Chapter 882: 841. Birth Of Sima Yi & Wannian Child
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Go to Wei’s gaze lingered on him for a heartbeat longer before he nodded. “You have done well. Rest, and let no detail slip from memory. I may call upon you again before the sun rises.” With another bow, Han Myeong withdrew, leaving Li Wei alone with the maps and the murmuring silence of the tent.
For a long moment, Li Wei stood motionless, his eyes fixed on the inked contours of Jeju-do sprawled before him. Beyond those lines lay more than hills and rivers, they held the pulse of power, the clash of wills, the subtle interplay of ambitions.
He reached for the brush again, dipped it in ink, and began marking points, the Yamatai camp, the neutral ground, the likely routes of approach.
But even as his hand moved with mechanical precision, his mind drifted, not in distraction, but in layered contemplation. Yamatai was proud, insular, and cunning.
They would not bend easily. And yet, there was an opening now, a fissure in the rock face of their resolve, pride could be stoked, rivalries exploited, alliances forged or broken with a single miscalculated phrase.
He allowed himself a thin smile. Negotiation was a battlefield of its own, and in that realm, he was as much a general as any who bore a sword.
Far away, under the bright lanterns of Xiapi, a different kind of battle was being waged, one of celebration, ceremony, and subtle currents of influence.
The city glittered like a jewel beneath the late spring sky. Red and gold banners rippled from every gatehouse, their silken lengths embroidered with auspicious symbols, dragons, cranes, and the blooming peony.
Lanterns swayed in the evening breeze, casting pools of warm light upon the polished stones of the thoroughfares. The air was thick with the mingled scents of roasted meats, fragrant wine, and incense spiraling lazily from bronze censers.
By imperial edict, the entire capital rejoiced, for a son had been born to Princess Wannian and Minister of War Sima Yi, a son whose birth bound two great clan in a tighter knot of blood and destiny.
The drums of festivity rolled like distant thunder, and laughter spilled from the open doors of taverns, carried on the river of voices that flooded the streets.
Within the walls of the Sima residence, the celebration burned brightest. The courtyards bloomed with silk and lacquer, tables groaning under the weight of delicacies.
Steamed fish gleaming like silver beneath lotus leaves, glazed pheasant, and towers of honeyed cakes sculpted into shapes of tigers and phoenixes. Musicians plucked zithers and struck chimes, their melodies weaving through the air like threads of gold.
At the main gate stood Sima Yi himself, robed in crimson patterned with coiled serpents, his hair bound in a jade crown.
His face, always composed in the austerity of duty, now bore the rare softness of pride. For all his reputation as a man of cunning intellect and iron resolve, tonight he was simply a father, one whose heart swelled at the cry of his newborn son.
When the imperial procession appeared at the end of the lantern lit avenue, a murmur rippled through the gathered guests. At its head was of course Lie Fan, as the Emperor of the Hengyuan Dynasty, astride a stallion black as midnight, his figure a silhouette of command beneath the banners that streamed like tongues of flame behind him.
Beside him, in a carriage draped in brocade, rode the Empress Ying Yue and the imperial concubines, Diao Chan who was as serene as moonlight, Cai Wenji who’s gaze was tender and reflective, Lu Lingqi who look as proud as the warrior blood that ran in her veins, and Zhen Ji whose beauty gleamed like polished jade in the lantern glow.
Sima Yi descended the steps in swift, measured strides, bowing low as Lie Fan swung down from his horse with the easy grace of a man born to both saddle and throne.
“Zhongda!” Lie Fan’s laughter rang out like a bronze bell, rich and unrestrained. He clapped Sima Yi on the shoulder with the warmth of a brother rather than the chill of an emperor. “A son! And not just any son, my first nephew! The first Imperial nephew! Heaven smiles upon both of our clan tonight.”
Sima Yi lowered his head, though his lips curved in a restrained smile. “Your Majesty honors me with such words. This joy… is shared by us all.” He straightened and turned to bow to the Empress and the concubines, his voice carrying the polished cadence of courtly grace. “Your Majesty, Your Highnesses, you grace my humble hall with radiance.”
The Empress inclined her head with a smile as soft as falling petals. The concubines followed suit, each in her own manner, Diao Chan with poised elegance, Cai Wenji with lyrical serenity, Lu Lingqi with a warrior’s frank directness, and Zhen Ji with a glance that shimmered like starlight.
With formalities observed, Sima Yi himself led the imperial family within, his steps quick yet dignified. Behind them, his brothers Sima Fu and Sima Kui took their place at the gate, welcoming the tide of scholars, generals, and ministers who flowed steadily into the mansion like a river of silk and jewels.
Inside the grand hall, the scent of sandalwood curled through the air, mingling with the sweetness of plum wine. The Emperor was seated at the highest table, a carved masterpiece of dark wood inlaid with mother of pearl. To his left, upon seats draped in crimson silk, reclined the Empress and concubines, their presence a constellation of grace.
