Prime System Champion [A Multi-System Apocalypse LitRPG]

Chapter 304 - 304: Salesman of a Choir



The localized, System-mediated 'Lounge Sector' looked like a tea house floating inside a hollowed-out comet.

I left Anna and the team back in the private suite, actively maintaining the highest levels of the [Nullifying Veil] while stepping through the designated transit-point Jeeves had verified. The ambient temperature here was perfectly neutral. The silence was absolute, heavily muffled by privacy wards that tasted like crystallized honey and ozone on the magical spectrum.

Sitting across a low, elegantly carved wooden table was the entity who had bypassed the most secure auction house in the local cluster of galaxies.

It wasn't a shifting gray silhouette. He wasn't using the Concourse's anonymity protocols. He didn't need to.

He appeared functionally human, but perfectly symmetrical to a deeply unsettling degree. He wore flowing robes that seemed to drink the ambient starlight filtering through the translucent walls of the comet. What caught my absolute, undivided attention was the density of his aura. My [Void Perception] usually scraped the surface of Ascendants, fighting the mana-overload. With this being, my Perception felt like it hit a polished diamond wall and bounced off.

He wasn't as strong as the Void Walker who wanted me for a cleaning job, but he was still very powerful. Tier 11. At the very least. An entity operating multiple orders of magnitude beyond Vasud's static copy, projecting an air of effortless, terrifying superiority. Which meant whoever actually ran the faction he represented had to be brushing against the boundaries of a World-Soul, operating easily at Tier 12 or beyond.

He was pouring tea from a constantly floating, ornate silver kettle into two delicate porcelain cups.

"Welcome, fellow Builder," the entity spoke. His voice resonated not just in my ears, but gently across my bones, soothing rather than commanding. "I am Altaier. Representative of the Chorus. I appreciate you braving the paranoia inherent in our unconventional invitation."

I didn't take the tea. I didn't sit. I kept my posture relaxed but anchored my Soul heavily in my [Domain], making sure to hide any signatures of my affinities or concepts.

"My guess for this invitation is most likely one of two things, Altaier," I said evenly. "A declaration due to a conflict of interests, or a highly motivated sales pitch. And I doubt you need a tea party for the former."

Altaier offered a serene, almost pitying smile. "Astute. The Prime appreciates paranoia; it breeds longevity. We are here for the latter, though we are not selling weapons and such."

He pushed a cup across the table. It slid frictionlessly, stopping exactly at the edge nearest me.

"We watch the floor bids, you know, while it is truly anonymous, some of us long-timers have devised methods of keeping track. While lesser Empires fought over broken Ascendant cores and planetary-busting artifacts, you quietly bid solar systems for farming catalysts and atmospheric stabilizers. It is… a shockingly rare logistical pattern for a newcomer to the Auction. I'll let you know, as a gesture of good will, that our predictive models — which are not the best here — devised that you are newly Integrated, as unbelievable as it is for someone like that to have these resources… You must truly care about your world…"

I kept my expression neutral. "We enjoy breathing clean air."

Altaier chuckled softly, the sound harmonic and genuine. "A sentiment shared by the Chorus. The Prime System demands exponential growth. Primal Essence inherently demands conflict and blood to continuously cycle the universal engine. It forces civilizations into meat grinders to forge sharper swords. We… disagree with the sheer velocity of the methodology. We are well-prepared for war, young one, but we possess zero interest in mindless conquest."

He gestured broadly toward the cosmic view outside the comet, where nebulas churned in violent, silent beauty.

"Another Integration Wave has violently concluded its Nursery Phase. Millions of worlds, forged into localized factions, are about to be dumped into the 'Great Crucible'. It is a localized, enclosed theater of war specifically designated only for the newly integrated."

My breath caught slightly, he was freely divulging information that I desperately needed. A closed system conflict. A tournament specifically designed for fresh meat. This confirmed my fears from the System notification months ago.

"Assuming I am part of this recent Integration, where do you fit into a war of newcomers?" I asked, slowly taking a seat opposite him, keeping my hands on the table.

