Helping with Adventurer Party Management

Lesson 145: Even Without the Auxiliary Festivals

Outraged, a man called Clemente stands up and the other two grabs the hem of their clothes and holds them back as they head for the exit.

I can see the hot air rising from my shaved head. The water is going to boil with that.

I raised my voice as I watched with cold eyes arguing in a low voice.

"Let's take a break. You all seem to have something to discuss."

That's what I said. When I left the room, Sarah came after me in a hurry.

"Hey, hey, Kenji! Were you okay to say that to the festivals?

"I don't know," to be honest,

"Wow, I don't know..." Sarah was stunned.

But what I don't know, I don't know.

How authoritative is the priesthood in this world? I'm sorry, there's something I haven't pinned.

So I'm going to have preached my attitude when learning academics very normally. I think it's a little too repetitive that I can tell Priest Nicolo.

I don't want to deny what their heads are made of, but I see a verse that mistakes taking people's frying feet for intelligence because they've won out in a highly competitive world.

Even though I'm trying to teach you something more difficult, the first time in this world, I'm not going to talk about it in that attitude.

Even though the talent needed is not a raw person who mistakenly thinks of deceiving an ignorant common man with an exaggeration for intelligence, but a discipline with an attitude to crave more and more unknown knowledge and to kneel and learn even from children on the side of the road if necessary.

Alternatively, anyone who simply strips a ditch if they are blinded by money and the benefits of the world and look for change.

Maybe I can't help it because I'm young and confident in myself, but I can't go about my business together without showing me an intelligent attitude to the extent that I can say I don't know what I don't know.

In the sense of intelligent attitude, Sarah, this ignorant peasant-ascending adventurer, is many times better.

That said, I can't help but cut it off. We have to figure out what to do.

Firstly, how about apologizing for the disrespectful attitude to the Festivals, reconciling them and continuing the lecture?

Benefits include new and cost-free, not crushing the faces of the Nicolo priests who introduced them, not buying the resentment of the young midwives

The downside is that the transfer of knowledge is probably halfway through. That will increase the criteria for evaluating the business and hence the probability of the business failing. Failure means that rural taxes are raised and farmers' lives are oppressed.

I mean, we don't have this option.

Next, what is the direction to proceed without the Festivals?

Specifically, if you're a Nicolo Priest, I'll make a detailed text so you can understand, and I'll make the evaluation criteria myself. Differences from the field are teamed up with low-status practitioners to actually head out to church territory to try and misfill them. That's how we make success stories. After the achievement, the Nicolo priest spreads it to the young midwives.

The advantage is that it is easy to get people to listen to you because it will be a story after the results are achieved. I will oversee it, so the accuracy of the evaluation criteria shall be increased. Having professional people on the team so it is easy to start up a practical organization by sliding them.

The disadvantages are that the initial costs will be greater, crushing the face of Priest Nicolo, who introduced the Young Aide, being resented by the Young Aide, and increasing my burdens.

And somehow, I can see through the thought of finishing the education of the young assistant priests, who were rationalists or were likely to fall. Why should I do that? I want you to do your own education.

You can even do it without an Easter Festival. If their attitude doesn't change, that's fine.

With that prospect, I was ready.

Well, I wonder what happened to the conclusions of the Festivals.

I rather look forward to their conclusion and open the door to the room.

They turn this way, like a jerk.

"Well, have you come to a conclusion?," but rather in a quiet voice, I asked the Festivals.