Dimensional Trader: From F Rank To Top Trader
Chapter 42: Moggrell
CHAPTER 42: CHAPTER 42: MOGGRELL
Frank rotated the glowing crate with two fingers.
"Definitely cursed," he muttered. "But also... possibly full of coupons."
Juliet narrowed her eyes. "Frank."
He paused.
"I know that voice," he said. "That’s your ’we’re-about-to-step-on-a-rune’ voice."
"I’m serious," she said, stepping forward. "This whole thing reeks. Goblins don’t give away anything without three traps and a soul deposit hidden in the terms."
Frank gave her a half-smile. "What’s the worst it could—"
Click.
The crate opened.
Too late.
A puff of glitter-smoke exploded from the lid, followed by a mechanical voice speaking far too fast to stop.
"CONGRATULATIONS, ESTEEMED TRADER FRANK HAGAN! By opening this Limited-Time Goblin Opportunity Crate™, you have entered a Tier-2 Provisional Contract with MOGGREL INC., effective IMMEDIATELY. Terms of trade, debt, and minor planar obligation now apply. Have a shiny day!"
The crate vanished in a flash of green fire.
Frank froze.
Juliet blinked. "Did it just say minor planar obligation?"
Frank didn’t answer right away. He was too busy staring at the glowing glyph now spinning above his head, pulsing faintly like an invoice about to explode.
[New Contract Acquired: Goblin Bond (Provisional)]
Status: Pending Clarification
Clauses: Unknown (Goblin-Legal Substructure)
Warning: Opening crate counts as legally binding acceptance.
Would you like a lawyer? [Recommended.]
"...Okay," Frank said finally, blinking slowly. "I may have just been out-traded."
Juliet crossed her arms. "That’s one way to admit you got conned by a crate."
Frank tapped the hovering glyph. "Can we cancel this?"
[Only with direct negotiation with issuer: Moggrel.]
"Perfect," Frank groaned. "Now I have to negotiate with a goblin scam-lord using a contract written in reverse sarcasm."
Juliet raised an eyebrow. "So... what now?"
He sighed, standing up.
"Now?" he muttered. "Now I find Moggrel. I flip the con. And I make that little gremlin wish he’d never sent me glitter in the mail."
He cracked his knuckles, already pulling up the cross-realm trader network.
"Let’s do this."
The moment Frank accepted the connection request, the world twisted.
One blink and his apartment was gone—replaced by a bazaar made entirely of noise.
Horns blared in the distance. Signs flickered with ever-changing prices. Vendors screamed in seven languages, three of which were probably made up. The sky wasn’t a sky—it was a swirling billboard made of marketing slogans.
"BUY NOW!"
"NO REFUNDS!"
"FREE KNIFE WITH EVERY TRAUMA!"
"TRADE YOUR TEETH FOR WARMTH—LIMITED TIME ONLY!"
Frank squinted as a flying parchment nearly decapitated him.
Welcome to the Goblin Market Negotiation Chamber™
In front of him, a short green figure sat in a throne made of unpaid invoices and crooked shelves. His coat was stitched from expired coupons. His grin could slice bread.
Moggrel.
"Frank Hagan!" Moggrel bellowed, arms wide like they were old friends. "The mouthy little miracle-maker of Market Thread 09-B!"
Frank crossed his arms. "You trapped me in a trade contract using glitter and screaming fonts."
"Branding," Moggrel said proudly. "Never underestimate shiny chaos."
Frank sighed. "Alright, goblin. Let’s make this simple. I cancel the crate contract, you don’t lose a lung."
Moggrel’s ears twitched with joy. "Ooh, threats! I love threats. They’re like sugar for traders."
He snapped his fingers. A scroll popped up beside Frank, unrolling with an almost smug flourish.
Clause 14B: All crate recipients must fulfill one Goblin Favor before voiding the bond.
(Favor definition may shift depending on mood, weather, or audience laughter.)
Frank muttered, "I knew I should’ve just eaten the glitter instead."
Moggrel leaned forward. "One little favor, trader. Easy. Harmless. Possibly mildly criminal. But! Break the clause—and the contract explodes. Figuratively. Mostly."
Frank grinned. "Fine. Let’s see how your favor stacks against Earth sarcasm and a legally gray teleport rune."
"So," Frank said, slowly walking around the glowing scroll floating in front of him, "just to confirm—you want me to hand-deliver a cursed item... to a void beast... while it’s sleeping?"
Moggrel clapped his hands like a child watching someone else’s cart catch fire. "Yes! Beautiful, isn’t it? And symbolic! You deliver the weight of our contractual burden—literally!"
Frank held up the item: a small velvet pouch labeled "DO NOT JINGLE" in ten different fonts, none of them comforting. Inside was something vaguely sock-shaped that pulsed once every few seconds.
"It’s vibrating."
"Good sign!" Moggrel chirped. "Means it’s still spiritually volatile!"
Frank gave him a long stare. "You ever consider therapy?"
"I sell cursed toothbrushes for a living. This is therapy."
The system chimed softly:
[Favor Active: Deliver cursed item to "The Slumbering Maw" before awakening.]
[Warning: Proximity to target may trigger emotional hallucinations.]
[Time Limit: 30 minutes]
Frank sighed. "And here I thought D-Rank would be boring."
---
Ten Minutes Later – Somewhere Dark and Dripping
The realm shimmered with shifting shadows and fog that smelled faintly like burnt marshmallows and guilt. Frank tiptoed down a slope of cracked bone tiles toward a massive crater filled with snoring black mist.
The Maw slept in the center—hulking, coiled like a nightmare snake, six eyes closed, teeth twitching in its dream.
"Just leave the socks and go," Frank whispered, crouching low. "Don’t talk to the beast. Don’t offer it tea. Don’t think about that one time in fourth grade when you spilled soup on yourself in front of your crush."
[Warning: Hallucination threshold rising.]
"Oh come on."
A whisper echoed in the mist:
"You’ll never outsell Zaruun."
Frank muttered, "That was one time!"
He inched closer, slipping the jiggling pouch onto a carved pedestal at the edge of the crater.
The Maw stirred.
One massive eye opened halfway.
Frank froze.
The pouch let out a small "heh."
"...Did it just laugh?"
[Favor Complete. Retreat Immediately.]
Frank didn’t need further instruction.
He turned, bolted, and ran like a discount coupon was about to explode behind him.
***
Far away—across realms, across screens, across distance not measured in miles—Sarina watched the chaos unfold through a mirrored pane embedded in a lattice of crystal.
Her eyes tracked the contract flare around Frank’s head. Watched as he stepped deeper into goblin territory, laughing like he’d already planned ten exits.
She didn’t smile.
But she didn’t stop watching either.
A voice behind her whispered, "He should have broken by now."
Sarina answered calmly. "He doesn’t break. He trades."
Another pause.
Then, almost softly: "Do we interfere?"
She narrowed her gaze.
"Not yet. Let him win something. Then we’ll see what he’s willing to lose."