Lord of Rot
Chapter 22: Autumn Harvest and Borrowing Grain
- Chapter 136 - 135: Eat Less Sweets, It’s Good for Your Health
- Chapter 135 - 134: Wanting to Become the Potato Baron
- Chapter 134 - 133: Give Birth to Your Heir
- Chapter 133 - 132: Impervious
- Chapter 132 - 131: Lady Jie Lin’s Invitation to the Treasury
- Chapter 131 - 130: Sorry, I Have a Maphack
- Chapter 130 - 129: They Follow Whoever Wins
- Chapter 129 - 128: I Got Shot
- Chapter 128 - 127: The First Suit of Armor is Ready
- Chapter 127 - 126: Assembly Line Factory
- Chapter 126 - 125: The Aristocrat’s Palate (Part 2)
- Chapter 125: The Noble Lord on the Tip of the Tongue
- Chapter 124: Hydraulic Hammer
- Chapter 123: A Forked Tongue
- Chapter 122: Covered in Thorns
- Chapter 121: A Tempting Letter
- Chapter 120: Expensive Glass
- Chapter 119: Foolish Bloodletting Treatment
- Chapter 118: Magical Red Bricks
- Chapter 117: Wado Eighteen
- Chapter 116: Don’t Go Near the Horse’s Rear
- Chapter 115: This Plot Looks Familiar
- Chapter 114: Water Can Carry the Boat
- Chapter 113: The Abducted Slaves
- Chapter 112: Explosive Pack
- Chapter 111: Porcupine Territory’s Honey Beer
- Chapter 110: The Emerald Green Fishman Skull Crystal
- Chapter 109: Fishman Crypt
- Chapter 108: Ambush
- Chapter 107: Craftsmen and Slaves
- Chapter 106: Desert Bandits
- Chapter 105: Three Dances
- Chapter 104: Miss Ivory Tower
- Chapter 103: Soft Rice Clan
- Chapter 102: Corpse Ghost Aina
- Chapter 101: Grant You New Life
- Chapter 100: The Dying Transcendent and the Wondrous Item
- Chapter 99: Sub-human Girls Are So Expensive
- Chapter 98: Red Dragon Furnace
- Chapter 97: A Great Harvest in the Library
- Chapter 96: Extraordinary Strike
- Chapter 95: Hating Greasy Confessions
- Chapter 94: Stacy, You’re Wearing Makeup
- Chapter 93: You Use a Sub-human Girl for That?
- Chapter 92: Older Female Cousin
- Chapter 91: Robbery
- Chapter 90: Heading to Green Forest Castle
- Chapter 89: About Cavalry
- Chapter 88: The Sixteenth Illegitimate Son
- Chapter 87: The Griffin Grass Sprouted
- Chapter 86: Until Death
- Chapter 85: Praying to the Lord
- Chapter 84: Self-heating
- Chapter 83: The Gunpowder Genius
- Chapter 82: Lime
- Chapter 81: The Wrong Salted Duck Eggs
- Chapter 80: The Dungeon is Very Rich
- Chapter 79: The Cart That Grabs Water
- Chapter 78: The Baron Has Been Sidelined
- Chapter 77: The Swineherd Wants to Cry
- Chapter 76: House Allocation
- Chapter 75: Taking Advantage of the Lord
- Chapter 74: The Selection Ends
- Chapter 73: "Sweet Gold" Honey
- Chapter 72: I Want This Skill
- Chapter 71: Multiplication Table
- Chapter 70: Reply Letter
- Chapter 69: Mad! Mad
- Chapter 68: Flying a Kite
- Chapter 67: New Team
- Chapter 66: An Invitation to the Garden
- Chapter 65: The Six Major Regions
- Chapter 64: A Bunch of Talents
- Chapter 63: Hiding a Beauty in the Crypt
- Chapter 62: The Knight Squire Selection Begins
- Chapter 61: The Second Village
- Chapter 60: Harpy
- Chapter 59: Cape Dungeon
- Chapter 58: Mercenary
- Chapter 57: Slave Riot
- Chapter 56: Discovery
- Chapter 55: The Water Mill is Very Useful
- Chapter 54: Hamburgers and Egg Tarts
- Chapter 53: A Noble Seeks Refuge
- Chapter 52: The Castle Recruits Manservants and Maids
- Chapter 51: The Rat Race
- Chapter 50: The Work-Point System
- Chapter 49: The Flu
- Chapter 48: The Fierce-Mane Horse is Pregnant
- Chapter 47: New Housing
- Chapter 46: Celebration
- Chapter 45: The Dwarf
- Chapter 44: War Trophies
- Chapter 43: Javelin and Pirates
- Chapter 42: Silver Steel Sword
- Chapter 41: The Beautiful Mare Stratagem
- Chapter 40: Plan to Seduce the Griffin
- Chapter 39: Insect Control Remnant People
- Chapter 38: The Second Batch of Slaves Arrives
- Chapter 37: Stealing a Corpse
- Chapter 36: Throwing Expert
