Chapter 17: Chromium Shine and The Hunger Transaction
Chapter 17: Chromium Shine and The Hunger Transaction
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Chapter 17: Chapter 17: Chromium Shine and The Hunger Transaction
The blacksmith was named Gorr. At least, that was the name written on the scorched wooden board hanging crookedly in front of his workshop: “Gorr’s Smash & Fix”. A brutally honest name for a workshop in Bakasa City, where most repairs were indeed done by hitting things until they surrendered and worked again.
Gorr was a half-Orc. His skin was dull moss-green, his arm muscles as thick as Dayat’s thighs, and two lower tusks protruded from his lips, giving the impression that he was always angry even when silent.
Right now, he was angry.
“You…” Gorr growled, his eyes narrowing at Dayat and Dola. His right hand gripping the sledgehammer tightened. “You said you have a solution? Or are you just hobos trying to scam me with scrap?”
Dayat swallowed hard. His heart pounded, but he remembered Dola’s instruction: Do not look weak.
Dayat stepped forward, entering the hot workshop area. He placed the manifested Adjustable Wrench on Gorr’s oil-stained workbench.
CLANG.
The sound of metal hitting metal rang clear. Different from the dull thud of rusty scrap iron Gorr usually heard.
“Not scrap, Boss,” Dayat said, keeping his voice as steady as possible. “This is Precision ’Tek’. Found in a vacuum-sealed coffin in Sector Delta. Still pristine. Still virgin.”
Gorr put down his hammer. He picked up the Wrench with his giant hand. The object looked tiny in his palm, but its shine couldn’t lie. The Chrome Vanadium coating reflected the furnace firelight, clean, without a speck of rust.
“The material…” Gorr mumbled, rubbing the tool’s surface with his rough thumb. “Slick. Hard. Harder than wrought iron. What metal is this?”
“Ancient alloy. Rust-proof,” Dayat answered quickly. “Try it first, Boss. That water pump is stuck because the bolt is stripped, right?”
Gorr grunted. He walked over to the water pump engine that had been frustrating him all day. There was a large hexagonal bolt whose head was almost round from being forced with dull pliers.
Gorr tried to fit the Wrench.
“Turn the thread, Boss. Adjust it to the bolt head size,” Dayat instructed, pointing to the worm gear mechanism in the middle of the tool.
Gorr turned the adjusting thread. The wrench jaws closed in, gripping the damaged bolt head with perfect precision. No gap. No wobble.
“Ooh…” Gorr’s eyes widened. “It bites.”
“Now turn. No need for rhino strength. Use feeling.”
Gorr pulled the wrench handle.
Screeeech…
A rusty sound was heard, but the bolt turned. It opened.
Gorr laughed. A laugh that boomed like a coughing bear.
“HAHA! It opened! Damn forest spirits, I spent all day hitting it, turns out it just needed a tight hug!” Gorr twirled the tool in admiration. “This tool is smart. Can get big, can get small. One tool replaces ten spanners.”
“There’s one more,” Dayat took out the Reversible Screwdriver from his other pocket. “For small screws. Plus and minus tips. Rubber handle, anti-slip, anti-shock.”
Gorr snatched the screwdriver. He tried stabbing it into a machine panel screw. Click. Perfect fit. He turned it easily.
Gorr stared at the two tools like a child looking at a new toy on Christmas. In a world where precision technology was extinct and replaced by crude magic, simple ergonomic tools were the ultimate luxury.
Gorr turned to look at Dayat. His gaze changed. From dismissive to business calculation.
“How much?” Gorr asked point-blank.
Behind Dayat, Dola (still in mute wife mode and bowing) squeezed Dayat’s left arm gently.
One squeeze. Signal: Bid high.
“100 Silver,” Dayat said firmly.
Gorr spat on the floor. “Peh! You’re crazy! 100 Silver is the price of a mid-quality steel sword! These are just handyman tools!”
“Handyman tools that will make your work ten times faster, Boss,” Dayat retorted, not backing down. “You can fix five machines a day with this. You’ll break even in a week. Besides, where else can you find Sector Delta goods this pristine? Other shops only sell rusty iron.”
Gorr fell silent. He knew Dayat was right. These tools were an investment.
“50 Silver,” Gorr offered.
Dola squeezed Dayat’s arm twice quickly. Signal: Still too low. Press again.
“80 Silver. And I’ll throw in information on how to maintain it so it never jams for life,” Dayat said.
