Chapter 889: 847. Funan’s Crisis
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Go to the edges of the crowd, city guards stood in stiff ranks, their hands twitching on spear shafts. Sweat beaded on their brows, not just from heat, but from the knowledge that a single spark could set this tinderbox ablaze. Funan was cracking. Not just from the outside, but from within.
Beyond walls painted with gold leaf and murals of lotus ponds, the mood was no calmer. The royal palace, once a sanctuary of opulence and serenity, now seethed with tension as King Kaundinya III sat upon the ivory throne, his posture rigid, his fingers digging into the carved arms as though he could squeeze answers from the wood itself.
This was the third emergency court meeting in five days, and still, no solution had emerged, only fear, and fear was as deadly as any spear.
The hall shimmered with the flicker of oil lamps. Beneath the high roof of interlocking teak beams, courtiers whispered like wind through dry leaves. Generals in armor stood alongside silk robed ministers, their faces drawn tight. Scrolls of reports lay scattered across a long lacquered table, their ink still damp from hurried brushes.
The King of Funan, King Kaundinya III, pressed his fingers to his temple, massaging the pounding ache that refused to leave him. His once proud shoulders slumped as the words from the last scout’s report replayed in his head.
“Hundreds of thousands of men…”
Not twenty thousand. Not even fifty. Hundreds of thousands. A tide of steel rolling through the jungles like an unending monsoon that will hit their kingdom.
He lifted his gaze, sweeping across the court. “Tell me,” he said, his voice hoarse but steady. “What strategy remains to us? What tactic can stop the storm that is approaching toward our gates?”
Silence.
The words hung in the air like the blade of an executioner. No one spoke, not the chancellors with their clever tongues, nor the battle hardened generals with their chests full of medals. All eyes slid to the floor, as if the polished marble held answers that their minds could not conjure.
Finally, General Phanindra, old and grizzled as the roots of the banyan tree, stepped forward. His armor was dull with years of wear, but his back was straight, his gaze unflinching.
“My King,” he began, his voice heavy as the toll of a temple bell, “we face an enemy unlike any before. These are no border raiders, no river pirates, and no tribes or small kingdoms soldiers in our surroundings. These are foreign legions from the north, drilled in the art of war beyond our understanding. They come not for plunder, but conquest.”
“And what of their leaders?” King Kaundinya III demanded. “Do we know their names?”
Phanindra hesitated, then spoke two names that tasted like iron in his mouth. “Our scouts managed to get hold of three names after interrogating the traitor we managed to kidnap. Sun Ce, Ma Chao, and Zhou Yu.”
King Kaundinya III’s jaw tightened. “And their strategist? The one who master in everything, is he with them?”
Another murmur rippled through the court like wind through reeds. This strategist, whom they called the man of silk and steel, whose a brilliant figure who could turn rivers into traps and mountains into prisons. If he marched with this Sun Ce and Ma Chao, then the jungle itself would bow to their will.
“Yes, Your Majesty,” Phanindra said grimly. “The fan bearer walks among them. He was the one named Zhou Yu.”
A hollow silence settled over the hall.
“Then we are finished,” muttered Minister Jivaka, wringing his bony hands. His voice was thin, reedy, like the whine of an insect. “We cannot stand against such men. Even if we muster every soldier, every levy, every slave who can hold a spear, we are but a grain of sand before the tide.”
King Kaundinya III’s head snapped toward him, eyes blazing. “So you counsel surrender then minister?”
Jivaka flinched as though struck. “I counsel… survival, Your Majesty.”
“Survival bought with chains is no survival at all!” barked General Indraditya, slamming a fist against the table. The sound rang like a drumbeat of war. “If we yield, Funan is no more. Our temples, our gods, our blood, swept away like dust. Better to die with a blade in hand than live as a slave to these foreign northern lords!”
The hall erupted, voices clashing like swords, ministers and generals shouting over one another. Some cried for negotiation, others for war to the last man. King Kaundinya III sat amid the storm, his thoughts a whirlpool of doubt and fury.
He wanted to believe Indraditya. He wanted to die fighting, if they must fight. But he thought of the faces beyond these walls, the farmers, the merchants, the children with bellies hollow from hunger. Could he doom them all for pride?
A hand touched his arm. Soft, slender, trembling. It was Queen Bhavani, her beauty dulled by sleepless nights, her eyes wide with unspoken fear. “Husband,” she whispered, so low only he could hear. “Think of our sons.”
Her words were daggers in his chest.
King Kaundinya III closed his eyes. The arguments of his generals faded into a meaningless buzz. When he opened his eyes again, they were filled with a grim, horrifying clarity. The path before him was dark, and every fork led to ruin.
