Chapter 363 The most dangerous is not the enemy
Only the most conceited people dare to face the light of dissociation.
It is said that this is a good way to test whether you are the protagonist.
Of course, Frunzberg was not joking with his life. He never placed his life on chance.
Of course he had a basis for daring to resist the dissociation technique. His basis was the treasure he had seized from King Francois, the "Immunity and Death" ring.
However, Frunzberg was actually a little nervous. It was one thing to know this kind of thing, and another thing to actually experience it.
Especially this ring, which is dusty and dusty, does not look like a rare item at all. Instead, it looks like a "fallen" gift from a little boy to a little girl.
Although Sazastan guaranteed the performance of this strange object, it was never tested with his "finger of death".
Although it wasn't too much trouble for Frenzberg to get a death row prisoner, it was too expensive to cast a seventh-level magic, and Sazastan was very annoyed by Frenzberg's questions.
The always polite old mage made a rare lapse in his professional field. Although considering his status as a member of the Frundsberg State Council and his own self-cultivation, he only made a few sarcastic remarks in the end.
But for Sazastan, this was enough to illustrate his anger.
So this was the first time that Frunzberg pinned his life on this strange object in actual combat.
In any case, the effect is good, which also confirms Ladislaus's joke, the simpler the things pulled from the King of France are, the more interesting they are.
At this time, the entire Praetorian Palace fell into chaos, and a large number of noble figures of the Republic of Venice were squeezed together, and then lost their lives in a daze.
These nobles are only weak because they are poorly organized.
In fact, the private soldiers of the Goriti family have become very corrupt and chaotic after being managed by younger brother Riti. They usually look glamorous but their true colors are revealed at critical moments.
As the Austrian officers outside mobilized soldiers to attack the Venetians, the shouts of killing continued to spread, and more and more private soldiers began to lose order.
It’s no wonder that most of these private soldiers are locals, and Consul Gritti is their first allegiance. Their loyalty to the family leader far exceeds their loyalty to the Republic of Venice. But their second allegiance is little Gritti.
It is not such an overwhelming advantage for the motherland.
The current situation of the battle between the enemy and ourselves has made most people who are not very dull begin to understand that little brother Riti has been prepared for his father's death, and more and more people are beginning to be unwilling to fight this battle.
Except for a few people who were still fighting with the nobles, most people had already devoted themselves to robbing the consul's mansion.
But the organization of the nobles and parliamentarians was obviously still not enough to deal with these half-hearted soldiers.
There are many mages among them, and even more cowards.
After Frunzberg killed an outcrop, other mages tried their best to squeeze into the crowd.
Then they found a wall and focused fire on it. Within a few minutes, countless magic missiles and two dissociation spells released by another senior mage opened a gap in the wall.
The brave Frunzberg and Ladislaus, who used "Tamson's Transfiguration" to transform into a heavily armored warrior, determined the battle situation in the entire banquet hall.
But even with the few guards brought in by Boss Sirica, they could not prevent the enemy from escaping.
In fact, Ladislaus once felt that something was wrong when he discovered that the fighting was developing into looting. Those MPs had a chance to defeat the few Austrians who fought resolutely.
Dissociation, ice spray, and even an elemental creature appeared at one point. There were several strong men among the Venetian nobles who were able to contact the sixth or even seventh levels of the magic network.
Although neither he nor Frunzberg was afraid of the dissociation spell, the evocation and conjuration magics were equally threatening enough.
It would be nice to be able to drive them out of their holes like mice.
Although they would go out to organize troops, more than a third of them were killed and captured during their escape.
For the Venetian mage, running away is a natural choice.
What frustrated them was that they found that the priests who had the greatest relationship with the rise and fall of the Republic of Venice and were responsible for supporting the front performed very poorly.
Their magical spells are often ineffective, although in fact more than two-thirds of their magical spells are successfully performed.
But this was enough to make them lose their will to fight.
Escape is the only thought for most people.
However, those who escaped from the consul's residence were horrified to discover that this was not a battle on the scale of a coup.
The dock area is burning.
The fleet there was the foundation of the Republic of Venice.
Aramis's raid plan failed due to the sudden appearance of the Speaker of the Venetian Parliament.
The Speaker never went to the residence of the Consul of Goriti, not even for diplomatic welcome banquets.
This is not a security consideration, but more of a political gesture.
The Speaker mobilized sailors to quell the rebellion as soon as the battle broke out at the Consul's Palace. These battle-hardened sailors were the most important force in Venice, a city with intertwined water networks.
The fleet was so important in the political life of the Venetian Republic that any family's control over it was very limited.
At the critical moment, the Speaker of the Republic of Venice relied on his many years of prestige to control the sailors. Although the various conflicting news made it difficult to see the full picture of the struggle, years of political struggle experience told him that the visit of the Austrians and the consul
His accidental death cannot be a coincidence, so the Austrians on the island of Venice are the biggest threat.
No matter what happened to Consul Goriti, he was determined to completely eliminate the Austrians to protect his country.
He is a politician and a Venetian.
The Speaker had grasped the main contradiction in the complex situation, and he might have become a hero of the Republic of Venice.
It would have been possible, if he had realized the problem when he first saw Aramis.
He should have realized that it would never be a coincidence for any mercenary leader to appear on the island at this time.
He shouldn't have let a monk get so close in a poor lighting environment.
He stretched out his hands to thank Aramis, who had always been unruly, for coming to support him so quickly this time. This was a fatal mistake.
This was a fatal mistake not only for him personally, but also for the Republic of Venice, but the fatal result came to him faster.
Several mercenaries on the outlying islands around the main island of Venice all have their own backings. Aramis can barely be regarded as the Speaker in terms of interests.
But the reward he wants this time is not something the Speaker can pay.
The Speaker's bodyguard suddenly fell into a state of fear.
Sherlock's "mass panic" did not affect the Speaker, who was also the senior priest of Woking, but most of his guards fell into fear.
At the same time, the speaker's hand held by Aramis was violently bent.
The powerful priest who had access to the seventh level of the magic network lost the battle in just one turn.
Aramis practiced hard in the monastery in Jerusalem for fifteen years, and the power of lightning on his transparent gloves made him one of the most powerful monks.
First he broke the speaker's wrist and then his neck.
Not only because the Speaker made the wrong handshake, but also because Aramis had the most opportunities to come into contact with the Speaker, and he had spent the longest time studying how to kill the Speaker who was half ally and half benefactor.
At the same time, Aramis's men began to attack the long line of sailors.
The sudden flank attack, coupled with the rapid death of the Speaker, greatly damaged the morale of the Venetian sailors.
Many merchant sailors only came together because of the prestige of the Speaker. Without this leader who could unite the major families, these merchant sailors quickly fell into chaos.
Chapter completed!