“60 Silver. And I won’t report you to the City Guards for carrying Delta contraband,” Gorr threatened, his eyes narrowing slyly.
Dayat flinched slightly. The threat was valid. They had no goods permit.
Dola squeezed Dayat’s arm three times, long. Signal: Deal. Do not risk legal conflict.
“65 Silver,” Dayat decided finally. “To buy medicine for my sick wife.”
Gorr grinned, showing his tusks. He reached into his dirty desk drawer, then threw a small leather pouch at Dayat.
Thud. The pouch was heavy. It sounded melodious.
“65 Silver Gears. Take it and leave before I change my mind,” Gorr said, already busy again with his new toys, opening every bolt he found in his workshop.
Dayat caught the pouch. He opened it slightly. Inside glistened small gear-shaped silver metal coins. Money. Real money.
“Pleasure doing business with you, Boss,” Dayat said, then immediately pulled Dola out of the workshop before Gorr realized how cheap Dayat’s capital to make those tools was (just a bit of dizziness and hunger).
Exiting the workshop, Dayat’s steps felt light. He felt filthy rich. 65 Silver! Earlier Dola said bread cost only 0.05 Silver. That meant he could buy a thousand loaves of bread!
“Dol, we’re rich!” Dayat whispered enthusiastically as they walked away. “You’re a genius! That Orc got totally scammed!”
“Correction: It was not a scam, it was a mutually beneficial transaction,” Dola’s voice sounded low from under her hood. “The utility value of those tools to him far exceeds 65 Silver. However, for us, the production cost was merely 150 calories of Master’s energy.”
“Yeah, yeah. Whatever the economic term is, what matters now is…” Dayat clutched his stomach which growled loudly. “EATING.”
They walked through the slum market until they found a busy open-air food stall. A strong smell of grilled meat wafted from there. Not a burnt smell, but a sharp spicy aroma.
Dayat sat on a long wooden bench. Dola sat beside him, keeping her head down.
“Bro! Two portions of grilled meat! The biggest ones! And two drinks!” Dayat shouted with full confidence.
The seller, an old man with one eye covered by a cloth, looked at Dayat suspiciously. “Got money?”
Dayat placed one silver coin on the table. “Keep the change for tip.”
The seller’s eye shone. “Right away, Boss!”
Shortly after, two large plates of meat skewers the size of a baby’s arm and a bowl of thick soup were served in front of them.
Dayat didn’t wait. He immediately grabbed the meat skewer. First bite… heaven. The meat was tender, oily, and the seasoning was sweet and spicy.
“Crazy… so good,” Dayat mumbled with a full mouth. “What meat is this, Bro?”
“Giant Swamp Rat meat, Boss. Fresh catch from the underground sewers!” the seller answered proudly.
Dayat stopped chewing. He looked at the meat in his hand. Rat? Sewers?
He swallowed hard, then continued eating. “Whatever. It’s good.” Hunger drastically changed one’s hygiene standards.
Dayat pushed the other plate to Dola. “Eat, Dol. You need nutrients for… what’s your term? Bio-Synthetic Maintenance?”
Dola opened the bottom of her hood slightly, revealing only her mouth. She took a small piece of meat, then put it in her mouth.
She didn’t swallow immediately. She chewed slowly, her eyes blinking as she performed chemical analysis.
[Organic Composition Analysis]
[Protein: 25%. Saturated Fat: 40%. Contaminants: Lead and low-level E. Coli bacteria.]
[Status: Tolerable by synthetic digestive system.]
[Taste: Savory (High Glutamate).]
Dola swallowed. “Texture is acceptable,” she commented flatly.
Dayat smiled seeing Dola eat. There was something soothing about seeing this “machine” doing human activities.
“After this, we find a place to sleep,” Dayat said after cleaning his plate. “I don’t want to sleep on the streets again.”
However, finding an inn turned out to be harder than buying rat skewers.
They visited three decent-looking inns (clean and had doors). But all three rejected them.
The reason was the same: Identity.
“Where is your City Entry Permit? Where is your Citizen ID Card?” the first inn receptionist asked.
“Don’t have one, Sir. We just arrived,” Dayat answered.
“Then no can do. Guild regulations. If there’s a raid, I get fined,” the door slammed in Dayat’s face.
The same thing happened at the second and third inns. Without ID, Dayat’s silver money was useless in legal places.
“Dammit,” Dayat cursed, kicking a used can on the street. “Got money but still treated like hobos.”
