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PathOfPen
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Chapter 197 – Truthseeker

Orin struggled to keep a straight face as he watched his elders – wise Violet cores who had been doing this for even longer than him, fumble their way around their cauldrons. They all understood – even better than him – that deattuning the elixirs twice in a row wouldn’t give them the result they wanted.

Still, Deimos simply refused to hear it. Upon learning that Rainbow Grass was involved in the recipe, he had pressured the alchemists to incorporate it by force, hoping against all odds it would work. And technically, he wasn’t wrong. After all, Rainbow Grass was the key to brewing the Aurora Dew. That said, they were all just missing one important step in-between.

‘Lord Paracelsus has a pure affinity too… if only he knew…’ he smiled bitterly.

At Violet, the veteran alchemist wouldn’t even need any practice to condense the crystals. It would only take him a few seconds. Hell, he had probably done it many times by accident over the centuries – he just hadn’t considered the crystals’ potential applications in alchemy – not unlike everyone else on Remior. Orin was confident they would all be pulling their hairs out a couple decades from now, as soon as they learned the solution had been right under their noses all along.

‘Assuming they don’t find Percy before then...’

The boy had no idea just how lucky he had gotten. Orin too. Had this been a few years back, when the Veritas House was still active, the Divine Root would have already brought one of their truth-seekers to interrogate the alchemists. Had that happened, Orin would have inadvertently spilled the beans by now, dooming everyone involved.

It wasn’t like their Truthseeker bloodline was the only one of its type to exist, but no other variant was nearly as accurate… as… absolute as theirs. Even the runner-up, the Truthreader bloodline that House Asclepius had – and from which the former had been derived – wasn’t remotely as good. Any experienced mage could trick it rather easily. Its best use was to sniff out lies from ignorant peasants who didn’t know any better.

Orin was counting his lucky stars that somebody had decided to eliminate the House at some point. Nobody knew exactly what had motivated the extermination, but the most logical guess was that somebody high up didn’t want such a dangerous bloodline to even exist. Perhaps the leader of some Great House had done something damning. Something they didn’t want ever brought to light.

And, as luck would have it, Percy had even taken the lone survivor – that Nesha girl – out with him. It was the only reason Orin’s head was attached to his shoulders right now.

‘It’s probably for the best anyway…’ he sighed, diving back to his work.

Initially, he had felt guilty over his deal with Percy. What if these twenty years ended up costing Remior everything in the end? Could Orin really carry such a heavy responsibility on his shoulders?

But after seeing Hermes and Deimos’s conduct over the past two years, he had slowly come around. People like them might be the very shield that protects Remior from their enemies, but they certainly didn’t have everyone’s wellbeing at the forefront of their minds either.

By now, Orin was convinced that publicizing the recipe would hurt the majority of people. Right now, there was only enough elixir for Orange-borns and above – in other words, around 40% of the population. What would happen if half of it was wasted during the conversion to Aurora Dew, and the recipients of the new elixir suddenly required three times as much per day?

It was simple math – less than 7% of the population would get Aurora Dew! It wouldn’t even be enough for all the Yellow-borns, let alone the Orange-borns!

Even worse, the unlucky fraction of Yellow-borns wouldn’t accept getting downgraded to the diluted elixirs. The most likely outcome was that they would outlaw the very act of diluting or drinking an elixir for Red-borns and Orange-borns, starving the rest of the population completely. And it still wouldn’t be enough.

Everything considered, 92% of the population would likely remain stuck at the grade they were born at their whole lives. Somebody like Orin would never even reach Yellow, let alone Blue. In fact, all these people would become entirely inconsequential, as they wouldn’t even be useful as cannon fodder in wars anymore, meaning they might end up treated worse than livestock.

It wasn’t all gloom and doom, of course.

Remior would get more gods eventually. When that happened, they would probably elevate the world’s standing, leading to everyone’s quality of life improving. But how many tens of thousands of years would it take for that to happen? How many millions of people would suffer until then?

If the Divine Order truly cared about the common folk, perhaps there were ways to mitigate the problem. For example, they could enforce a law that ensured everyone got access to at least the diluted elixirs. Or another one that had a smaller number of Yellow-borns compete for Aurora Dew based on their merits.

‘Yeah, as if.’ he chuckled. These people, frankly, didn’t give a shit.

Soon, the veteran alchemists called the session off for the day. It was already getting late, and everyone was tired. Deimos protested, of course. In his eyes, every idle second was a second wasted. But the elders shut his complaints down with some scathing words. Divine Root or not, there was apparently a limit to how much shit they were willing to take from a Blue.

On the way home, Orin couldn’t help but revisit his plan for disseminating the recipe when the time came. Obviously, he couldn’t just come out and say he had been sitting on it for twenty years. That would be the quickest way to get himself skinned alive.

