I Died and Became a Noble's Heir-Chapter 304: [QUEST COMPLETED]

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Chapter 304: [QUEST COMPLETED]

[QUEST COMPLETE: War Without Casualties]

[Reward: +10,000 Reputation Points]

[Notable Citizens attraction bonus activated]

[QUEST COMPLETE: Prove Your Worth]

[Chiron Stormblood respects strength paired with strategy. Your systematic execution of fifteen thousand enemies while maintaining zero friendly casualties has impressed him greatly.]

[Future opportunities unlocked]

[QUEST COMPLETE: The War to Come]

[Reward: +25,000 Reputation Points

[New Title Gained: Soul Breaker]

[Soul Breaker: Your methods have become legend across Erebon. Everyone knows Jack Kaiser as a man true to his beliefs and a sadistic manipulator who breaks enemies mentally before destroying them physically. Reputation gains from displays of power increased by 15%. Enemy morale decreases faster when facing you.]

[SUMMARY]

[Enemies Defeated: 1,050]

[Experience Gained: +157,500 EXP]

[Level Up!]

[Level Up!]

[Level Up!]

[Level Up!]

[Current Level: 24 (2,410/45,000 EXP)]

[Stat Points Gained: +4]

[Ring of Stats Effect Activated]

[Stat Points Gained: +4]

He pulled up his stat allocation without hesitation. His stamina had been burning too fast during combat. The transformation, the spatial jumps, the hours of violence, all of it drained him faster than he’d like.

’All eight points into stamina,’ Jack decided.

[Stamina increased: 83 → 91]

[Current Statistics:]

Strength: 100 (+100)

Stamina: 91 (+45)

Agility: 110 (+45)

Vitality: 110 (+25)

Endurance: 110 (+30)

Magic: 140 (+90)

Mana: 400

HP: 3,375

Skill Points: 750

Stat Points: 0

His breathing became easier despite the day’s exertion.

Tartarus Spire had taught him that rest was a luxury he couldn’t afford. Five hundred days of constant vigilance, of sleeping with one eye open, of never truly letting his guard down because the next floor might kill him if he wasn’t prepared.

His body had learned to exist in a state of perpetual readiness, with muscles always coiled and nerves constantly firing.

Even now, sitting in his own study in his own home, Jack couldn’t completely unknot the tension that lived in his spine.

But it was the reputation calculations that made his exhaustion retreat entirely.

[SUMMARY]

[Citizen approval: +25 Reputation Points per citizen]

[Current population: 4,121 citizens]

[Total citizen approval: +103,025 Reputation Points]

[Quest rewards: +35,000 Reputation Points]

[Previous balance: 1,451,096 Reputation Points]

[New Total: 1,589,121 Reputation Points]

Jack stared at the number. Over one and a half million reputation points. It was a staggering number.

’System,’ he thought. ’Open the Reputation Store.’

[Reputation Store Accessed]

[Available Categories: Earth Blueprints, Infrastructure, Defense, Civic, Religious, Recipes, Unknown]

Jack’s mind was already calculating. He needed defenses. He needed infrastructure. He needed to turn Sorne from a vulnerable territory into something that could withstand whatever came next.

’Defense category first.’

[DEFENSE PURCHASES]

[Garrison - 30,000 Reputation Points]

[Magical Sensors - 18,000 Reputation Points]

[Magic Towers - 50,000 Reputation Points]

[Castle Upgrade - 100,000 Reputation Points]

[Orichalcum Combat Instructor Location - 250,000 Reputation Points]

[Seven Star Magical Instructor Location - 250,000 Reputation Points]

Jack’s finger hovered over the instructor’s purchases. His jaw clenched so hard his teeth ground together.

[Purchases Confirmed] 𝐟𝕣𝕖𝐞𝐰𝕖𝚋𝐧𝗼𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝗰𝐨𝐦

[Garrison - 30,000 RP]

[Magical Sensors - 18,000 RP]

[Magic Towers - 50,000 RP]

[Castle Upgrade - 100,000 RP]

[Orichalcum Combat Instructor Location - 250,000 RP]

[Seven Star Magical Instructor Location - 250,000 RP]

’Infrastructure next.’

[INFRASTRUCTURE PURCHASES]

[Sewage System - 55,000 Reputation Points]

Jack pressed the purchase without hesitation. He’d smelled medieval sanitation. Never again.

[Sewage System - 55,000 RP]

’Civic.’

[CIVIC PURCHASES]

[Sanitation - 20,000 Reputation Points]

’Yeah, this will be for the best.’

[Sanitation - 20,000 RP]

’Religious.’ The category surprised him, but he opened it anyway.

[RELIGIOUS PURCHASES]

[Shrine to Divine Entity - 100,000 Reputation Points per deity]

Jack’s lips curved into a grin.

[Shrine to Draven - 100,000 RP]

[Shrine to Dreknar - 100,000 RP]

[Total Spent: 973,000 Reputation Points]

[Remaining Balance: 616,121 Reputation Points]

Golden light erupted across Jack’s desk.

Blueprints materialized from nothing, rolling themselves open in perfect sequence. Detailed diagrams showing the construction of magical towers, garrison layouts, and castle fortification upgrades.