- Chapter 35: The Arena
- Chapter 34: The Widow and the Lucky Dog
- Chapter 33: Business
- Chapter 32: Magic Tide
- Chapter 31: The Griffin Crisis
- Chapter 30: The Extraordinary Knight of the Golden Flash
- Chapter 29: Sidor Sea Water
- Chapter 28: The Ball
- Chapter 27: The Invitation from Iron Stone City
- Chapter 26: Even a Fierce Beast Has a Close Friend
- Chapter 25: Marrying a Cousin: A Sure Profit
- Chapter 24: Master and Dog
- Chapter 23: Slacking Slaves
- Chapter 22: Autumn Harvest and Borrowing Grain
- Chapter 21: Ground Dwellers
- Chapter 20: Son of the Ranger
- Chapter 19: Mutated Half-Corpse Ghost
- Chapter 18: News of a Death
- Chapter 17: Sacrifice
- Chapter 16: New Crypt
- Chapter 15: Smoked Bacon
- Chapter 14: Red Dot
- Chapter 13: The Fiery Red Giant Bear
- Chapter 12: Steaming Crabs
- Chapter 11: Magic Farming and Manure
- Chapter 10: Corpse Decay
- Chapter 9: Silver Moon Daddy
- Chapter 8: Leech Confidence
- Chapter 7: The Golden Carriage of a Lifetime
- Chapter 6: My Charming Stepmother
- Chapter 5: The Red Rose
- Chapter 4: Corpse Farmer
- Chapter 3: Blood Sacrifice Treasure
- Chapter 2: The Necromancer’s Legacy
- Chapter 1: The Yellow Dot and the Green Dot
"Cough, cough!"
The acrid smell from the preservative he was making sent Leech into a coughing fit. He waved his hand in front of his face for a long time before the stench finally dissipated.
He turned to look at the mutated half-Corpse Ghost wandering in the distance. It possessed a very low level of consciousness; even under Leech’s orders, it could only walk around slowly and aimlessly.
He had also turned the other two troglodyte bodies into zombies. Lacking magical materials, they were just the most ordinary kind of undead, requiring him to control them directly. Normally, they were as motionless as any other corpse.
Leech had also sent people into the mountains to search for the red herb, but there had been no news so far. On the other hand, there was a lot more wild game on his dining table.
Making the preservative wasn’t difficult. The materials were readily available and not too expensive. The only problem was the pungent smell. If he hadn’t been conducting his research in the cellar beneath his bedroom, the stench would likely have filled the entire Porcupine Castle. 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂
This also meant the corpses soaked in preservative could never be seen in public.
With three troglodyte corpses at his command, Leech’s progress in clearing the area sped up considerably.
The cavern.
He controlled two swaying troglodyte zombies, making them draw their rust-covered longswords. He was getting used to multitasking. The ability to apply combat techniques to bodies that felt no pain and could not die allowed him to take hits head-on, and by coordinating with the red-haired, mutated half-Corpse Ghost, he successfully slaughtered his way through the troglodyte cavern.
He discovered that when he gave the red-haired half-Corpse Ghost a simple "kill" command, her primitive brain would execute the near-instinctual order with brutal efficiency.
In a corner, a small troglodyte was curled into a ball, staring fearfully at the zombies. It probably didn’t understand why the bodies of its family had stood up, let alone why they were killing its other kin.
And Leech had no intention of letting it be troubled for much longer.
A longsword ran it through. The last troglodyte was dead.
Now he could finally take stock of the spoils.
He found a patch of grass.
Blue grass. A whole patch of shimmering, vivid blue.
’Could this stuff be the Grass of Life mentioned in Son of the Ranger?’
Besides the blue grass, the spoils included three intact troglodyte bodies, a pile of rusty armor and weapons, and a single rotten, broken chest.