"As Sponsors," Altaier said simply, steepling his elegant fingers. "The Prime System allows established, elder civilizations to invest in the potential of the newly integrated. It prevents total stagnation and introduces external variables. We offer infrastructural blueprints, esoteric cultivation theorems, and diplomatic shielding against aggressive, established neighbors who might try to circumvent the Crucible's rules to target you early."

He paused, letting the heavy implications settle in the quiet room.

"We wish to sponsor your world. We wish to fold you under the diplomatic canopy of the Chorus. We envision a union of Builder-worlds within the newest wave, strong enough to survive the blood-tithe, but sane enough to stop swinging the sword when the bell rings."

It was an incredible, arguably irresistible offer for a young planet trying to punch vastly out of its weight class. A cosmic benefactor offering an umbrella against the galactic storm.

But my instincts screamed. Free umbrellas usually come with heavy, restrictive leashes.

"It's a generous proposal, Altaier," I said cautiously, ensuring I didn't show a single hint of excitement or relief. "But philanthropy is rarely a viable long-term survival strategy, especially on a galactic scale. Why us? And more pressingly, how do you know we're a newly integrated world? The auction said it guarantees absolute anonymity."

Altaier's smile didn't falter, but a knowing glimmer touched his incredibly deep, starry eyes.

"The System's anonymity protocols are indeed impenetrable to direct, aggressive scrying," Altaier explained gently, leaning back and taking a slow sip of his tea. "We cannot scan your core strength. We cannot trace your physical location through the terminal. But we can observe behavior. You travel with heavily obscured but undeniably powerful multi-soul bound Anima — a feat requiring profound conceptual mastery, indicating high Tier combat capacity. Yet, you purchase fundamental, low-level civic infrastructural nodes in massive, exorbitant bulk quantities, dropping over… four billion Shards now?"

You might be reading a pirated copy. Look for the official release to support the author.

He set his cup down with a soft clink. "An established empire does not desperately require basic Weather-Control Obelisks at a massive markup. A seasoned Warlord doesn't prioritize dirt-purification over legendary armaments. We profiled you not by piercing your shield, but by carefully observing what you aggressively placed behind it. While the Veiling that hides the members' purchasing activity is powerful, it is much easier to bypass and observe than the others. And your buying habits basically screamed 'wealthy, powerful, and building from scratch'."

I absorbed that silently. It was a terrifyingly simple, entirely logical deduction. My attempts at discretion hadn't been enough, and the amount we had to spend to secure Ferra's future was painting a massive neon target on my back for the expert sociologists of the universe.

"And our end of this proposed bargain?" I pressed, refusing to let him dictate the tempo of the conversation.

"To thrive. To expand your foundational stability. To eventually integrate into our trade networks when the Crucible inevitably concludes, heavily indebted, sure, but undeniably alive and highly civilized."

Altaier stood up smoothly, floating rather than walking. He didn't try to press a glowing contract into my hand or demand an immediate soul-oath.

"We do not need an answer now, young Builder," he said, his tone devoid of pressure. "We simply offer the introduction. Survive the initial clash of the Crucible. Prove your architectural philosophies can withstand the Primal tithe. When the localized shields eventually fall… the Chorus will welcome you again."

With a brief, entirely courteous bow, the majestic tea room simply vanished. It didn't fade or collapse; the transition was instantaneous, depositing me safely back into the plush armchair within my designated private suite.

"Fascinating," Kasian whispered urgently in my ear the moment my [Veil] fully re-established contact with my group. "A coalition actively attempting to manipulate the macro-economy of a forced Systemic War through subsidized development. It represents a massive schism in standard Prime methodologies."

"It represents another massive hand trying to play chess with our planet," I corrected sharply, rubbing the tension from my neck. "The universe is very crowded. Let's finish up the haul and get back to the sandbox before someone decides we are looking a bit too green. I know we did it with the risks in mind but we have to figure out how to hide our spending in the marketplace better…"

The final, 'Grand Finale' day of the Celestial Auction was less an exchange of goods and more a horrifying display of gross domestic product warfare between star-spanning conglomerates.

We sat in our isolated box. My personal ledger had ballooned significantly following the successful sale of my refined Void Cores, securing us almost an additional two billion QS. We had the budget to buy a few more moons. We just needed a worthy target.

