Chapter 888: 846. Negotiation Halted For Now
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Go to Han Myeong and Jin translated the final words for their masters, the air in the pavilion changed again. Lord Kaito’s face was unreadable, but the arrogant certainty had been replaced by intense, thoughtful calculation. He was no longer just dealing with a regional kingdom, he was, according to this story, facing a player on a much larger board.
The presence of such a larger player on the board had thrown a heavy stone into the calm waters of Lord Kaito’s strategy. The ripples spread wide, touching every assumption he had brought with him into this meeting. The Yamatai lord sat perfectly still, his hands folded on the low lacquered table, but behind the serene mask of his face, his thoughts churned like storm waves.
If what Li Wei had just claimed was true, if Goguryeo truly had an alliance with this… Mongolia, then the foundation of his plan was shattered. Yamatai had come here with a sense of leverage, a quiet confidence that their naval superiority could dictate terms.
Even if Goguryeo had grown stronger in recent years, Yamatai’s fleets still ruled the waves, and Lord Kaito had believed that strength would balance the scales.
But now? That balance was an illusion. His mind turned to the implications with cold precision. If this alliance exists, the seas no longer matter. Ships could burn, yes, fleets could be shattered, but a fleet cannot march inland.
It cannot hold mountains, rivers, or plains. Armies do that. And if Goguryeo alone could already boast a formidable army capable of dominating the peninsula, then what of this combined force Li Wei spoke of? What of Mongolian horsemen thundering across the northern steppes, ready to descend in endless waves?
The thought gnawed at him like a rat chewing through rope. Yamatai’s population was a fraction of Goguryeo’s, even without Mongolia. Its armies, though disciplined and proud, were small compared to the legions of the continent.
Numbers mattered, and numbers in this game belonged to Goguryeo, and now, perhaps, to this phantom empire of horsemen from the north.
Lord Kaito’s pride whispered that Yamatai’s ships could still hold the line. They could strike at ports, disrupt trade, scorch the coastlines. But what then? Would Goguryeo even need its coast if the heartland remained unbroken and its northern ally supplied strength unending? Would Yamatai burn villages only to invite a storm across the sea? A storm that might never stop?
For the first time that day, he felt the faint chill of caution slide down his spine.
Across the pavilion, Li Wei watched all of this without a word. He had spoken his last sentence softly, almost humbly, but his eyes, his eyes told a different story.
Calm, unwavering, and quietly triumphant. He could see the change in Lord Kaito, the tightening of the jaw, the subtle shift of the shoulders. A proud man measuring the weight of new chains.
It worked, Li Wei thought, the satisfaction blooming behind his composed expression. Every word, every careful drop of poison had seeped where it needed to. The lie was audacious, yes, but it was a perfect lie. Who among these islanders could verify it? Who would dare sail into the northern steppes to seek truth from ghosts?
And so, his purposes were achieved. Two purposes, sharp as twin daggers.
The first is that Hengyuan’s hand was hidden, its true reach veiled behind the mask of a nomadic phantom. The Yamatai court would not suspect the true empire pulling threads from the shadows, for who would imagine that the dynasty of the Central Plains, reborn under a new banner, was already shaping the fates of kingdoms?
The second one, Yamatai now felt the weight of the threat pressing on its throat. The tone of the negotiation had shifted like sand underfoot.
No longer would they posture for Silla’s sake, no longer would they demand bold concessions. The talk of restoring Silla’s lands, laughable now. That notion had withered in the frost of fear. Fear of Goguryeo. Fear of Mongolia. Fear of war across the waves.
Even Himiko herself, Queen of Yamatai, shrouded in whispers of magic and mystery, even she, Li Wei mused, would see reason when she heard of this.
For all her rumored powers, could she fight the tide of two empires united? Could she face the shadow of horsemen darkening the northern sky? No. Not even Himiko, for all her divine claims, would make two enemies for the sake of a broken ally clinging to scraps of power.
Power speaks louder than loyalty. Always.
Han Myeong’s voice broke the silence as he translated Li Wei’s parting courtesy into the Yamatai tongue, and then, with an edge of command, told Jin to repeat it for Lord Kaito in the Silla dialect. Jin’s hands clenched at his sides, the cords of muscle standing out against the fine silk of his sleeves. Every word tasted like ash in his mouth, but what choice did he have?
He could not offend Lord Kaito, not now, not when Silla’s survival dangled on threads finer than spider silk. If he spoke rashly, if he soured Yamatai against them, then what remained? A king without allies. A kingdom without hope.
