that his teacherâs lifespan was longer than a base human's anyway.
More important than that were the skills. As the lifeblood of an enchanter, it made sense he had a lot, with many of them being fairly high in level and complimenting the ones Ben was sure he thought of as his core skills, namely his smithing and magics, but there was still room to be surprised there as well.
That was namely the two awakened skills he held. Ben knew for sure he had one, with his earthen smithing being what made him a contender, but the yeti also had an advanced version of death magic, high death magic, and at the seventh level of that to boot.
He made sure to memorize everything he was seeing, while making a note to get Falk to make him rings for each of his skills for him, before handing it back over.
âAlright, so what does this have to do with your goal then?â
âIâm aiming to become a soul smith.â
It was a name he hadnât heard before, but he could get at least a bit of it through context.
âSo should I assume thatâs what itâs called if you awaken your smithing to the third tier with death magic? Or would that be holding both a third-tier smithing along with becoming a soul mage?â
âYou got it right the first time,â His teacher told him with a nod. âIn the history of this world, thereâs only been one, which isnât surprising since the soul mages have typically been trying to raise people up to create a number of different tier three skill holders to see what would work best. âCourse, that didnât exactly go to plan since there was so much less notice for the invasion than anyone hoped, but the one we had changed the world. Theyâre the reason we have our cards.â
âWait, really?â
It was something Ben had never stopped to question, but his teacher just nodded. âDrop some blood and it links to your soul. More important though is the fact that when you reach the third tier and enchanting has blended into the skill at some point or another, youâre able to use a very particular, very useful enchanting spell. One that, once powered, lets the user build an enchantment that can keep creating a new enchantment to create a magic factory of sorts, hence how the world keeps a steady supply of cards around.â
Ben took his own card out to look at it after he heard that. It was something he looked at all of the time, and heâd never given much thought to how it worked, but after being told that he couldnât help but wonder at the simple fact that as far as his eyes could see, there was no enchantment on it at all.
It was something his teacher picked up on and gave a small chuckle as he did. âThe enchantment is a pretty delicate thing and itâs stuck in the middle of two plates that are sealed together. It would potentially be pretty hard to read if you had to see the text through the enchantments depending on the power of your mana sense after all.â
âInteresting, interesting,â Ben muttered, thinking about if it would be worth it to crack his open to see what was going on beneath the surface.
âIt wouldnât,â Falk told him, practically reading his mind. âYouâve got plenty of connections boy, donât destroy your card and just ask Pelenia to get you an example of one before itâs sealed next time you see her.â
âFine, fine, so this is your goal then? Itâs big, and Iâm sure itâs ridiculously hard so I get why you arenât making romance a priority. How longâs it been since your last level?â
âSix years. Itâs no easy task boy, but Iâm doing my best to chip away at it. Still, it might never happen so Iâll talk with Sonya, she shouldnât be wasting her life waiting for someone like me.â
âNot so fast,â Ben told him, feeling his eyes gleam. âIâve seen you work Falk, youâre no slouch. Six years is plenty of time to be on the edge of getting your level which means all thatâs left is tipping you over the edge. Whatâs the best you can make?â
âUgh, I suppose since Iâve already told you this much it doesnât matter. I can make a legendary item about two in three times if Iâm lucky, and maybe even the middle grade one in fifty. Never high though.â
âWell then, that makes this easy. Hope youâre ready for the next few days Falk because we arenât sleeping. As soon as weâre done here, weâre going to work on designing something past whatâs possible for you. Weâre making a super weapon.â