Font Size
15px

We darted between stalls, picking up so other items. A trinket and a pair of shoes with a faint brown aura. Daniel didn’t want to stop and test it though, so we kept moving, heading toward a nearby stall where a ring pulsed with vibrant blue energy.

“That one,” I said, pointing to the small object to signal Daniel.

He placed a bid, and we waited. As I’d expected, soone eventually showed up, soone with very clear intentions.

“What’s the current price on the ring?” the servant asked.

“He’s got seven on it right now.”

“Eight, then.”

And so it began.

“Nine,” Daniel said, unfazed.

“Ten,” the brown-robed bidder countered without hesitation.

Another man joined the fray, followed by a young woman. Neither wore sect robes. Before long, a small crowd of six had gathered around the stall, not including us.

“Eleven,” Daniel called after a short pause, visibly thrown by how fast the crowd had ford.

The woman raised it again without batting an eye. Then soone else did. And again. But no one was bidding against each other, just against Daniel.

I leaned toward Synthia. "Looks like you’re about to get so real acting practice."

“What?” she asked, caught off guard.

The bidding war raged on behind us, Daniel’s frustration rising with each jump in price, his dreams of easy profit rapidly slipping away.

"You don’t think it’s odd they’re only targeting Daniel?" I said quietly. "Maybe not all of them, but so are definitely working together."

I wasn’t sure if that kind of behavior broke any sect or town rules, but if they kept it subtle, it’d be nearly impossible to prove. A big crowd naturally invited attention, and even more people started to gather, offering even higher prices.

Synthia’s eyes flicked across the group. As realization dawned, her expression shifted.

“Oh... So what do we do?”

I gave her a sideways glance, voice thick with sarcasm. “Sa thing we always do. Find 'greeeeat' treasures for .”

She smirked. “Let’s have so fun then.”

“Twenty!” a young girl suddenly shouted, loud and proud.

Daniel stiffened. I could practically feel the heat radiating off him.

“Co on, man,” I said, placing a hand on his shoulder. “There’s plenty of other stalls.”

“Yeah, bu—” he started, eyes still locked on the bidding war.

“We’ll make plenty more in the future. No harm in a few losses, right?” I kept my tone light, trying to steer him away from the rising tension. As we turned away, the crowd, now our uninvited entourage, trailed close behind.

“Goddamn Brogo must’ve sent these pests,” Daniel muttered under his breath.

“Hey, it’s no problem,” I said with a grin. “Let’s just ss around a bit.”

“There!” Synthia suddenly pointed to a stall, her voice full of performative excitent. Her finger landed on an unassuming wooden flute. I glanced at it, there was so energy, a faint golden hue, but nothing impressive.

Easing into her role, huh?

Daniel jumped in to bid, but just like before, the second he opened his mouth, soone else outbid him. Then another. The pattern repeated, again and again.

And so the ga began. Fun for two of us, miserable for one.

Daniel kept losing. Over and over. But Synthia? She started to escalate. It began with the flute. Then a small hamr that looked better suited for fixing a loose shelf than anything combat-related.

Each ti, soone would cheer after winning. The joy of outbidding a Core Disciple, even if it wasn’t their money on the line, seed to be a reward all its own.

Daniel’s frustration simred beneath the surface, rising steadily. But as long as he didn’t explode in public, I figured we were fine.

The next item, a beat-up old iron pot, was won by a brown-robed girl who squealed with excitent and bounced in place before hurrying off. She handed a small pouch to another man as she left, probably out of funds but a couple crystals.

I started to feel a little bad for these people. They were clearly excited. Hopefully, they didn’t get punished later for Brogo’s idiocy.

Then ca the crown jewel of ridiculousness.

“Master,” Synthia said, voice full of reverence, “this is perhaps the most valuable item I’ve seen.”

She was staring at a rusted, dented helt. One so pockmarked with holes it looked like it had fought a war... and lost. The way she gazed at it, though, you'd think it radiated holy light.

Even Daniel gave her a look. “Are you sure? It—it’s got holes. Lots of them.”

Synthia nodded with exaggerated seriousness.

“Daniel…” I began.

He raised a hand to stop . “Don’t worry. I’m winning this. No matter what.”

‘What a moron,’ Luna muttered.

I didn’t want to agree with her but seriously? No way he should’ve been buying this act. Even the bidders weren’t even checking the items. They were just taking our word for it.

Even the stall owner looked baffled when Daniel made the first offer. “Uh… I’m sorry, you an this?” He pointed to a shiny silver ring next to the helt.

“No,” Daniel sighed. “That. The helt.”

“Uh… One? I guess?”

“Then one,” Daniel confird.

