Chapter 3: The path to riches goes through the stomach

Chapter 3: The path to riches goes through the stomach

Tom's chosen path to a happy and full bank account was through alchemy.

While he couldn't do much with it, he knew enough to create a proper business opportunity for himself and that was all that mattered.

Well, that was slightly wrong. In the end, all that mattered was being creative enough.

Tom didn't go through the 'expected' path of trying to create and sell expensive potions. Not only did he have no idea how to brew those, but the materials for that would also cost him a fortune. One that he didn't have.

And the less said about the necessary research, the better.

Sure, thanks to his Sacred Gear, he only needed one of these potions to know about the 'theory' behind it but that still meant he would need to actually get good at creating one in reality.

For now, that endeavor was just a waste of money.

Instead, Tom decided to go through the food industry. Alchemy was in simple terms the craft of transformation. This transformation didn't need to be huge nor did it have to be outwardly glaring.

Using Alchemy to enhance the sweet taste of apples was Tom's very first experiment.

And he understood why nobody tried to do it before. Making the apple edible while also cheaply enhancing its taste to levels that would make it worth his while was an incredibly difficult task that took Tom weeks of effort.

But not all was bad.

Tom realized some things about his Sacred Gear throughout the process.

He learned the principles he learns by using the Gear are not really 'general'. No, they were very much subjective and depended on who was the creator of the inspected thing.

He inspected his experimental apple a lot with his Sacred Gear and whenever he tried a different kind of experiment, different kind of approach, even if he used the same alchemy method, his Sacred Gear revealed his 'way of thinking' to reach the finished product.

That told him he should not fully trust in whatever his Sacred Gear is showing him as it might be subjective, instead of the general truth of the world.

It took Tom a whole three months to finally, through trial and error, find the best balance in the procedure and create an alchemical circle that could, with some cheap materials, enhance the taste of an ordinary apple by ten times while making it edible without any side effects.

Sure, Tom could use costly materials, and maybe he would find a way to get twenty, fifty, or even a hundred times better results but why bother? He needed a product that would get popular fast, a product that he could sell to a massive number of people for cheap and rake in the profits.

The best part was... Now that Tom created his alchemical circle for 'taste-enhancement', it wasn't hard for him to fit the procedure for other sorts of fruits. Nor was it hard to create a circle that could affect multiple apples at the same time, massively speeding up the process.

Still... the actual profit-making work was annoying and took a lot of effort. Tom had to buy apples wholesale, drop them into the room with an enlarged alchemic circle, buy and use the supplementary materials needed for the circle to work, transmute the taste of the apples, find a buyer, and only then did he receive his first batch of profits.

It took him a week to find a wholesale provider for his needs.

It took him another two weeks to find a buyer that would buy his overpriced apples.

That was mostly because people usually sent him to hell before even tasting one of his products when he told them he wanted 20 pounds for a kilogram.

But he did manage to find someone interested, dare he say, hooked to his apples and willing to risk starting a business with them.

If anything, Tom really had a lot of trust in his product and refused to lower the price no matter what.

Tom didn't have time to transmute large quantities of apples and sell them. He could do much more worthwhile things with his time than that. Hence, a delegation of work was necessary. Losing most of the profits from a method he found out grated his ego but... in exchange for that, he would not need to spend any effort and would still get ten percent of profits plus the future opportunities this would bring him.

It was a good deal... and while Tom would let James's family profit immensely from it, he would not let them walk all over him.

"I can't accept five." Tom wryly shook his head, "Ten is my bottom line. That's why I ask for it."

That statement came out as extremely naive but it was exactly what Tom aimed for.

"Young man, you are asking my family to do all the work while you only rake in the profits. I don't think ten percent is-"

"In that case, I am sorry for wasting your time, Mr. Jasin." Tom apologetically smiled like an inexperienced man who found this whole situation awkward. He was about to get up when James stopped him.

"Fine. I guess I can be gracious and grant you ten percent." He grumbled.

Tom inwardly rolled his eyes. As if he didn't know the deal was heavily skewed in the Jasin Family's favor. The old bastard would never let such a deal slip through his fingers. But... Tom could respect the mindset of squeezing every benefit out of the naive idiot who came with such a proposal to him.

Yet, it was exactly this kind of mindset that would save Tom from being killed here.

"But..." James started again, "what about broadening the terms and including a marriage contract with our family? We can offer you a lot of support and research funds."

'And here it is. His attempt to get me to work under them.' Tom thought, trying very hard to not have his eye twitch. 'Let's get this over with.'

"No! I am too young to marry. I want to focus on research. Who knows! Maybe I could find out more about this method of mine!" Tom gushed out with the proper level of idiotic naivety about business, found in people that were interested in nothing but the life of a researcher.

"Are you sure? My Lia is quite the quiet soul and skilled at alchemy too. Her assistance could provide you with a lot of benefits and would be completely obedient. Even in bed." James tempted.

It might have worked on a normal hormone-driven teenager but Tom wasn't interested in the exchange of short-term benefits and a bit of pleasure for a life-long cage.

Plus, he knew why this Lia was a meek girl. She could not turn out any other way with her 'daddy' being quite the sadist and having a thing for his daughter.

Yes, he was willing to offer her hand in marriage for the benefit of his family but Tom didn't doubt even for a second that the man would cease his romping of his own daughter just because she would be married. Quite the contrary, Tom thought it would just increase James's appetite for her and he had no intention of being cuckold as soon as the second day of his married life.

On top of that, from what he knew, Lia Jasin was a girl who lived her whole life under the strict thumb of her father. Taking her as a wife would be taking in a permanent spy.

"No. My research is more important." Tom stubbornly said, his eyes shining with conviction.

James tried a few more times, probing different angles. At times, Tom had fun acting indecisive and discontent, but it was irritating most of the time.

He aimed to not agree nor disagree with any change, simply letting James come to the conclusion that Tom was leery of changing the contract on his own. It took the fucker four freaking hours to finally let go of the notion that he could screw Tom over more than the initial contract allowed.

Tom could have quickly shot him down but that would endanger both the deal and himself.

Usually, if a weak magician without any support walked into James's family and offered an extremely good business opportunity, he would not walk out alive unless he had some kind of deterrent that would prevent James from simply killing him and taking the product as his.

Tom's deterrent was his very product and his promising talent in alchemy that could bring more profits. James thought Tom would sell the rights to his next alchemy product to his family too and Tom was fine leaving him in that delusion. But the ruse needed Tom to appear indecisive, naive, and utterly unaware of how business was done.

It was all good old balancing work.