Phield stepped out of the manor, the sunlight easing his nerves.
"Whew, the money issue is sorted. Now itās time to procure suppliesābuy more food and livestock this time."
Due to the territoryās special environment, even after eliminating the pollution, the soilās fertility was insufficient, and agricultural output would be minimal.
Phield planned to build a ranch, mainly raising chickens, ducks, pigs, and cowsātheir manure could also effectively boost soil fertility.
Itās worth mentioning that in the empire, prices varied by city. One copper coin could buy a loaf of bread in Golden Eagle City, but in the impoverished western mountain regions, it could only buy the scent of breadāthe shopkeeper would let you sniff it.
As a place with a developed service industry, Maple Leaf City had no interest in war, so slaves were scarce. You could only buy some human slaves, mostly women and children, with able-bodied laborers priced at over three times that of women.
Grain and fodder were also major purchases.
Nightfall Domain produced nothing, relying entirely on Phield to sustain the whole territory. Currently, it wasnāt Phield exploiting the peopleāit was the people exploiting Phield.
Only Phield, with his modern mindset, would do such a losing deal; other nobles wouldnāt touch it.
"Before buying anything, I need to recruit some management and administrative talents first." Phield rubbed his brow. "The entire territory has only two people who can read and write, and Kaorās management skills are pretty average. Plus, weāre short on craftsmenāthe grand winery needs repairs."
After organizing his thoughts, Phield said to his guard Sam: "First, send the gold coins back to the post station. Later, come with me to the tavern."
Taverns were medieval talent markets and one of the most informed places.
After handling everything, they arrived at a tavern in Maple Leaf City, and Phield pushed the door open.
The place was filled with "boom boom" noisy clamorātall, short, fat, and thin people gathered together, boasting about their glorious deeds. Some played cards or finger-guessing games; everyone seemed to be laughing heartily, but those smiles were just masks worn on their faces.
Who knew how dejected theyād be once sober?
Phield, in a black noble robe with a fine steel longsword at his waist and three guards behind him, startled everyone as he entered.
They fell silent, staring at him oddly, assuming he was there to catch some fugitive.
"Three mugs of barley ale." Phield casually tossed a silver coin. "Keep the change."
Hearing Phield wasnāt there to arrest anyone, the tavern instantly returned to its noisy state.
"My lord, thank you for your generosity." The bartender respectfully set down the wooden mugs, grinning as brightly as a chrysanthemum, and scooped up the silver coin. Three mugs of barley ale cost only fifteen copper coinsāPhield had given way too much.
"Donāt rush off; I want to ask you about some news. First, tell me about the empireās recent big events."
Phield rewarded the ale to Iron Hammer and the others; he himself had no interest in the rough, sour barley ale.
"Have you heard about the armory theft in Bull territory? Count Nibelungen has started investigatingāof course, the unlucky Baron Bull is in for severe punishment. But Iām curious: who could quietly move over two thousand suits of plate armor? Probably only a devil could do that."
"Two thousand suits?"
Phield frowned. Heād only found five hundred?
Probably Nibelungen inflating the numbers to balance the books.
But this was good newsāif the count reported accurately, it meant he really wanted to find the culprit. Inflating the figures meant the count wanted to pocket some benefits himself; likely, heād just grab some bandits, kill them, and close the case.
Noblesā tricks always revolved around their own interests.
Phield smiled faintly: "Very good. Anything else?"
"Thereās another big event: the imperial family had a tier-five artifact stolen, a trophy from those damned hereticsāthe Eye of Ancient Vows. Itās said to bewitch minds, turning normal people into their puppets. The heretics are so rampant because of their massive western crusade. The gateway and barrier to the prosperous Taloria, the imperial capital of the Purple Gold Empire, has been besieged for a month, and as for the other cities in the Purple Gold Empire, theyāve all fallen."
"Anything else?"
Phield had zero interest in this newsāit held no value. Holed up in Nightfall Domain, whether it was stolen or not had nothing to do with himāit wasnāt like he stole it, and he had no ability to steal a tier-five artifact anyway.