“Regulation Analysis,” Dola said. “Bakasa City enforces strict population control to prevent spies or intruders. Places that accept guests without ID exist only in one location.”
“Where?”
“Black Zone. The Slums Deep Dive.”
Dola pointed toward the darker part of the city, where the smoke was thicker and buildings were denser, almost sticking to one another.
“There is no official law there. Only the law of landlords and local gangs. Money is the only valid ID.”
Dayat sighed. “Fine. Better than sleeping on a store porch.”
They walked deeper into the slum area. The atmosphere changed drastically. If the market earlier was busy and lively, this area was grim and threatening. People here stared with empty eyes or predatory gazes.
They finally found a leaning building with a signboard “The Sleeping Rat”.
Dayat entered. Behind a reception desk full of knife scratches sat a wrinkled old woman smoking a pipe.
“Room,” Dayat said, placing two silver coins on the table. “No questions asked.”
The old woman glanced at the silver coins, then at Dola covered in the cloak. She grinned, revealing gold teeth.
“Third floor. The very end. Don’t be noisy. If anyone dies, dump the body in the back river, not in the hallway.”
She threw a large rusty iron key to Dayat.
Dayat caught the key. “Thanks, Grandma.”
They climbed the wooden stairs which creaked badly with every step. The third-floor hallway was dark, lit only by one dying mana lamp. The smell of mold and urine stung the nose.
Dayat opened their room door.
The room was cramped. There was only one thin straw mattress on the floor, one small three-legged table, and a window boarded up with wood. The walls were made of thin plywood full of holes.
Dayat could hear sounds from the next room. People arguing, bottles breaking, and sounds of… very loud marital activities.
“Zero percent privacy,” Dayat commented, closing the door and locking it. He even slid the table to block the door.
Dola opened her tarp cloak. She shook out her silver hair that had been trapped all day. Her body light illuminated the gloomy room.
“Security Analysis,” Dola reported. “Door fragile. Window easily breached. Area crime rate: Very High. I must remain in Standby Mode Level 2 all night.”
Dayat dropped himself onto the straw mattress. Dust flew up.
“Whatever you say, Dol. I’m so tired. Stomach full, heart happy, even if sleeping in a rat hole.”
Dayat patted the empty space on the mattress.
“Come here. Sit. We need to count money and plan for tomorrow.”
Dola sat beside Dayat. In that cramped room, Dola’s presence felt very prominent. She was too clean, too beautiful for this slum. The contrast made Dayat realize how dangerous their position was.
“Dol,” Dayat said softly, holding his money pouch. “We have capital. Tomorrow, we can’t just sell screwdrivers. We have to find a way to get Ids. And we have to find info about… that.”
Dayat pointed to his own eyes, referring to Dola’s identity as a machine.
“That poster said the Church hunts technology. We need to know who our enemy is.”
“I agree,” Dola replied. “Tomorrow, I will attempt to scan local information networks. But tonight…”
Dola looked at Dayat, then at the door blocked by the table.
“Tonight, Master sleep. I will watch the door.”
Outside, shouts and breaking glass were heard again. Bakasa at night was a different monster. But at least tonight, Dayat and Dola had a roof, money, and full stomachs.
