Chapter 180 - Appraisal
“Sell a weapon?” Dave was shocked. He then he lowered his voice and asked, “Are you talking about what I’m thinking about?”
“What you’re thinking about? What do you mean?”
Dave took a deep breath. “Are you selling an alchemy weapon you crafted yourself?”
Angor nodded. “Yeah.”
Of course, Dave choked a little at the answer.
“You already made an alchemy item?”
“Well, yes. You made one too, right? The propeller machine is way more complicated than mine,” Angor said.
Angor recalled how Dave almost cried out when hearing about his alchemy talent, and carefully arranged his words. “Maybe I have a really good memory?”
Dave gave Angor a thoughtful look. “You’ve already tested my nerves the last time, and I thought that was it. I was wrong.”
Dave picked up the scythe and triggered the rune on it using mana. He gave the touchstone a mighty slash.
Looking at the deep cut on the touchstone, Dave turned back slowly. “Okay. I’m a failure. A terrible failure.”
Angor did not know how to respond.
It took Dave half an hour to complain about his frustration before he could talk like normal again.
“The scythe is a tiered item. Only a low tier, but it still costs a hundred crystals, at least. It may go for more if there’s an urgency,” said Dave.
“Urgency?”
“For example, someone is going to explore a ruin and needs a new weapon real quick. Or when someone is dueling another wizard for his life and will spend anything to buy a weapon that can save his life.”
Angor considered. “I see… Can you put them up for sale one and a half month later?”
“One and a half month? Is there a reason?”
“Well, yes. You’ll know by then.”
After agreeing upon a price for the weapons, they came to Prome’s Alchemy Shop together. Angor spent 17 magic crystals on some new materials.
Before Angor could leave, Dave took out an object and asked Angor a question.
“Is this yours?”
Angor looked at the small golden bolt in Dave’s hand and raised an eyebrow. “Yes. You found it in the woods?”
“Not me, Master Prome did.” Dave paused a little before saying, “Master Prome seems really interested in your long-range weapon. Can you show it to me?”
Angor lifted his sleeve and revealed the Trigger Crossbow on his wrist.
“An… alchemy item?”
“Sort of, yes.”
Dave carefully inspected the weapon’s delicate designs, but he saw no runes on it.
“It’s not a tiered item, but the creation alone is impressive. And it’s deadly. Even without runes, it can penetrate most defensive spells with enough shots,” Dave commented.
He did not know that Angor drew runes on the bolts, not the crossbow.
“By the way, who came up with such an interesting idea?” Dave asked out of instinct.
When he saw Angor trying to answer, Dave quickly raised a palm. “No, stop. I’ve had enough terrible surprises today.”
…
Angor reached the second level of Sky Tower by the third day of his challenge plan.
Scattered around the underground market were cableways for participants to reach higher levels. Being able to board a cabin hanging on such a cableway also displayed one’s strength to others.
Audiences had to buy tickets to watch the matches at higher levels.
Those with enough money all went to the top level. No one would waste money on the second level. Mortals who did not have magic crystals could only stay on the first level to satisfy their hunger. This was why the second level had fewer people. Angor’s first match only had two or three spectators. They were also participants at the same level with nothing better to do at the moment.
The opponents here were a lot stronger. Still, using his Trigger Crossbow and “coward” tactic, Angor did not run into any real trouble.
The only heated match was when he fought against an apprentice called “Lord of Darna”, who used blizzard and wind spells. The mighty wind caused his golden bolts to stray off their mark, so Angor had to shoot a great number of them in the air without specific aiming and forced Lord of Darna to surrender in the end.
At the same time, his name was spread around the level quickly.
Angor kept winning. He earned another 40 match points in only three days and gained entrance to the third level soon.
He carefully looked around the participants in the third level. Once he made sure that there were no level-2 apprentices, he grew confident that he could progress without having to worry too much.
However… the very first battle in the third level proved to be harder than he expected.