The bartender wiped the mug in his hand: "Thatās it. If youāre not satisfied, I can give you a mug of barley ale."
"I want to find some people to work for me. Do you have channels?" Phield didnāt want to drink.The bartender gave a knowing look and whispered: "Thereās a real desperadoāfor just twenty silver coins, heād even assassinate his own parents. Or the Mad Dog mercenaries, a bunch of thorough lunatics who take pride in eating their enemiesā hearts and livers. The cost is highāno less than thirty gold coins to hire themābut there are rumors theyāve murdered employers, so be careful."
"I donāt want assassins or mercenaries."
Realizing the misunderstanding, Phield waved it off. "Iām not looking to kill someone; I need capable people." Phield said, "Specifically, I need talents with practical skills, like in management, architecture, herbalism, or craftsmanship."
"Ah? Thatās unusual. Why not seek heirs from other nobles?"
Nobles typically appointed knights or guards to management rolesādonāt think guards are lowly jobs; actually, itās an exclusive channel for nobles to "win at the starting line." Guards were usually family second sons, going to other lords to learn martial arts and knowledge, helping out the nobles along the way to get familiar faces.
"Let me thinkāthereās one good at management: Gaoler Tate, who can read and write. But heās a rigid fool who refused gold bribes and insisted on upholding justice. Haha, hopelessly stupidāin the end, his subordinates conspired against him, and now heās out of a job, drinking alone over there."
This sounded alright. Phield nodded.
"Thereās also a horse hunter named Durandāthat bastard sneaked into the lordās backyard at midnight, raped the stallion, and escaped hanging through sophistry. A pervert with real guts; perhaps you could have him serve as a diplomatic advisor."
Phield nearly flipped the table.
It really was a horse hunter!
What his territory lacked was talent for hard workāas for diplomacy, you couldnāt mate with zombies anyway.
Donāt let him sneak into the stables at night and bugger his beloved warhorse.
"Letās talk about Tate." Phield wiped his cold sweat.
After getting the information, Phield approached Gaoler Tate and sat down unceremoniously.
"Iām Phield, lord of Nightfall Domain." Phield interlaced his fingers and said sincerely, "I need someone who understands management and can read and write, especially to keep slaves in line. I wonder if your professional skills are up to the task."
Tate was a middle-aged man with a full beard, looking extremely resolute: "I can read and writeālearned from an old monk as a kidābut the problem is, I only know how to manage prisoners."
"At least thereās commonality. Iāll give you a salary far above market rateāthree times your previous wage."
"But Iād need to be alive to spend it. I have a wife, daughter, and mother. The northern province isnāt a place for peopleāitās absolute death territory."
"Nightfall Domain is dangerous, no doubt about that, but if you stay put, it might be even more dangerous." Phield spread his hands. "I hear you offended quite a few people during your enforcement days, and your colleagues donāt like you. I imagine the local gangs have long been preparing revengeāespecially on your family."
"They wouldnāt dare!" Tateās eyes turned red with rage as he slammed the wooden mug down angrily, spilling beer everywhere.
"From your reaction, I know I guessed rightāand you know it in your heart too."
Phield knew heād hit his sore spot: "Come on, go take a look at Nightfall Domain. It might be a hell full of corruption, but compared to a hell full of debauchery, it might be a bit better. Plus, one more thingāthe northern province isnāt absolute death; at least Iām still alive."
"Youāve convinced me." Tate slumped down dejectedly. He worried the thugs would target his wife and daughter. "Right now, I just want to escape. Perhaps the remote cursed lands are my destination."
Then Phield verified Tateās knowledge.
About a quarter hour later, Phield laughed heartily and placed a gold coin on the table: "This is settling-in money. Find me at the post station outside the city before noon tomorrow."
Tate was nearly blinded by the gold coinādidnāt expect the noble before him to willingly offer a gold coin after just a short chat.
"This is too much."
Now that Phield was flush with cash, he immediately said firmly: "This is my sincerityādonāt disappoint me."
"Alright." Tate wasted no more words and left quickly.