"Anything critical on the closing manifest?" I asked Jeeves, tapping the armrest impatiently as the opening bells resonated through the massive projection.

"There are Ascendant artifacts and bound nebula-creatures that could shatter continents, Master," Jeeves summarized rapidly, flipping through holographic lists dismissively. "But they draw entirely too much hostile attention and possess catastrophic maintenance risks for our current integration phase. However… Lot 10,211 aligns strongly with your specified quality-of-life parameters."

He highlighted a rotating, perfectly smooth, colorless orb the size of a carriage floating over the main stage projection.

[Lot 10,211: The Harmonic Crucible Core (Intact).]

"Behold, Esteemed Guests," the Auctioneer's voice reverberated politely across the venue. "A salvaged marvel from a pacified Fae-World. This massive core, when correctly calibrated and seated within a dense Ley-line junction, passively saturates an entire continent with harmonized, frequency-altering Essence."

The auctioneer paused for dramatic effect.

"Its primary function is resonance alignment. Any entity naturally cultivating within its vast domain slowly harmonizes with their own intrinsic affinities at highly accelerated rates. Furthermore, over prolonged exposure, the resonant waves actively lower internal, biological resistance to foreign mana concepts. Citizens may actually acquire localized secondary affinities entirely beyond their birth-right capabilities. It accelerates societal progression immeasurably. Starting Bid: One Billion Quintessence Shards."

Eliza gasped so hard her notebook hit the floor. "Secondary affinities? That completely shatters conventional class structures! A Geomancer could actively learn Pyromancy without tearing their soul apart just by living in the city long enough! Eren you must understand how huge this is! Not everyone can manipulate every type of mana like you…"

"And accelerated intrinsic alignment means our frontline gets substantially stronger simply by existing in Bastion," Anna noted quickly, eyes wide. "Eren, this is better than any sword or shield on the market."

"Agreed. Jeeves," I ordered, leaning forward, eyes fixed on the projection. "Put in a bid. Let's secure it."

The holographic counter spiked immediately as we entered 1.1 billion. Bids from other suites quickly followed.

The price jumped. 1.3. Then 1.6. It crawled steadily up to 1.8 Billion QS.

"Two point Two," I gritted my teeth, adjusting our bid. I had the liquid cash, and this artifact alone could dramatically push Ferra from a localized survivor settlement into an accelerated magical powerhouse over a decade. It was the absolute capstone to everything we had gathered.

The room held its breath. 2.2 Billion was an astronomical sum to throw around on an infrastructural item rather than an immediate, tangible power spike like a legendary warship or an Ascendant core.

The heavy hitters of the auction apparently didn't find the 'passive learning' benefit as cost-effective as buying raw destruction. The counter flashed three times.

[Item Secured.]

I exhaled a long breath, slumping back into the chair as the monumental sum disappeared instantly from my accounts.

The week had been entirely ridiculous.

I surveyed the staggering list of compiled acquisitions glowing neatly on Jeeves' data-pad. High-end alchemical stabilizers for Eliza's expanding labs. A Sub-light aerodynamic quiver blueprint for Anna's [Final Word]. Macro-scale defensive city grids capable of absorbing massive bombardments of meteor strikes. Instant atmospheric scrubbing nodes to purify the lingering Essence corruption. Massive, autonomous terrain restorers for the scorched wastelands. Runic optimization templates that would allow Leoric's foundries to operate with near zero waste. Dozens of highly classified ancient conceptual manuals to dump directly into the new Academy. And finally, an impossibly rare artifact that would essentially edit the genetics of magic for every person born under the Ferran sun, enhancing their ability to naturally perceive and cast beyond standard system logic.

Ferra wasn't just going to be well-defended. It was going to be magnificent. An untouchable utopia built on an absurd budget derived entirely from aggressive resource management and extreme pest control.

"Wrap it up, team," I smiled, finally feeling genuine exhaustion settle in, tempered heavily by an eager surge of productive anticipation. I tapped the 'Extract' prompt hovering next to my original Invitation token.

"Let's go home and plug in the upgrades. The universe is about to send us to a warzone. It's time we built a proper fortress."

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