Ansel had reasons for making such a judgment. Aside from the wool issues, the most striking was the Salvation Army members, who patrolled once every six days, showing numerous bruises on their bodies.
It seemed they were hit by stones, and when Ansel inquired about the reason, they always maintained a shrouded silence.
Ansel roughly guessed that although the confrontation between the two sides was not openly displayed, there were certainly many small maneuvers happening in private.
As for the reason, apart from the neighboring district monks' own impulsiveness, the people at the higher-level monastery must be anxious.
After all, the mountains would be snowbound by mid-November. If this wasn't completed before the snowbound, there would be no progress in the Hundred Households District throughout the winter.
Despite Horn's guidance of "prefer delays over chaos," the impatient monks could not tolerate the slow progress in South Mangde County.