Each one more intricate than the last, covered in measurements and notes that would make an engineer’s job easier.

The instructor’s locations appeared as glowing maps before him.

One showed Cordelia’s Magic Academy. A place of learning that had produced some of the most powerful mages in history.

’You want me to go to school? Yeah, that’s not happening.’

[You rely on the system too much for your magic. You need to learn to wield magic and create magic. I will not be in your head forever, Jack.]

Jack’s hands clenched. The words hit harder than he wanted to admit. ’It’s a waste of time.’

[Is it? Or are you afraid of discovering how much you don’t know?]

Jack exhaled hard through his nose. The System was right, and he hated it.

He let the thought pass as he looked at the subsequent notification.

The second location showed a small village in Krogar, barely more than a cluster of buildings surrounded by training grounds where Orcs forged warriors through methods that would horrify softer kingdoms.

Jack gathered the papers carefully, rolling them with precision despite his exhaustion.

Sorne would become something greater than a vulnerable territory.

But first, he needed one more thing.

’System, show me the recipe blueprints.’

[Recipe Blueprint Category Accessed]

[Warning: Some recipes require specific infrastructure or materials to produce]

[Available Blueprints: 79]

Jack’s eyes widened. Seventy-nine possible inventions. His mind raced through possibilities—weapons, tools, luxuries, necessities. Things this world had never seen.

He scrolled through the list slowly, examining each entry with the focus of someone choosing which card to play in a game where the stakes were entire kingdoms.

Penicillin caught his eye first. Medical revolution in a bottle. However, it required specific infrastructure that he didn’t have yet, namely sterile facilities that would take months to build. He filed it away for later.

Gunpowder made him pause. The military applications were obvious. However, introducing firearms to a world of magic and swords felt dangerous and unpredictable. He could easily create something that backfired—literally and metaphorically. ’Not yet. Maybe never.’

Steel alloys. Interesting. Better weapons, better armor, stronger infrastructure. But Sorne already had decent metallurgy. The improvement would be incremental rather than revolutionary.

Preservatives. Useful for food storage, for military campaigns. But boring.

’Yeah, and ruin the taste of food and make everyone fat. I could offer medicine to combat this, and I’d be rich.’

Fertilizers. His mind caught on this one for a moment longer. Better crop yields meant more food, which in turn supported larger populations, leading to economic growth.

But it wasn’t... immediate enough. Not impactful enough for what he wanted.

He kept scrolling, his golden eyes tracking each entry with growing frustration. Nothing felt right. Nothing sparked that sense of ’this changes everything’ that he was looking for.

Glass manufacturing improvements. Pass.

Improved bread recipes. Seriously? Pass.

Better candle wax formulations. Hard pass.

Jack’s jaw clenched. There had to be something here that...

He stopped scrolling.

His eyes locked onto a single blueprint nestled between the mundane improvements. The description was vague, deliberately cryptic. But the implications...

Jack’s pulse quickened. His exhaustion was forgotten entirely as his mind calculated possibilities.

’Perfect,’ Jack thought, a smile spreading across his face. Not a pleasant smile. The kind of smile that belonged to someone who’d just found exactly the weapon they needed.

[Blueprint Purchased]

[Wait. That one? Really?]

’Problem?’ Jack’s thoughts carried a sense of satisfaction.

[No problem. Just... of all the things you could have chosen, you picked that. I’m genuinely curious what kind of mischief you’re trying to ensnare here.]

Jack rolled the blueprint up carefully, securing it with a leather string. ’You’ll see.’

[That’s what I’m afraid of.]

He leaned back in his chair, surveying the scattered blueprints covering his desk.

A knock at the door interrupted his thoughts.

"Young master?" Seraphina’s voice came through the wood. "Your chambers are ready. The chickens have been... temporarily relocated."

Jack’s eye twitched. "Temporarily?"

"They’re very persistent, young master."

Jack stood, gathering the blueprints, and stored them in his system storage.

He opened the door. "The maids have changed the bedding three times to ensure no feathers remain," Seraphina reported. "Your bath has been drawn. Dinner is waiting if you’re hungry."

Jack nodded, suddenly aware of just how bone-deep his exhaustion ran. Five hundred days in Tartarus Spire, where rest meant vulnerability.

"Thank you, Seraphina. That will be all for tonight."

She bowed and withdrew.

Jack made his way back to his chambers, half-expecting to find chickens had already reclaimed his bed. But the room was blessedly empty, clean sheets turned down invitingly, steam rising from the bathroom.

He stripped off his clothes, letting them fall where they stood. The bathwater was perfect; Hot enough to make his muscles loosen, scented with something that cleared his head and eased the constant vigilance that had been drilled into his head.

Jack sank into the water with a sigh that came from his soul.

For the first time in five hundred days, he allowed himself to truly relax. Just for a moment. Just long enough to let the heat seep into bones that had forgotten what safety felt like.

Outside his window, a rooster crowed.

Jack’s eyes opened.

"Tomorrow," he muttered to the chicken that had somehow found its way onto his windowsill, "we’re having a serious conversation about boundaries."

The rooster crowed again, defiant.

Jack closed his eyes once more and decided that some battles weren’t worth fighting tonight.