Chapter Seventy-Five: The Story of Others 4

The necromancers of Morslaw differ from any other faction not only in their school of witchcraft, but also in their organizational structure, which is not a witchcraft organization but a bureaucracy, at least in name. Morse's law provided them with everything they needed by taxation, and apprentices were levied on them by law, and in turn, they were subject to Morse's administration, governing the place, providing the witchcraft goods needed by Morse's law, and defending Morse's law, which was generally understood by a person with a little official position and common sense. From this point of view, these necromancers are parasites of Morsfa, their survival and prosperity are completely dependent on Morsfa, the emperor has a population of 10,000 times that of necromancers, all material materials, and the support of almost all elemental wizards, it is simply clear who has the advantage.

However, these are just carefully packaged illusions by both sides. If someone thought about it for a while, it would not be difficult for him to think that no matter how many ordinary people competed against wizards, it would be difficult to call them any combat power. It is true that ordinary people are also prone to fear death when they are instigated, and on more than one occasion in history these mobs have destroyed armies armed with bronze and steel with sticks and stones, the problem is that wizards are not armies, they have never advocated frontal attacks - perhaps the Age of the Dance is the exception - and smearing oil on the soles of their feet is the first rule of their military class. When necessary, they will even discard some of their useless apprentices and low-level wizards to the mob, and while the mob is basking in the joy of successfully killing these decoy wizards, the wizards will cut off their food channels, destroy their granaries, and then sit quietly in the safety of the distance and wait for themselves to kill and collapse due to lack of food.

It was then that the leaders of the mob would understand a military adage: "A soldier is not expensive." ”

Then he would think of the emperor's material superiority, all the land and people were taxed by the emperor, and under the long-term propaganda, even the shadow of the necromancer could scare them into fleeing into the mountains overnight, so it seemed that the necromancer had a hard time getting supplies. However, the Necromancers were few in number, so they didn't need a lot of supplies, and the Emperor's subjects were accustomed to relying on the cheap sorcery provided by the Necromancers for good weather and roads, and millions of people lived in the capital of Morsefa, which was more than the population of the entire world before the appearance of elemental wizards! High-value agricultural products such as fruits and flowers, food and meat are all produced in distant valleys, transported by a series of elaborate water hubs built and controlled by necromancers, and once the necromancers close the doors of the academy and hide it in the depths of the moonset, I am afraid that the first to collapse will be the capital of Morsfa, which has a population of millions.

Therefore, among the three authorities, Morslaw can rely on only those elemental wizards of different schools, which may be why Morse Law and other countries have stubbornly maintained the inheritance of elemental witchcraft despite the fact that necromancy is much more efficient.

They don't have a shortage of madmen, but they're not so arrogant as to think that they can dictate to necromancers by relying on ordinary people.

In fact, they don't even think that hired wizards are objects to be relied upon, every noble family has their own wizard, not necessarily a patriarch, but there must be, even if it is just an apprentice, a family without an apprentice cannot be called a family, even if they hire as many capable wizards, they will be regarded as not having the qualifications of nobility, and will be banished from the social circle until they get their own wizard through marriage or adoption. This may seem uneconomical, but considering that even the untouchable children who have been helplessly sent to the Necromancy Academy can take power without regard for the whole worldly society, it is foolish to trust the loyalty of hired wizards. On the contrary, if a noble family can have a large number of wizards, first-class territory and marriage are also at their fingertips.

The Duchess of Astarte was able to willfully reject powerful suitors and marry an ordinary person, her magic and her six sisters who were wizards were her strength, and one of her sisters easily married into the royal family and became the queen of Morsfar.

And if the heir to the royal family has no magic......

Warren could see that his fate would not be much better than that of a frog in a saucepan, and it was no wonder that Edward Astadt was able to "put aside his old suspicions" and "lend a hand" - Warren laughed when he saw this - he could almost imagine the painful look on the face of Edward Astadt's dear uncle when he handed over his only son to this dear genius cousin for "love education", which must have been well worth seeing!

Judging from the records left behind, the agreement was close to losing power and humiliating the country, and the old emperor did not expect his son to have complete arms and legs by the time he graduated.

But Eduard Astartt did something worse than he thought.

From Edward's cousin Luther Morslaw entering the Necromantic Academy to leaving, except for the opening ceremony and other occasions when all the staff were present, the two met together, Edward Astadt seems to have forgotten all the agreement signed with his father, what level Luther Morslaw was when he entered the academy, and what level he was when he left, let alone becoming a necromancer, he couldn't even release a light ball for lighting on his own.

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