Chapter: 219

"What… what in the hells was that?" he whispered, his voice hoarse. He ran a trembling hand over his face, wiping away the sweat. The Red Man. The static. The desperate, failed attempt at communication. It felt… familiar. Like a memory from a dream he’d had a thousand times and instantly forgotten upon waking.

He pushed himself off the sofa, his legs unsteady, and stumbled towards the window, needing to see the solid, real, non-swirling-cosmic-nebula reality of the waking world. He looked out at the awakening gardens, the familiar shapes of trees and hedges reassuringly solid, reassuringly mundane.

It must have been an unpleasant dream, he told himself, trying to rationalize it, to dismiss the profound, unsettling feeling it had left in its wake. Stress. Exhaustion. The after-effects of being hunted by giant monsters and publicly scrutinized by his entire, slightly terrifying, family. Just a nightmare. A particularly weird, abstract, and existentially troubling nightmare. Nothing more.

He wiped the sweat from his brow again and chanced a glance towards the bed. Rosa was still there, a still, silent form beneath the silken sheets, her breathing deep and even. She hadn't stirred. She was asleep. He was alone with the echoes of his unsettling vision.

He needed air. He needed to walk. He needed to feel the solid ground beneath his feet and convince himself that the world wasn't about to dissolve into a swirling vortex of red and blue static.

Despite the sun having yet to fully rise, despite the chill in the pre-dawn air, he left the room, closing the door softly behind him, and headed towards the quiet, empty gardens, the image of the silent, waving, crimson man a burning, unanswerable question at the forefront of his mind.

---

The pre-dawn air in the garden was cool and sharp, a welcome, grounding shock after the thick, humming atmosphere of his dream. Lloyd walked, his feet crunching softly on the gravel path, the scent of damp earth and dew-kissed roses a reassuringly normal counterpoint to the memory of cosmic static and silent, crimson men. He paced, letting the rhythm of his steps, the solidity of the ground, chase away the last, clinging tendrils of the unsettling vision.

It was just a dream, he told himself again, more firmly this time. A stress-induced hallucination. My subconscious trying to process the fact that my life has officially gone from ‘mildly complicated’ to ‘full-blown fantasy epic with questionable supporting characters and a distinct lack of decent catering’. Nothing more.

He gradually brought his breathing under control, the frantic hammering in his chest slowing to a more reasonable, less ‘I’ve-just-been-verbally-assaulted-by-a-metaphysical-entity’ rhythm. The sun was beginning to crest the horizon now, painting the eastern sky in delicate shades of rose and pale gold. A new day. A day for practicalities. A day for soap. And System Coins.

He found himself smiling, a genuine, almost relieved smile. The dream was weird, yes. Unsettling, definitely. But it was intangible, a mystery for another time. The soap empire, the fifteen thousand Gold Coins slowly making their way through Bursar Periwinkle’s bureaucratic labyrinth, the one hundred and three System Coins currently burning a metaphorical hole in his mental pocket… those were real. Tangible. A solid foundation upon which to build his future, a future that hopefully involved significantly less running from giant monsters.

The thought of the coins, the sheer potential they represented, was a warm, comforting glow against the lingering chill of the dream. He could finally, properly, begin.

Just as the thought crossed his mind, just as a renewed sense of purpose began to chase away the last vestiges of his nocturnal dread, the familiar, almost smug, chime echoed in his mind.

[New Primary Goal Detected!]

[Task: Operation: Suds and Steel – The Foundation]

[Description: The User has successfully secured significant investment capital for a new commercial enterprise (‘Ferrum Family Finest Cleansing Elixir’). The time for theoretical planning and small-scale, smokehouse-based experimentation is over. The time for industrial-scale production has begun. Don't just make soap; build an empire. A very clean, very profitable empire.]

[Objective 1: Establish a dedicated, purpose-built manufactory (‘The Soap Factory’). This includes land acquisition/appropriation, architectural design, construction, and outfitting with necessary equipment (boiling vats, drying racks, scent infusion laboratory, etc.).]

[Objective 2: Commence successful, consistent, large-scale production of at least one (1) baseline product (e.g., Rosemary-scented hard bars).]

