ITIEQ C86
by berryChapter 86 â Ending War With War
Marching within the realm was unlike the frontiers. In the Northwest, fighting outsiders meant battling through seas of yellow sand, or sometimes in forests thick with snakes and insects; when supplies were scant, belts had to be tightened. Here, it was different: water and grass were abundant, cooking smoke often visible. Yet the soldiers felt no joy.
On the wasteland, one could act freelyâwhatever was trampled in passing hardly mattered. Here, each flower and tree was the fair landscape of Great Yong; advancing felt like moving with hands tied.
At Tongguan the army pitched camp. Commanders gathered in the central tent, a huge map spread in the middle. After a brief council, orders were drawn. Three columns would advance. One would push up from within the Passâthe Northwest Armyâs familiar routeâplaced under Commander Zhao. Another would push down, crossing the Pan River into Chang, Hui, and Qingâstrongholds of the clans, a hard bone to gnaw; unexpectedly, the Zhaohuan Emperor entrusted the young General Yao and the LongâRampart Corps to spearhead itâa mark of full confidence.
As for the central host under the Emperor himself, it would remain at the rear, encamping at Mount Nanzhiânot too near, not too farâable to support the upper and lower armies and command the whole.
With the palace guard withdrawn, even the capital wasnât overly secure. Shen Qinghe donned soft armor and rode with the army. Xiao Yuanzheng looked up and asked which force he would join; Shen thought a moment and chose Yaoâs southern column.
Yao Guangâs silver armor shone bright; hearing it, he looked up, delighted. âGood. Iâll show you what I can do.â
Catching the Emperorâs glance, as if to speak, Shen smiled lightly and answered frankly, âA contingent of physicians and craftsmen will arrive from Cangzhouâskilled hands. By the route, they should come from this side. I was once Qingbeiâs governorâI should see them safe.â
Yao Guang thumped his chest. âIf Your Majesty worries for Lord Shenâs safetyârest easy. With me, not a hair will be harmed!â
Across the circle, Xiao Yuanzheng glanced to the last rank where Shen stood. Shen patted Yao Guangâs arm, as if in jest; he did not look back.
The sovereignâs fingertip traced the map. He too wore armor today. Surrounded by burly commanders at the center, his bearing seemed yet more heroically formidable.
Standing aside without silks to veil his view, Shen saw more clearly the difference between Xiao Yuanzheng and the Zhaohuan Emperor. Sensing that subtle difference only left him more ill at ease.
âReceiving physicians and craftsmenâ was only half the truth.
They needed to separate.
While humoring Yao with words, Shen weighed matters. From above, a cool voice fell: âDown the Pan Riverâbesides the threeâprovince clans, there is another man.â
All eyes turned to him.
Xiao Yuanzheng tapped the border between Qing and Changâan area called Pushuo. Everyone caught up. âYour Majesty means Prince Lu?â Pushuo was his fief.
Prince of Lu, Xiao Tianxin, the Emperorâs youngest uncleâXiao offspring had thinned; after Prince Yingâs disasters, few remained as true imperial kin. Prince Lu was only two years older than the Emperorâlowâkey, mostly in his fief, so low in presence one nearly forgot he existed.
These were not dull oafs. Whatever they missed in intrigues, when it came to war, they had their sayings. To move troopsâyou must have righteous cause; if none, you dig until you find one. As ministers, to gather forces toward the capital was rebellionâunless a prince led, making it âfamily dispute,â altering the stakes.
A timid, conservative vassal lordâa pillow arriving when sleepiness came.
âThis river routeâI will take.â
Northwest generals balked.
âIf you thought to seat me at central commandâwhy wouldnât others think the same?â Xiao Yuanzheng cut them off, brooking no dissent. âMeeting my royal uncle in armsâonly I can make them disperse without loss.â
No one could object. Yao Guang alone muttered a regretful âshame,â then agreed to remain with the central host at Nanzhi.