The first step of conquering this slum city had begun.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 186: Encounter At The Border
- Chapter 185: Preparation
- Chapter 184: The True Awakening
- Chapter 183: Sacrifice
- Chapter 182 182: The Heart Of The Plague
- Chapter 181 181: The First Sign
- Chapter 180 180: The Calm Before The Storm
- Chapter 179 179: A Peaceful Life Interrupted
- Chapter 178: Voices From The Darkness
- Chapter 177: Shadows In The South
- Chapter 176: The Promise On The Terrace
- Chapter 175: The Architect’s Design
- Chapter 174: Echoes Of Ignis-sol
- Chapter 173: Residual Wounds And Schemes
- Chapter 172: The Hand That Clutches
- Chapter 171 171: Dreams And Thrones
- Chapter 170 170: Silence And The Report
- Chapter 169 169: Violet Blade vs. Crimson Blade
- Chapter 168: The Awakening of the Architect
- Chapter 167: The Maiden’s Final Transfer
- Chapter 166: The Crimson Blade of the Brassvale Hero
- Chapter 165 165: The Red Dot
- Chapter 164 164: The Envoy of Brassvale
- Chapter 163: Morbis’s Offer
- Chapter 162: A New Home for Loy and Riri
- Chapter 161: Aura of the Wailing Forest
- Chapter 160: The Opened Door
- Chapter 159 159: What Remains
- Chapter 158 158: Memories Behind the Scars
- Chapter 157 157: After the Storm
- Chapter 156 156: DEW and Gravity Magic
- Chapter 155 155: Battle in the Narrow Alley
- Chapter 154: The Plan Behind the Darkness
- Chapter 153: Night at Alaric’s Mansion
- Chapter 152: The Adventurer’s Guild and Dalgor’s News
- Chapter 151: Rustgard and the Return to Bakasa
- Chapter 150: The Return Journey and the Beginning of Brassvale(2)
- Chapter 149: The Return Journey and the Beginning of Brassvale(1)
- Chapter 148: Audience with the Dwarf King
- Chapter 147: The Train to Karak-Zorn (2)
- Chapter 146: The Train to Karak-Zorn (1)
- Chapter 145: Toward Karak-Zorn (2)
- Chapter 144: Toward Karak-Zorn (1)
- Chapter 143: The Gates of Terragard
- Chapter 142 142: Journey Through the Forest of Lamentation
- Chapter 141 141: A Jealous Morning
- Chapter 140 140: Strategy and Room Warmth
- Chapter 139: The Architect’s Blueprint
- Chapter 138: Throne of the Architect
- Chapter 137: Dinner of the Damned
- Chapter 136: Echoes in the Binary Corridors
- Chapter 135: Awakening Upon the Steel Throne
- Chapter 134: The Bastion of Indigo Light
- Chapter 133 133: The Goddess’s Authority
- Chapter 132: The Goddess’s Priorities
- Chapter 131 131: The Goddess’s Agony
- Chapter 130 130: Metallic Carnage
- Chapter 129: Awakening of the Harbinger
- Chapter 128: Echoes of the Maiden: Tragedy Behind Logic
- Chapter 127 127: Binary Echoes Behind the Memory
- Chapter 126 126: The Architect's Nadir
- Chapter 125: Silver Rain on Lamping Hill
- Chapter 124: The Line Upon the Hill
- Chapter 123: Lament Upon the Scorched Wheat
- Chapter 122: Dawn’s Echo on the Brink of Purification
- Chapter 121: The Queen’s Mobilization
- Chapter 120: The Calm Before the Storm
- Chapter 119: Echoes Behind the Shadows
- Chapter 118: The Price of a Betrayal
- Chapter 117: Resonance Behind the Straw
- Chapter 116: Service in the Land of the Mixed
- Chapter 115: Fugitives at Rest in the Northern Grasslands
- Chapter 114: Runners on Wheels
- Chapter 113: The Crumbling of the Sacred Walls
- Chapter 112: Path of Blood
- Chapter 111: Resonance of the Primal Light
- Chapter 110: The Fall of the Architect
- Chapter 109: Days of Rust and Roots
- Chapter 108: Memory of Rust and Blood
- Chapter 107: Echoes of Screams Within the Roots
- Chapter 106: The Oppressive Depths of the Roots
- Chapter 105: A Thorny Banquet
- Chapter 104: The Signature of Doom
- Chapter 103: The Banquet of the Ancestors
- Chapter 102: The Mover of Winds
- Chapter 101: Echoes of Tranquility
- Chapter 100: The Awakening Omen
- Chapter 99: A New Mission
- Chapter 98: The Queen’s Gratitude
- Chapter 97: Battle in the Canopies
- Chapter 96: The Confrontation
- Chapter 95: The Trap is Set
- Chapter 94: The Inquisitor’s Ghost
- Chapter 93: Investigation: Forensic Data
- Chapter 92: The Poisoned Sap
- Chapter 91: The Shadow in the Garden
