Chapter 893: 851. Different Situation For The Foreign Powers But Same Tension
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The column drew up before him. Mud spattered, blood soaked, hollow eyed, they swung down from their saddles. Armor clinked like broken bells. Then, as one, they dropped to their knees. “Your Majesty,” they intoned, voices hoarse with smoke and grief. Their foreheads touched the earth. In that gesture, there was reverence, but also something heavier, an unspoken plea for absolution.
King Kaundinya III’s jaw clenched. He nodded once, curt, as though to master the quiver in his hands.
“Rise,” he commanded. They obeyed, slow, weary, their heads bowed like men awaiting doom.
His gaze swept them, counting faces, measuring silences. Then his voice cracked the hush like a whip.
“Where is General Phanindra?” he thundered, eyes burning like oil fed flame as it scanned the battered ranks as if he could summon the general forth through the force of his anger. “How dare he! How dare he launch this… this folly without my express command! He defied a direct order! He will answer for this insubordination!?”
His words echoed against the stone gatehouse and lashed through the chill air, but it was met by a silence so profound it was deafening. Ministers flinched. The kneeling soldiers flinched as if struck.
The lieutenants exchanged glances as their grief scarred faces tightening. The weight of the king’s fury was immense, but it was nothing compared to the leaden truth they carried. The king’s tone sharpened, rising like a blade unsheathed.
Finally, one lieutenant, a man named Virak, whose face was seared by a near miss from a fire arrow, take a step forward unsteadily.
He was a veteran, a man who had served under General Phanindra for a decade. His hands trembled slightly, but his voice, when it came, was steady, though thick with emotion.
“Your Majesty,” Virak began, his voice a raw scrape in the quiet night. He bowed deeply. “General Phanindra… he…” The words caught in his throat. He swallowed hard, forcing them out. “General Phanindra is slain. He fell in battle, leading the charge.”
The words landed like a physical blow. A collective, sharp intake of breath hissed from the ministers and guards.
King Kaundinya III stared, uncomprehending for a moment. The anger on his face didn’t vanish, it froze, then slowly began to crack, revealing the raw terror and disbelief beneath.
“What?” The word was a whisper, barely audible. He took an involuntary step backward, his legs suddenly unsteady. The royal guards moved instantly, their hands firm on his elbows, holding him upright. The king’s face, once flushed with rage, was now a ghastly pale. “Say that again,” he breathed, his voice trembling.
Virak’s own composure wavered. A tear, cutting a clean path through the grime on his cheek, betrayed his stoicism. “He is dead, Your Majesty,” he repeated, his voice breaking. “He fell… he fell to a champion of the enemy. He fought like a lion to the last, trying to reach their siege engines. But… there were too many. It was a trap.”
The confirmation shattered the last of the king’s composure. The news was more devastating than any trebuchet impact. General Phanindra was not just a commander; he was the spine of Vyadhapura’s defense. His strategic mind, his unwavering courage, his sheer presence had been the glue holding the army together against the impossible odds. His death was not just a loss; it was an amputation.
The king’s eyes darted across the faces of the survivors, seeing the truth reflected in their hollow, grief-stricken eyes. The furious bluster drained from him, leaving behind a void of cold, stark horror. The strategic implications crashed down upon him with the force of a collapsing tower. Who will lead now? Who can possibly rally the men? What hope is left?
“His… his body?” the king finally managed to ask, the question a fragile, broken thing.
Virak nodded, a gesture of profound weariness. “We brought him home, Your Majesty. We could not leave him… out there.” He gestured behind him.
At his signal, the ranks of survivors parted. Four soldiers, their faces set in masks of grim duty, stepped forward. Between them, they carried a litter made from cloaks and spears. Upon it lay the body of General Phanindra.
They laid the litter gently at the king’s feet. Someone had closed his eyes, but nothing could hide the terrible wound that had killed him, nor the countless other cuts and gashes that spoke of his final, furious stand. The great general, the defender of Funan, was gone. The symbol of their resistance was now a corpse.
King Kaundinya III looked down at his fallen champion, and the full, crushing weight of his kingdom’s doom settled upon his shoulders. The anger was gone, replaced by a grief so vast it was numb. He had lost more than a general. He had lost the war.
The king sank to his knees. His hands hovered, shaking, then closed on the cold brow. “You fool,” he whispered. His voice broke. “You glorious, damned fool.”
No man spoke. The courtyard was a tomb, the only sound the sob of the wind threading the banners.
At last the king rose, his face carved from ice, though his eyes burned like coals. He turned on the kneeling officers, his voice low, shaking with fury.
“He disobeyed me. He defied his king. And now he is dead, and five hundred of my sons lie with him!” His hand slashed the air, trembling. “Was there none among you with the spine to stop him?”
Virak who had spoken lifted his head. His voice was steady now, though his eyes gleamed wet. “Your Majesty,” he said, “had we stopped him, we would all be dead, and the city with us. He rode for Funan. For you, Yiur Majesty. He believed there was no other way.”
King Kaundinya IIi stared at him. For a heartbeat, his rage blazed bright as the sun. Then it guttered, and what shone in his eyes was something darker. Fear.
