HLCOB C32
by berryChapter 32
In the end, the hand behind it was not found.
Though the tonic was said to have been prepared by Cai Yong, he was not the sort to kill Jaheonâif anything, he would revive himâand, unlike other officials, he did not care much for power struggles. After all, had he not flown into a rage at Hongdu because Jaheon had âused lettersâ to become a Yirang?
âIm Jaheon.â
Zhang Rang snapped at Jaheon, who was seated in a quiet corner of the palace where few came and went.
âHave you no mind to stop that old man Cai Yong from tearing about the place?â
At his words, Jaheon lifted a shoulder.
âIf Master Chae dotes on me, what can be done? Until the culprit is found, let him rage.â
ââŠIf it were possible to find the culprit, would I have come to see you?!â
Since Wang Boâs fall, Zhang Rang had behaved with a certain cooperation toward Jaheon, yet his manner remained far from pleasant.
âThe young eunuch who boiled the decoction claims Wang Bo gave the order. It will be hard to identify the culprit.â
It was not strange; Jaheon had clearly become Wang Boâs mortal enemy. Yet who would listen now to the fallen Wang Bo? He had never had much personal support.
âIt will not be Wang Bo.â
âI know that. But two or three among the eunuchs are trying to bury the affair. That is why I said the culprit would not be found.â
âSo the palace is still the eunuchsâ world.â
âWang Boâs seat has not yet been filled. Are you asking the obvious?â
How many posts had Wang Boâs faction held?
From the Keeper of the Privy Purse, who managed the imperial householdâs personal assets, to the Henan Governor who governed Luoyang, to the Commandant of the Capital who guarded the Emperorâonly offices that either held military power capable of seizing Luoyang in an emergency or financial power to reap vast gains.
And when Wang Yun, the Censor-in-Chief with the power of investigation, arrived, further inquiries into this matter would begin, and vacancies would surely grow.
âThey think that if they fill all those vacancies, those dullards can regain their former sway.â
âHis Majesty will never allow it.â
On this Jaheon could stake certainty.
It had not been Jaheon who decided to dismiss Wang Bo; Jaheon had only persuaded the Emperor. The decision itself had been the Emperorâs. Which meant the Emperor no longer intended to give power to the eunuchs.
âIf the Throne does not permit such power to you, then what?â
What was more, power was the Emperorâs taboo.
It was the taboo of a ruler who had been born outside the palace and forced to enter it lacking any respectable power. And the capitalâs military command was a force that could overturn all in an instant; the Emperor would not lightly entrust posts that held it to just anyone. If he had entrusted such power to Wang Bo, it had been because he could purge him at any time.
âIf they understood that, would they be trying to kill you now?â
At Zhang Rangâs words, Jaheon gave a short laugh.
ââŠIt is strange to hear such from Your Excellency, who once sought to kill me.â
âHa! Do you think your importance is what it was then?â
Now that Wang Bo had been purged and the eunuchs were in collapse, Jaheon was, to the Emperor, the crucial bait to replace them. In the past, had Jaheon been struck, there might have been a scolding and it would end; now it would be different. Not only headsâthree generations might be exterminated.
Still, with Wang Boâs dismissal, the eunuchs were greatly aggrieved against Jaheon.
âHence your demotion of He Jin was your mistake.â
So Zhang Rang murmured.
âDolt he was, He Jin served well enough as a screen. He should have been extracted somehow.â
He Jin was affinal kin; with him, there would have been cover enoughâjust as Wang Bo had tried to use He Jin to flee.
âWhat is to be done if Wang Bo acted thus. Your Excellency should have stopped him rather than sought to use it.â
âYou⊠it is because you act so that I tried to kill youâŠ!â
Shouting in anger, Zhang Rang let out a sigh.
âHa.â
In any case, now they were in the same boatâuntil he made Lady He Empress and Lady Heâs son Liu Bian Crown Prince. Grinding his teeth, Zhang Rang spoke.
âEnoughâstate your business briefly.â
And added, with venom,
âNo one knows I am helping you, so if this is exposed, you too will be in trouble.â
The Emperor might know, but since that day no one else knew that Zhang Rang and Jaheon had made common cause. Zhang Rang had taken Wang Boâs place as head of the eunuchs; Jaheon had become a rising notable of the Qingliu. In court, the two were obvious enemies.
That point was also one Jaheon had aimed for.
âThen only learn for me who is prodding the other eunuchs.â
For Zhang Rangâs existence could be Jaheonâs hidden trumpâ
As now.
ââŠYou mean there is a hand behind this?â
Zhang Rangâs brows twitched as he asked.
The Emperorâs favor for Jaheon still endured. Even without knowing the reason, the Emperor cherished him; the curious part was that. Now, even if Jaheon died, there was no guarantee imperial favor would return to the eunuchsârather, the eunuchs would be cast out.
In short, Jaheonâs death would bring the eunuchs no benefit beyond venting spite.
But it was otherwise for those not of the eunuchs.
âYes.â
Thus there surely was.
âThere will be those who are waiting for the court to split.â
In Luoyang, there was a predator holding its breath.
âIt seems likely Qingliu.â
Ironically, in the record of events, the incident that utterly cut off the Hanâs breath was the eunuchsâ fall.
When the eunuchs, the Emperorâs guard, fell and the Emperorâs power collapsed, the regional lords who coveted that power flocked to Luoyang.