‘Either I write it down and leave it somewhere anonymously, or I pretend I rediscovered it on my own by accident.’

Neither option was completely risk-free. If somebody found out he was lying, he’d be screwed. Then again, there wasn’t much point in stressing over this right now. He had plenty of time to make up his mind. Besides, if Percy got caught, or otherwise leaked the recipe on his own by then, it would absolve Orin of the responsibility.

Shrugging, he was about to go to sleep, when he heard somebody knocking on the door. Naturally, his mind instantly went to all sorts of dark places, though he still walked up to his house’s entrance. Opening, he was relieved that it wasn’t a Guild official, nor a member of the Divine Root standing there. Instead, it was a plump man in orange robes.

“How may I help you?” Orin asked, still raising an eyebrow at the unexpected visit.

“Sir, I’m sorry to disturb you this late. You don’t know me, but I’m Freddy – one of Percy’s friends.”

“Freddy? Ah!” Orin’s expression eased, putting two and two together. “I have heard of you, actually! Percy didn’t have that many friends after all.” he chuckled.

“You mean, he mentioned me?”

“Of course! You’re the one he bought those Honey Rolls from every night, right?” Orin asked, getting a nod back. “So, what brings you here?”

Freddy’s expression soured at the sound of that. He looked down at his feet for a moment, before gazing back at Orin.

“Sir, I don’t know if you are aware, but Percy has been missing for a long time. Nearly two years, in fact. It’s really strange. He almost never skipped a day visiting my stand for ages. Then, he suddenly disappears, never to be seen again. I’ve spoken to lots of people since then. I’ve even scoured the first and second levels of the hunting grounds on my own, but I haven’t found any traces of him.”

Orin remained silent for a second. He still had no idea how Percy and Nesha had even escaped from the settlement – assuming that they had, of course – but it wasn’t hard to guess why Percy hadn’t told Freddy anything. He clearly didn’t want to get his buddy involved in his mess.

Misunderstanding his silence for confusion, Freddy spoke again.

“Sir, after exhausting all other avenues, I came to ask you if you have any idea what might have happened to Percy. You were his alchemy mentor, weren’t you?”

“I haven’t seen the boy in years.” Orin muttered. “I assumed he just locked himself in a room, working, as he often did. Is he really missing?”

Freddy nodded, before voicing another request.

“I apologize in advance for my rudeness, sir, but could you please look for him on the third level? That idiot always did reckless things like that. I would have gone myself, but I can’t survive out there on my own…”

Orin couldn’t help but clench his fist. He wanted to tell this youngster the truth. But it was better for everyone involved if he remained in the dark. Even better, he had to get him to stop poking around, before anybody caught wind of Percy’s connection to him, or the suspicious circumstances of his disappearance.

“Young man… I suggest you forget about it.” he said drily. “People go missing on the Fungal Spire all the time. Especially those who bite more than they can chew on a regular basis. Like Percy.”

“But sir, I–”

Orin raised his hand to stop him.

“I said, forget it. I liked the boy. He was smart and hard-working. But two years are a long time. If he really went missing that long ago, chances are that he’s dead. If he thought it was a good idea to go hunting on the third level, I doubt there will be any trace of him left.”

Next, he closed the door, not giving Freddy the chance to utter another word. He walked back to his room, taking his robes off. Brushing his hand over a rune, he switched the light off, before resting on his bed.

At the same time, he couldn’t stop thinking about his student and the colossal mess he had brought upon everyone. The Divine Root aside, those old coots would slap the boy to death if they knew it was his fault they were forced to break their backs trying to reproduce this recipe.

‘Percy… whatever it is you’re doing out there, I hope you’re making the most of this opportunity you’ve carved out for yourself…’

Comments

Well the issue is partly one of supply. One of competent alchemists. If there were more alchemists getting a better conversion rate out of the Bug goop then yeah that would increase supply. But you'd have to increase the amount of people harvesting to support the increased demand. And increased supply would mean to decreased cost and decreased profits. Yeah volume makes up for it...but alchemists don't strike me as willing to accept this and pretty lazy tbh.

Matthew Bernardin

@Private Writer Oh hmmmm. Heterogeneity of the nectar is definitely an issue, and one that I hadn't thought of. But they can probably homogenize it by dumping all the nectar vials into a big vat, and mixing them all together, yeah? That's what they do for milk, in the real world, and it seems to work.

Chyre

Wait until he drops a soul clone on a... cultivator's world. ("what do you mean, two cores? You guys never open up the third eye Dantian? Or cultivate without pills? You're barbarians or what?")

Vincent Archer

The problem isn’t the supply of stable beast mana. The bottleneck is the number of trained alchemists. That’s one of the reasons Orin gave out the initial free lesson on alchemy for everyone.

