Chapter 303 - 303: A Cosmic Shopping Spree
The Celestial Auction didn't take place in an obscenely lavish room with an extravagant podium like I had expected. It was a place far beyond even my Essence-adjusted imagination. The 'room' was more like a meticulously orchestrated planetary simulation that made the Zenith look like a quaint village inn.
We stepped through the golden starlight portal and the chaotic, anonymous hum of the Pavilion of Delights instantly vanished. The noise of a million bargaining merchants was silenced, replaced by the hushed, heavy, perfectly regulated acoustic dead-zone of a private luxury suite.
"Oh," Anna breathed, leaning against a railing carved from a single piece of flawless obsidian. "Now this is a view."
Our 'box' was essentially a floating island of luxury. It was completely enclosed in a spherical, opaque privacy barrier that hid our signatures from the outside but offered a crystal-clear, magically-enhanced panoramic view of the center.
And the center was spectacular.
Below us, floating in a projected, slowly churning nebula of violet and gold plasma, was the main stage. It was a continent-sized platform of white stone. We were looking down at it, but thanks to high-tier spatial enchantments, it also felt like it was only fifty feet away.
Surrounding the central stage, suspended like glittering constellations, were tens of thousands of identical private suites holding the galaxy's elite.
A plush armchair that perfectly contoured to my posture materialized behind me as I stepped forward.
[Welcome, Honored Guests.]
A discreet, elegant prompt blinked in my vision.
[Current Phase: Reception & Lot Cataloging. Active Bidding commences in Cycle 1. Complimentary restorative services active in this suite. Maximum Veiling is currently Enabled.]
"Leoric," I said, relaxing into the chair and feeling the deep, chronic exhaustion from weeks of running towers simply melt out of my muscles into the enchanted upholstery. "We have a decent budget, but I'm not here to just throw it around for the fun of it. Do you have the list of what we actually need the most?"
Leoric pushed his glowing goggles onto his forehead, his leonine clawed hands immediately producing a scrolling holographic list from a data slate. "Everything, frankly. But realistically, we need foundational, infrastructural anchors. If the Prime System drops the planetary quarantine and dumps Ferra into the 'Great Crucible' Integration war without warning… our basic reinforced walls and kinetic wards in the average Ferran city will not hold against organized, orbital magical artillery."
He highlighted several sweeping categories. "We need Macro-Shield generators. We need Ley-Line Stabilizers to prevent localized mana storms when foreign, highly volatile magic hits our atmosphere. We need automated defensive algorithms, not just simple alarm trips. And Eliza said she…"
"I need specialized catalysts!" Eliza practically shouted from the back of the room, holding up a glowing vial. "Our planet's soil is too young! It hasn't had enough time to infuse with the ambient mana. We can't reliably grow the delicate reagents necessary for high-volume Tier 6 and Tier 7 restorative draughts on a large scale yet! I need pure, condensed conceptual earth or synthetic, time-dilated soil variants to establish stable greenhouse biomes!"
"Okay, slow down, let's prioritize," I nodded, waving them to quiet down as I reviewed the sprawling digital catalogue scrolling before me. "Jeeves, I want you running constant predictive models on the bidding trends once we start. I don't want to aggressively overpay if we don't have to."
But first, I needed to solidify our standing capital.
While Anna and Eliza browsed the pre-auction catalogs and cautiously raided the impossibly opulent buffet, I activated a side terminal in our suite labeled 'Merchant Interfacing'.
Within minutes, the opaque, shimmering wall of our suite rippled. A figure stepped through, moving with the disturbing fluidity of a synthetic form.
It was an official Appraiser for the High Concourse — an android composed of dark-matter lattice and pulsing silver circuitry.
"Entity designation unregistered," the android spoke smoothly. "You requested a high-priority appraisal of raw physical assets for rapid auction listing on the open floor?"
"I did," I replied from my chair, keeping my [Nullifying Veil] tightly layered. I tapped my dimensional pocket and gently set five items on a floating marble table.