Another name for those lords was âQingliu.â
For unlike the eunuchs, the Qingliu were a force built upon the provincial gentry. They claimed to stand for the Han house, yet paradoxically were a force that could survive even if the center fell.
âBut the Partisan Prohibitions have not yet been lifted; there will be no Qingliu figures in Luoyang with influence.â
Thus Jaheon thought this assassination attempt the work of the Qingliu side.
But he had only suspicion, no evidence.
If one included the regional lords, the scope of âQingliu figuresâ was broad. And if one added those who had been Turbid Stream but would become Qingliu, they were beyond counting.
âHaah.â
Sighing, Jaheon set down the crown cap he had been wearing.
âA headache.â
This was unlike when there had been a clear enemyâthe eunuchs. So long as the eunuchs existed as foe, all Qingliu were allies. But now that the eunuchs had collapsed and a vacuum had opened in power, could the Qingliu be considered allies? And could those Turbid Stream who had kept distance from the eunuchs be counted as enemies?
Allies and enemies were mixed.
And among them, those who could be called Jaheonâs clear allies were few.
âEven if any, only Cai Yong and O JukâyeopâŠâ
But O Jukâyeop, being a servant given by Wang Yun, had limits to what he could do; and Cai Yong, for all his fame among scholars born of his stubbornness, had little practical influence in court.
âLacking in men.â
In this chaos, people were needed who could surely protect him. A few figures rose and fell in his mind.
âIt must be solved before Choseon arrivesâŠâ
If this point were not solved, the attack aimed at him might go to Choseon.
As Jaheon was sunken in thoughtâ
âMy loooord!â
Bangâ!
Tearâ and snotâstreaked, O Jukâyeop threw the door open and shouted as he burst in.
ââŠâŠ?â
âWhat villain put poison before my lordâŠ! The eunuchs! It must be those eunuchs! If my lord goes like this, how can I hold my shoulders high and liveâŠ!â
At the sight, Jaheon asked evenly,
ââŠWhen did I die, exactly, O Jukâyeop?â
At his voice, O Jukâyeop blinked, coming to his senses. The Jaheon said to have taken poison was quite fine! Seeing Jaheon sitting hale, he beamed and said,
âAs expected! I knew it! Our lord would never die to a mere poisonâŠ!â
Come to think, was he not the one who uncannily read peopleâs hearts and tinkered up marvelous things? Jaheon would not die to a mere poison.
âRather, it would be our lord putting poison in the eunuchsâ food!â
In high spirits, O Jukâyeop blurted out.
ââŠâŠ?â
At that, Jaheon raised a brow. Feeling the roomâs air grow cold, O Jukâyeop hurriedly added,
âNâno! That is to say, you are that formidable, my lord⊠ha. Ha.â
At that, Jaheon let out a deep sigh.
âEnough. Was there anything else?â
Watching his mood, O Jukâyeop grinned.
âOf course nothing else! It is you who must be careful, my lord. There are hundreds lined up saying they would see youâŠ! Do you know how hard it is for this humble one to keep those lists in order?â
At those words, Jaheon recalled what he had forgotten.
âThey are still at it.â
He had told O Jukâyeop to keep organizing the lists of those who sought to meet him.
Frankly, there had been no result.
The great houses in Luoyang had long since sent feelers to Jaheon, and the regional lords still did not quite trust him.
Moreover, aside from those who would become lordsâCao Cao, Yuan Shao, Liu Bei, and so onâuseful talents were mostly just born or not yet born. Yet he could not refuse to take anyone at all.
For talents were not absent entirely.
âSince you mention itâshow me the list. I should at least check it.â
âAh. Here it is.â
O Jukâyeop took a bamboo slip from his robe and handed it over. As Jaheon looked over itâ
âNo one that matches memory yetâŠâ
One name, halfâwritten and struck through, caught his eye.
[Ma Suseong]
Jaheon asked,
âWho is this man?â
âEh? Ah, haha. That⊠is nothing, truly nothing. A woodcutter who, needing money, tried to put his name on the list to meet you, my lord. His circumstances sounded pitiable, you see. So I meant to have him do hauling and give him some moneyâŠâ
ââŠâŠ?â
Watching O Jukâyeop babble, Jaheon said,
âI will see him tomorrow.â
âEh?â
âJudging by how you speak, you know him?â
âWell, my lord! He is a good sort! He did not mean to cheat you of silverâŠâ
ââŠ? I am not calling him for cheating silver.â
Jaheon, giving O Jukâyeopâwho seemed suspiciously chummy with Ma Tengâa sidelong look, said,
âI am calling him because he seems to have talent for the martial.â
ââŠEh?â
Ma Teng.
Style name Suseong.
A general whom Jaheonâs modern memory recalled.
Father of Ma Chao, who would become one of Shuâs Five Tiger Generals, he rose from a poor woodcutter to a warlord of Liangzhou; a wolfish warlord who sought to strike at the backs of every powerful minister who grasped central power, andâŠ
âHe looks like the sort whoâd be good at slaughtering hogs.â
A commander who even gave the greatest villain of the Three Kingdoms, Dong Zhuo, a hard time.
Footnotes:
- The capital command posts (Henan Governor, Commandant of the Capital, Keeper of the Privy Purse) concentrated military and fiscal leverage; control of these determined who could seize Luoyang in a crisis.
- Ma Teng (style Suseong) later emerges as a Liangzhou warlord and father of Ma Chao; recognizing him as a âwoodcutterâ foreshadows recruiting future military power from humble origins.