Chapter : 365

Lyra’s reaction was one of pure, logistical delight. “The cost savings… the simplicity of implementation… we don’t need new equipment, just a secondary grinding stone! The reduction in packaging costs alone will increase our profit margin by another five percent, at least!” Her mind was already redesigning the workflow chart, her earlier frustration replaced by the clean, sharp joy of a perfectly solved problem.

Borin just started laughing, a deep, booming, hearty laugh of pure, unadulterated delight. “Rock dust!” he roared, clapping Lloyd on the back with enough force to make him stumble. “Of course! It’s so stupidly simple it’s genius! I was trying to invent self-heating sacks, and all we needed was a bit of bloody rock dust!”

Lloyd just grinned, rubbing his smarting back. He had done it again. He had taken a piece of basic, commonplace knowledge from one world and applied it to another, creating a solution that felt, to them, like a stroke of revolutionary genius. The Radiance Laundry Powder was no longer just a concept. It was a viable, stable, and soon-to-be incredibly profitable, reality. The alchemy of industry, he mused, was often far simpler, and far more rewarding, than the alchemy of the laboratory.

________________________________________

The successful resolution of the Radiance clumping problem had infused the Elixir Manufactory with a renewed sense of purpose and a healthy dose of awe for their enigmatic young lord. The team worked with a new, fervent energy, finalizing the formulation, testing the limestone-based anti-caking agent with Alaric’s meticulous rigor, and preparing for the first large-scale production run. The atmosphere was one of triumph, of a team that felt it was on the cusp of not just one, but two, revolutionary commercial ventures. The soap empire was taking shape, solid and fragrant.

But as the days turned into another week, Lloyd Ferrum found his own thoughts drifting far from the comforting, profitable world of saponification and market logistics. The solution to the Radiance problem had been a satisfying intellectual exercise, a neat application of simple, cross-world chemistry. But it was… small. It was about improving a product, increasing a profit margin. The Major General within him, the strategist who had wrestled with weapons of mass destruction and the fate of nations, was growing restless. The ghosts were still out there. Ben Ferrum’s warning echoed in the quiet hours of the night: They are stronger than you.

The Spear of Justice was a powerful deterrent, a magnificent weapon. But it was a single, high-cost silver bullet. A war could not be won with a single bullet, no matter how potent. He needed more. He needed an arsenal. He needed a fundamental shift in the very nature of warfare in this world, a disruptive technology that would render the old ways of swords and shields, of even Ascended spirits and Void Power, partially obsolete. He needed his own industrial revolution, but not one of soap. One of fire and steel.

The idea had been simmering at the back of his mind ever since he had reclaimed his Steel Blood abilities, ever since he had sketched the simple, beautiful, terrifying schematics of a rifle. Gunpowder. The simple, three-part chemical recipe that had torn down the castle walls of his own world’s history, that had ended the age of the armored knight and ushered in the age of the common soldier.

Here, in Riverio, it did not exist. Warfare was a grand, almost romantic, affair of clashing swords, of powerful Void Users who were living tanks, of magnificent spirits battling in the sky. It was a war of heroes, of individuals. Gunpowder… gunpowder was the great equalizer. An anonymous, impersonal, brutally efficient force that could be mass-produced, that could put the power to kill a duke in the hands of a peasant. It was a terrifying, world-altering concept. And Lloyd knew, with a cold, hard certainty, that he needed to control it. To possess it first. Before his enemies, the other ghosts from Earth, remembered the same simple, deadly recipe.

He chose his moment carefully. It was late in the evening, after the main production work at the manufactory had ceased for the day. The rank-and-file workers had departed, leaving only the core team finishing their notes and cleaning their stations. The air was quiet, the scent of rosemary now a familiar, almost domestic, comfort.

He approached his R&D team—Alaric, Borin, and Lyra—who were gathered around a table, reviewing Alaric’s latest test results on the Radiance powder.