Only one man broke into a sweat.
Shen thought silently: Would Xiao Yuanzheng, like him, be⊠speaking halfâtruths?
No, noâmatters of war and stateâno place for jokes.
Onlyâit was almost too neat.
The words slipped out; he wished he could bite his tongue.
The assembled troops split to three roads. Horses and wagons spun and rolled till at last they reached a way station north of Qing.
North lay a lonely road. Southâlow, sparse hamlets.
Wind tugged the long plumes on helmets. Horses snorted, hot vapor from their nostrils. The LongâRampart set camp swiftly. Though Shen had never seen war, his mind was clear: this was the point to slip inâto cut into the belly.
Before marching, one thinks on how to take the fightânot just to win, but win gloriously; make a name ring the world.
Blades slid from sheaths. The LongâRampart was full of tenâagainstâone fighters. No need to blow horns or beat drumsâthe ranks assembled in silence, austere and tight. Nearly ten thousand stoodâno soundâlike rows of black figures bearing blades and spears. Only their eyes burned, fixed on the man atop the ridgeâwho had led them countless times to charge and drink from the Yellow Dragonâtheir supreme sovereign, their undefeated general.
âRapid march. Take the main manor. Do not harm the people.â
The plan was set on the way. Now the Emperor spoke only two plain lines. No one answeredâbut sparks lit in their eyes.
No need for speeches. If General Xiao stood there, their blood ran hot.
Shenâs sole duty in this battle was to guard himself. Watching from the height as the LongâRampart thundered below, he felt strangely calm.
Only the logistics remained with himâand a detail to protect him.
âSystem.â
At the edge, he could only speak to it.
A long beat passed before the voice in his mind returned. ââŠHostâŠâ
He sensed something. âSystemâŠ?â
The voice stuttered, like a jammed frequencyâthen snapped back. When Shen listened again, a flat neutral voice had taken over.
âGreetings, Host.â
He blinked.
âGreetings, Host. Primary System 00001 at your service.â The mechanical tone glitched once.
âCongratulations, Hostâhidden side quest completed: Founding Patriarch.â
âHidden⊠side quest?â
âYes. You have forty students who have completed the imperial exam track and attained officeâtriggering a hidden side quest.â The primary explained. âReward: ten Luck points.â
Only ten.
It sounded rare.
âWhat is âLuckâ?â
âIn every world, certain âChildren of Fortuneâ are bornâbearing special luck, extraordinary talent, uncommon livesâand an inescapable fate.
âWhen a worldâs source is shaken, hidden quests may open to gain Luck. By inverting cause and effect, the Host may, by gaining Luck, become this worldâs true âChild of Fortune.ââ
âSo there really is such a setting. Then Xiao Yuanzhengâthe Emperor of Yongâwould he count as a Child of Fortune?â
Not something a Host was meant to knowâyet the primary answered. âYes.â
Shen smiled, stretching out a hand, as if to catch the passes of wind among the hills.
âCan Luck only be given to oneself?â
Silence. Perhaps no one had asked; no one would hand over Luck. Orâwas he thinking of that Emperor? The system didnât care.
ââŠTo whom would you give it?â
âA high monk need not wear a robe; a true Buddha need not be gilded. I crossed worlds with a system and shook the worldâs sourceâand Iâm not a Child of Fortune?â Shenâs pride was easy, as if the reward were trivial.
âDisperse the Luck evenly across this land.â
ââŠAs you wish.â
The primary withdrew; as it left, Shen thought he heard a laughâmeaning unclear.
The System popped back inâsquealing. One moment whining that the boss had stared at it; next boasting that its metrics were over target and it could rest a whole cycle after this job.
âYouâre the best Host Iâve ever had!â it crowed.
Shen smiled and said nothing.
Good news came from afar in waves. Xiao Yuanzhengâs edge had been sheathed too long; many had begun to forget. From today, his name would thunder again.
