Chapter: 233

After the infamous ‘green goo incident’, Borin’s more explosive tendencies were tactfully re-channeled. Under Lyra’s watchful eye, he threw his considerable energy and surprising mechanical aptitude into building a prototype of the mechanical stirrer she had proposed. It was a marvel of rustic, functional engineering: a large, hand-cranked wooden gear system, connected via a series of sturdy connecting rods to two massive wooden paddles suspended over the largest cauldron. It was clunky, noisy, and required considerable effort to operate, but it worked. The constant, even, counter-rotating motion it provided was far more efficient than manual stirring, reducing the time it took for the soft soap mixture to reach ‘trace’ by almost a third and freeing up Martha and Pia for other crucial tasks.

Alaric, meanwhile, with a small discretionary fund from Lloyd, had procured a proper copper alchemical retort. He spent days patiently, meticulously, steam-distilling the vast quantities of rosemary they had gathered, capturing a small, precious vial of pure, incredibly potent essential oil. The difference in quality was immediately apparent; the scent was sharper, cleaner, and far more complex than the simple hydrosol they had used in their first smokehouse experiments.

With these refinements in place, it was time. Time for the first true ‘industrial’ batch. The one that would, if successful, form the basis of their initial, exclusive product line.

“Alright, team,” Lloyd announced, gathering them around the largest, newly scoured cauldron, the hand-cranked stirrer looming over it like a skeletal wooden beast. “This is it. No more small-scale tests. No more… interesting… color experiments,” he said, shooting a pointed look at Borin, who just grinned sheepishly. “This is for real. Alaric, your measurements?”

Alaric, clutching his ledger, nodded curtly. “Calculated for a fifty-kilogram batch, my lord. Tallow-to-lye ratio adjusted for a slightly higher water content to favor a softer, more pumpable final consistency. Temperature profile established for optimal saponification with mechanical agitation.”

“Lyra, workflow?”

“Martha and Pia will manage the tallow melting and lye transfer under Alaric’s direct supervision,” Lyra reported crisply. “Borin and I will operate the stirring mechanism in shifts to maintain constant motion. Jasmin will oversee the scent infusion and final quality check before cooling. All safety protocols are in place. We are ready, my lord.”

The process began. It was a symphony of controlled, focused labor. The scent of melting tallow filled the air, followed by the sharp, alkaline tang of the lye. Borin and Lyra began turning the heavy hand-crank, the wooden gears groaning as the massive paddles began their slow, relentless churning of the cloudy mixture. Alaric monitored his thermometers, calling out minor adjustments to the fire. Jasmin stood ready with the precious vial of pure rosemary oil. Lloyd observed it all, a conductor watching his orchestra, a quiet satisfaction settling in his chest.

Hours passed. The mixture thickened, transformed, reaching that perfect, creamy ‘trace’ stage. At Lloyd’s signal, the stirring slowed, and Jasmin carefully added the potent rosemary oil, its clean, invigorating scent instantly blooming, filling the entire manufactory. The first industrial-scale batch of Ferrum’s Cleansing Elixir soft soap was complete. It was left in the main cauldron to begin its cooling and stabilization process, its quality consistent, its aroma delightful. A tangible, fifty-kilogram victory.

Simultaneously, Lloyd had been tackling the other critical challenge: the dispenser. The prototype he had crafted from oak and Void-forged steel was a masterpiece of functional art, yes. But it was also a one-off, a miracle of personal power that was completely impractical for mass production. He couldn't spend his days personally forging hundreds of intricate pump mechanisms; he had an empire to run (and System Coins to grind for). He needed a design that could be replicated, consistently and affordably, by skilled, but non-magical, artisans.

He tasked Ken Park with finding the best master carpenter in the capital, a man known for his precision and discretion. Ken returned with a name: Master Valerius. Lloyd met with the old, wizened craftsman, presenting him not with the actual Void-steel pump, but with a series of detailed technical drawings he had painstakingly created—schematics that would have looked more at home in an Earth engineering firm than a Riverian carpenter’s workshop.

Master Valerius stared at the drawings, his aged eyes wide with a mixture of bewilderment and professional awe. “My lord… these… these designs… the tolerances, the internal mechanisms… I’ve never seen anything like it. To craft this from wood alone…”

“Not entirely from wood, Master Valerius,” Lloyd explained. “The body, yes. From a good, seasoned hardwood. But the internal pump mechanism… that will require metal. Not steel, too difficult for common smiths to work with this precision. Bronze, perhaps. Or a tin alloy. Something a skilled metalsmith can cast or machine.”

