"Hey... Mr. Crowe, are you a wizard or something?

It is the Bolton Parent Dialogue when Crowe talks about taking Sir Harcourt and Sir Partridge, and three of Lupa, to the Bolton Workshop to draw up - with some imagination - a landscape painting of the Cave of Disaster based on Sir Harcourt's sketch.

In the end, Crowe drew several original paintings based on the sketches and gave Sir Harcourt a little something he liked. The Bolton parent will choose the appropriate one from the rest and turn it to print. That said...

"Just a sketch of Rock Mountain, the screen is drenched. I just want to add a drawing of Theodrum or Marcus' soldier or something...... is there any material I can reference?

If you're looking at images of soldiers infiltrated within the "Rock Cave of Disaster," Kerr, the dungeon core, keeps them on record. That said, I can't possibly paint it as a lower picture. Crowe has never been to Theodoram or Marcus...

"Oops, there is. The one who portrayed Marcus' soldiers."

Without the soldier's materials, even the proper adventurer would have painted a cloud of tea, but Bolton's parents say there are Marcus soldiers' materials.

"Why do you have such materials again?

"A few years ago, the king of Marcus had a soldier's ceremony."

It seems to be like a combination of military parades and military exercises. Events will be handled all year round in the Earth world, but this world seems to be about once every few years, and in some cases during the king's life. So, when it came to the censorship ceremony, it was a major event, and Bolton Workshop also folded a variety of related prints, etc.

Anyway, Crowe looked at the prints and decided they were going to be able to use them, and decided to rent a room in the workshop to go into the drawing work.

The reference material for "The Rock Cave of Disaster" is a sketch brought by Sir Harcourt... In fact, "The Rock Cave" is a dungeon under Crow. Because we know the dimensions in more detail than anyone else, there is no difficulty in drawing them. Ning, if not this way, people were taking the time to decide on an effective structure.

On the eleventh day after Crowe got into the drawing work, Michelle, the artisan, calls out when she sees Crowe coming out of the work room with a face like he's done the first job.

"Mr. Crowe... a moment?

"Yeah, I managed to get it done. Could you please call my parents and Lord Harcourt?

"Wow, I get it!

I guess Lord Harcourt also told his Bolton parents when he drove him to Rupa's mansion, where he was supposed to stay until Crowe's original painting was finished. I came to Crowe first, but I'm waiting for the other three to come to discipline.

Parental twitching and waiting focuses were off, but eventually Lupa jumped in, and then a little later Sir Harcourt and Sir Partridge became the carriers of arrival. Finally, it is the unveiling of the original painting.

"Uh-huh..."

It's already thirty minutes to put your arms together and look around the six original drawings, compare them, and exhale. Lord Harcourt, who swallowed the condition of presenting a single point of what he liked, was moaning (groaning) to choose one of those points.

There are six original drawings drawn by Crowe, but there are three types of schematics. That is, two schematics depicting a far-sighted view of the "Rock Cave of Disaster", two schematics depicting a nearby view of a Marcus soldier standing against the background of the "Rock Cave", and three schematics depicting a "Rock Cave" in such a way that it feels covered behind a Marcus soldier depicted from a medium distance. Although the last three points are shaped to look up at the "rock cave" as a diagram, not only the diagram but also the light conditions were altered and drawn, and one point or the like was drawn under the conditions of backlight. How dare you simulate this many schematics in your brain, even though you are a dungeon master.

Now, the troubled Lord Harcourt, apparently narrowed it down to three mid-range points and one long-distance point, but he's having difficulty choosing one from it. In the sense of the force of the screen, the armament rises to three points of medium range, but there seems to be an untrained one that captures the panorama of the "cave of disaster".

"Um... Sir Harcourt? Bolton, I don't know which one my parents would choose, but I'm sure you'll give me a set of prints, right?

As soon as Crowe said that, Sir Harcourt's face jumped and turned to Bolton Parents.

"Huh? Well, naturally... you know what, Mr. Crowe, I'm not letting Lord Harcourt print any of your choices..."

"We need to talk to Lord Harcourt about that..."

"Give me one six-point print... no, I don't mind if I get three at a time"

"Yeah, don't be so cheap..."

"So? Pat, have you decided which one you want?

The day ended when Sir Harcourt chose one more point of distress (every day) and a medium distance, and his parents made a bronze version of all six original paintings.

The six-point prints sold at a later date took on a more reputation than expected, no, as expected by the parent.

It took a little more time for Crowe to know what form that echo would return.