He forced the words out, each one scraping his pride raw, and when he finished, his throat felt tight as a noose.
Lord Kaito nodded slowly. His face was an ocean at dusk, dark, still, impossible to read. He rose, movements fluid as a blade unsheathed, and Li Wei rose with him, mirroring his courtesy. They bowed, not as equals, but as men testing each other’s steel without drawing blood.
“I will consider what has been said,” Lord Kaito murmured, voice low as the wind through bamboo. “This… changes much.”
Li Wei inclined his head, his smile the soft, inscrutable curve of a man who had already won.
Kaito turned without further word, his entourage falling into formation like shadows at dusk. Jin lingered for a heartbeat, eyes burning with silent frustration, before he too mounted and followed, the hooves of Yamatai horses drumming against the earth as they vanished down the forested path.
Li Wei stood alone in the pavilion now, the scent of pine and ink heavy in the air, and he let the mask slip just enough for the smile to bloom in full. The game had shifted, and every piece now moved to his design.
Far to the southwest, beyond rivers and jungles, another game was unfolding, a game of fire and iron.
The southern campaign.
Under a sky the color of molten bronze, the banners of the Sun Clan snapped in the wind as their army advanced like a tide of steel through the steaming jungles of Funan.
War drums pounded in the distance, deep and relentless, their rhythm echoing off the green clad hills. And at the heart of this tide rode Sun Ce, the Little Conqueror, his armor gleaming with a hungry light, his eyes fixed on the horizon where the enemy waited.
Beside him thundered Ma Chao, his frame a fortress of muscle and fury, his spear resting easy across his saddle. He had seen battlefields from Liang to Chang’an, had tasted the blood of warlords and rebels alike, but this land was different. Dense jungles, stifling heat, rivers that twisted like serpents through emerald coils. A land that resisted every step like a living thing.
And yet, the Funan were breaking.
They were breaking because of Zhou Yu’s brilliance, the mind behind the silk fan, the strategist whose whispers turned into storms. His auxiliaries, drawn from Funan’s own people, had proved worth their weight in gold.
Men who knew the hidden trails, who spoke the tongue of the land, who could read the signs of river and leaf. With their guidance, the army moved like water, flowing where Funan least expected, striking like lightning before vanishing into the green.
It was they who had revealed the location of Funan’s capital, that jewel nestled deep in the jungle’s heart. It was they who had shown the safe road, broad enough for the march of ten thousand men.
Now, that road lay beneath the hooves of Sun Ce’s chargers and the iron tread of Ma Chao’s cavalry. The auxiliaries rode at the flanks, their eyes sharp, their tongues translating orders with the ease of water slipping through fingers.
The capital lay ahead, its spires glinting faintly through the haze, and with every mile, the air grew thicker, heavier, pregnant with the promise of battle.
Meanwhile, at the capital of Funan, the ancient city of Vyadhapura, tension coiled like a serpent ready to strike. The sun hung low in the sky, its heat pressing down on the sprawling metropolis, and the thick jungle air clung to every surface like a second skin.
The sound of bells, sharp, urgent, and relentless, rang from the highest towers, warning the people of danger. High alert. Scouts had returned, mud-caked and breathless, bringing grim tidings:
The enemy was coming.
And not just any enemy. An army so vast that the ground itself trembled under its march.
The streets of Vyadhapura, once alive with chatter and the heady aroma of spices, now hummed with unease. The great southern gates, carved with images of nagas and lotus blooms, stood under heavy guard, their bronze hinges oiled and ready to shut at the first sign of disaster.
City guards patrolled the walls with spears gleaming in the harsh sun, their eyes scanning the horizon as if expecting the jungle itself to come alive with steel.
Inside the bustling markets, trade still happened, but just barely. Merchants whispered nervously as they exchanged goods at inflated prices. Rice that once sold for a handful of shells now costs ten.
Salt, once plentiful, became a luxury. Goods piled in warehouses, unable to move down the river routes, for no one dared risk the roads. Fear sealed every gate.
The people suffered first, as they always did. Faces grew leaner, tempers shorter. Where once laughter spilled from the taverns, now anger brewed in silence, until it could no longer be contained.
By midday, it wasn’t silent anymore.
A crowd surged in the central square, where the stone statue of Kaundinya’s divine ancestor loomed over them. Men with sunburnt skin and women with babies clutched to their breasts shouted until their throats grew raw. “Food!” they cried. “Lower the prices! Open the gates!” Some carried sticks. Others hurled stones at the doors of wealthy merchants, splintering painted wood and shattering carved screens.
At 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.
______________________________
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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