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17kNovel > Munitions Empire > Chapter 198: Good stuff 194

Chapter 198: Good stuff 194

    Just as Tang Mo finished writing his reply, Galsa excitedly knocked on Tang Mo''s door. Tang Mo had just folded the letter and ced it in an envelope, "Galsa, just in time! Your father has been thinking of you. In Roger''s letter, he asked me to check how you''ve beentely."


    "Me? I''m doing quite well," Galsa, clever beyond his years, said to Tang Mo with a grin: "My studies are going great, and recently I''ve been learning swordsmanship from Master Wes."


    "Hmm, that''s good. I also mentioned in the letter that you''ve been doing welltely," Tang Mo said, looking at the boy who had once been his young apprentice and noticing that he had grown to about 1.7 meters tall in a year''s time.


    The food at Brunas was really good, plumping up the boy who had once been rather scrawny.


    "By the way," Tang Mo said as he sealed the letter with his own seal and casually asked Galsa, who hade to see him, "What brings you here?"


    Galsa remembered the purpose of his visit and immediately ryed the good news to Tang Mo: "My lord! That nt you wanted... we''ve found it!"


    "Hmm? Which nt?" Tang Mo had people collecting seeds of various nts all over, hoping to find methods for hybrid crop cultivation, so he couldn''t immediately recall which exact seeds had been found.


    As Tang Mo pondered, Galsa exined: "A merchant ship that came by recently had an old sailor whose hometown grows a nt that, when dried and ground into pieces and set alight, can be inhaled and, once one gets used to the peculiar smell, is said to be very soothing."


    "He has that nt?" Tang Mo asked in surprise and then eagerly inquired.


    Galsa nodded affirmatively, "Yes, and there''s plenty of it."


    "Plenty?" Tang Mo became even more excited, feeling his craving for tobo kicking in.


    "Yes, in his hometown, many people have the habit of inhaling the smoke from burning this nt. Every time he goes home, he brings back a lot of it and smokes it when bored at sea," Galsa continued, nodding in response to Tang Mo''s questions.


    "Did he bring the stuff here?" Tang Mo asked almost without pausing for a second.


    Galsa nodded again, "Yes, both the dried leaves and the ground powder are here."


    "Bring it to me, let''s have a look! Go on! If it''s what I''ve been looking for, that''d be great," Tang Mo, like a smoker who had finally found a tobo shop after searching for over a year, felt as though he finally had something to look forward to.


    Tang Mo had always been in search of tobo, a habit for him and also an incredibly lucrative industry.


    Someone once joked that if a few billion people smoked a pack each, the country could fund an aircraft carrier. Although it was in jest, it spoke volumes about the profitability of the tobo and alcohol industry.


    Unlike alcohol, which involves grains, the cultivation of tobo and tea leaves hardly takes up any good farnd, avoidingnd conflicts.


    Given the not-so-high food self-sufficiency rate at present, tobo and tea are certainly more worth investing in and promoting over brewing.


    Of course, before promoting it, Tang Mo needed it to soothe his own empty and lonely soul.


    Soon after, he met with the old sailor and the nt thetter had brought along. As he had guessed, it was tobo leaves—exactly what he had been longing for.


    "I am d you could offer these. They are precisely what I need," Tang Mo said, nodding as he ced the tobo and shredded leaves on his office desk and acknowledging the old sailor.


    The sailor was surprised, as he had never seen anyone outside his homnd with such an infatuation for these particr nts.


    In fact, these foreigners didn''t even know what the nts were called, let alone ask about their effects or uses. Yet the young man in front of him seemed to value these worthless leaves very highly.


    "This is your deserved reward," Tang Mo indicated casually, and Galsa, understanding, handed a Gold Coin from his pocket to the sailor.


    For a Sailor, a Gold Coin was a substantial reward, so the old Sailor''s face lit up with joy.


    "Next time youe here, bring the seeds of this nt! If possible, I also want living nts. Tell your captain I want to buy these from you..." Tang Mo said while skillfully spreading some shredded leaves across a piece of pre-cut white paper, without even looking up.


    "One shipload, 500 Gold Coins! Fair and square... Do you understand? Out of the 500 Gold Coins for the whole ship, 200 are yours. I''ll make it clear to your captain... Don''t get any funny ideas, for if you switch ships, you might just end up thrown overboard halfway," said Tang Mo, carefully rolling up the piece of white paper as if he were handling a bar of gold.


    "Understood... understood..." the sailor, knowing Tang Mo spoke the truth, swallowed and curbed his greed, nodding in agreement.


