BEGW C91
by berryChapter 91
Ying Changchuanâs fingers brushed lightly over the shell.
The movement was careful and gentleâutterly unlike the man who usually rode horses and swung a sword.
What he had just said was no joke. Rather⊠it was genuine emotion.
Curiosity was human nature, let alone when the person before him was the Son of Heaven of Great Zhou, a man long known for never indulging in romance.
âŠThis scene was no different from the sun rising in the west.
The Dingbei Grand General, who spent most of the year stationed far from Zhaodu guarding the northern frontier, felt his curiosity reach its peak at this very moment.
Usually meticulous and sharp-minded, his brain began spinning rapidly.
While speculating about who the emperorâs beloved might be, the general sneaked a glance at the object in Ying Changchuanâs hand.
The shell was prettyâyesâbut clearly not of tribute quality.
Which meant⊠it must have been something his beloved had personally picked up and given to him?
If memory served correctly, His Majesty had once gone to Shuolin Commandery!
The Dingbei Grand General subconsciously held his breath.
Since His Majesty had brought it up himself, surely there was nothing wrong with asking?
After holding back for quite some time, the generalâfamed for his valorâfinally chuckled and asked tentatively,
ââŠThis object is truly beautiful. I assume it was personally selected by the one in Your Majestyâs heart along the seashore? Ah⊠then Your Majestyâs beloved must be from Shuolin Commandery?â
Ying Changchuanâs fingers paused.
He did not spare the general a glance, merely placing the shell back into its brocade pouch.
The lamb over the bonfire had finished roasting.
The soldiers removed it from the fire, cut it into portions with small knives, and distributed it to everyone.
The atmosphere at the camp grew even livelier.
Night wind carrying the aroma of roasted meat swept over them, and the Dingbei Grand Generalâs stomach let out an involuntary growl.
âCoughâcoughââ
He hurriedly cleared his throat and looked around, trying to cover up the embarrassment.
The Son of Heaven secured the pouch and walked slowly toward the command tent.
Just as his figure was about to disappear from sight, the restless Dingbei Grand General suddenly heard him say softly,
âShe is from Lanze Commandery.â
With that, he entered the tent.
The Dingbei Grand General: â!!!â
From Lanze Commandery?!
The generalâwho had just been eager to eatâfroze on the spot.
Lanze Commandery was unimaginably far from Zhaodu. When had His Majesty ever met someone from there?
âŠCould it have been during the imperial tour years ago?
But Lanze Commandery didnât seem to produce shells like that.
A few breaths later, a terrifying possibility surfaced in the generalâs mind.
âCould it be that His Majesty had known that person even before the tour, and had kept them by his side all along?
That⊠that was hiding it far too deeply!
The Dingbei Grand General had spent half his life on the battlefield. Though shocked by the eveningâs conversation, it did not distract him.
At dawn the next morning, scouts who had confirmed King Qiuqiâs movements returned to camp.
The army broke camp and advanced westward at full speed.
Deep within the vast Dingwumu Grasslands, King Qiuqiâwho had fled back in disgraceâspat out a mouthful of blood-tinged saliva.
He grabbed a waterskin and gulped it down.
âDamn it⊠how did Ying Changchuan end up here?â
As he spoke, the warhorse he had ridden finally collapsed to the ground in exhaustion.
Horses were the most precious wealth of the Zherou people.
Not to mention that this yearâs White Calamity had already claimed countless warhorses.
Seeing the horse fall, a dull pain struck King Qiuqiâs heart. He immediately sent someone to inspect it.
At his earlier words, a subordinateâs eyes widened.
âCould it be those Zhou men who claimed to be âBelievers of the Listening Heaven Platformâ who tipped them off?!â
The strategist who had fled with him gritted his teeth.
âThat makes sense! Otherwise how could Ying Changchuan have waited so precisely in Wuchang County?â
While washing the rope burns from his palm, King Qiuqi snarled,
âCapture every last one of them!â
âYes, Your Majesty!â The soldier withdrew at once.
The Dingwumu Grasslands were the third-largest pasture in King Qiuqiâs territory and had suffered relatively less damage this year.
All Zherou under his rule were now secretly hiding here.
But the landâs carrying capacity was limitedâit could not support so many people.
The veterinarian dragged away the dead horse. After being chased by Zhou troops for two days, King Qiuqi was utterly exhausted.
He glanced at the distant sky and finally staggered back into the tent.
Once those Zhou men were killed and the threat eliminatedâŠ
He would lead his people south, reclaim his honor, and seize enough food for the year.
At that time, he would wash the hatred in his heart away with Zhou blood!
Without even cleaning himself, King Qiuqi collapsed onto the animal-skin couch.
Yet before he could fall asleep, chaotic footsteps sounded outside the tent.
âReporting to the Kingâbad newsâ!â
A sharp pain drilled into his head. Pressing his temple, he forced his eyes open.
âWhat now?â
The soldierâs voice trembled.
âThe Zhou⊠the Zhou seem to have caught up again.â
âImpossible!â King Qiuqi shot upright.
Three sides of Dingwumu were desert. He was certain that Zhou soldiersâunfamiliar with Zherou terrainâcould never find this place.
âCome in and explain!â
âYes, Your Majesty!â
The leather-armored soldier stepped forward and handed over the report.