Four were roughly the size of softballs. They pulsed heavily with a terrifying, absolute absence of light. They were high-grade Void Beast Cores — specifically, the cores of peak Tier 7 Void-Stalkers my customized [Echo] had been mercilessly grinding into dust in the designated Void Hunting ground on Ferra.
The fifth item was significantly larger. Roughly the size of a small boulder, it was the Core of the Abyssal Ravager Zareth had summoned after lots of preparation. A true, pure mid-Tier 8 monster heart born directly from the Deep Void.
The android paused mid-glide. Its silver eyes suddenly whirred loudly with multiple scanning lenses deploying sequentially.
When it finally spoke, the programmed neutrality was noticeably strained.
"Confirming absolute physical and conceptual integrity," the android buzzed, hovering inches from the massive Tier 8 core. "Absolute purity verified. Zero atmospheric corruption. Preserving pure conceptual 'Nothingness' is incredibly rare due to the catastrophic localized destabilization upon host death."
"The universe casually makes them; I just organize them into convenient, transportable spheres," I said dryly. "Market value?"
"Given the current, macro-political hostilities expanding rapidly across the outer sectors, the raw demand for pure nullification fuel has spiked violently," the android reported. "We offer direct buyout, or prioritized placement in the Prime Lots. Based on conservative estimates, the four Sub-Prime Tier 7 cores will practically guarantee 250 Million Quintessence Shards individually on the open floor."
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"And the big one?" I asked.
"The Prime core… due to its sheer mass and flawless structural purity… It serves as foundational prime-material for localized Reality Anchors or high-tier offensive conceptual erasure warheads. It could easily incite a desperate bidding war, breaching one billion among the militant Empires."
"List them all in the Prime Lots," I said immediately. If an Empire wanted a nuke component, I wasn't accepting the house minimum. And another billion or two QS should help secure more of the resources we urgently needed.
"Very good, Honored Entity," the android bowed deeply, respectfully boxing the items into heavily shielded temporal-stasis fields. "Your suite is instantly upgraded to 'High-Aura' status. You now bypass standard queue times and possess direct messaging capabilities to the Central Auctioneer."
He vanished through the wall.
The rest of the week became a grueling masterclass in cosmic, high-stakes consumerism.
The scale of the items offered daily on the central stage gave me a constant migraine of ambition. Every purchase was analyzed by Jeeves for maximal impact on Ferra's development, debated fiercely by Leoric and Eliza, and verified by Kasian's historical context.
We spent strategically in the low-millions range. We won intense bidding wars for lots like a pallet of [Chronos-Lichen] for 12 million QS, more of the stabilizing temporal "moss" Eliza needed to permanently optimize the baseline synaptic reaction time for our Vanguard through dietary supplements.
We bought massive digital schematics for [Gravimetric Atmospheric Scrubbers] for 18 million QS, automated planetary tech explicitly designed to aggressively strip industrial rot from the mana in the upper atmosphere. I secured dozens of crates of [Null-Core Conductors] that costed around 60 million, highly unstable empty energy matrices Leoric swore he could reverse-engineer into entirely new, highly efficient power sources for Bastion's localized defensive grids.
We stopped by a vendor in the pavilion earlier in the week, where Anna found the [Whisper-Silk Carapace], so when we found a blueprint that specializes in using the material, we didn't hesitate to buy it for another 10 million. The completed suit, woven from dark gray smoke and spun starlight that actively bent local space to convince attacking forces to miss, would supplement her stealthy, highly-mobile sniper style perfectly.
During the later stages of the auction, where some of the prices started treading on a billion, we threw down our heaviest bid for a civilization upgrade.
[Lot 904: The Genesis Catalyst Seed. Description: When embedded within a planetary Tower Matrix, it permanently decreases the natural respawn cycle duration of localized essence materials, Guardian entities, and geological harvests by a factor of 40%. Starting Bid: 100 Million QS.]
The bidding was ferocious, just wealthy worlds throwing pure cash at a genuine economic cheat-code. It rapidly hit 350 million. 400.
I waited patiently, watching the trajectory. At 460 million, it slowed.