When all were settled, Sima Yi raised his cup and his voice. “My lords, my friends, Your Highnesses,Your Majesty, tonight we celebrate a gift beyond measure, the birth of my son Sima Shi, with courtesy name Zhiyuan.” His gaze flicked briefly to Lie Fan, the faintest shadow of a smile crossing his face. “May he live in virtue and strength, a pillar of our dynasty.”
A thunderous roar of approval filled the hall. “Gan bei!” Cups were drained, and the formal atmosphere instantly melted into one of unrestrained celebration.
The musicians struck a brighter chord, and the first course of the feast began its stately procession, dishes steaming like clouds from the kitchens, each a triumph of flavor and artistry.
Lie Fan lifted his cup, the wine within catching the firelight. As he drank, his thoughts wandered, unbidden, inevitable. The name had gave him inwardly a deeply private jolt of surreal recognition when it was announced.
Sima Shi. The name rang through the corridors of his memory, echoing against the knowledge of a history that no longer belonged to this world. Once, in another thread of time, that name had been carved into the annals of power as the harbinger of the Cao Wei dynasty twilight alongside his brother and son.
But not here. Not now.
He glanced toward Sima Yi, who stood resplendent in the glow of his house’s triumph, and felt no tremor of doubt. Loyalty bound them, not by chains of fear, but by the tempered steel of trust.
He had given Sima Yi his sister, his confidence, and his friendship. And in return, Sima Yi had given him unwavering service, a shield against chaos.
The Sima Clan was not a threat. They were kin now, bound to the imperial house by blood and shared ambition. The birth of Sima Shi was not a portent of doom, but a cause for genuine celebration, a strengthening of the dynasty’s very foundation.
‘The future,’ Lie Fan told himself as he lowered the cup, was a road yet untraveled. And on this road, he would carve a destiny none could steal.
Meanwhile, the banquet was in full bloom now, the grand hall alive with the laughter of nobles and the mellow hum of zither strings. The warmth of wine softened the rigid angles of protocol, and voices rose like a tide, carrying with them toasts, boasts, and fragments of poetry.
Lie Fan lingered at the high table for a while, savoring the flavors of the dishes brought before him. He ate without haste, sipping his wine as he observed the throng of guests, the swirl of robes, the glitter of jade ornaments, the shifting eddies of conversation that revealed as much as they concealed.
Beside him, Sima Yi matched his pace, drinking in measured sips, every movement steeped in the quiet elegance that came so naturally to him. His pride tonight was evident, but never loud, it glimmered beneath the surface like a hidden current, lending warmth to his usually austere demeanor.
After the third round of toasts, the Empress Ying Yue rose gracefully, her silken sleeves flowing like the wings of a crane. The concubines followed in her wake, each with their own distinct vision of beauty.
“Your Majesty,” Ying Yue said softly, her voice a bell in the din, “we shall pay our visit to Sister Wannian and her newborn child.”
Lie Fan inclined his head, a faint smile touching his lips. “Go, then. Tell Wannian that her brother awaits his turn.”
Lie Fan remained where he was, the weight of the hall settling on his shoulders in a way he both welcomed and endured. Tonight, he was not only a brother or an uncle, he was an emperor, and the eyes of a hundred men sought his favor like moths drawn to flame.
Sima Yi summoned several maids with a flick of his sleeve. They hurried forward, their robes whispering against the polished floor, and fell in behind the imperial ladies like a train of blossoms drifting on the wind.
The great doors parted, and the women vanished into the inner chambers, leaving the hall subtly altered, as if a breath of fragrance had passed and gone.
Here, the air was quieter, softer, filled with the intimate warmth of family rather than the performative grandeur of state.
They were ushered into a chamber where Princess Wannian, looking both exhausted and radiant, reclined on a daybed piled high with embroidered cushions. In her arms, swaddled in fine blue silk, lay the cause of all the celebration, the newborn Sima Shi.
Ying Yue’s face immediately softened into a maternal smile. “Sister,” she said, her voice a gentle murmur as she approached. “Look at him. He is perfect.”
Wannian looked up, her eyes shining with a mixture of pride and overwhelming emotion. “Sister Ying… Sisters… you are too kind.” She adjusted the bundle in her arms, revealing the sleeping infant’s face, a tiny, serene mask of unknowing peace.
The women gathered around, their earlier courtly personas melting away to reveal genuine affection and shared womanhood. “He has his father’s brow,” Ying Yue observed quietly.
“And his mother’s stubbornness, I can already tell,” Wannian replied with a tired laugh, the sound full of love. For a timeless moment, the politics of Xiapi, the ambitions of men, and the distant rumble of war faded into irrelevance. In this quiet room, there was only the profound, universal truth of a mother and her child.
______________________________
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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