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Chapter 202: Berengarâs Terms
[TL: Asuka]
[PR: Ash]
The sun had set under the horizon, and dusk was starting to descend unto the land. The people in the temple area started lighting up their torches and oil lamps, illuminating the shadowy area. Three witchers came into a house in Hemp Alley. Berengar lit the oil lamp on the table, and its light kept the shadows at bay.
Like most houses of witchers, there were no ornaments hanging around Berengarâs place. Aside from a few worn-down furniture, there was only a thin, oily bed on the ground. Empty wine bottles were strewn across the floor, and a thick blanket of dust covered the floorboards. The place was even dirtier than a dog house.
Roy joked, âYouâll love Serrit and Auckes. You guys have the same taste in interior decor. I bet youâll have a lot to talk about. You might spend the whole night drinking.â
âItâs hard making a living in Vizima. Winding down is important, and wine is essential.â Berengar unstrapped Torâhaerne and hung it on the wall. He heaved a sigh and plopped down on his sofa that was riddled with holes. âYou understand, donât you? I live in fear every day. Iâd probably go mad without any wine.â
Letho had a look of understanding and agreement on his face. They went through a lot of trials and tribulations to become a witcher, but then they had to live an even more dangerous life just to make a living. The people resented and ostracized them just because they were witchers. It was not exactly an easy life. Perhaps that was one of the reasons Berengar renounced his witcher identity.
âYou said you thought we were hunting you down?â
âIt was just a guess. I couldnât be sure about it.â He squinted and laughed at himself. âI got a job from a madman in Vizima, but decided not to accept it. Spent all of the deposit though. That guy would never let me off the hook that easily.â
âYou thought we were debt collectors sent by that guy?â
âYeah, but things donât look that bad at the moment.â
âYou say heâs a madman?â Roy did not recall such a person in Vizima before. âWhoâs the guy?â
âDonât talk about him.â Berengar rummaged through his sofa and whipped a bottle of beer out. He uncorked it and gulped the liquid down, then he tossed it to Letho. Letho drank without complaints. Berengar said, âI guess youâre here for a weapons request?â
Roy and Letho exchanged looks, and the young wither handed the blueprint to Berengar. Berengar skimmed through it nonchalantly at first, but eventually he started getting serious.
In terms of stats and skills alone, Berengar was the weakest witcher Roy had ever met. âLevel 10 Blacksmithing? Thatâs worse than Mahakamâs Great Elderâs Ancient Crafting.â
If Berengar could not help them, then Roy would have to try his luck at the Crowâs Perch in Velen and see if he could find that female blacksmith. Dwarves were off limits. They crossed Mahakamâs leader, and they would not ask them for help.
After he cast Observe on Berengar, Roy turned his attention to the silver sword that had a V-shaped crossguard and reddish-brown hilt.
âTorâhaerne.
(Specially made by Berengar, the Wolf School witcher)
Traits: Weighs 3.06 pounds, hilt measures at 9.3 inches, blade measures at 36 inches.
Affixes:
Bleeding: Wounds caused by Torâhaerne will bleed nonstop.
Sharp Blade: Thanks to Berengarâs craftsmanship, Torâhaerne has double the sharpness of other swords. It can cut through light armor easily and maintain its durability for a longer time.â
âNot bad. Guess this guy has some skills. No wonder Lethoâs sword got so messed up.â
âViper Schoolâs twin blades. This craftsmanship is spectacular. Itâs almost on par with Torâhaerne. Your regular blacksmith wonât even know how to make this.â Berengar was so engrossed with the smithy, he was millimeters away from it.
âSo can you make this?â
Berengar smiled, and his look of dejection was replaced with confidence. His eyes were shining like two little suns. âI made Torâhaerne. I can make these, of course, but before I start my work, Iâll need two things.â
âSay it.â The witchers pursed their lips, hoping that Berengar would not quote them an impossible price.
âIâll need all the necessary materials, and they must be sufficient. I canât guarantee the final productâs quality otherwise.â
âOf course. We have them at the ready.â The swordsâ main materials were made up of four things: leather straps, iron ingots, emerald dust, and venom extract. They could buy leather straps easily from the marketplace merchants, and blacksmith shops had iron ingots. Emerald dust was aplenty in jewelry shops, and sorcerers used them to cast their spells. The most important material, venom extract, came from ghouls. Roy had them in stock.
The silver sword required one extra materialâsilver ingots. The silver covered the iron core, and they did not come cheap. Jewelry shops had them, however, and they could be used in blacksmithing. The higher the silver content was in a sword, the more effective the weapon was against monsters, but the witchers did not have enough crowns to pay for that, and silver-coated swords were enough to handle most situations.
The steel swords cost two hundred crowns each, while the silver swords cost four hundred, which was double the cost of its steel counterpart.
âSecondly, this is a business deal.â Berengar raised two fingers. âI am going to spend a lot of time and effort making your weapons. I think a reward is in order.â
Roy looked at him innocently and whispered, âTwenty crowns?â
Berengarâs face fell, and a storm brewed in his eyes. âIs that supposed to be a joke, child? Do you think Iâm a mere beggar?â
âIâm kidding, Mr. Berengar. Two hundred crowns, no problem.â He looked at Letho. The veteran witcher did not like the price, but he nodded.
Berengar was scamming his brethren. Most blacksmiths would only ask for a few dozen crowns for a steel sword, excluding the price of the materials. Berengar more than doubled the price, but the witchers had no choice.
âSo three steel swords and silver swords will cost six hundred crowns, right?â Serrit and Auckes needed new weapons too. They had the blueprint and blacksmith, so might as well settle it at once.