"Jeeves," I said calmly. "We need one of these. If we can learn to replicate this into all of Ferra's Towers…"
The counter jumped instantly to 550 Million QS under our anonymous tag. The arena fell silent for a tense thirty seconds before the hammer dropped.
[Item Secured.]
A staggering chunk of change evaporated in an instant, but that seed meant we could outfit an army twice as fast for the Integration war. I spent around 2.5 billion in total during the first six days of the auction, focusing primarily on civic, defensive, and economic foundations rather than singular mythic weapons or beast cores.
Despite dropping fortunes, a quick check of my internal ledger brought a relieved smile.
My account balance was still hovering around 2.15 Billion Quintessence Shards.
Thanks to my overdrive [Echo] constantly churning through Floor 100 Bosses back home, our wealth hadn't been hit as hard as I expected. And the staggering two billion to be brought in by my Void-Core sales during this very auction still haven't gone through. We were basically operating an money-duplicating glitch. I mentally reminded myself of the 'Upgrade Clone Capacity' at the top of my priority list for when we returned to Ferra.
However, as the final day of the auction commenced — the day reserved for items requiring treasuries that spanned star systems, items that could reach far beyond 2 billion in bidding — we experienced the inevitable consequence of playing our hand optimally.
The unwritten 'rules' of the celestial house had already been blatantly tested by arrogant warlords broadcasting terrifying Tier 10 and higher auras through the bidding channels to suppress prices on rare artifacts like Ascendant Core fragments. We ignored that, remaining cloaked, preferring to be the quiet sniper, not the loud cannon. We just anonymously spent practically unending mountains of liquid cash on farming and defense tools, stubbornly ignoring weapons of mass destruction.
That, apparently, had formed a very distinct, fascinating psychological profile to the wrong people, people who apparently did not see our purchasing as anonymous.
We were sitting in the lounge of the suite. Anna was carefully waxing her new invisible bowstring, Leoric was practically weeping over schematics for anti-divination city wards, and I was casually scrolling through the absurdly priced 'Grand Finale' catalogue, when Jeeves manifested.
His shadow form lacked his usual smooth calm. It flickered sharply.
"Master," the Shadow Anima projected internally, a high-alert undertone laced through his words. "We have an… anomalous occurrence. I just received a highly secure, heavily-encrypted message. It was explicitly routed directly, circumventing generic channels, specifically aimed at our dynamically randomized, 'anonymous' venue identifier deeply hidden within the Concourse network."
I set down my drink. The [Void-Star] hummed loudly in my chest. The venue promised absolute anonymity. Finding us wasn't just impressive; it was technically a direct challenge to the hosting Powers.
"Read it. Exactly," I demanded tightly.
"It is an incredibly polite invitation, sir," Jeeves reported, projecting the text discreetly into my vision. "Originating from a currently unidentifiable third party officially holding 'Absolute Priority Venue Status'."
I read the lines quickly.
'To the esteemed Architects prioritizing foundations. We note with unparalleled curiosity your aggressive procurement of wide-scale civic and stabilizing modules over raw military domination tools. It suggests an appreciation for structure over slaughter, a rarity in these trying Integration Waves.'
The message paused elegantly, leading to the offer.
'We cordially invite the representative of your silent Faction to a completely private, System-mediated 'Lounge Sector' explicitly shielded from external consequence before the final session closes. Our intent is solely informational gathering and polite networking. We believe we hold entirely complimentary insights regarding your rare focus on planet-building that the open market cannot offer. We guarantee peaceful intent.'
I sat back, steepling my armored fingers. The privacy rules here guaranteed physical safety, but meeting whoever hacked the ultimate security grid was an immense risk. Yet, the information they could offer on a cosmic, planetary-management scale might be worth a hundred Genesis Seeds.
I blew out a long breath, standing up and the soft chime of my dark Void armor clattering loudly in the incredibly quiet suite. The luxurious shopping spree part of the trip was definitively over. It was time for high-stakes political networking.
"Jeeves," I commanded calmly, fixing my [Veil] securely into place. "Draft a reply, accepting the invitation. Let's see exactly who else out in this vast cosmos is heavily interested in someone just trying to casually play civilization-builder on an apocalyptic difficulty setting."
