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Now reading: Chapter 103: Breeding Living Mercury Slimes from Lich for Hire, a Fantasy novel by 九命肥猫Fat Cat With Nine Lives.

Deep within the desert, Heki Stone was sprawled across an enormous golden throne.

It was clearly a throne built for giants. At just over a ter tall, Heki could not even reach the armrests.

This area had only recently been excavated.

The Golden Kingdom survived via tomb-raiding. Even in war, it never ceased to excavate underground ruins.

Heki Stone had been particularly lucky these past few days. His crews had broken through into a brand-new passageway that led to a vast subterranean city.

Judging by its scale, it had once been a city inhabited by giants. Every object within was oversized, including the gold artifacts scattered everywhere.

Any civilization buried beneath the sands like this must once have enjoyed an era of unparalleled splendor. As a result, these underground cities almost always yielded enormous quantities of gold and magical relics.

Heki had struck it rich. This was a city of giants, packed with gold.

The golden throne alone was likely worth tens of millions of gold, not to ntion the warehouses filled with mountains of golden utensils and ceremonial objects.

Just like most ruins excavated before, the city was completely intact—save for one feature. There were no remains. No skeletons, no corpses, nothing at all.

Almost as if the inhabitants had vanished overnight. The entire civilization had then been swallowed by the desert.

Over the years, countless scholars had studied this phenonon in depth, but their conclusions varied wildly. No one had ever produced decisive evidence.

Of course, that didn't interfere with the physical aspect of archaeology. Tomb raiding was tomb raiding. If the tomb's owner wasn't lying inside, all the better.

That was why Heki Stone didn't hesitate for even a second before agreeing to Ambrose's fee. Two million gold was nothing. He was a wealthy vampire now.

Ambrose, naturally, had no idea what was happening on the far side of the desert. He certainly did not know that Heki Stone was rolling around atop a massive golden throne in giddy excitent, as if he were a tumbling die.

But since Heki had declared himself flush with gold, Ambrose replied without hesitation. [gaman Tiga: In that case, please send the gold first.]

It was ant as a probe. To Ambrose's surprise, however, Heki really did transfer the money imdiately. Not only that, he even sent over the promised gargoyles directly, without even asking Ambrose to cover the teleportation fee.

The continental-wide teleportation array capable of transporting such magical constructs cost over ten thousand gold alone.

At first, Ambrose couldn't understand what was going on. But once he saw the gold that arrived alongside the gargoyles, the reason for Heki Stone's largesse beca obvious.

These weren't gold coins. Rather, they were gold artifacts of various shapes and designs. Their intricate engravings even added significant collection value.

It was clear that Heki Stone had unearthed a fortune. Sothing major had been dug up beneath the desert. Overnight, the vampire had beco obscenely rich.

Still, the patterns on those gold artifacts looked oddly familiar.

Ambrose tried to recall where he had seen them before, but he simply couldn't rember. Besides, the gold was too distracting. It was of flawless purity.

"How I envy him," Ambrose muttered. "Why isn't there an ancient civilization buried beneath my castle?"

With that sigh, he sent Heki Stone the intelligence he had promised. [gaman Tiga: The elven race is equipping its troops with anti-magic weapons on a large scale. This is likely part of the Elven Queen's personal plan. The magical contract I ntioned earlier appears to be tied directly to the elves' overall strategy. A contracted lord who violates it may end up actively assisting an elven invasion...]

Ambrose withheld nothing, not even his own conjectures. The desert dwarves were currently at a disadvantage. If he didn't provide this major client with a helping hand now, they might not be able to afford future "employnt fees." And once the elves completed their strategic deploynt, Ambrose himself would be driven rapidly into a corner.

Heki Stone was, naturally, skeptical at first. Everyone knew the mass deploynt of enchanted weapons was unrealistic. Even at its peak, Alkhemia had lacked such capabilities. But Ambrose's reasoning held up. If the Elven Queen had truly achieved a second legendary ascension, then perhaps it was possible after all.

Alard, Heki Stone imdiately passed the information to Hoffman Ironfist. Yet faced with such an earthshaking revelation, the King's Hand rely replied with a brief "Understood," offering no further discussion and no invitation for a strategic discussion.

Heki Stone found this strange, but didn't press the matter. Their private relationship aside, matters of state were best kept at arm's length.

Ambrose, anwhile, did not inquire how the Golden Kingdom planned to counter the elves' anti-magic weapons. He was far too busy renovating his castle. Twenty obsidian gargoyles needed to be situated properly.

Strictly speaking, gargoyles were neither living beings nor undead. They were magical constructs, golems born of magical engineering. These top-tier gargoyles were made primarily from obsidian and reinforced with rare materials such as adamantine and mithril. The raw materials alone were enormously expensive. Moreover, because their forms were directly tied to their internal magical arrays, expert craftsn had to carve them out by hand.

Each of these twenty obsidian gargoyles possessed over a dozen special properties. The most fundantal—and most important—was magic resistance.

Obsidian gargoyles were highly resistant to all forms of magic. Without drawing upon the power of the Golden Throne, even a spellcaster like Ambrose would have to seriously consider fleeing if faced with five of them at once.

