FREE USE in Primitive World

Chapter 75: Conquer The World With Soup


​Next, he found a cluster of small, pale bulbs still caked in mud. They looked like deformed pearls. He scraped one clean with his thumbnail and sniffed. It made his eyes water in a familiar, comforting way.

​Allium family. Wild garlic.

​"Jackpot again," he muttered. He crushed the bulbs under the flat of his knife, releasing a pungent, sulfurous aroma that made Liora wrinkle her nose.

​"That smells like feet!" she giggled.

​"It smells like flavor," Sol corrected, sweeping the crushed garlic into the pot. "It wakes up the nose so the tongue can taste better."

​He moved through the pile like a man possessed, tasting everything. Some things were failures.... a purple berry that tasted like earwax (he spat it out immediately), a vine that numbed his lips unpleasantly. But his modern knowledge gave him an edge. He recognized patterns: the serrated edge of a mint-like leaf, the woody stem of a rosemary equivalent. He gauged their power and taste, building a mental flavor profile of the prehistoric pantry.

​Then, his hand hovered over a bunch of brown, wrinkled roots Lyra had gathered.

​He picked one up. It was ugly. It looked like a shriveled, severed toe of an old man. It was hard as a rock.

​He brought it to his nose and scratched the surface.

​A scent wafted up.... warm, nutty, slightly sweet, and deeply earthy.

​Nutmeg? No... deeper. Like mace mixed with cinnamon.

​"Eh, looks aromatic," Sol thought, his chef's intuition tingling. This was the finishing note. The thing that would give the soup that mysterious, 'I can't tell what this is but I love it' quality.

​He didn't hesitate. With a look of profound, mystical wisdom, he grabbed the mystery roots. He didn't chop them; he grated them against a rough stone, letting the fine brown dust fall into the bubbling cauldron like magic powder.

​"What was that?" Veyra asked, watching the brown dust dissolve. Her suspicion was back. "It looks like dead wood."

​Sol paused, holding the shriveled root up to the light. He needed a name that sounded impressive, something that shut down questions.

​"Root of... Resilience," Sol improvised instantly, his voice grave. "It grows only in the shadow of the great trees. It binds the flavors together. Essential for the texture of the soul."

​Veyra opened her mouth to argue that she found it growing in a ditch, but the smell wafting from the pot stopped her.

​The nutmeg-like dust hit the hot fat and the chili oil. The aroma bloomed. It tied the sharp spice, the salty brine, and the rich meatiness into a warm, cohesive embrace. It smelled like comfort. It smelled like home.

​"Soul texture..." Veyra muttered, looking at the pot with a grudging respect. "Fine. Whatever

He stirred the pot. The fire crackled, the water rolled, and slowly, the magic began to happen.

The steam rising from the pot changed. The metallic smell of the raw meat vanished, replaced by the rich, savory scent of rendering fat. The sharp tang of the chili cut through the heaviness, and the salty succulents broke down, seasoning the broth. The mystery root added a strange, earthy sweetness that tied it all together.

It didn't smell like wet rag or sadness anymore. It smelled like food, Delicious food.

The girls sniffed the air. Liora leaned in, her nose twitching, her fear forgotten. Arelia's posture relaxed. Even Veyra uncrossed her arms, a confused look on her face.

"It smells..." Liora whispered. "Good?"

"It smells like hunger," Veyra admitted grudgingly.

Sol dipped the ladle in, stirring the golden-red liquid, into gray hot matter.

"Not just good," Sol corrected, dipping a spoon in and blowing on it. "Perfect."

​He took a sip, letting the liquid roll over his tongue.

​Damn, he thought, his eyes widening slightly. It was really tasty.

​Honestly, even he hadn't expected it to turn out this good. He thought that just a basic broth with some actual salt would be enough to surprise these primitive palates, but unexpectedly, the flavor profile was complex. The gamey richness of the badger meat, the creamy mouthfeel of the rendered fat, the sharp, escalating heat of the chili, and the deep, briny undertone of the marsh-succulents... it all balanced perfectly.