Ahppy

@Chyre The brews can be standardized by just selecting a method of brewing out of hundreds, what I mean by standardization of components is to extract just the chemical component for an alchemical process out of an ingredient at the precise mass needed for the amount of elixer to be produced and everything broken down by mass and chemical components. Which is how modern pharma industry works and how mass production/ assembly line work is enabled. Here with the beast mana transformation process, you are working with a nebulous energy which could be different between each nectar droplet and so requires corresponding change in other ingredients can't be measured for standardization. It is not possible to implement at Remior's current tech level

Private Writer

You guys are right that these are logistical challenges that would have to be overcome somehow...but they are possible to overcome, and in fact, have direct real-life analogues. @Private Writer That's why you standardize the brews. Right now, every alchemist has his or her own methods and ingredients, but that's also how the production of goods worked in the real world, prior to the invention of mass manufacturing. You would 100% need to train your own crop of alchemists for this to work, with all of them taught exactly the same method of making their respective brewing steps. @Dove Orrin mentioned, in his intro lecture way back however many chapters ago, that they could probably produce enough elixir for everyone on Remior - even without collecting more nectar - if only they could get the brewing yield high enough (I think it was like 40% they needed? I forget.). The goal here is not to collect more nectar at all, it's to use the nectar they do collect more efficiently. And maximizing efficiency through worker specialization is just basic economics. @Derze That's why I said "assembly-line". You would 100% need a team of alchemists in the same room together for this to work, with each passing their respective concoctions to the next person in the chain, immediately after finishing.

Chyre

So far we know of three ways to pacify beast mana. A wasp’s gland, the meat of some animal and the pearl of some mollusk. If Percy introduced some of these species on Remior he could create other ways to generate pacified beast mana. That is until he figures out runes to do the same.

ThoMiCroN

There is also a time problem involved. The intermediate steps aren’t stable enough to become its own thing from what the process was described.

Derze

From what we know now any source of beast mana works. If Percy learns from Atlantis that he can use conversion to use any OTHER source Mana. Even if it’s at an ABYSMAL rate that’s ground breaking. It would become mostly a resource allotment problem. Beasts naturally convert mana through eating. Find a way to replicate that step and u literally solved the equivalent of cancer in their world

Derze

I didn’t quite realize how valuable Nesha is! The last of her bloodline… almost any major house would want to take her in and protect her if they knew.

Dove

For an assembly line to work, you need the raw materials. I think there’s definitely a limit to how many wasps there are and how much they can produce. If suddenly everyone hunts them, there will be a huge drop in production of the nectar because there won’t be enough wasps making it back to the hive to feed the queen. The real answer is going to be if Percy can learn to propagate the new mushrooms freely and create a sustainable (and hopefully more potent!) source of raw materials.

Dove

Assembly line only works on the basis of standardization of all components, that does not apply for a potion or an elixer, with each ingredient having varying physical properties which can affect the brew in completely different ways, that's why it takes someone so long to produce higher yield, as they need to assimilate and become familiar with all the failure possibilities and how to recover from or prevent the failure conditions from happening. Even seasoned alchemists are only producing 50-60% at their best according to Pathofpen.

Private Writer

Suggestion: If you feel like revisiting the population math issues with Aurora Dew in the future, you might have Percy discover the concept of assembly-line production somewhere...or something assembly-line-ish, anyway. Basically, rather than having a every individual alchemist do every stage in the process, have each of them specialize only on a single stage. The deattunement guy only does deattunement, and then passes the partially-finished brew off to somebody else. And while he sucks at most of the brewing phases, he's REALLY good at doing deattunement, so functionally you get a much higher brewing yield than you would otherwise.

Chyre

Maybe the new mushrooms or creating the aura pills from the Atlantis world

Kbzzy

Does Orin include all orangs born? Undiluted elixirs are expensive and not for most the common people. While yellow born common people mostly get adopted to noble houses, this shouldn't be a thing for common orange born. So the alchemy guild doesn't produce enough for all orange born. But they are getting more of the main ingredient than they are able to convert into elixsiers. The should have a massive stockpile of it now. They'll need more/better alchemists.

Xorvivs

The main problem with the Alchemist Guild is that nothing motivates the veteran alchemists to brew. They are already rich with nothing to spend money on

Apoca

Orin can decide that it's not worth the risk 20 years from now to share the truth. Give Percy more time.

Apoca

at least orin is committed to keeping his word... welp, it looks like percy is going to need to figure out an elixer alternative within 18 years... if that fate watcher guy doesn't out him immediately.

MagicWafflez

Kinda feel ambivalent about this chapter. Good plot, not so good emotional payoff.

werotan


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