“Leave me,” he whispered. “All of you. Leave me with him.”
The guards hesitated, but at a flick of his hand they backed away, dragging the crowd with them until only the dead and the king stood beneath the sullen sky.
King Kaundinya III knelt once more, his fingers combing through hair stiff with blood. His lips moved soundlessly, shaping prayers or curses or both.
Soon the news of General Phanindra’s death spread like plague through the streets, through the barracks, through the marble halls of the palace. Men wept in silence, heads bowed over bowls of rice gone cold. Women clutched their children, their eyes huge and hollow. And now in the council chamber, voices rose like jackals around a carcass.
“This is ruin!” one minister cried, his silks quivering with his fury. “Five hundred men, thrown away like chaff! And for what? For nothing!”
“For honor!” snarled another, a lean hawk-faced man whose hands clenched on the hilt of his dagger. “Would you have us sit and rot like sheep in a pen?”
“Better sheep than corpses!” the first spat. “Better a city living than a field of bones!”
“Enough!” The word cracked like a whip as Kaundinya rose, his face white as marble, his eyes burning. “Enough, all of you!” His gaze swept the chamber, freezing men where they stood. “General Phanindra is dead. The blame is mine, and mine alone. I forbade him to act, and in defying me, he bought us one night more. One night!”
His voice faltered, then steadied, cold as steel. “There will be no more folly. No more raids. From this day forth, we hold these walls, and we hold them to the last drop of our blood.”
Silence fell, heavy as a tomb door closing. But outside, beyond the walls of Vyadhapura, the drums had already begun again, the slow, deep thunder of war rolling across the plain.
The second day of Vyadhapura’s bloody siege dawned under a sky bruised with storm clouds. The drums of the Sun Clan still rolled across the plain like the growl of a waking beast, and the banners of Sun Clan and Hegyuan Dynasty snapped crimson against the sullen wind.
Smoke coiled from the ruins of farms and hamlets, smearing the horizon like the strokes of an ink brush dipped in blood. The city’s walls glistened wet under the night’s rain, their stones blackened by fire arrows and slick with the sweat of desperate men.
Yet far to the northeast, beyond the storms sweeping the mainland, on the windswept isle of Jeju-Do, another council of war grappled with its own turmoil.
On the rugged island of Jeju-Do, inside the sprawling Yamatai encampment pitched east of the volcanic hills, Lord Kaito paced like a caged tiger within his command tent. The space smelled of oiled steel and incense, the heavy drape of silence pressing on every soul within. His counselors stood rigid, eyes lowered, and at the edge of the circle knelt Jin, the Silla envoy, his face drawn with worry. None dared to speak until Lord Kaito bade them.
Finally, after a long stretch of taut quiet broken only by the rustle of silk and the muffled stomp of guards outside, Lord Kaito stopped mid stride. His hand rested on the hilt of his sword as he turned, his gaze sweeping the assembly like a blade.
“Counsela,” he said, his voice a low command. “Speak. What course do you advise, now that we stand in this shadow? The words of that man, Li Wei, hang in the air like a poisoned mist.”
“He has reshaped the board with a single story. This ‘Mongolia’… if it is even half as powerful as he claims, then our position has crumbled to sand. We came here to dictate terms, to secure a foothold for Silla and, by extension, for ourselves. Now, we are the ones who must tread carefully to avoid being swept away. I need your counsel.”
One of his senior counselors named Takeshi stepped forward. His hair, streaked with gray, gleamed in the lamplight, and his eyes were hard as tempered iron. Bowing deeply, he raised his voice.
“My lord,” Takeshi intoned, “the path is clear. We must placate the Goguryeo representative. We must accept this new reality. The gifts he offered were not merely generous, they were a test, a glimpse of the wealth and power they can command. To continue to champion Silla’s lost cause is to risk provoking not just Goguryeo, but this… this northern colossus he speaks of. Silla is a sun that has set. Our interest, and the interest of the Divine Queen, lies in aligning with the rising sun.”
The words were like daggers plunged into Jin’s heart. Jin surged forward, sinking to his knees, his palms flat on the mat. His voice rang with urgency, cracking like dry wood.
“Lord Kaito, I beg you!” Jin’s voice was choked with emotion, the polished cadence of a courtier replaced by raw desperation. “Counselor Takeshi speaks of cold interest, but he forgets the value of a loyal friend! For generations, Silla has been Yamatai’s eyes and ears on the peninsula.We become the counterweight to Goguryeo’s hunger. Without us, Goguryeo will rule unchecked across the peninsula.”
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Name: Lie Fan
Title: Founding Emperor Of Hengyuan Dynasty
Age: 35 (202 AD)
Level: 16
Next Level: 462,000
Renown: 2325
Cultivation: Yin Yang Separation (level 9)
SP: 1,121,700
ATTRIBUTE POINTS
STR: 966 (+20)
VIT: 623 (+20)
AGI: 623 (+10)
INT: 667
CHR: 98
WIS: 549
WILL: 432
ATR Points: 0
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