​Maybe he really had a talent for cooking? Or maybe it was just the raw, untainted quality of the prehistoric ingredients?

​Either way, it didn't matter. This soup was a weapon. It was enough to make them slaves to his cooking. With this, he could conquer them all... first his family, then the neighbors, then the tribe. He couldn't help thinking wildly, his ambition spiraling, as if what he was brewing in that clay pot wasn't just soup, but the Philosopher's Stone itself.

​He walked over to the women, holding the spoon out to Veyra first. She was the skeptic, the barrier. If she broke, the rest would follow.

​"Taste," he commanded.

​Veyra looked at the spoon as if it contained concentrated venom. She looked at the red tint of the liquid, then at Sol's confident, almost arrogant face.

​"If I die," she hissed, "I'm haunting you."

​With a sigh of martyrdom, she leaned forward and took a tentative sip.

​She froze.

​For a second, she didn't move. Then, her eyes didn't just widen; they bulged. She blinked rapidly, smacking her lips, trying to process the explosion of sensation on her tongue.

​"It's..." Veyra stammered, looking from the spoon to the pot. "It's... salty? But... good salty. Rich. And... oh!"

​Her hand flew to her mouth as the chili kicked in. "It bites! It's hot inside!"

​"Is it bad?" Lyra asked anxiously.

​"No!" Veyra gasped, grabbing Sol's wrist to pull the spoon back for another sip. "It's... it makes my mouth water! It tastes like... like meat, but ten times stronger!"

​Liora couldn't wait any longer. She scrambled forward on her knees. "Me! Me!"

​She took a sip and shrieked with delight. "It tastes like the best meat! But better! It dances on my tongue! It's spicy!"

​Then, it was Arelia's turn.

​The eldest sister moved with her usual grace, brushing a stray lock of hair behind her ear. She approached the spoon not with hunger, but with a careful, studying gaze. She took a small, measured sip, closing her eyes as the broth hit her palate.

​She stayed silent for a long moment, her brow furrowed in concentration.

​"It is like a storm," Arelia whispered, opening her soft brown eyes to look at Sol. Her voice was warm, filled with a quiet wonder. "The heat strikes like lightning, waking you up... but then the fat and the salt soothe you like the rain that follows. It flows together, Sol. The earth, the beast, and the fire... you made them hold hands."

​She smiled, a serene, beatific expression that made her look like a forest spirit.

​"It feels like... safety. Like a warm fire in the winter."

​Sol felt a twitch in his chest. Damn, she's poetic.

​Finally, Lyra stepped forward. She looked at the pile of discarded "useless" marsh-plants, then at the pot. She took the spoon Sol offered, her hand trembling slightly.

​She tasted it.

​A shudder ran through her frame. She didn't speak of storms or flavor profiles. She looked at Sol with eyes that were wet with sudden emotion.

​"The Tear-Grass..." she murmured, disbelief coloring her voice. "It was bitter. It was useless. We walked past it every day for years, starving, thinking it was nothing."

​She looked at the pot, then back at Sol, the devotion in her gaze deepening into something frighteningly intense.

​" You changed its nature," she whispered. "You took the things we threw away... the bones, the weeds, the poison... and you turned them into... this. Only the Ancestors have that kind of power."

Sol smirked, "I told you, Aunt," he said, turning back to the fire to stir the pot, hiding the triumphant glint in his eyes. "It's called seasoning."

​He looked at his four converts, their eyes glued to the cauldron.

"And it's going to make us king.

A/N: Should I include more slice of life chapters like these or should I just focus on high intensity action, adventure and Smut?

Do give your opinion, it is very important to determine future direction.

If you find any errors ( broken links, non-standard content, etc.. ), Please let us know < report chapter > so we can fix it as soon as possible.


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