The zombies tore apart the fungus-covered wooden chest. Most of the contents had rotted beyond recognition, but a single sealed cylinder caught his eye.
The study.
Two items lay on Leech’s desk: a stalk of the blue grass and the sealed cylinder.
He pried open the cylinder with a knife. Inside was a letter sealed with wax—an unopened, secret message from centuries ago? Even though he wasn’t a scholar, Leech’s breath caught in his throat. Humans are naturally curious about unknown history, and the secrets hidden within it only amplify that curiosity.
After centuries, the paper of the letter inside had only yellowed with age. Still, he opened it with extreme care, afraid it might crumble.
But this was no letter. It was... Magic!
It described a spell called "Eagle Eye." By taming one’s own bird, the magic user could have it patrol the skies and see everything the bird saw.
’It’s like how a Necromancer controls the undead, but this spell doesn’t grant control over the creature’s actions. You can only see what it sees.’
It wasn’t as effective as controlling the undead, but it consumed less mental energy and could be used on living creatures.
After reading it carefully several times, Leech copied the Magic Letter onto a new scroll. Then, he burned the yellowed original. It was a mercy of time that the paper had lasted this long; he couldn’t possibly expect the original to survive for ages to come.
Black Ears’s Smithy.
Leech had come to inspect the new farm tools forged by his blacksmith apprentice. Black Ears, though proud and convinced he was destined for more than making farm tools, was admittedly a natural at it.
"The... iron tool you asked for... I’ve finished it."
It was a triangular, double-bladed piece of iron. Its long, sharp point was designed to dig into the soil.
Black Ears scratched his hair, unwashed for a month or two, and asked curiously, "Lord, are you planning to mount this on a hoe?"
"Of course not,"
Leech shook his head. "I’m having a completely new kind of farm tool built. It will make tilling the fields faster, more efficient, and less strenuous."
At a time when people still dug holes by hand and only some farmers could afford hoes, the introduction of a plow to his territory would massively increase the speed of cultivation. Of course, the Lord had no intention of providing them for free.
The autumn harvest had nearly ended, and a new planting season was about to begin. He planned to have his slaves use the plows, thereby enticing the farmers to change their own tools.
The planting of the wheat would be an excellent opportunity for a demonstration.
Although a heavy plow would be a great labor-saving device, Porcupine Territory only had those few decrepit old horses he had just bought. Lacking sufficient draft animals, it wasn’t a consideration.
According to the Groom’s assessment, only two of the mares were still capable of breeding. The rest could only pull light loads and couldn’t be expected to handle anything too heavy.
With the iron plowshare ready, the rest of the plow needed to be crafted by a carpenter. However, Porcupine Territory was short on craftsmen. Having heard Leech’s idea, Black Ears volunteered for the job. He had experience making farm tools, so he wasn’t a complete novice when it came to woodworking.
Having a complete lack of skilled artisans under his command, Baron Leech could only let Black Ears give it a try.
"Lord!"
The manservant, Pitchfork, came running over in a panic.
"What is it, Pitchfork?"
Pitchfork glanced at Black Ears. The blacksmith’s apprentice tactfully turned and left, leaving the master and servant some privacy. Only then did Pitchfork whisper, "I followed your orders and mixed that grass into the sheep’s feed. After the sheep ate it..."
"What happened?" Leech was very curious about the effects of the Grass of Life.
"The ram... it was on top of the ewe for a very long time," Pitchfork said awkwardly. "Now the ewe runs away the moment she sees it."
He asked, "What about the ram?"
Pitchfork scratched his head. "The ram was foaming at the mouth. It’s awake now, but its legs are so weak it can’t stand up."
"Then let it get some rest," Leech said, sympathetic to the completely drained ram. "If it won’t eat, pry its mouth open and feed it. Don’t let it starve to death."
Pitchfork immediately replied, "Yes, Lord!"
Leech, however, was thinking about the Grass of Life.
’A single stalk of that grass can nearly work a ram to death. If I dilute it and make some kind of special drug to sell in Iron Stone City...’ He could practically see a glittering golden road to wealth.
The "sacred ground" of Iron Stone City would be the perfect market for a male enhancement drug.
But he would have to run more tests first, lest he end up killing his customers.
The autumn harvest ended. The yield this year was poor. Cart after cart of shriveled grain was delivered to the castle, leaving only a small fraction behind to help the farmers endure the harsh winter.