âŠ
Sparse stars and moon; birds on cold branches.
A high campfire blazed before the tent. Generals sat in a ring with hot wine; a great pot simmered meat to be ladled to the ranks.
âSix counties in a rowâbrothers, your valor is as in years past!â
âThatâs rightâwho do you think we are?â
They drank and bantered. The Emperor had set off his armor; in simple clothing belted close, the muscle under the cotton showed. He sat at center, speaking less than the talkative officersâonly now and then a line.
When Shen arrived, they said theyâd reach Pushuo tomorrowâPrince Luâs manor lay there.
As expectedâhouses marched under Prince Luâs name, bannered âpurging the evil ministers,â grouping men to boat toward the capital. They wished to force the Emperor to bend; if not soft, then hard. They hadnât expected the Forbidden Palace to be emptyânor that the sovereign, avoiding contention, would cut straight at their roots.
Looking back, theyâd find themselves taken in one potâand not know when theyâd realized it.
Speed is the soul of war. At the level of forceâa contest of whose blade reached the throat first.
Caught by their high spirit, Shen drank a little more. It was only common rice wineânot the concentrated spirits refined by academy purifying methods; a sip warmed rather than swayed.
âEnough. Rest early.â The Emperorâs voice was cool. The bowls of hot wine seemed not to lift his warmth; his eyes were clear. âBreak camp at the hour of Mao.â
âHahahaâno wine holds him! Once, I roared through battle; many quailed at the name Bawangâno vain boast.â The speakerâs hair was half green, half frost; his face red as a monkeyâs rump.
âHeyâthe Emperorâs right. You think youâre still young? Drink less!â
Laughter swayed like grass.
Their mouths quipped, but each knew the weight. After the round, all turned back to their tents. Shenâs sat beside the main; they had to walk together.
Winter wind bit more than usual; banners whipped without knowing north.
Shen lacked the soldiersâ iron constitutions. Near the Nines of cold, they drank and wore only one or two layers. He dressed from inner to outer, slinging a cloak on top.
âIs campaign life dull? Are you wearied?â asked Xiao Yuanzheng.
âIn camp, I neither fight nor commandâwhat weariness could there be?â Shen felt almost ashamed. A great idlerâwhen had he ever known âwearinessâ?
The Emperor smiled. âThenâtroubled in heart.â
âMy lordâwhile you fight in blood at the front, how can I grin?â Shen sighed. âOn paper, war is one win, one lossâeasy to say. Before, I thought the clans were autumn grasshoppers; by the arc of history, great houses must wane. But these days, seeing the wounded carried inâI canât find it light.â
âIf I were strongerâcould we win without blood?â
Such thoughts he only voiced in private. The worldâs rot ran deepâhow hard to do this. Let it be heard and pass; he didnât think the Emperor would mark it.
He caught a stray lock blown loose; in camp, conditions were rougher, and this wasnât a place for societyâhe wore no crown or pin, just a band to tie his hair. Poorly done; sometimes it loosened and had to be redone.
Seeing the crooked knot, Xiao Yuanzheng tugged the band free; all the hair fell.
Shen froze. With his hair in the otherâs hand, he could only stand still.
âYour ambition is grand. A day will come,â said the Emperor, voice gentled for the first time in a day spent giving orders and punishing traitors. Even with wine among troops, he had been windless and heavy. A stern commander holds the line.
In this rare moment alone, he was waterâcalm again.
Shen tugged the slipping cloak; the hand on his shoulder slid off with it.
He bowed lightly. âMy tent is just ahead. Your Majestyârest well.â
The Emperorâs hand fell in the air; he drew it back without fuss. âVery well.â
He turned.
Shen lifted a hand to touch the nowâneat knot.
Heh.
After a few steps, Xiao Yuanzheng heard a faint voice behind him.
âQinghe will await Your Majestyâs triumphant return.â
The Emperorâs lip lifted slightly. He answered:
âVery well.â