Berengar cocked his eyebrow, and he had a look of horror on his face. âDo you know how long it takes to make a weapon, kid? You want me to make six at once? Iâm not a mule!â
âMr. Berengar, think about this. Making weapons is a lot safer than taking requests,â Roy said, trying to persuade him. âSix hundred crowns is enough for a yearâs supply of wine.â
Berengar fell into a dilemma, and he struggled with himself to reach a decision. In the end, he said, âI can make them if you want, but youâll have to give me a hundred crowns more for that.â
âHow does fifty sound?â
âYouâre not at a brothel, kid. No haggling,â Berengar hissed. âEither you give me seven hundred crowns, or you get another blacksmith for this.â
âItâs alright, kid. Weâll pay him the seven hundred.â Letho crossed his arms.
Roy shot him a look, and then his face fell. Seven hundred for the blacksmith and eighteen hundred for the materials. Thatâs twenty-five hundred crowns. He had a feeling that his adorably full wallet had been cut up and had shrunk by a considerable degree. When he squeezed it, he could feel all the money flowing out of it. We worked so hard to make twenty-eight hundred, and now thereâs only three hundred left. âItâs gone.â All the color faded from Royâs face, and he muttered, âThe villa, the manor⌠All gone.â If Serrit and Auckes bring back the Manticore Schoolâs blueprint, Iâll have to fork out more crowns to make that equipment.
âGood. The moneyâs settled then, but I have another request.â Berengar continued matter-of-factly, as if he thought this was something the witchers should offer. âIâve made the calculations, and with my level of blacksmithing, itâll take me about ten days to make two weapons. Three pairs of that will take about a month. Youâll have to be my bodyguard for that duration. Interruptions are not allowed when I work, especially not from my ex-creditor. I might slip and ruin the weapon, and the loss is on your head.â
âHonestly, what are you trying to do?â Roy shot him a sharp look and bared his teeth. âAre you asking us to keep that madman out for you?â
âJust for a month or so,â Berengar assured. âJust stand outside the shop, and heâll never get near me. Not like he can find me anyway.â
âWho is that guy anyway?â Roy asked.
âJust an alchemist-cum-sorcerer. Has a few screws loose in his head.â There was fear in Berengarâs eyes. âCanât tell you too much about him. Bound by a nondisclosure clause.â
âWeâll give you the deposit, and you can pay him back,â Letho suggested.
Berengar shook his head adamantly. âIf push comes to shove, you can pay him the two hundred crowns when he shows up. Iâll deduct the money from your payment. Of course, itâd be best if we didnât have to do that.â
âItâs not easy dealing with an alchemist. Weâll have to talk about the payment.â
After a lot of negotiations later, the witchers finally came to an agreement, and they were already drenched in sweat. The payment was reduced from seven hundred to six hundred, but Roy and Letho would have to contact the nearby blacksmiths and borrow their furnace, hammers, anvils, and other tools.
âYou just wonât budge, huh?â Roy mocked. âYou raise your prices however you want the moment you get a customer. I bet you have done this before.â
âI could say the same to you.â Berengar smiled, but it looked as fake as plastic. The brutal negotiations had exhausted him, and he looked lethargic. âIâve never seen a young lad as stingy as you. You shouldnât be a witcher. You should be a merchant.â
Letho was watching in silence from start to end. When the negotiations were finally over, he heaved a sigh of relief. Iâm glad I donât have to be in charge of the finances.
âBy the wayâŚâ Berengar took a swig of his beer to calm down. âWhere did you get these blueprints?â
âWhy do you want to know? I could have taken them from the schoolâs archives.â
âAs if,â Berengar retorted. âAs far as I know, most of the Viper Schoolâs blueprints are scattered throughout these lands.â
Letho looked surprised that he knew. âWho told you this? Kolgrim?â
Brengar shook his head and answered without hesitating, âTwenty years ago, I met a Viper School witcher near Dol Blathanna. He was searching for his schoolâs equipment blueprints, and his name was⌠letâs see⌠Ivar Evil-Eye.â
âWhatâd you say?â Roy and Letho exchanged looks of shock. Ivar Evil-Eye never returned after he left the school two decades ago, and they never thought they would find out about him in this place.
âTell us more, Mr. Berengar. What happened next?â Roy asked, sounding a little out of breath. âDid Mr. Ivar tell you where he was going? Is he still in Aedirn?â
âIâm sorry. I only shared a drink with him in an inn. We didnât even talk for ten minutes.â Berengar sighed. âAnd itâs been twenty years. I canât remember most of the details.â
The air was fraught with gloom, filled with nothing but the sound of Berengar gulping his beer down.
âGive me some.â Letho snatched the beer from Berengar, but the witcher did not mind. He turned to the young witcher. âWant some, merchant?â Berengar asked.
âDo you have any cider?â
âOnly women and kids like that kind of stuff.â
âThatâs because you have no taste at all.â Roy was reminded of something, and he put on a calm and collected look as he said, âLetâs not talk about the Viper School. Howâs the Wolf School doing?â
âWho knows?â Berengar bit on the lip of the bottle and kept quiet for a few moments. âIâve cut all ties with them. Iâm just a mercenary now. I have no time to care about witchers and their politics.â
âHow long has it been since you left Kaer Morhen?â
âMore than ten years.â
âYouââ
âThatâs enough, kid,â Berengar stopped him impatiently. âYou should know when to stop asking. You two should get prepared now. Iâll have to work starting tomorrow.â
Roy sighed. If he could get Berengar back to Novigrad, he could truly turn the Wolf School into his ally. But he wonât be persuaded that easily.