Having just finished his work, a man named Pig’s Eye Grass pushed open the door to his home.
Oatmeal porridge simmered in a pot hanging over the fire, bits of bran still floating on the surface. The aroma made the man’s stomach rumble noisily. He ladled out a spoonful and was just about to bring it to his lips.
"That’s for the child!" His wife, dressed in a dirty hemp skirt, walked over and snatched the spoon from Pig’s Eye Grass’s hand, dumping its contents back into the pot. "There’s no grain left in the house. How are we going to get through the winter?"
’The land we farm never seems to grow any grain. My husband works so hard,’ she thought, ’but... maybe our prayers to the Four Gods just aren’t pious enough.’
One-Eared Old Gaps had enough grain to last the winter. The Lord had even married a young widow off to him. His life was complete.
"Heh heh," Pig’s Eye Grass grinned. "Who says we won’t make it through the winter? The Lord said that any family short on grain can borrow from the castle. Borrow ten pounds this year, pay back thirteen next year."
"Did the Lord really say that?" his wife asked, surprised. Then her face soured. "But what if the harvest is poor again next year and we can’t pay it back?"
"Then we’ll forfeit our lives to the Lord and become his slaves," Pig’s Eye Grass said, trying to sound nonchalant. "From what I’ve seen, those slaves have it better than we do. They get a bowl of oat soup and a loaf of rye bread every day."
But his wife became agitated. "Who wants to be a slave!"
Slaves only have the freedom to kill themselves. Beyond that, they must obey their master’s every command. And the children of slaves are born slaves, a cycle that continues for generations. She hoped her son would grow up to be a farmer. If he were lucky, he might even enter the castle as a manservant, and the whole family’s life would become much easier.
Just look at Lady Sparrow. Ever since she started working in the castle as a laundry maid, her children had been able to eat their fill every day.
"I saw Old Toilet’s family borrow thirty pounds of oats," Pig’s Eye Grass whispered. "The grain from their land is even worse than ours. If we really can’t pay it back, well, we won’t be the only ones. If we don’t get through this winter, we’re all dead anyway. Next year, while I’m busy, you just stay home and pray extra hard to the Four Gods. We’re bound to have a good harvest then."
She seemed to be wavering. "Well... why don’t you go and ask?"
- Chapter 136 - 135: Eat Less Sweets, It’s Good for Your Health
- Chapter 135 - 134: Wanting to Become the Potato Baron
- Chapter 134 - 133: Give Birth to Your Heir
- Chapter 133 - 132: Impervious
- Chapter 132 - 131: Lady Jie Lin’s Invitation to the Treasury
- Chapter 131 - 130: Sorry, I Have a Maphack
- Chapter 130 - 129: They Follow Whoever Wins
- Chapter 129 - 128: I Got Shot
- Chapter 128 - 127: The First Suit of Armor is Ready
- Chapter 127 - 126: Assembly Line Factory
- Chapter 126 - 125: The Aristocrat’s Palate (Part 2)
- Chapter 125: The Noble Lord on the Tip of the Tongue
- Chapter 124: Hydraulic Hammer
- Chapter 123: A Forked Tongue
- Chapter 122: Covered in Thorns
- Chapter 121: A Tempting Letter
- Chapter 120: Expensive Glass
- Chapter 119: Foolish Bloodletting Treatment
- Chapter 118: Magical Red Bricks
- Chapter 117: Wado Eighteen
- Chapter 116: Don’t Go Near the Horse’s Rear
- Chapter 115: This Plot Looks Familiar
- Chapter 114: Water Can Carry the Boat
- Chapter 113: The Abducted Slaves
- Chapter 112: Explosive Pack
- Chapter 111: Porcupine Territory’s Honey Beer
- Chapter 110: The Emerald Green Fishman Skull Crystal
- Chapter 109: Fishman Crypt
- Chapter 108: Ambush
- Chapter 107: Craftsmen and Slaves
- Chapter 106: Desert Bandits
- Chapter 105: Three Dances
- Chapter 104: Miss Ivory Tower
- Chapter 103: Soft Rice Clan
- Chapter 102: Corpse Ghost Aina
- Chapter 101: Grant You New Life
- Chapter 100: The Dying Transcendent and the Wondrous Item
- Chapter 99: Sub-human Girls Are So Expensive
- Chapter 98: Red Dragon Furnace
- Chapter 97: A Great Harvest in the Library
- Chapter 96: Extraordinary Strike
- Chapter 95: Hating Greasy Confessions
- Chapter 94: Stacy, You’re Wearing Makeup
- Chapter 93: You Use a Sub-human Girl for That?