[Reward Upon Completion: 1000 System Coins (SC) AND One (1) New Permanent System Function: ‘Farming’ System Coins.]

Chapter: 220

Lloyd stopped dead on the gravel path, his mouth falling slightly open. He read the notification again. And again. A thousand System Coins. One thousand. The number was staggering, an order of magnitude beyond any reward he had received before. It was enough to upgrade a spirit to Ascension and then Transcend, with change to spare. It was enough to significantly rank up his Void powers. It was… a game-changer.

But it was the second part of the reward that truly made his breath catch in his throat. A new permanent System function: ‘Farming’ System Coins.

What did that even mean? His mind raced, the eighty-year-old engineer instantly dissecting the possibilities. Farming. Cultivating. Generating. Did it mean he could… create coins? Passively? Set up some kind of system that would generate a steady, reliable income of the most valuable currency in his known universe? The implications were profound, world-altering. It would free him from the tedious, dangerous grind of bounty hunting, from the slow drip of his allowance, from the constant, pressing need to find new ways to scrounge for Gold. It would be a paradigm shift, a leap from being a gig-economy power-gamer to a full-blown, self-sustaining, supernatural magnate.

This wasn't just a task; this was the key. The key to everything.

A fierce, almost giddy, excitement surged through him, completely obliterating the last traces of his earlier unease. The dream, the crimson man, the unsettling static – they felt distant now, unimportant, overshadowed by this dazzling, tangible promise of power and progress.

He had thought he would build the factory later, after more planning, after the funds had fully cleared. A slow, methodical process. But this… this reward changed everything. The timeline had just been aggressively moved up.

"Right," he murmured, his eyes gleaming with a new, fervent intensity. "Plan changed. Forget 'later'. The soap factory starts construction… today."

He turned on his heel, his mind already a whirlwind of logistics, planning, and a deep, abiding desire for that ‘farming’ function. He practically strode back towards the main estate building, his earlier exhaustion forgotten, replaced by a surge of pure, unadulterated, System-fueled ambition.

He needed to speak to his father. Immediately. He needed access to the Ducal Bursar, to the estate architects, to the land surveyors. He needed to get the ten thousand Gold Coins released, now, not in a week. The deed. Right. His father had mentioned a deed.

He found Roy Ferrum in the main dining hall, engaged in his usual solitary breakfast ritual of paperwork and stoic disapproval of everything. Lloyd, still slightly dishevelled from his pre-dawn garden walk but radiating a new, almost manic, energy, bypassed the usual formalities.

“Father,” he began, his voice firm, respectful, but carrying an unmistakable urgency. “I require the ten thousand Gold Coin investment you pledged. Today. I wish to commence work on the manufactory immediately.”

Roy looked up from his ledger, one perfectly sculpted eyebrow arching in surprise at his son’s sudden, energetic intrusion. “Immediately, Lloyd? Your enthusiasm is… commendable. If slightly abrupt. But as I believe I mentioned, such a significant transfer of Ducal funds requires proper procedure. A venture of this scale, an investment of this magnitude… it must be formalized. We must first draw up a deed.”

Lloyd frowned, a flicker of his earlier frustration returning. “A deed, Father? Between us? I am your son, the heir. This is a Ferrum enterprise. Why the need for such… legalistic formality?” It seemed like another unnecessary bureaucratic hurdle, another delay designed by Bursar Periwinkle to protect his precious ledgers from the grubby, innovative hands of the younger generation.

Roy set down his quill, his expression becoming serious, paternal, almost… educational. "Lloyd," he said, his voice losing its usual sharp edge, becoming patient, instructive. "This is not about a lack of trust between us. It is about a surplus of prudence. And about building a foundation for true, lasting success. You are no longer just my son dabbling in a hobby; you are proposing to become a captain of industry. And captains of industry," he paused, letting the words sink in, "operate with contracts. With deeds. With the force of law and tradition behind them."

He leaned forward, his gaze intense. "This deed, Lloyd, serves two crucial, intertwined purposes. Purposes that look not just inwards, to our family, but outwards, to the world you wish to sell your soap to."

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