“Two!” soone from the crowd shouted.

“You guys aren’t ssing with ?” the vendor asked, glancing between us with visible confusion.

I decided to throw a little fuel on the fire. “Fifteen.”

A breeze passed through as the silence stretched. The vendor stared at like I was both a saint and a lunatic.

“Si—sixteen!” soone stamred.

The bidding war continued until soone blurted out “Thirty!” and Daniel finally stepped back, defeated. The group huddled together, pooled their money, and handed over several pouches before taking their glorious prize and vanishing.

But Daniel didn’t seem upset. If anything, he looked… satisfied. A thin smile tugged at the corner of his mouth.

“Good riddance,” he said. “Let’s see Brogo try bothering us again after blowing all his crystals.”

“When’d you figure it out?” I’d assud Daniel was just tunnel-visioned, chasing his dream of getting rich.

He shrugged. “I an… who buys that rust bucket and calls it treasure for fifteen crystals?”

Fair point. So my bet spilled the beans.

The stall owner didn’t wait around for questions. He scrambled to pack everything into a cloth bundle and bolted, probably afraid soone might co asking for a refund.

“Well, let’s head back,” I said, stretching. “We can always shop more tomorrow.”

I still needed to et with Ramus, and I was curious about the books Daniel had ntioned. Plus, if I could get anything useful out of Synthia regarding elents, that’d be a bonus.

They both nodded, and we started jogging back. Not quite a sprint, but definitely faster than the casual stroll we’d taken earlier. Between the pace and the comfortable silence, we made it to the Core Disciple housing in no ti.

We stopped at the edge of the row of hos.

“This one’s mine,” Daniel said, pointing to a modest building.

“Oh! We’re neighbors then.” Maybe he was pretty new to the sect too.

“Give a sec, I’ll grab the books,” he said, heading inside.

A few monts later, he returned with three thin manuals in hand. “Here.”

I accepted them with a nod. “Thanks.” I reached into my pocket, ready to pay him back for all the earlier purchases, but he stopped with a raised hand.

“We can settle up later. Let’s just et tomorrow and make so real money.” His eyes sparkled... almost literally. You could practically see the Force Crystals in their reflection. “I’ve got a few things to handle first, but I’ll fill you both in later.”

With that, he waved and jogged off down the mountain.

I turned to Synthia. “Want to look through these together?”

She blinked, surprised. “You did all the work to get them… You sure you want to share?”

I chuckled lightly. “Of course. Think of it as your reward for playing your part today.” Sliding the door open, I stepped inside. “Co on.”

I sat cross-legged in the center of the room and laid the three books out in a fan in front of . Synthia settled in beside .

‘Anything in there look good for ?’ Luna asked.

‘I’ll check. Just hold on. How’s the purification going?’

She paused, then glowed a soft, pulsing yellow. ‘Pretty good! I can feel my body absorbing World Force faster and more efficiently now. I think I’ll be done soon.’

‘Good. Keep focusing on that while I handle the long-term power stuff.’

‘Understood!’

“You talking to that thing?” Synthia asked, eyeing curiously.

I smirked and held up my wrist. “This is Luna. My partner in cri. We help each other out.”

She leaned in for a closer look. “Wow… So, that’s why you kept acting weird?”

“You an the interruptions? Yeah. That’s all her.”

Turning back to the books, I scanned the titles. Thankfully straightforward and not drenched in dramatic flair.

I was relieved to see that the script was legible despite so differences in the styling, though not everyone had the sa penmanship. I an, were I to write a manual myself who knows if anyone could make it out.

“Pillar Formation. Spiritual Root Formation. Pathway Formation,” I read aloud. Each cover was marked with a rough diagram, hollow human silhouettes etched with different lines.

The Pillar Formation showed a long, solid vertical channel from the crown down through the Nexus then to the base. Almost like a simplified Grand Channel.

Spiritual Root Formation matched what I’d seen when examining myself in Kazriel’s body.

And Pathway Formation looked nearly identical to what I called the Circuit System. Though honestly, Circuit Formation was the better na in my opinion.

“I’ll take this one,” I said, reaching for the Spiritual Root Formation. The pillar thod seed basic, and I already had a manual for the circuit system waiting.

“Sure,” Synthia said, then added with a hint of smugness, “but I could just explain it to you… if you want.”

You are reading Beyond The System Chapter 92: Rust Bucket on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Dragon God Supreme cover
Similar genre

Dragon God Supreme

Seven Luan ·Action

Theordinaryyouthlackedtheexceptionaltalentsofhispeers,yethepossessedashockingheritage,bearingamysteriousbloodlineandharboringthespiritoftheEvilDrag...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.