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Chapter 109: The Hook

There is no SSS Appraisal. Not in the way Elisser thinks.

What I have is [Link]—a passive detection skill that reads the true soul of an item. Stats, hidden properties, flaws, the whole ledger. It’s not appraisal. It’s sothing older. But the output looks identical to what an S-tier appraiser sees, and that’s all I need.

"Well. Let’s see what this child has to offer." Elisser walks toward the table. Her cane clicks against the stone floor in a slow, unhurried rhythm. She’s already decided I’m wasting her ti.

"I’m at your serv—"

"A test." She cuts

off. Her hand dives into an apron pocket and erges with three objects. She drops them onto the table between us.

A red crystal wrapped in thin tal bands, shaped like a cut gem the size of a walnut.

A compact karambit knife, the blade curved like a talon, the handle etched with small runes that glow faintly under the blue light.

A tal star—a shuriken, four-pointed, each edge so sharp it looks like it could cut the air just by sitting still.

"Appraisal classes are rare." Elisser closes her eyes and exhales through her nose. "SSS? I doubt it. Co on, boy. Tell ." Her lips curl into a thin, knowing smile. "Which one of these is broken?"

"May I touch them?"

"Whatever you want. It won’t make a difference."

I reach for the crystal first. [Link] activates the second my fingertips make contact. The data unfolds inside my head:

[Na: Heart of the Drowned Sun]

[Rank: D — Coral]

[Type: Pyromancy Stone]

[Durability: 50/50]

[Passive Skill —

10% casting speed]

[Hidden Skill — Salvation of the Drowned: If the caster extends casting ti by 20%, the next cast is incantation-free.]

Perfect condition. Common item with a hidden passive most appraisers miss. Clever design.

I move to the karambit.

[Na: Tide’s Claw]

[Rank: D — Coral]

[Type: Karambit]

[Durability: 8/50]

[Active Skill — Hook Break: light bleeding on piercing strikes.]

Low durability. Standard active. Nothing hidden.

Finally, the shuriken.

[Na: Wavebreaker Shuriken]

[Rank: D — Coral]

[Type: Shuriken]

[Durability: 49/50]

[Active Skill — Wavebreak: consus minor OXI; blade vibrates on impact, amplifying damage.]

[Hidden Passive — Cannot be repaired.]

Three items. Three conditions. Three possible answers.

And Elisser is watching

like she already knows I’m going to pick the wrong one.

Fine. Let’s give her what she’s expecting.

"The broken one is the shuriken," I say.

Elisser’s face collapses.

Her shoulders drop. Her grey eyes go flat. The anticipation drains out of her like water from a cracked cup, and what’s left is pure, uncut disappointnt.

"I knew it." She gathers the three items and drops them back into her apron pocket one by one—crystal, karambit, shuriken. Each one landing with a small, final clink. "Another boy with a tongue bigger than his brain."

She turns. Her cane hits the stone.

Clack. Clack. Clack.

The sound is slower now. Heavier. The walk of soone who already got what she ca for: confirmation that her ti was being wasted.

Boris opens his mouth to say sothing. I hold up a hand to stop him.

Rhayne’s fingers tighten in the back of my shirt.

Elisser reaches the doorway at the back of the workshop. Her free hand rises to push past the beaded curtain.

"The crimson crystal... that’s what you wanted

to say."

The cane stops.

She doesn’t turn around. She just stands there, one hand on the curtain, her back rigid.

I keep going. Speaking to her spine.

"A common appraiser would say the karambit. Durability eight out of fifty. Obvious answer. Wrong."

A long pause.

She turns. Slowly. Her grey eyes narrow, locked on

now with a focus that wasn’t there before.

"A qualified appraiser—the level you were expecting—would say the crystal. No visible active skill on a Rank-D pyromancy stone looks like a missing enchantnt. Defective by design."

She walks back to the table. Doesn’t sit. Just stands there, her hand resting on the edge.

"Also wrong," I say.

I pick up the red crystal. Hold it between my thumb and forefinger. Then I turn to the nearest guard—a wiry man standing against the wall, a faint heat shimr around his hands that I clocked the mont I walked in.

"You’re a fire caster. Aren’t you."

The guard blinks. "Yes, sir. How did you—"

"Use this." I toss him the crystal. He catches it. "Small fla. Palm of your hand. And when you finish the incantation, keep chanting. Don’t stop. Extend it beyond the completion point."

The guard looks at Boris. Boris nods.

"Oh fire that guides

through the shadow of the deep..." The guard’s voice is steady. A small sphere of orange fla blooms in his right palm. Fully ford. Complete cast.

I circle my finger.

Keep going.

"...turn everything to embers!" He completes the extended incantation, a full beat longer than necessary.

He blinks.

"The stone—" He looks at the crystal in his other hand. "It finished the spell for . Before I was even done—"

"Now cast another. Left hand."

"Oh fi—"

A second fireball blooms in his left palm. Instantly. No incantation. No delay.

The guard stares at his hands. Both of them burning. His mouth moves but nothing cos out for a full two seconds.

"Salvation of the Drowned." His voice cracks on the last word. "It—the hidden skill. It activated."

The other guards along the wall have stopped breathing. Boris is leaning forward, both elbows on the table, his jaw slack.

I turn back to Elisser.

"Nothing is wrong with the crystal. It’s a Rank-D item hiding a hidden passive that rewards patience. Most appraisers never find it because they give up cataloguing at the visible skill layer."

Elisser is staring at the crystal in the guard’s palm. Her grey eyes have gone wide—actually wide, for the first ti since she walked in.

Then she turns those eyes on .

"If the crystal isn’t broken," she says, and her voice has lost every trace of the dismissive edge from earlier, "what’s wrong with the shuriken?"

Bingo.

I hooked her.

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