“Enough,” he said, his voice quiet but cutting through the noise like a blade. The council fell silent. “General Phaenindra. Prepare our elite regiments. We will… make a stand at the capital. You are not to commit to a full engagement and only protect the walls. We make sure they bleed and lose many soldiers, and don’t ever pursue them outside our walls. Is that understood?”
The general’s chest swelled with a grim sense of purpose. “Yes, Majesty!”
The king then turned to his ministers. “I want a census of all grain stores in the city. Every merchant, every noble household, every temple granary. It is to be seized and redistributed by the crown at a fixed, fair price. Anyone found hoarding or price gouging will be executed as a traitor. We must quell the unrest inside our walls before the enemy even arrives at them.”
The ministers bowed, their faces pale at the drastic measure.
“As for the rest of you,” the king said, his gaze sweeping over the room, “pray to every god you know. For I fear we will need more than strategy and grain to survive what is coming.”
The meeting dissolved, the officials and generals rushing to carry out their orders, their footsteps echoing with a new, frantic energy. King Kaundinya III remained on his throne, alone in the vast chamber, as his Queen also took her leave to find their sons.
Meanwhile, on the outside, the drums beat louder. The enemy was coming. And the serpent of panic coiled tighter around Vyadhapura’s heart.
The midday sun burned high above the jungle canopy, its molten light washing the world in shades of gold and bronze. The rhythmic thunder of hooves and the creak of wooden wheels carried through the humid air as the combined army advanced. At the head of this tide of men rode four figures whose names would echo through history, Sun Ce, Ma Chao, Zhou Yu, and Ma Dai.
The army stretched far behind them like an endless serpent of steel and banners, the Sun Clan legions and Imperial troops hardened in a dozen campaigns, and at the rear, the Funan auxiliaries, men who now fought for their conquerors against their own homeland. Their loyalty was brittle, but fear was a strong leash.
At last, the capital of Funan revealed itself in the distance. Where before it had been a smudge on the horizon, now its stone towers rose clear and proud, shimmering faintly in the jungle haze. Vyadhapura.
Sun Ce reined in his horse atop a low ridge, eyes narrowing as he took in the sight. His golden armor glinted like fire in the sun, his expression calm yet hungry. For a long moment, he said nothing, only studied the city as if weighing its soul.
“So this is Vyadhapura,” he said finally, his voice carrying the weight of a man used to command. “It has its own beauty. Different from our cities back home, but… there is pride here. Elegance, even in these wild lands.”
Ma Chao drew up beside him, his tall frame straight as a spear, his eyes like molten bronze under his helm. He scanned the walls, the great gates banded in bronze and wood, and the towers carved with images of nagas and lotus blossoms.
“It’s not what I imagined,” Ma Chao said bluntly. “Smaller than Qiao. But for these jungles, it’s a jewel. And a jewel has sharp edges if you try to take it.”
Sun Ce grinned, his teeth white against sun darkened skin. “A jewel, yes. One His Majesty will want intact. It would be a waste to burn this to ash when it could serve as the keystone for the south.”
Ma Dai chuckled from his side, resting his spear against his shoulder. “You mean to make this our stepping stone? For the dynasty to march even further into these lands?”
“That,” Sun Ce said, his voice low but fierce, “is His Majesty’s vision. And I will carve that vision into the bones of these jungles.”
While they spoke, Zhou Yu remained silent. The fan in his hand stirred the heavy air in slow, deliberate arcs, but his eyes, sharp as the edge of a whetted blade, were fixed on the walls of Vyadhapura.
He saw the height of the gates, the angle of the bastions, the narrow roads winding into the heart of the city. He noted the placement of towers, the glimmer of shields on the parapets, and the faint glint of bronze spearheads catching the sun.
Every detail was a thread, and Zhou Yu’s mind wove them into patterns, patterns of fire and steel, blood and smoke.
“This city will not fall easily,” he murmured at last. His voice was soft, almost musical, yet it carried a gravity that made the others turn to him.
“You have a plan,” Sun Ce said, not as a question but as certainty.
Zhou Yu’s lips curved in a faint smile, but his eyes were grave. “A plan, yes. But one that comes at a cost.”
Ma Chao tilted his head, a glimmer of challenge in his golden eyes. “What cost?”
“The cost,” Zhou Yu said, his gaze never leaving the city, “is blood. Ours. If we want Vyadhapura intact, its walls unbroken, its palaces untouched, then we cannot scorch it with fire and steel as we would any other city. We must be precise. Surgical. That means a siege. That means casualties.”
______________________________
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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