Chapter 157 Automatic Quill Pen (Seeking Monthly Pass)
"Mr. Webster must have sent someone to deliver the goods." Javier stood up and said to Dr. Galandil, "You have to get up early tomorrow and go to bed early." Turning to Joan again: "Tonight You will live here, and I will send you a car to report to Leiden College after breakfast tomorrow."
"How embarrassing!" Qiao An quickly stood up and said embarrassingly, "I... I have a place to live, so I won't bother you."
"Don't be polite to Javier. It's better to stay here for one night than you spend money to find a hotel. Javier has a lot of bad money. If we eat him twice, he won't go bankrupt. Don't refuse. Already." Galandil smiled and persuaded Joan to stay.
Javier also laughed, and pointed at Galanduil: "It doesn't matter if you stay here, don't waste my tobacco, it's the best shredded tobacco produced by Kirtland, and I specially asked someone to bring it from the Far East Yes, it reminds me of home with every puff.”
"But Javier, from the perspective of pharmacy, the shredded tobacco produced in your hometown has no special ingredients compared with the shredded tobacco produced locally in Alfheim. I have to suspect that something is wrong with your sense of taste, or Homesickness prompts you to overestimate the tobacco produced in your hometown..."
"Okay, okay! My dear friend Galandil, please shut up, I don't want to quarrel with you over this topic again!" Javier said angrily.
Dr. Galandil shrugged and went downstairs to sleep, muttering strange things like "this is not scientific".
When Joan heard Mr. Havel talk about the new batch of magic guides in the store, they were all good things he ordered himself. They were both beautiful and practical. Follow to open your eyes.
"Of course no problem, come with me." Javier readily agreed, took Joan to the shop on the first floor, and accompanied the supplier to discuss business, leaving Joan alone to appreciate those who just opened the box A magical device that was put on the shelf in time.
Each magic device comes with a beautiful manual with hand-painted illustrations, neatly stacked on the counter, looking upscale and atmospheric.
Joan first picked up a manual and flipped through it, and then found the corresponding magic tool according to the manual—a quill pen emitting a hazy halo.
Referring to the introduction in the instruction manual, this is called an "automatic quill pen". This pen can replace manpower to copy spell scrolls by itself, freeing spellcasters from the heavy and boring copying work.
The specific usage is as follows:
The owner of the quill pen first prepares a book or several scrolls, and then takes the quill pen to copy the contents of the book or scrolls by himself. Copy the above-mentioned books or scrolls by yourself, and completely imitate the owner's handwriting from content to font, without any difference.
The automatic quill can only be activated once a day, and it will stop after completing the scheduled transcription work or being forcibly interrupted, and lie quietly on the desk waiting for the owner to return.
"Eala!"
Joan tried to chant the Elvish spell that activated the quill. When the characters representing "life and soul" blurted out, the quill pen that had been quietly placed on the counter jumped up automatically, and the pen tip was suspended above the table, like a lost elf, going around in circles in confusion.
There is no book on the table, and there is no ink bottle, the good partner of the "automatic quill pen". This poor little thing cannot perform the transcription work according to the predetermined procedure. Joan held back a smile and recited the mantra again, and the quill then lay flat on the table and returned to silence.
As a mage, Joan knows that the heaviest job in this line of work is to copy spells—either copying the spells from the scroll to the spell book, or copying the magic from the spell book to the scroll. work consumes a lot of time and energy.
With this amazing quill, the time spent on transcribing magic can be saved for more valuable study and research work.
Joan liked this quill pen very much, but when he saw the price of 2,000 Gold Duga, he had to give up the idea of buying this pen, and turned his brains.
He can't afford it, but he can try to analyze the enchanting process of the automatic quill, understand its spell composition, and then master the core technology of making an automatic quill. When the time is right in the future, he can try to imitate one by himself.
With a guilty conscience, Joan quickly looked around: Mr. Havel was drinking tea and chatting with the supplier, and the clerks of the firm were busy greeting customers, and no one paid attention to the movement in the corner here.
Don't miss this opportunity, act now!
Joan quickly took out the stationery and spell book, and first drew the No. 4 rune Ansuz on the "automatic quill" to analyze the spell composition of this magic tool. Joan has done this kind of trick countless times, and it can be said that practice makes perfect, and he quickly figured out the details of the "automatic quill pen".
It is not difficult to make a quill itself, the key is that the maker must be proficient in copying skills. In addition, this pen is also blessed by the maker with the second-level spell "secondary activation item". This spell temporarily animates an object no larger than 4 feet in length, width, or height into a construct that obeys its master's commands.
Put the "secondary activation item" on an ordinary quill, and solidify it with enchanting additives such as magic crystal powder, and you can get an "automatic quill".
Pushing this manufacturing process back, it is not difficult for Joan to understand why this quill can automatically copy documents: "secondary activated items" endowed the quill with a certain amount of intelligence and vitality, and the knowledge of the maker himself endowed the quill with a certain amount of intelligence and vitality. Pen copying skills.
With an intelligence of up to 22, Joan has a near-photographic memory. He quickly browsed through the analyzed spells, and then picked up a pen and buried himself in copying them. Within half an hour, he copied the "secondary activated items" into his spells on the book.
It's a pity that he still can't learn "secondary activated items". When he is promoted to a level 3 mage in the future and obtains a second-level spell slot, he can use this spell to create his own "automatic quill".
Joan made a simple calculation while transcribing. The cost of the "automatic quill pen" would not exceed 1300 Gold Duga. The cost was mainly concentrated on the 2 ounces of magic crystal powder needed for enchanting, and the price was as high as 2000 Gold Duga. Profits are truly enviable.
After copying the "Secondary Activated Items", Joan picked up the second manual and found the corresponding magic tool. This thing is composed of a pair of iron bars two feet long and one inch wide. Many parallel metal bars are fixed between the two long iron bars. It looks like a small ladder.
The four changes are over, please subscribe and ask for a monthly pass!