- Chapter 92: Older Female Cousin
- Chapter 91: Robbery
- Chapter 90: Heading to Green Forest Castle
- Chapter 89: About Cavalry
- Chapter 88: The Sixteenth Illegitimate Son
- Chapter 87: The Griffin Grass Sprouted
- Chapter 86: Until Death
- Chapter 85: Praying to the Lord
- Chapter 84: Self-heating
- Chapter 83: The Gunpowder Genius
- Chapter 82: Lime
- Chapter 81: The Wrong Salted Duck Eggs
- Chapter 80: The Dungeon is Very Rich
- Chapter 79: The Cart That Grabs Water
- Chapter 78: The Baron Has Been Sidelined
- Chapter 77: The Swineherd Wants to Cry
- Chapter 76: House Allocation
- Chapter 75: Taking Advantage of the Lord
- Chapter 74: The Selection Ends
- Chapter 73: "Sweet Gold" Honey
- Chapter 72: I Want This Skill
- Chapter 71: Multiplication Table
- Chapter 70: Reply Letter
- Chapter 69: Mad! Mad
- Chapter 68: Flying a Kite
- Chapter 67: New Team
- Chapter 66: An Invitation to the Garden
- Chapter 65: The Six Major Regions
- Chapter 64: A Bunch of Talents
- Chapter 63: Hiding a Beauty in the Crypt
- Chapter 62: The Knight Squire Selection Begins
- Chapter 61: The Second Village
- Chapter 60: Harpy
- Chapter 59: Cape Dungeon
- Chapter 58: Mercenary
- Chapter 57: Slave Riot
- Chapter 56: Discovery
- Chapter 55: The Water Mill is Very Useful
- Chapter 54: Hamburgers and Egg Tarts
- Chapter 53: A Noble Seeks Refuge
- Chapter 52: The Castle Recruits Manservants and Maids
- Chapter 51: The Rat Race
- Chapter 50: The Work-Point System
- Chapter 49: The Flu
- Chapter 48: The Fierce-Mane Horse is Pregnant
- Chapter 47: New Housing
- Chapter 46: Celebration
- Chapter 45: The Dwarf
- Chapter 44: War Trophies
- Chapter 43: Javelin and Pirates
- Chapter 42: Silver Steel Sword
- Chapter 41: The Beautiful Mare Stratagem
- Chapter 40: Plan to Seduce the Griffin
- Chapter 39: Insect Control Remnant People
- Chapter 38: The Second Batch of Slaves Arrives
- Chapter 37: Stealing a Corpse
- Chapter 36: Throwing Expert
- Chapter 35: The Arena
- Chapter 34: The Widow and the Lucky Dog
- Chapter 33: Business
- Chapter 32: Magic Tide
- Chapter 31: The Griffin Crisis
- Chapter 30: The Extraordinary Knight of the Golden Flash
- Chapter 29: Sidor Sea Water
- Chapter 28: The Ball
- Chapter 27: The Invitation from Iron Stone City
- Chapter 26: Even a Fierce Beast Has a Close Friend
- Chapter 25: Marrying a Cousin: A Sure Profit
- Chapter 24: Master and Dog
- Chapter 23: Slacking Slaves
- Chapter 22: Autumn Harvest and Borrowing Grain
- Chapter 21: Ground Dwellers
- Chapter 20: Son of the Ranger
- Chapter 19: Mutated Half-Corpse Ghost
- Chapter 18: News of a Death
- Chapter 17: Sacrifice
- Chapter 16: New Crypt
- Chapter 15: Smoked Bacon
- Chapter 14: Red Dot
- Chapter 13: The Fiery Red Giant Bear
- Chapter 12: Steaming Crabs
- Chapter 11: Magic Farming and Manure
- Chapter 10: Corpse Decay
- Chapter 9: Silver Moon Daddy
- Chapter 8: Leech Confidence
- Chapter 7: The Golden Carriage of a Lifetime
- Chapter 6: My Charming Stepmother
- Chapter 5: The Red Rose
- Chapter 4: Corpse Farmer
- Chapter 3: Blood Sacrifice Treasure
- Chapter 2: The Necromancer’s Legacy
- Chapter 1: The Yellow Dot and the Green Dot
Comments