253 Uncooperative

Glarel choked on the lazy Beryl's snake stick, and couldn't pick the right words to describe the other party for a while, well, she should remember that this guy was a real slacker, and would not miss a chance to send someone else. When he came to this village, didn't he go to the meeting place by himself, so that the coachman and she thought something was wrong? He could not be expected to move his body except to fill his stomach, and the word "last resort" had to be added to the stomach filling, and if they had stayed at the villager's house smoothly, Grage believed that the slacker would probably not have gone out and pushed the inspection to her.

With a flick of his wrist, Barrier caught another small fish, and then, to his surprise, Grirrell walked towards the woods with his basket on his shoulder.

"Are you really going?"

"Since I said I will trust you for a few days, I will believe you for a few days," Grirrel did not look back but left behind the sentence, the former trainee nun's red hair fluttering in the wind, "but if you are really derelict in your duties, I will not let you go." ”

"The wind is so strong on the edge of this pond that it's weirdly cold," he muttered to himself, "these fish should be enough to eat, and there is no need to keep fishing." I'll clean up here first, and then I'll go to the house and borrow a fire...... Or tell them to put the fish directly in the porridge to make fish porridge? ”

He skillfully picked up a knife to scrape off the scales of the small fish, disemboweled, and then picked a wicker stick by the pond, threaded the fish into a string, and carried it to the village to find a fire.

"Nope. We don't have a fire," said the woman who sold them porridge in the morning. "Why don't you go to the city? We've told you that we don't want anyone but Count Edward. ”

"Auntie. I'm just borrowing a fire. ”

"Go back to the city, where there is everything, and there is nothing in the village of Barbado."

"Auntie, I don't believe you don't have fire."

"Don't come near me, if you get close to me, I'll call someone!"

"Okay, okay," Beryl knew what the result would be when he "shouted", it was bad enough to be accused of indecent assault, and the result was indescribably miserable to be accused of indecent assault by such a dirty, smoky aunt. And it will definitely ruin his future, he already has the stain of being born and fake, plus a charge of indecent behavior (or such an aunt) is expected to become an urban legend of Arona on the day of the court appearance, "I didn't mean to offend you, goodbye!" ”

He passed through the village and returned to the pond with the fish that needed to be processed urgently, found a place to take a little shelter from the wind, and sat down to think about what to do next.

The actions of the former trainee nun seem to have increased the hostility of the villagers of Barbado against them, who have now adopted a thoroughly uncooperative attitude, apparently. Next, not to mention buying food, they may not even be able to get haystacks to sleep on at night. If there is any consolation, it is that they have not been stoned by the villagers and have not been expelled by force. However, it is difficult to say what will happen if they continue to stay in the village.

Beryl heard about it when he was in the General Staff. There have been cases of knights who fled from the battlefield and were killed by peasants with spears after losing their horses. So, he doesn't make a mistake in this regard. Treating the villagers as lambs to be slaughtered, the villagers have not yet expelled them by force, most likely not because the villagers dare not kill, but because they have not forced the villagers to that point.

"Alas, alas, this world, even if you don't pay attention to eating and drinking, you can't be lazy." He muttered meaninglessly, for he had a headache in front of him. He had taught Glarel to wait patiently for a few days until the villagers showed their impatience, but he underestimated the hostility of the villagers, who did not simply ignore the government, but tried to exclude the government from the village of Barbado.

Of course, the solution to this exclusion is simple: the new government would have to send a group of soldiers here, fine them, and pay them on the spot with their livestock and crops, and they would not dare to be so uncooperative with the people sent by the government next time. But, then, what about his boasting to Miss Graire? What's more, to transfer troops, they have to report the situation here to the government, make reports, apply, run to the office, ask for approval, and think of going back and forth and other tosses, the lazy Beryl retreats.

Besides, Beryl knew that it would be too trivial to transfer troops just because "the villagers refused to cooperate", and the commander was likely to refuse to send troops on the grounds that "they did not use force", now is not the old era, and superficial disrespect cannot be a reason to kill, and I am afraid that there are many people who question whether they have done something in the village before the villagers refuse to cooperate, thinking of that scene, and then thinking of the aunt who warned to call people, Belier has a headache.

"Let's get rid of the fish first." Faced with a seemingly unsolvable problem, the lazy Belier turns to another problem, placing the fish on a rock, with a flatter surface, and looking around for his target. After a while he found a flint, which was so common that it might have been used for a similar purpose by the ape-man ancestors of Beryl, who placed the flint next to a piece of dry moss, struck the flint with the back of his knife, and took out the fire.

After putting the fish on the fire, he began to ponder his current situation again.

When Grerell returned, the number of berries in the basket made Beryl dizzy - when did his laziness spread to the other party? He blinked several times before he made sure that the berries in the basket were no more than his own grilled fish.

"Leave the berries alone!" Grirrell said to him.

"That's all for our dinner! Woowoo woo ......"

"Don't patronize dinner!" "I heard from the children who were picking berries and mushrooms in the woods. ”

"Huh? Oh. "Balier was still frustrated, knowing that he would catch a few more fish......

"The villagers thought we would recruit soldiers here, and that every household would have to send one person to serve as a soldier," Mr. Graire said, "and that's why they rejected us, and that's why there were so few men in the village, and many of them went into hiding." ”

"Actually, all adult men and adult women with the right conditions have to do military training, look at what I'm doing, don't you know about this?" (To be continued......)