My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife!
Episode-311
Chapter : 621
“I did, Master Elmsworth,” Roy said, his tone flat and devoid of emotion. He gestured to the report on his desk. “I have been reviewing your analysis of my son’s latest… enterprise. Your summary is filled with what I can only describe as hyperbole. ‘Economic paradigm shift.’ ‘A revolution in foundational resource management.’ ‘Geopolitical leverage on a continental scale.’ These are strong words.”
Elmsworth’s head shot up, his eyes blazing with the fire of a true believer. “Hyperbole, Your Grace? I assure you, my words are inadequate! They are a pale shadow of the magnificent reality! What your son is creating on that coast is not a business; it is the fulcrum upon which the future of this kingdom will pivot!”
Roy raised an eyebrow, a gesture of profound skepticism. “Explain. In simple terms, Elmsworth. Spare me the poetry.”
The old economics tutor took a deep, steadying breath, trying to rein in his zeal. He stepped forward, laying his own meticulously prepared charts on the corner of the Arch Duke’s desk. “Your Grace, for centuries, the value of salt has been determined by its scarcity. It is difficult to mine, difficult to transport. The Salt Guild’s entire economic model is built upon this artificial scarcity. They control the source, so they control the price. It is a simple, brutal monopoly.”
He tapped a finger on one of his charts. “The Young Lord’s method eliminates scarcity entirely. His only significant costs are the initial construction and the labor to harvest. The raw material is the sea. The energy source is the sun. Both are, for all practical purposes, infinite and free. Do you see, Your Grace? He is not just creating a more efficient process; he is fundamentally breaking the existing economic equation. He is creating a product of supreme quality for a cost that is a tiny fraction of the Guild’s.”
Roy remained silent, his gaze fixed on the old tutor, his expression unreadable. He had, of course, already grasped the core concept. What he was testing was Elmsworth’s depth of understanding.
Elmsworth, emboldened by the Arch Duke’s focused attention, pressed on. “The commercial implications are staggering, of course. He will obliterate the Guild. He will control the entire salt market within the duchy in a matter of years. But the true power, Your Grace, lies beyond mere profit.”
His voice dropped, becoming conspiratorial, urgent. “Think of it. Salt is essential for preserving food. An army marches on its stomach, and its stomach depends on salted meat and fish. By controlling the primary source of pure, affordable salt, House Ferrum will hold a quiet, unbreakable leash on the military logistics of this kingdom and its neighbors. Any king wishing to wage a long campaign will need to come to us first.”
“Furthermore,” he continued, his excitement building again, “the southern coast is poor. The people there struggle. This project will create hundreds, perhaps thousands, of stable, year-round jobs. It will transform a desolate marsh into a prosperous hub of industry. The loyalty the Young Lord will earn from those people will be absolute. It will be a loyalty forged not from fear or duty, but from gratitude and prosperity. That is a political power that cannot be bought.”
He finally paused, his chest heaving, his face flushed with the passion of his own oration. He looked at the silent, imposing figure of the Arch Duke, waiting for a verdict.
Roy leaned back in his chair, the leather groaning under his weight. He steepled his fingers, his gaze distant. He had seen the reports. He had understood the numbers. But hearing it laid out like this, a grand strategy of economic, political, and social conquest, all born from a simple idea of evaporating seawater… it was something else entirely.
His son. The quiet, disappointing boy who flinched from sword practice and showed no aptitude for command. The boy he had worried over, despaired over, and pushed relentlessly, hoping to forge a spark of the Ferrum fire within him. That boy was gone. In his place was a man who did not just wield power, but created it from thin air. A man who thought not in terms of battles, but in terms of industries. Not in terms of years, but in terms of generations.
He had sent Lloyd to learn business as a consolation prize, a way for a non-warrior to be useful. He had expected him to manage ledgers, to learn the family’s existing trades. He had never, in his wildest imaginings, expected him to start tearing down the very economic foundations of the world and rebuilding them in his own image.
Chapter : 622
First, a cleansing elixir that had the nobility and royalty clamoring for more. A luxury, but a revolutionary one. Now, this. Salt. The most mundane, most essential, most foundational of all commodities. It was a move of breathtaking vision. It was a move a king would make.
A slow, unfamiliar feeling settled in Roy’s chest. It was a heavy, profound sensation, a mix of awe and a fierce, terrifying pride. His son was not just a worthy heir. He was more. He was a force of nature, a builder of empires. The future of House Ferrum was not just secure; it was destined for a level of power and influence Roy himself had never dared to dream of.
He finally looked at Elmsworth, his eyes holding a new, steely resolve. “Your analysis is… adequate, Master Elmsworth. You are dismissed.”
The tutor, basking in what he took as high praise, bowed low and practically floated out of the room.
Roy was left alone in the silence, the weight of his son’s ambition settling around him like a royal mantle. He picked up the Project Brine report, his calloused fingers tracing the elegant, radical designs. A faint, almost imperceptible smile touched the lips of the iron-faced Arch Duke. The game had changed. And his son, it seemed, was the one who was rewriting all the rules.
The silence in the Arch Duke’s study deepened, becoming a heavy, contemplative blanket. The last rays of sunlight slanted through the high, arched windows, illuminating motes of dust dancing in the air like tiny, golden spirits. Roy Ferrum did not move. He sat as still as the stone of the castle walls, but his mind was a raging sea.
He thought of the duel. The raw, untamed power his son had unleashed. Two Transcended spirits, a mythical feat that defied all known laws of magic and nature. The fusion of lightning and demonic fire, a paradox of creation and annihilation held in a single, desperate hand. He had seen the wild, chaotic river of Lloyd’s strength. He had met it with the unyielding mountain of his own mastery and had, as expected, prevailed. He had taught his son a lesson about control, about the difference between raw power and true will.
But now, staring at the plans for Project Brine, he realized that he had been the one who had truly been schooled.
He had been testing Lloyd’s soul as a warrior. He had been looking for the Ferrum spirit, the will to conquer, the strength to dominate. He had found it, yes, but it was buried under layers he could not comprehend. While Roy was thinking of the battlefield, Lloyd was thinking of the supply lines that fed it. While Roy was focused on the strength of the sword, Lloyd was focused on the economy that forged it.
It was a different kind of warfare. A silent, insidious, and infinitely more profound form of conquest. To control the salt was to control the lifeblood of the kingdom. It was a power more fundamental than any army, more enduring than any fortress. And his son had not stumbled upon it; he had engineered it with the cold, precise logic of a master craftsman.
A wave of something akin to fear washed over him. It was not fear of his son, but fear of the sheer, alien scale of his son’s intellect. Where did this knowledge come from? The principles of solar evaporation were not unknown, but the application on this industrial scale, the understanding of fractional crystallization, the elegant, interlocking systems of production and distribution… it felt like knowledge from another world.
He remembered the soap dispenser. The impossibly perfect pump mechanism that had baffled his finest engineers. He remembered the economic theories Lloyd had espoused, concepts that had left Master Elmsworth, a renowned scholar, feeling like a first-year student. He remembered the impossible awakening of the lost Steel Blood and the mythical Black Ring Eyes of the Austins.
Individually, they were anomalies. Together, they formed a pattern. A terrifying, magnificent pattern of a mind operating on a plane far beyond their own.
Roy rose from his desk and walked to the large, enchanted map of the kingdom that dominated one wall. He placed a hand over the southern coast, over the marshlands that were being transformed. He had always seen that land as a flaw, a weakness in his duchy’s geography. Lloyd had looked at it and seen the heart of a new empire.