Chapter: 234

It was here that Lyra, with her practical, problem-solving mind, made a crucial contribution. She had been studying Lloyd’s schematics, her sharp eyes identifying potential weaknesses, not in the design, but in the materials available.

“My lord,” she had said during one of their planning sessions, tapping a drawing of the valve mechanism. “Bronze is a good choice for the piston and cylinder; it’s durable and can be machined to a smooth finish. But the valves, the seals… over time, with constant exposure to the slightly alkaline soap and water, even bronze will corrode. The seal will fail.”

“An excellent point, Lyra,” Lloyd had conceded, impressed. “So, what do you propose?”

“An alchemical solution,” she replied, a faint spark of excitement in her practical eyes. “There is a sealant, a varnish we use in the Guild for coating beakers that must hold highly corrosive agents. It’s a resin-based compound, infused with powdered obsidian and a small amount of silver colloid. When applied to metal and cured with low, steady heat, it creates an inert, waterproof, and highly corrosion-resistant layer. We could coat the internal bronze components with it. It would drastically increase the dispenser’s lifespan and ensure a perfect, long-lasting seal.”

It was a brilliant fusion of Lloyd’s engineering and her own applied alchemy. The final design was a masterpiece of practical elegance: a standardized, easily turned wooden body, beautiful yet replicable. And a modular, bronze pump mechanism, its components cast by a skilled metalsmith, then coated in Lyra’s alchemical sealant for durability, and finally, assembled with precision. It was no longer a one-off miracle; it was a manufacturable product.

The manufactory was a hive of activity, a place of creation, a fusion of old-world labor, new-world engineering, and practical alchemy. The first successful large-scale batch of soft soap was cooling in its cauldron. And the first ten replicable, artisan-crafted, alchemically-sealed dispenser prototypes were nearing completion in Master Valerius’s workshop.

Lloyd stood in the center of the bustling mill, the scent of rosemary in the air, the sounds of hammering, cranking gears, and cheerful, if slightly off-key, work songs from Martha and Pia echoing around him. He felt a profound sense of accomplishment, a satisfaction that went bone-deep. This was real. This was his. An empire, born from a memory, funded by kings, and built on the hard work and brilliant collaboration of his strange, wonderful team. The System Coins, he thought, checking his slowly but steadily increasing balance—now at 468 SC, thanks to the relentless daily conversions and a series of minor, background tasks—were almost secondary. Almost. The real prize was this. This act of creation. This tangible, fragrant, revolutionary reality.

---

The scent of warm rosemary and cooling tallow that permeated the old grain mill was, to Lloyd, the smell of progress. days had bled into a week of relentless, focused activity. The initial chaos of refurbishment had given way to the organized hum of a fledgling production line. The great water wheel, lovingly restored by Borin and a team of grumbling but ultimately impressed estate carpenters, now turned with a steady, rhythmic groan, its power transferred through a clanking, ingenious system of wooden gears and leather belts to the massive stirring paddles, which churned the saponifying mixtures with an efficiency that brought tears of joy to Lyra’s pragmatist eyes.

Down on the main floor, several large, sealed earthenware jars filled with the creamy, rosemary-scented soft soap were stacked neatly, awaiting the completion of the first run of dispenser bottles from Master Valerius’s workshop. Alaric’s ledgers grew thick with meticulous records of batch numbers, lye concentrations, and cooling times. Jasmin, a transformation in herself, moved through the manufactory with a quiet, confident authority, her earlier timidity burned away by the heat of responsibility, replaced by the focused competence of a true forewoman.

It was into this hive of industry that Master Elmsworth arrived one bright afternoon, not as a tutor, but as an auditor. Arch Duke Roy, true to his word, had dispatched the economics expert to conduct an initial inspection, to assess the viability of the enterprise not just in theory, but in practice. He was also, Lloyd suspected, profoundly curious himself.

Lloyd met him at the door, a faint, almost proud, smile on his lips. “Master Elmsworth. Welcome to Ferrum’s Cleansing Elixirs.”

Elmsworth, who still seemed to be vibrating with a low-level hum of economic excitement whenever he was in Lloyd’s vicinity, stepped inside, his sharp eyes taking in everything at once. He peered at the clanking gear system, sniffed the air appreciatively, ran a critical finger along a dusty beam (a test Lloyd’s team had, thankfully, passed, as Pia had been scrubbing the rafters just that morning), and then his gaze fell upon the heart of the operation: the workflow.

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