Demon King of the Royal Class - Chapter 11
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Chapter 11
Go to a magical items store.
It was a clear and straightforward message, and I immediately understood what kind of advice it was.
Among the many problems I had, the most crucial one was money.
As soon as I heard the words âmagical items store,â I could only interpret it one way.
Fortunately, I still had the scroll book in my possession. Selling the scrolls at the magic item shop would undoubtedly get me some money because scrolls were relatively valuable items.
I understood the advice to mean to sell them to secure some quick cash and, above all, to take care of the elephant in the room. However, I couldnât afford to be too relaxed. The Scribeâs advice usually involved both good and bad things happening simultaneously.
So, the advice was to sell the scrolls for money. The bad thing was undoubtedly the possibility that I would be selling the scrolls at a far lower price, since I didnât know the market price of the magic scrolls.
However, I distinctly remembered what Dyrus had said.
ââWow, even the low-level scrolls are worth more than my monthly salary. The Demon Kingâs castle sure is something else.â
The monthly salary of a lieutenant in the royal army cavalry.
The value of a single low-level scroll was either higher or just a bit lower than that.
I wondered how much a cavalry Lieutenantâs salary was. That would give me a sense of how expensive the scrolls were.
The so-called âmedieval fantasy tropeâ came to my mind.
In such situations, the descriptions always included how a single gold coin could sustain a family of four.
And it also described how much an average person with a regular job earned in a month.
Naturally, I used such references in my novel as well.
In the novel I had written, one gold coin covered a family of fourâs monthly living expenses, and an average worker earned about two gold coins a month.
So naturally, I thought of one gold coin to equal about one million won.
Itâs convenient to have a precise conversion like this when I write my novels.
You may be wondering, âHow can a family of four live for a month on one million won? Donât they eat out at restaurants? Our monthly food expenses are about four million won! One million is ridiculous!â
And to that, I say, âIt is what it is. Theyâll figure it out somehow.â
After all, in the so-called âmedieval fantasy trope,â the characters only need to spend on food, and donât have other living expenses! And in this world, thereâs no health insurance, or phone bills that need to be paid!
Those who obsessed over historical accuracy were missing the point.
Some things could only be seen if you emptied your mind and looked at it.
Medieval fantasy trope. A spectacular genre where magic, knights, and magic-like science contributed to the development of the societyâs infrastructure. I was a person who felt pity for those who couldnât enjoy such a remarkable genre and had to criticize every small detail.
The main point of medieval fantasy wasnât the medieval part; it was the fantasy part!
It wasnât medieval fantasy, it was medieval fantasy!
Most of it had nothing to do with the medieval period anyway! It was just there for the sake of it!
Anyway, thatâs the kind of setting in a medieval fantasy.
I had created this world with that kind of simple and shallow thinking, but now that I was here, I found a fantastical world that had nothing to do with the Middle Ages!
Well... it was fantastical in a different sense.
I decided to sell some scrolls for now and make it through the day.
Iâm not a wizard, nor a knight. I was just a fallen Demonic prince. I had the ability to control demons but I was in the imperial capital Gradium, where not one demon was to be found.
âExcuse me, can I ask you some directions?â I asked a passerby.
âHuh? Directions?â
I was addressing the most important question to a passerby who seemed bewildered by my unusual way of speaking.
âOh! Are you lost?â
Oh, come on.
***
The primary customers of the magic item shop were adventurers and wizards. Of course, this wasnât exactly an adventure story, so I never properly described what kind of people adventurers were. They existed, but Iâve never really thought about it.
...Come to think of it, I wondered how adventurers made a living in this world. Did they earn gold by taking on monster-slaying missions through an adventurersâ guild or something? Do such guilds even exist here?
Adventurers existed, but I never established how they made their living.
It was quite odd when I thought about it in detail.
When I thought about adventurers earning money in my head, the only things that came to mind were dungeon exploration and monster hunting.
But if thatâs how adventurers made money, that was a problem, too.
Why would individual entrepreneurs like adventurers engage in monster hunting when there was a regular army that took care of them? If a country had a system for outsourcing major security issues like monster lairs and attacks to individual adventurers, then why did that country even exist? Why did people pay taxes?
Certainly, it was the hero, Artorius, who killed the Demon King; but are you saying that an army that was strong enough to defeat the demons and their allied countries would rely on adventurers and their guilds to solve monster-related issues? What did the soldiers do on their regular days?
In that case, if the regular army took care of the monster hunting and there were no requests for adventurers and their guilds, what exactly did adventurers do for a living? Furthermore, wouldnât it be highly unusual if there were dungeons filled with rare magical items scattered all over the world, and none of the nations tried to collect them? Why wouldnât they nationalize dungeons, restrict adventurers from entering, and monopolize it?
Wasnât the very existence of adventurers a setting error in this world?
â...â
I started to become concerned about the authenticity and details of this world. I really did.
I got serious about the little things I would normally just let go of because this was the world I had to live in.
I decided not to think about it right then. It wasnât like there were any adventurers rushing toward me, begging for a single coin. If adventurers had nothing to do, theyâd probably turn to banditry or something.
There was only one thing I cared aboutâthat I didnât get ripped off at the magic item shop. I had to get at least one gold per scroll. I was willing to haggle a bit, as I wasnât expecting to sell them at the regular price. However, I wasnât going to sell it to them if they started blabbering about defects or nonsense to rip me off.
I was planning to take the money and go grab a meal somewhere. I was hungry.
And I needed to find an inn or somewhere to collect my thoughts.
Whether or not it resulted in a good outcome, The Scribeâs Advice had a positive side to it, since it provided straightforward instructions that helped me decide what to do.
If the advice was always good, Iâd just follow it blindly and live an easy life.
