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Night fell, torches lining the siege camps like a necklace of fire. The drums of Champa could be heard in the distance, faint but growing. Their main army was on the march. And Shi Xin, sitting before the map by lantern light, allowed himself a thin smile. "They will come," he murmured. "And when they do… the trap will close."
The next day, the sun had barely risen, its pale light spilling across the misty fields, when the next phase of the siege began. The town's walls, low, worn, and battered by days of assault, already bore the scars of relentless pressure.
Cracks spread like veins across the stone, timber reinforcements sagged under the strain, and smoke from the previous night's skirmishes still curled faintly upward.
The Champa soldiers inside, gaunt eyed and ragged from exhaustion, nevertheless fought with the desperate tenacity of men who knew the end was near but refused to bow easily.
They hurled stones, boiling water, and flaming arrows from the ramparts, their war cries breaking against the steady, disciplined advance of the Shi Clan troops.
Shi Xin stood at the command post, high enough on a small earthwork mound to see the battlefield. His posture was composed, his arms folded neatly behind his back, the faint breeze tugging at his commander's cloak.
His eyes, calm but sharp, scanned the walls where his men pressed forward in waves, scaling ladders raised, shields interlocked, archers providing cover.
He coordinated without raising his voice, issuing short, precise orders through his aides to different detachments. Every move was deliberate, every push measured.
Beside him, Shi Hui sat with a wooden board propped on his knees, scrolls and scraps of Champa writing spread before him. His brows furrowed in concentration, lips moving silently as he tested words and sounds.
Every now and then, his hand darted to jot down a note. Despite the clash of steel and the shouts echoing across the field, he seemed half absorbed in his study of the language.
"Kraik means 'fight,'" Shi Hui muttered, tapping his brush against the paper. "Srok is 'land' or 'home.' And yuon…" He frowned. "I think it means 'foreigner' or 'invader.'"
After saying that, Shi Hui's fiery spirit couldn't be contained. He glanced up, eyes flashing with impatience.
"Elder Brother," he said, "the walls are crumbling, the defenders weakening. Why stretch this out? Let me take a storming party and end it quickly. Every hour we tarry gives Champa's main army more ground."
Shi Xin turned to look at him, gaze steady, before shaking his head slowly. "No. Do you not see? These men fight with the fury of those who expect death. If we rush, they will drag more of ours into the grave with them. Better to grind them down, steady and sure. We have no fear of time, our strength grows the longer we hold, theirs diminishes with every breath. War is not won by fire alone, Hui. It is won by patience."
Shi Hui exhaled sharply, but he didn't argue further. Instead, he lowered his eyes back to his scrolls, though the restless tapping of his foot betrayed his eagerness. Shi Xin placed a hand briefly on his brother's shoulder, a gesture at once reassuring and commanding, then returned to overseeing the battlefield.
The hours dragged on, the steady rhythm of siege warfare consuming the day. Arrows darkened the sky, ladders rose and fell, rams pounded at the gate until it groaned on its hinges.
All the while, Shi Xin carefully conserved his men. He rotated units to keep them fresh, sent water and rations forward, and forbade reckless charges. For him, every soldier's life was a resource to be preserved.
By midday, the defenders' resistance was visibly faltering. Their volleys grew sporadic, their shouts weaker. Smoke rose thicker from within the town, the sign of crumbling morale. Shi Xin watched, eyes narrowing slightly, then raised his hand. The time had come.
"Signal the full assault," he ordered. His voice carried quiet finality, like a stone dropped into a well.
Trumpets blared. Drums thundered. From every side, the Shi Clan's banners surged forward. Siege towers creaked as they locked against the walls, ladders slammed into place, and waves of armored soldiers stormed upward with shields and blades flashing. Rams struck the gates in unison until the timber splintered and burst open.
The clash that followed was brutal but swift. Exhausted and outnumbered, the Champa soldiers fought to the last, slashing wildly, hurling themselves at their enemies even when their bodies could barely stand. Shi Xin had foreseen this. He had already given the order, kill only the soldiers and those who dared strike against them, spare the civilians, forbid looting or desecration.
The discipline of the Shi Clan army shone. Their lines swept through the streets like a tide, cutting down resistance but leaving houses, shrines, and the terrified townsfolk untouched. Within an hour, the defenders were slain or scattered, and the town lay silent under Shi Xin's control.
Shi Hui, accompanied by a squad of elite guards, moved swiftly to secure the civilian quarter. The people huddled in fear, women clutching children, elders bowing low, young men trembling as if awaiting slaughter.
Shi Hui, clutching his notes, attempted to speak in broken fragments of their tongue. The words were rough, the grammar clumsy, but his tone was calm and steady.
He pointed to the soldiers standing at ease, weapons lowered, then touched his chest. "Safe," he tried, repeating the word in their language. "No harm. Food… remain."
