Helping with Adventurer Party Management

Episode 682: Reconnaissance Operations

About that night.

"What do you say, those guys?"

"Well, it's worth the planting. At least you're going to have guts."

You don't cry out in anger with Kirik's unexpected face.

Speaking of ten or so, my real age is only in elementary school, and I would have cried out when I was a kid.

"And then, I guess it was a good idea to let you eat. Your health has continued."

I was trained by Kilik for one drink in the afternoon.

It's something that surprises me that I'm unexpectedly training in systemic formats, starting with standing upright in the room, albeit big, and making a big voice out of the bottom of my belly.

"Is that training for the Sword Tooth Corps?

"Right. It's hard to get a voice through when it's on the battlefield, so being able to have a big voice is an essential skill for us. We won't be talking about soldier fights until we can do mass fights. You work with the sword shield soldiers to punch in axe spears, or the crossbowmen notify you of loading times, and you speak out anyway. Otherwise, you'll cut and shoot your allies."

Indeed, training and communication would be essential for a group to move organically, like the Swordtooth Corps.

Even in Hollywood films and other occasions, soldiers were even yelling at each other for a reason.

"After that, the captain and the deputy captain had a long time to go. A missionary order is the eyes and ears of a regiment. If you look at the type and number of monsters incorrectly, it can lead to injury or death to the members of the crew. Did you count what you saw, put it in words, or paint something?"

Somehow, I laugh when I imagine Kilik circling his back and writing pictures on the ground, etc.

"No, it's not funny. And those kids, they have guts, but they can't write. I don't have a problem right now, but I'll have a problem in the future."

"The future..."

I guess I would need to teach my kids how to write.

But the human resources spent on such things are not in this territory.

"I'm supposed to be in church, and I guess I should soothe the kids I can"

"Right. I was, too, that mouth. Church people, if they can afford priests, gather their children to teach them about simple letters and numbers. It's just going to be hard for the church today."

As Paperino says, it's a state where many earned peasants are asleep in the church.

I try to reward the women and clean them regularly, but living in a group would be a lot of trouble.

Those from multiple villages also seem to have factions, and it is not difficult to imagine that church priests would be swung around to take care of such arbitrations.

"Plus, if the lines involved in the printing industry calm down, we'll need to go back to the city in a few months. As soon as I started teaching, then, if I left, the trust I built would be ruined."

Education is about continuity. Instead of doing it halfway without thinking about it, I want to think about it properly and move on.

"Besides, it's important to be able to eat first. You won't get what we're saying until you're bloated."

With that said, Paperino nods with a dark face, too.

Sometimes the importance of investment in education, such as rice mounds, is said, but only if there is a consensus in society on the importance of education and there is an active destination for the trained human resources.

Of course, we need as many educated people to expand our forthcoming territorial development and shoe workshops, but I can't tell the villagers in our territory today that that's understood.

I have just preached the importance of education, and it will only show that your nobility has begun the journey.

If that's how the parents feel, the child will just go through in law.

Then I'm in trouble.

"But what do you want to do? I can't write, besides I don't even know about the village. Do they work as messengers?

I have a few ideas for ideas, but I would like Kilik to do another good job as a commander, so I dare ask.

"Kirik, what would you do if you were captain of the regiment?

"The captain's a little... he's like a god."

Kilik answers as he scratches his nose head with his fingers.

True, Jilboa wasn't appropriate as an example.

We need to take a few more ordinary people as an example.

"In short, suppose Kilik is the commander and the soldier in hand, only those three children. The battlefield is this village."

If it can be compared to the battlefield, it seems that Kirik also has something to work with.

Kilik's wild appearance revives confident measures.

"I see, it's a reconnaissance first. If you're on a battlefield that won't die, you're just right to train the chicks."

I started ringing my fingers, and so on, so I just had a little sympathy for the kids to be trained from tomorrow.