Ah, so thatâs why they included traps. So that I donât get off the hook easily, and they can watch me suffer in one way or another.
***
Since the primary setting of the story was the imperial capital, I had to describe Gradium in quite some detail. Well, not down to how every single brick looked like, but still, it was relatively specific.
However, meticulously setting up a virtual space could be quite a hassle. It was not only challenging, but also had a high chance of turning into a huge headache, and if you didnât set it up properly, youâd get confused later on.
The imperial capital city of Gradium was meant to be similar to South Koreaâs Seoul.
Perhaps more than just similar.
Alright, to be honest, it was literally the same as Seoul. I just gave it a different name.
My description of the imperial capital Gradium was something like this:
âA main river flows through the imperial capital of Gradium. This vast waterway divides the city into the northern region, where the royal palace is located, and the southern region, where the temple stands.â
Are you starting to get where I referenced this from?
Yes, it was just like Gangnam and Gangbuk in South Korea.
âIn the northern central part of the imperial capital of Gradium, you can find the Royal Palace.â
Basically, when comparing it to South Korea, it was like saying that there was a palace in Jongno. Of course, it wasnât as small as Gyeongbokgung, but you could say that the entire Jongno district was like the royal palace.
âIn the southern Eredian district, a vast educational facility and a cradle of numerous talents, the Temple, coexists with Gradiumâs landmarks.â
It was like saying thereâs a temple in Gwanak district.
So, the Eredian district was the same as Gwanak district.
I constructed the space called Gradium simply by renaming Seoul, with each district in Seoul given names that sounded somewhat medieval.
Actual sentence:
[The protagonist and his group raced from the Gehena district to the Eredian district at full speed. The effects of their physical training had finally paid off.]
How I pictured it:
"The protagonist and his group sprinted from Dongjak district to Gwanak district."
That was roughly the idea. It wasnât like I was going to create a map of this world and show it to others, so all I needed to do was insert a mental map of a place I was familiar with and roughly change the names. It worked well and was so convenient.
Creating a detailed map of a fictional world was unnecessary because readers werenât interested in such details. I realized that when I received a comment like, âIâm not curious about any of this. Stop adding useless details!â around ninth grade, back when I didnât know any of this.
Anyway, an imaginary world map was for the author, not the readers. Gradium being Seoul was entirely for my convenience.
Thereâs the Temple in Gwanak district and a palace in Jongno.
The place I teleported to was currently Aligar district, but later it will be renamed Artorius district, in honor of the hero. They would even erect a big statue of him later on.
Presently, Aligar district, and later Artorius district.
Where was this on the map? It was the equivalent of Yongsan. freewebn(o)vel.com
Of course, it was organized that way in terms of the terrain and layout, but the actual buildings werenât similar at all, so it was a new environment to me regardless.
So, pretending that I had arrived in Yongsan, I headed towards the direction of Yongsan Electronics Market, where I supposed the shopping district sector would be located.
Even though it was a virtual land, this area seemed to have the characteristics of Yongsan.
âWhatâs with all these crappy scrolls? Hey, where did you pick up stuff like this?â
Great. Right from the first shop, I encountered a typical Yongsan-style salesman, ready to rip me off.
***
The first comment from that dishonest salesman clearly indicated to me that I had no business being in that shop, so I headed back onto the street. I could hear him muttering something as I left, but I didnât care.
Every building around here was a shop. Numerous people were coming and going, examining goods. Were all of these people adventurers?
Was being an adventurer even a viable profession to make a living? Were there any income-generating ventures I didnât know about? There must have been something, given how numerous they were.
It felt like someone had strangely supplemented the settings Iâd messed up in my writing.
Sounds of haggling and bargaining echoed from all around.
âOh, young adventurer! Just give it a try! If you try it, Iâll give it to you for half price. How about it?â
âCome on, so youâve examined the item to your heartâs content but you wonât buy it? Geez, youâre really making fun of us store owners. Hey, come here for a moment. Oh, you donât want to? No, come here for a moment. No, hey! Letâs talk for a moment. Who said I was going to hurt you? Huh? I just want to speak with you privately. Are you trying to make me look bad right now? Do you know what defamation is? Are you trying to make me look like the bad guy?!â
âRefund? Who is this guy? Why donât you just take a dump in your underwear and ask for a refund for that? Why are there losers like this? Get lost!â
âHey, oppa, look, itâs got a scratch on it! How am I supposed to sell this? Iâll give you two for the price of one, just take it! Even at this price, Iâll be in the red! You wonât buy it? You wonât? Should I call security? Huh? Do you think youâre right? Can you guarantee that? Where are you from? Argand? Do you know who Rand oppa is? Never heard of him? Ha. Why do I have to deal with someone who doesnât even knowâhey, fine. Iâll be nice and just let you take it.â
.
.
.
What?
What was going on?
Why did it actually feel like Yongsan?
The medieval version of Yongsan unfolded before my eyes.
âHow many times do I have to tell you, theyâre the same price elsewhere, too!â
The ones trying to take advantage.
âUm, I, uh... Iâll come back later then...â
The ones rebelling to avoid being taken advantage of.
âHey, donât make eye contact. Just donât look at any of them. There are crazy store owners who will open an item and blame it on you even if you didnât touch it.
âTheyâre all retired adventurers, so they can fight really well as well. If you argue, youâll end up with a broken arm or leg.
Even those who had come knowing exactly what this place was like.
The place I had imagined to be like Yongsan, had literally turned into Yongsan right before my eyes.
And I, a 17-year-old boy, had come to a place that was more of a living hell than the Demon Realm to sell magic scrolls.
"Yongsan."
That one word made it feel like the task I had come here to do was impossible.
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