The civilians glanced at one another, hesitant, but his effort, however imperfect, soothed them more than force ever could.
Fear made people pliable, kindness gave them reason to obey. Slowly, they bowed their heads, murmuring among themselves. The guards moved through the quarter, collecting supplies, grain, dried fish, and water jars, but left enough behind to ensure the townsfolk would not starve.
By dusk, the work was done. The town was secured, its defenders eliminated, its people subdued but not broken. Shi Xin convened his officers in the square, the bodies of fallen Champa soldiers being cleared away by his men. He spoke briefly, his words clipped but resonant.
"We have what we came for. Supplies for our army. A message for Champa, resistance will not break us. We do not slaughter the innocent, nor do we steal their bread. Tonight, we return to the fort. Shi Zhi will have it ready for us. There we shall wait for Champa's next move and crush them when they come."
Cheers rose, not loud or reckless, but firm and steady, echoing the discipline that defined the Shi Clan.
The retreat began before nightfall. Columns of soldiers marched in order, wagons creaking with seized supplies, banners snapping in the wind. Behind them, the town remained intact, battered, but not burned, its people left alive to speak of both the terror and the restraint of their conquerors.
Shi Xin rode at the head, his face unreadable, already thinking of the fort ahead, the battles to come, and the larger designs of the Hengyuan Dynasty that stretched far beyond this single clash.
Meanwhile, far to the northeast, the sea winds carried the scent of salt and fish into the port town of Gaya. The docks bustled with merchants, fishermen, and soldiers, yet an unusual tension hung in the air, for a meeting of rare weight was about to take place.
Inside a timber hall overlooking the harbor, Li Wei sat at a long table with several officials of Goguryeo, of course, they were from the Lie Clan Supervision Bureau, men whose quiet authority marked them as more than mere bureaucrats.
Across from them sat Gongsun Gong, the northern noble whose loyalty to the Hengyuan Dynasty was proven but whose eyes still carried the cautious sharpness of one who measured every word.
And beside him, dressed in the regal garb of his station, was King Jinji of Gaya. His face, broad and weathered, betrayed little at first, but his eyes, narrowed slightly as they flicked from Li Wei to the Goguryeo officials, were keen with thought.
For this was the first time he had seen Li Wei, and through him, he saw clearly what had long been hidden. Goguryeo had no free power. It was a vessel, a mask. Behind it loomed the true shadow, the Hengyuan Dynasty.
The realization struck him heavily. The careful manipulations, the sudden strength of Goguryeo, the exclusion of Gaya from the defensive pact that should have bound Baekje, Silla, and Gaya together, he saw the threads now, threads woven not by accident but by design.
The Hengyuan Dynasty had orchestrated for it all to happen from the start. One by one, the peninsula's kingdoms were being maneuvered into isolation, primed for conquest. Baekje first, then Silla, and finally… Gaya.
His heart tightened with unease. Even here, in his own port, he felt the weight of that vast power pressing upon him.
Li Wei, however, was composed as ever. He spoke smoothly with Gongsun Gong, his voice calm, almost conversational, though every word carried intent.
"You've seen the island's security yourself," Li Wei said, his fingers brushing idly against a map laid out before them. "Tell me, can the defenses hold? And more importantly, can the Silla translator we've secured be trusted?"
He leaned back slightly, his eyes flicking toward the young man standing nervously at the edge of the hall, the appointed translator who was to bridge their words with the emissaries of Yamatai.
"I can understand them well enough," Li Wei admitted, "for their tongue shares roots with that of Goguryeo. But in matters of such consequence, similarity is not certainty. A single twisted phrase can alter the course of kingdoms. I will not gamble His Majesty's designs on a half learned tongue, it would only lead us to destruction."
Gongsun Gong inclined his head, his expression thoughtful.
King Jinji, however, remained silent. He studied Li Wei not as an ally, but as a man trying to peer through mist at the shape of an oncoming storm.
Gongsun Gong did not answer at once. He sat quietly, fingers steepled, eyes lowered in thought as if weighing Li Wei's concerns with the gravity of a judge considering a verdict. Only when the silence stretched thin did he finally raise his head and speak, his voice steady and assured.
"All of the translators we employ have been tested thoroughly," he said. "Not once, not twice, but numerous times. Their loyalties, their pasts, even the cadences of their speech. Nothing is left unchecked. You know well, Lord Li Wei, that the Oriole Agents see to such matters. It is their craft to ensure no flaw escapes the eye."
At the mention of the Orioles, that shadowed web of the Hengyuan Dynasty's intelligence network, Li Wei's brow eased slightly. He leaned back in his chair, studying Gongsun Gong with those sharp, unblinking eyes that had a way of piercing through a man's words to the marrow beneath.
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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