Chapter 61 Luck



She buys spirit beast eggs based on her first impression, without paying attention to size, patterns, or texture. With a single unsealing spell and an incubation spell, the spirit beast eggs quickly begin to move.

The egg was the size of a washbasin. As the spell was completed, the sounds coming from inside gradually increased, and cracks appeared on the egg. With a "poof," the eggshell broke open, and a little monkey jumped out.

Ah Jiang was speechless; he had bought an artificial spirit beast egg.

The little monkey squeaked and seemed a bit listless. It was just an ordinary golden monkey. After settling it aside, she started on a second one.

This time, she specifically sought out the largest spirit beast egg to see what was inside. The egg was half a person tall, with a clear and translucent white shell, as beautiful as a pearl or jade. However, such eggs were more likely to hatch bad ones, so A-Jiang didn't pay much for it.

The same procedure repeated itself: the eggshell cracked, and the creature inside wasn't very big. It looked a bit like a lizard, with beautiful colors all over its body. However, it was still a bit weak after hatching, so A-Jiang didn't take it out but put it aside to rest.

The third one that came out was a small bird, its feathers hadn't fully grown in yet, and you couldn't tell what kind it was. It was chirping away.

The fourth one was outrageous; it was a turtle. Well, turtles lay eggs after all, so it wasn't too outrageous. Ah Jiang just threw it into the pond.

The fifth one was a black snake, which startled A-Jiang. She carefully resealed it, intending to donate it to the Spirit Beast Garden. She really disliked such things.

What you fear most is what happens; the sixth one is a green snake.

The seventh one is a human-faced spider the size of a palm.

Ah Jiang was almost in tears. Did opening a spirit beast egg have to be this exciting?

After calming herself down, A-Jiang told herself that everyone should be educated regardless of their background, and if she raised them well, they might all succeed in the future.

So, with a blank expression, she drew the eighth one. A bird with a very long beak, perhaps a woodpecker.

The ninth one was a yellow frog. Ajahn couldn't tell if it was a horned frog or a tree frog, so he threw it into the pond.

The tenth one, if I'm not mistaken, should be called Psyduck, oops, Call Duck.

Eleventh, the toad. Ajahn's hand trembled several times as he pressed the button to cast the fireball spell.

The twelfth one is the Windwing Tiger, which is a white tiger with wings. It is a good thing, a rare flying spirit beast, but raising it is very expensive!

More than half of them have been opened, and only the Wind Wing Tiger is worth the price. It seems that we're going to lose money this time. Ah Jiang thought helplessly, no longer as excited as at the beginning.

The thirteenth was a crested snake. Ajahn took a deep breath, held back, and didn't throw it away.

The fourteenth one is indeed quite good: an egg containing two birds, a bluebird and a phoenix. A-Jiang had seen these birds in a book; they are wood-type spirit birds and usually exist in pairs, making them very rare.

The fifteenth one, when opened, left A-Jiang stunned. It looked exactly like Tianpeng when he was a child. Could it also be a golden-winged eagle? A-Jiang also thought of Little Fatty and wondered how they were doing.

He opened the sixteenth door dejectedly and found a yellowish-brown four-legged beast with a small head, a large body, sharp claws, and scales all over its body. Ah Jiang had never seen one before.

The seventeenth one was yellow and fluffy; it was hard to tell whether it was a chick or a bird.

"The eighteenth one," A-Jiang sighed. "Only three left. Give it your all!" The silver spirit beast egg trembled slightly, then cracked open to reveal a silver fox. And, A-Jiang glanced at its tail—two tails!

Who's playing this high game?!

Ajahn stared blankly at the little fox in front of him, utterly shocked.

After a while, A-Jiang fed it a spirit beast pill and put it aside.

Looking at the two remaining eggs, Ajahn opened them with mixed feelings.

The nineteenth one was a crayfish, which Ah Jiang threw into the pond.

The twentieth one was very strange; it was a black humanoid animal, only three feet tall, with big eyes and pointed ears. It wasn't ugly, but it was very strange.

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