Top-tier obsidian gargoyles could also regenerate. As long as they hadn't sustained too much damage, about thirty percent or so, they could petrify themselves. As statues, that would fully regenerate within a few days.

They had no weak points. Brute force was the only way of destroying them. Hamring their heads was no different from smashing their feet. The head was purely decorative, not a sensory organ.

Beyond that ca their auxiliary abilities: life detection, rending attacks, flight, shadow concealnt, and more. Once activated, they would tear into enemies like rabid dogs, pursuing them relentlessly until their death. An ordinary person would be shredded in just a few blows.

If they had a flaw, it was their limited operational range.

Gargoyles weren't roaming units. They were defensive installations bound to their base. Stray too far, and they would rapidly petrify.

This batch of obsidian gargoyles had a maximum mobility of five hundred ters. That was more than enough to cover the castle, but using them to bully others offensively would be difficult.

Fortunately, Ambrose had a solution. He placed ten gargoyles around the castle as permanent guards. The remaining ten he stored within his private space.

At a critical mont, he could open a spatial gate to instantly bring them into the fight.

With the gargoyles installed, it was ti for real work. Ambrose had just received the first batch of "employnt fees" from Viscount Letterman: iron ore. It had only been roughly processed, but there was enough of it to fill over half the castle's storage vault.

With the ore delivered, he could finally start breeding living rcury slis.

After searching the castle, Ambrose finally found it in the dungeon running around with a few playmates.

The silvery sli was trailed by a group of smaller, sparkling blobs. They looked like they were playing hide-and-seek, or perhaps dancing.

These small blobs, of course, were the special undead that Ambrose had previously created from sand and glass. He had altered their material properties to form a set of hybrid elental-undead constructs.

Because Ambrose had not limited their intelligence, their ability to imitate what they saw was surprisingly well developed.

Perhaps because the living rcury sli was the largest, the others had instinctively accepted it as their leader.

They had not noticed Ambrose yet and were fully absorbed in playing.

The living rcury writhed and reshaped itself, sprouting several arms to grab the elental undead. The little blobs scattered, each showing off their own tricks. One dissolved into sand, spreading flat across the floor before scattering at high speed. One twisted into rope-like strands that slithered like snakes to evade capture. One mimicked the living rcury and ford arms with which to wrestle its leader—only to be slamd into the floor monts later. Another particularly shaless blob simply shoved a nearby spirit down and fled.

They were having a wonderful ti, and Ambrose found himself surprisingly engaged just watching them. They had clearly grown more intelligent. Before long, he would test their faith output again. Perhaps he was closer to his dream of golden freedom than he had realized.

After watching for quite a while, Ambrose realized they had no intention of stopping. Reluctantly, he played the role of the spoilsport parent, scooped up the living rcury, and carried it over to the ore warehouse.

He patted the chubby sli. "You've matured. It's ti for you to learn how to have children."

The living rcury nodded tentatively and wriggled onto the pile of ore.

With a wet splat, a severely corroded helt fell out of its body: the ersatz divine artifact looted from the Lyon paladins. Even after days of digestion, it had only managed to consu the outer layer of tal.

Spitting out the indigestible junk, the living rcury dissolved into a stream of silver liquid and began devouring the ore in great gulps. The mound of ore shrank visibly.

Though it digested divine artifacts slowly, ordinary tals vanished at terrifying speed. In just a few minutes, where there had once been over a hundred tons of ore were gone, there was now only a pile of slag.

Even so, the living rcury's size didn't seem to increase at all. It even let out a protesting wail, conveying that it was only eighty percent full—still short of what it needed to reproduce.

Ambrose was shocked. His calculations had been off. Fully feeding a living rcury sli with just ordinary tal ore was far harder than he had anticipated.

Gritting his teeth, he brought out so gold and fed it to the creature. Only then did it reach satiety. The living rcury's outer shell rapidly hardened as it entered its breeding state. When the silver shell eventually shattered, two such slis would erge.

This was his first cultivation attempt, so Ambrose was naturally cautious. He stayed by the creature's side, monitoring its vitals at all tis.

A full day and night passed. At last, cracks appeared in its hardened shell.

Silvery liquid flowed out, pooling on the floor before swiftly separating into two identical rcury masses. Though slightly smaller than the original, they were fully ford.

"It's a success!" Ambrose cried out.

re survival was only the first step for any form of life. To beco a true species, reproductive ability was essential.

The two rcury blobs crawled to Ambrose's feet, rubbing against his calves like clingy kittens.

Ambrose patted the indistinguishable little creatures and said, "Children, you eat far too much. One Viscount Letterman won't be enough. It's ti we visited so other mines."

The slis' appetite far exceeded Ambrose's expectations. Waiting for Letterman's second shipnt was unrealistic. Better to pick a suitable target and loot it directly. He could also bring the elental undead along and let them experience real combat. Hunting was, after all, the best way to develop intelligence.

Thinking back, Ambrose muttered to himself, "We ran into followers of the Mistress of Pain last ti, didn't we? Unlucky for them."

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