Chapter 955 The n
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"Then let''s cut it and find out," Daniel said with a grin.
He took a marker and drew a line on the Heliotrope.
When he was done, he told the worker, "Hey, please cut this original stone in half along the line I drew."
“Sir, this cut looks significantly moreplicated than thest two. I''ll need a five thousand dor tip to make this cut."
The worker was clearly in it for the cash.
"Sure! Five grand is fine!" Daniel casually shrugged. To him, a few thousand wasn''t a big deal, especially since he was nning to win big that night.
Initially, he aimed to win at least eight hundred million, but now he adjusted his goal to a billion. After all, this worker expected to charge money with every cut, but Daniel didn''t mind. He knew he''d get back every cent tenfold from Grant.
"Five grand? What a na?ve country boy!" the worker thought.
With that thought in mind, the worker devised a new n.
Just as he had everything figured out, the electric saw suddenly made a loud snap.
Bang!
That sound echoed as the saw de broke.
Knowing the de was broken, the worker immediately switched off the saw.
It was no ident; he hoped to exploit this to get Daniel to pay more.
But Daniel was no fool; he caught on to the
leorker''s underhanded scheme immediately and decide
let the worker y his gam
to
For now, Daniel just watched, curious to see what would unfold from this guy''s sudden twist.This text is property of N?/velD/rama.Org.
"Sir, the de broke," the worker said, still acting innocent.
"Yes, I can see that. Just get a new e de! You''re the professional here, right? This isn''t the first time a de has broken while dealing with original stone, is it?"
"Of course it broke. But we have a rule: if an original stone breaks a de while cutting, that stone is cursed. And I can''t continue to cut such a cursed stone without consequences."
The worker paused, gauging Daniel''s reaction to decide his next move.
“Uh, so what are you saying?” Daniel asked.
"Sir, if you want me to keep cutting, you need to be responsible for whatever bad luckes from cutting this cursed stone."
The worker unambiguously ced the burden of "bad luck" squarely on Daniel''s shoulders.