Void Lord: My Revenge Is My Harem

Chapter 243 : Opening Shop and Increasing Harem Members XX



Chapter 243 : Opening Shop and Increasing Harem Members XX

---

Simple ink. Simple promise. The flyer says:

Fizz Holdings

Tools, Blades, Repairs

Fair Price, Clean Work

No Questions for Honest Buyers.

She had also placed a few in the black market. Not because she expected criminals to become loyal customers. Because rumors travel faster when thieves whisper them.

For the first hour, nothing happened. For the second hour, nothing happened again.

Kel sighed. "We have sold air."

Orna snorted. "Air is free. We are losing."

Gael didn’t move from his ledger. "Shops do not bloom in one morning," he said. "Patience."

Edda tapped her fingers once on the counter, then stopped. She could feel the academy far away like a wall between John and this place. She did not like walls she could not climb.

At last, a man came in.

He looked like a farmer who had been forced to become brave because tools break whether you are ready or not. He held a worn knife in his hand, its edge chipped, its handle wrapped in cloth like a bandage.

He glanced around the shop as if expecting a trap.

Gael gave him a nod. Calm. Steady. "Looking for repair."

The man swallowed. "I heard... you do good steel."

Orna leaned forward with a grin that dared the world to disagree. "We do."

The farmer handed over the knife. Orna examined it, clicked her tongue, and said, "This has been through more carrots than war."

The farmer blinked. "That... is true."

Kel muttered, "Carrots are vicious."

Edda’s eyes didn’t soften, but her voice did. "We can fix it. You want edge only, or full balance. Or we can give you a new one."

The farmer hesitated. "New would be nice. If I can afford it."

Gael named a price. Fair. Honest. Not cheap, not cruel.

The farmer agreed quickly, like a man who had expected robbery and was shocked to find business.

Orna picked two options: fast, hands steady, and controlled. She worked like she was singing, even though she never sang. When she showed the items, the blade gleamed like it had remembered what pride felt like.

The farmer tested it with a thumb, eyes widening. "This is... good."

Gael nodded once. "We sell good."

The farmer paid, bowed awkwardly, and left.

Kel watched the door close and said, "We have sold one thing. We are now a legend."

Orna smirked. "We are now a shop."

Gael wrote it neatly in the ledger. "One customer becomes two if he talks."

Edda’s mouth curved slightly. "He will talk."

Two more customers came before afternoon. One bought a dagger. One bought a simple farming tool. Small coin. Honest coin.

No crowds. But the shop had taken its first breaths. And that mattered.

Back at the academy, John and Fizz finished their classes and returned to the hall’s corridors with the slow, controlled pace of people who were trying not to sprint toward the parts of life they actually wanted.

Fizz floated beside John, smug. "We are doing business. We are doing school. We are doing romance. We are doing everything."

John exhaled. "We are doing too much."

Fizz nodded. "Yes. That is why it is exciting."

They stepped into the courtyard and—

The air changed.

Not because of magic.

Because attention gathered.

Students looked toward a single point like flowers turning to sunlight.

Sera walked toward John.

She wore her academy clothes in temple whites, composed and calm, but the simple act of her approaching made the courtyard hush the way crowds hush when they smell gossip.

Fizz leaned close to John, voice delighted. "Ah. The famous beauty returns. And she is walking directly to you. This will ruin at least twenty boys’ afternoon."

John’s heart kicked once.

Sera stopped in front of him, eyes steady, voice soft enough to be kind. "John."

Fizz lifted a paw. "Hello, priestess. Please do not steal my disciple entirely. I still need him to fund my dessert habit."

Sera’s mouth twitched, amused.

John didn’t have time to speak.

Sera stood in front of John in the academy courtyard, and the world behind her immediately forgot how to mind its own business.

Sunlight touched the stone paths and made everything look clean and innocent, which was a lie, because the academy was a living machine built from rules, ambition, and gossip. Students drifted by in little knots. They pretended to be walking somewhere important, but their eyes kept sliding back like they were pulled by a magnet.

Fizz floated at John’s shoulder with the satisfied glow of a man who had correctly predicted drama.

Sera’s gaze stayed on John. Calm. Warm. Not loud. That was what made it dangerous. Loud attention could be dodged. Quiet attention stuck.

She smiled a little and spoke as if she were greeting him in a hallway that belonged only to them.

"John. I heard you opened the shop. I am glad you did it."

John felt the words settle in his chest. The shop. The capital. The little house attached to it. The work. The risk. The future that suddenly had a roof.

He lowered his voice without meaning to. It was instinct now, like the academy itself trained people to hide what mattered.

"It is all because of you," he said. "You gave me the place. Without that, there would be no shop. I am grateful, Sera. Truly."

Her eyes softened. She accepted the gratitude, but she did not let it make her proud. Pride was a noble habit. Sera had trained herself out of it, or at least she had trained herself to wear it only when necessary.

Fizz made a small, dramatic sniff. "If anyone needs to thank anyone," he announced, "it is everyone thanking Lord Fizz for inspiring economic growth with my presence."

Sera glanced at him, amused. "You are very heroic," she said.

Fizz puffed. "I am also very hungry."

John tried not to smile, failed, and then tried again to become serious, because there were still too many eyes.

"Fizz," John said quietly, "we are going to the shop now."


Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.