On the couch, King Qiuqiâs eyesâred from exhaustionâshook as he took it.
After drawing a deep breath, he opened it.
The kneeling soldier cautiously raised his head to observe the kingâs expression.
âIt turned iron-blue in an instant.
Soldiers guarding the desert choke point had seen the Zhou army marching west.
They appeared to be crossing the desert directly toward this place.
ââŠYing Changchuan.â
King Qiuqi crushed the report in his hand.
At last he understoodâhe had never shaken off Zhou pursuit.
They had followed him at a distance, deliberately letting him lead them to the main force.
He tossed the report aside and donned his armor once more.
The soldier blurted out, pale-faced,
âYour Majesty, even if they know where we are, the desert blocks them. They might not dare cross it⊠they donât even know how vast or deep it is.â
As he spoke, his expression eased slightly.
The desert was their natural barrier.
Zhou soldiers unfamiliar with the north might well die of thirst before reaching Dingwumu.
âSilence!â
King Qiuqi suddenly turned and kicked him hard.
âTheyâre already at the choke pointâyet you think they wonât make it?â
His shout pierced through the tent and echoed across the grasslands.
Stepping outside, he saw the trembling strategist.
âWhat do you think, Duenli?!â
Duenli immediately knelt.
âYour Majesty speaks wisely⊠if the Zhou can find the choke point, then itâs possible they possess detailed Zherou maps.â
The messenger muttered,
âHow could that beâŠâ
Indeedâthe so-called Listening Heaven Platform believers had arrived recently and were blindfolded the entire way.
How could they have maps?
Dingwumu was the last pasture of the year.
King Qiuqi could not abandon it.
Orders for battle spread at once.
Seventy thousand Zherou troops hidden in the grasslands prepared at full speed.
Still basking in memories of countless past victories, King Qiuqi and those who had not experienced the terror of Wuchang Night showed little fear.
But Duenliâs face alternated between red and white.
Silently, he prepared to flee.
Total mobilization had once been the Zherouâs strength.
Now, it was their greatest weakness.
Lacking professional training, they relied on mobilityâfight if they could win, flee if not.
But now, with no route of escape, cavalry power would plummet.
Duenli clenched the reins.
This time, Heaven seemed to stand with Zhou.
The Dingwumu Grasslands stretched endlessly beneath a clear sky.
Every movement within dozens of li lay exposed.
Moments later, a black dot appeared on the horizon.
King Qiuqi, mounted at the rear, raised his hand.
The war horn sounded.
Zherou troops facing east dispersed into a semicircle, bows raised.
King Qiuqi took another swig of strong liquor and shouted at the top of his lungs,
ââThe commander of the Fulin Army today is Ying Changchuan! Slay him, march south, seize Zhaoduâwine and beauties will be endless!â
âSeize Zhaodu! Seize Zhaodu!â
The roar echoed across the grasslands.
The Fulin Army advanced like a black cloud.
Just before entering range, they halted.
Murmurs spread among the Zherou.
âThey stopped?â
âNot many of themâŠâ
âAll cavalry?â
Zherou had over seventy thousand.
Zhou had fewer than ten thousand.
The disparity was obvious.
King Qiuqi laughed.
âYing Changchuan finally realizes how many we have. Heâs afraid.â
Duenliâs smile froze.
âŠIf Ying Changchuan dared come, how could he not know?
His unease only deepened.
Eagles soared overhead.
At that moment, dozens of war carts appeared before the Zhou army.
Duenli sucked in a breath.
ââŠTrebuchets?â
King Qiuqi frowned.
âTheyâre useless against cavalry.â
Thenâ
The âstonesâ arced through the air.
âBoomââ
They ignited midair.
Fireballs.
They struck the dry grasslandâand exploded.
From them burst countless èșè (caltrops), tearing into horsesâ legs.
Screams erupted.
Horses reared, fell, trampled riders.
Chaos spread like ripples.
Untrained troops panicked.
Seventy thousand cavalry collapsed into disorder.
In moments, the battle was decided.
Ying Changchuan drew his sword.
Cold light flashed in his ash-gray eyes.
No words were needed.
Blades were drawn.
âKillâ!â
Blood sprayed.
Grass stained red.
Their shared thought:
End this century-long plunder.
Pacify the north.
Let the people live.
âKill!â
Ying Changchuan advanced like a nightmare, severing heads in a blink.
Their eyes met.
He smiled casuallyâwhile striking again.
Another head fell.
âRetreatâŠâ
Cold sweat drenched King Qiuqi.
He fled.
Ying Changchuan let him go.
He wanted him to find the other kings.
The battle ended with Qiuqi fleeing with a thousand guards, the rest surrendering.
Eastern and southern Zherou lands fell to Zhou.
Days later came the surrender rites.
At dawn, mist clung to the grass.
Before the rooster crowed, the Son of Heaven stepped out.
A white horse galloped toward camp.
Jiang Yuxun approached at full speed.
âYour Majesty, be careful!â
âDonât be afraid. Jump.â
He did.
And fellâ
Into Ying Changchuanâs arms.
- ăèșèă â caltrops: ancient spiked weapons designed to maim horsesâdevastating to cavalry-based armies.