Chapter : 366

“A moment, if you please,” Lloyd said, his voice quiet but carrying an unusual weight that made all three of them look up, their professional focus instantly shifting to him. They saw the look in his eyes—the distant, serious, almost grim intensity of the Major General—and they knew, instinctively, that this was not about soap.

“Dismiss the others, Jasmin, Tisha,” he instructed, his gaze flicking towards the other side of the room where the two women were discussing staffing schedules. “And ensure the main doors are barred. No one is to enter or leave this section of the manufactory until I say otherwise.”

A flicker of surprise and concern crossed Jasmin and Tisha’s faces, but they nodded without question, moving to carry out his orders. The atmosphere in the room, once one of productive camaraderie, suddenly became tense, expectant.

Lloyd waited until the main doors had boomed shut, the heavy iron bar sliding into place with a definitive thud. He was now alone with the three people whose skills he needed most for this new, dangerous venture. His alchemists. His engineers.

He pulled up a stool, sitting down at their table, creating a sense of intimacy, of a shared, secret council. “What I am about to discuss with you,” he began, his voice a low, serious murmur, “does not leave this room. It is not to be recorded in any ledger. It is not to be spoken of, even in whispers, outside of this sealed space. It is a project of the utmost secrecy and of the highest strategic importance to the future security of House Ferrum, and indeed, this entire Duchy. Do you all understand?”

The three of them stared at him, their earlier relaxed postures gone, replaced by a rigid, focused attention. They nodded in unison, their expressions a mixture of apprehension and profound, almost fearful, curiosity.

“Good,” Lloyd continued. He leaned forward, his elbows on the table, his hands steepled before him. “We have created wonders with soap. We are building a commercial empire. But commerce, prosperity… it is all meaningless without security. Without the strength to protect what we have built.” He paused, letting the weight of his words sink in. “Our current methods of warfare… they are effective, but they are limited. They rely on the innate power of a few—the powerful Void User, the master swordsman, the wielder of a Transcended spirit. But what if,” his eyes gleamed with a cold, revolutionary fire, “we could create a power that was not reliant on individual talent? A power that could be manufactured, stored, and deployed by any common soldier? A force that could shatter a castle wall from a distance, or fell an armored knight with a single, thunderous blow?”

He saw their expressions shift from curiosity to bewilderment.

“You speak of siege engines, my lord?” Lyra asked, her practical mind immediately turning to catapults and ballistae. “Their power is great, but they are cumbersome, slow to deploy…”

“I speak of something far beyond a catapult, Lyra,” Lloyd replied, his voice a low, compelling hum. “I speak of a new kind of alchemy. A new kind of fire.”

He began to describe it, not with the chemical formulas of his Earth life, but with the language of their world, the language of properties and effects. “I have been studying… certain obscure alchemical texts,” he lied smoothly. “Texts that speak of a… ‘catalytic combustion powder’. A fine, dark powder, created from the precise mixture of three simple, seemingly mundane, ingredients.”

He looked at Alaric, the meticulous chemist. “Imagine, Alaric. A stable, solid compound. But when a spark, a single point of ignition, is applied to it in a confined space… it does not just burn. It undergoes a near-instantaneous phase transition. It transforms from a small volume of solid powder into a massive, immense volume of superheated gas. The expansion is so rapid, so violent, that it creates a wave of pressure, a force of immense, almost unimaginable, propulsive power.”

Alaric’s eyes widened behind his spectacles, his scientific mind instantly grappling with the concept. “A phase transition of that velocity… the energy release would be… astronomical. It would be an explosion, my lord. A controlled, directed explosion.”

“Precisely,” Lloyd confirmed. “A controlled, directional explosion. A force that can propel a projectile—a ball of lead, a shard of iron—at speeds far exceeding any arrow or crossbow bolt. A force that can be contained within a metal tube, aimed, and unleashed with a simple mechanical trigger.”

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