    "The sea is a great ce..." Tang Mo waved his hand to signal the dismissal, and Galsa promptly escorted the old sailor out of Tang Mo''s room.


    Continuing to roll cigarettes one by one, Tang Mo didn''t stop until he had used up all the tobo scraps.


    He gathered the hand-rolled cigarettes he had made and treasured them, setting them aside as if they were precious gems.


    Then, as if struck by a sudden thought, he pulled out a nk sheet of paper from next to him and began to draw something swiftly.


    He was very meticulous and serious about his drawing, even shading in a quick sketch in ck and white on the side.


    Although his drawing skills were nothing remarkable, the effect he achieved was quite good—after all, he had been a heavy smoker for years, often sketching his own cigarette cases on scraps of paper in his spare time.


    Thus, he remembered the object vividly, down to the veryst detail inside it.


    The metal cigarette case was of a flip-top design, with space inside to hold a row of cigarettes. Tang Mo also had the habit of cing a small knife de inside, useful for self-defense or unexpected emergencies.


    Afterpleting the drawing of the small cigarette case, Tang Mo continued to lean over his desk, starting to sketch out a lighter—lighters were certainly unheard of in this world, but the principle of a lighter is actually quite simple.


    For the lighter''s materials, Tang Mo already had kerosene on hand, and flint was not rare either; thus, a simple ignition device would be a piece of cake for his factory to handle.


    As for the issue of the lighter''s air-tightness, well... it didn''t actually need to be solved. The most famous ZIPPO lighters in the United States were known for their leaking.


    After stacking the hand-rolled cigarettes in a corner of a drawer, Tang Mo headed towards the noisy workshop with the two blueprints.


    He handed his drawings to Mathews, who was discussing improvements to the Maxim gun with Parker, and shouted to his key technical team member, the old Dwarf, "Mathews! Take a look at these two items. Can you make them?"


    "No problem," the old Dwarf nced at Tang Mo''s drawing of the cigarette case, dismissively passing that blueprint to Parker, and then looked at the other with the lighter''s design.


    Examining the strike wheel and simple airtight structure, the old Dwarf looked back at Tang Mo and said admiringly, "This is very sophisticated! Master! If it had been invented some years earlier, it could have be standard army artillery gear!"


    "So you can make it?" Tang Mo wasn''t concerned about how useful the gadget would be to artillerymen right now; he was only interested in when he could have his own ZIPPO lighter.


    The old Dwarf set the blueprints aside on the table, speaking with a trace of disdain, "Leave it to me! Master, I roughly understand the purpose of these two items now—one is a simple box that can hold things, and the other is an ignition device. I will make them well for you, don''t worry."


    "I''m in a hurry," Tang Mo added anotherment.


    "Give me no more than two hours, and I will deliver them," Mathews confidently promised.


    Soon enough, Tang Mo saw the two items Mathews had brought to his office, and to be honest, he was immediately stunned by their exquisite craftsmanship when he firstid eyes on them.


    It was his first time seeing such a beautifully made cigarette case—crafted with metal reliefs that looked incredibly delicate.


    Since it was made of twoyers of metal, it felt satisfyingly heavy in his hand. The inner box fit precisely with not even the slightest gap, and the outer metalyer had been hammered into an exquisite design with a rough technique, conveying a profound sense of power and beauty.


    Tang Mo caressed the twining vines of the embossed design with his fingers, his eyes fixed on the half-visible wolf head at the center of the case, his face full of satisfaction.


    As a traditional cksmith, Mathews''s skill in such artistic design really had reached mastery.


    And when Tang Mo saw the ZIPPO lighter, he was even more astonished by Mathews''s sense of aesthetics.


    It was also adorned with an embossed design—this time featuring the emblem of the Great Tang Group, Tang Mo''s family crest—the dragon totem.


    To be frank, Tang Mo had never imagined that Mathews could make the act of smoking feel so ceremonial. He was extremely fond of the two items, even feeling an almost unreal sense of magic.


    He took out the hand-rolled cigarettes from his drawer, cing them one by one into the cigarette case. Meanwhile, Mathews stood quietly by his side, waiting for Tang Mo to change the world once again with his inventions.


    After Tang Mo had finished, he held thest cigarette between his fingers, and with a finger from his other hand, he struck the lighter that had just been filled with kerosene.


    "Ding!" With a crisp sound, the lighter''s lid flipped open, and the flint made a gratifying scratch noise as it sparked.
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