- Chapter 90: A Moment of Peace
- Chapter 89: The Skeptical Council
- Chapter 88: Manifestation: Drip Irrigation
- Chapter 87: Dola’s Soil Analysis
- Chapter 86: Verdia’s Agriculture Crisis
- Chapter 85 - 83: The Asylum Agreement
- Chapter 84: The Sisters’ Face-Off
- Chapter 83: Dayat’s New Look
- Chapter 82: The Living Wonders of the Ancients
- Chapter 81: Entry to the World Tree
- Chapter 80: The Paladin’s Ambush
- Chapter 79: The Emerald Threshold
- Chapter 78: The Sight of Daylight
- Chapter 77: Supplies Running Low
- Chapter 76: The Hall of Memories
- Chapter 75: A Breath in the Void
- Chapter 74: The Silent Stalker
- Chapter 73: Echoes of the Maiden
- Chapter 72: Farewell to the Forge
- Chapter 71: The Deep Road Map
- Chapter 70: The Price of Victory
- Chapter 69: The Breach Closure
- Chapter 68: Manifestation: Anti-Tank Javelin
- Chapter 67: Dola’s Tactical Overload
- Chapter 66: The Demon General Appears
- Chapter 65: The Fortress Hold
- Chapter 64: Kancil’s Training Ground
- Chapter 63: The Science of Exorcism
- Chapter 62: The Shadow Swarm
- Chapter 61: Under the Last Light
- Chapter 60: The Emergency Council
- Chapter 59: The Foundry of Progress
- Chapter 58: The Scout’s Report
- Chapter 57: The First Tremor
- Chapter 56: Dola’s Origin Inquiry
- Chapter 55: Manifestation: Industrial Lathe
- Chapter 54: The Meritocracy Challenge
- Chapter 53: The Great Workshop
- Chapter 52: The Customs of Iron
- Chapter 51: The Stone Breath
- Chapter 50: The Steel Threshold
- Chapter 49: Dayat’s Emotional Acceptance
- Chapter 48: Logical Conclusion (Wife Status)
- Chapter 47: Dola’s Reboot — Logic Within Tears
- Chapter 46: Recovery & Discovery
- Chapter 45: Manifestation of Wrath
- Chapter 44: Broken Dola (The Climax)The heavens had finally broken.
- Chapter 43: Scorched Remnants and the Whispers of Doom
- Chapter 42: Mage vs. Logic
- Chapter 41: The Weight on My Shoulders and the Irrational Heartbeat
- Chapter 40: Blood Ultimatum at the East Gate
- Chapter 39: Scorched Trails and the Shadow of the Hunter
- Chapter 38: Collapsed Logic and the Anomalous Heartbeat
- Chapter 37: Death Resonance and the Traitor’s End
- Chapter 36: Thunder in the Narrow Alleys and the Mist of Death
- Chapter 35: Festival Symphony and the Traitor’s Frequency
- Chapter 34: Heavy Gravity and Magnetic Rails
- Chapter 33: Three Threads of Fate and the Escape Map
- Chapter 32: Logic in the Dead End and The Painful Truth
- Chapter 31: The Serpent’s Banquet and The Living Main Course
- Chapter 30: Dinner Etiquette and The Golden Serpent
- Chapter 29: Warm Soup for Broken Souls
- Chapter 28: Shock in the Dark and The Eight-Legged Queen
- Chapter 27: Ghosts of the Past and Bloodless Tactics
- Chapter 26: Bloody Bonus and The Screaming Book
- Chapter 25: A Deadly Picnic and The Stone-Piercing Bolt
- Chapter 24: Blueprints, Royalties, and Peeping Eyes
- Chapter 23: Salty Bureaucracy and Gear Eyes
- Chapter 22: The Price of an Explosion and Melting Steel
- Chapter 21: Touch of Used Rubber and The Ghost Bow
- Chapter 20: Purple Anomaly and Corrupted Code
- Chapter 19: Printer Ink and Hacking Spells
- Chapter 18: The Dust Library and the Little Spy
- Chapter 17: Chromium Shine and The Hunger Transaction
- Chapter 16: The City of Scrap and The Economy of Rust
- Chapter 15: The Rusty Iron City and Those Who Hate Machines
- Chapter 14: The Mask of Kindness and Filthy Touches
- Chapter 13: Night School Language Class and Bridge Thugs
- Chapter 12: Incognito Mode and The Outskirts Humans
- Chapter 11: Cracked Asphalt and the Glitched Toll Keeper
- Chapter 10: Pendulum Physics and anAerial Embrace
- Chapter 9: The Humor Algorithm and the Definition of Catching Feelings
- Chapter 8: Right Angles Amidst Natural Chaos
- Chapter 7: Sleep Anomaly and The Breathing Battery
- Chapter 6: Puppet Dance and Data Threads
- Chapter 5: A New Name and the ForestThat Never Sleeps
- Chapter 4: The Hunger Download
- Chapter 3: Imagination Colliding with Logic
- Chapter 2: Interface in Flesh and Blood
- Chapter 1: The Last Message on a Saturday Night