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And still, the unknown waits across the plain. Meanwhile, to the east, the messenger's party rode hard along a trail beaten by Gongsun Gong's scouts. The wind smelled of brine and wild grass, and the surf's distant thunder mingled with the snort of horses.
The messenger's party rode in tense silence, the only sounds the crunch of their horses' hooves on the stony path and the cry of distant gulls. The Goguryeo banner flapped softly above them, a square of bold color against the green and grey landscape.
As they neared the eastern side of the island, the vegetation changed, and the signs of another presence became evident: trampled grass, the distant smell of woodsmoke, and then, the sight of patrols.
Two Yamatai soldiers emerged from a copse of trees. They were shorter than the Goguryeo men, but stocky and muscular, clad in lacquered leather armor. Their faces were broad, their eyes watchful beneath helmets adorned with subtle, sea based motifs. They held spears at a cautious, ready angle.
The messenger immediately raised a hand,halting his group. "Slow!" He then gestured, and one of his guards lifted the white flag of parley higher, while another held the Goguryeo banner steady. The messenger kept his hands visible and empty.
The patrol approached cautiously, and the Yamatai soldiers studied them for a long, silent moment. Words were useless here. After a tense pause, one of them jerked his head, a clear, universal signal to follow. The Goguryeo party fell in behind them, their pace slowed to that of the foot soldiers.
The Yamatai camp was a stark contrast to their own. It was less about orderly rows and more about organic clustering, as if it had grown from the earth itself. The tents were of a different design, lower and seemingly more resilient to wind.
The air smelled of salt, smoked fish, and a peculiar, faintly spicy scent unfamiliar to the Goguryeo men. Guards stood at the perimeter, their expressions inscrutable. A ripple of alertness went through the camp at their arrival, but it was met with disciplined curiosity, not alarm.
Their escorts led them to the center of the camp where a larger, more ornate tent stood. As they dismounted, a man emerged. He was clearly the emissary, his robes were of finer quality, dyed in deep indigo and embroidered with intricate, swirling patterns that evoked waves and whirlpools.
His bearing was erect, his face a mask of composed authority. Beside him was another man, whose features immediately marked him as from the peninsula. He was Silla, without a doubt.
The messenger bowed respectfully, a gesture Han Myeong mirrored precisely. "I bring greetings and a missive from the esteemed Director Li Wei of the Goguryeo Lie Clan Supervision Bureau," Han Myeong translated, his voice calm and clear.
The Yamatai emissary listened, his dark eyes missing nothing. He gave a short, sharp nod and replied in his own language, a series of clipped, rhythmic syllables.
The Silla translator beside him then spoke. "I'm Jin, and this is the honorable emissary of the Shaman Queen, Lord Kaito, welcomes you and accepts your message." His Silla was fluent, but carried a distinct, unfamiliar accent, likely shaped by years in Yamatai.
The messenger stepped forward and presented the sealed letter with both hands. Lord Kaito accepted it with a similar formality, his fingers brushing the jade seal of Goguryeo. His eyes lingered on it for a fraction of a second too long, taking in its detail.
With the exchange complete, the messenger bowed again. "We await your response. May the winds favor our meeting." Han Myeong translated the polite farewell.
They were escorted back out of the camp with the same silent efficiency. Only when they were a hundred paces away did the messenger let out a slow, controlled breath he hadn't realized he'd been holding.
Back in the center of the camp, Lord Kaito stood holding the letter. He turned and handed it not to an aide, but directly to his Silla translator.
"Well, Jin? What does it say?" His own command of the Silla language was functional for trade and basic commands, but the nuances of high diplomatic prose were beyond him. He could speak enough to get by, but he could not read the dance of formal characters.
The translator named Jin broke the seal and unrolled the parchment. His eyes scanned the text quickly, then again more slowly. "It is from the Goguryeo official, Li Wei. He proposes a meeting. In two days' time. At a neutral location on the plain between our camps. He comes as a mediator, under the auspices of Gaya, to discuss… matters of mutual interest between our great peoples." Jin's voice was neutral, carefully filtering out any of his own opinion.
Lord Kaito's lips thinned. "Goguryeo… and Gaya. Mediators." He snorted softly, the sound dismissive. "They sit on a land that is not theirs and speak of mediation. And this location? This 'neutral ground'?"
"It appears to be precisely midway between our camp, my lord," Jin said.
"Nothing is ever precise, or neutral, with mainlanders," Kaito murmured, his gaze turning westward, as if he could see through the hills to the Goguryeo camp and the mind of the man who led it.
He knew the game that was being played. The letter was just the first move. The meeting would be the second. And he was eager to see what the third would be.
Meanwhile, thhe wind had shifted by the time Han Myeong and his party rode back toward the Goguryeo encampment. Nightfall had begun to stretch its long fingers across the plain, painting the sky in muted shades of violet and indigo.
The horses' hooves struck sparks against the occasional stone, a lonely rhythm against the vast emptiness of Jeju-do's windswept hills. In the distance, gulls circled low over the shoreline, their cries fading into the dusk.
Han Myeong's thoughts, however, were far from the beauty of the twilight. His mind replayed every detail of the meeting, the sharp, assessing gaze of Lord Kaito, the stiff formality of the Silla noble standing like a shadow at his side, and the subtle weight in the way the Yamatai emissary had lingered on the jade seal of Goguryeo. That was no idle curiosity. That was the look of a man measuring worth, power, and intent.
When the glow of the Goguryeo campfires appeared on the horizon, relief loosened the knot in Han Myeong's chest. The rows of tents stood like silent sentinels, their peaks etched in orange light as torches burned at regular intervals. Soldiers moved in purposeful patterns, their armor gleaming dully beneath the flames.
The scent of smoke and boiled millet drifted through the air, mingling with the tang of the sea. It smelled like home, or as close to home as this foreign soil would allow.
They passed the outer cordon, the sentries saluting crisply as the party approached. The messenger gave them a nod but said nothing, there was no time for pleasantries. His duty now was to deliver what he had learned to the man who needed it most.
Han Myeong swung down from his horse the moment they reached the main command tent. He adjusted his robes, dusted the grit from his sleeves, and stepped inside with the solemn precision of a man entering a sanctum.
The tent was warm, lit by the steady glow of oil lamps and the gentle flicker of a brazier in the corner. Shadows danced across the canvas walls, softening the sharp edges of the campaign maps spread across the central table.
There, leaning slightly over the maps with a brush in hand, stood Li Wei. His figure was a study in composed intellect, slender, immaculately groomed despite the rough conditions, his expression serene yet edged with a quiet intensity that hinted at the storm of calculations within.
Han Myeong dropped to one knee, bowing deeply. "Director."
Li Wei set the brush down with deliberate care and turned his gaze upon the returning emissary. His eyes, clear and cold as a winter stream, swept over Han Myeong and his dust streaked garments before softening by a fraction.
"Rise," he said, his voice calm but carrying the authority of one accustomed to command. "You have returned sooner than I anticipated. That is… promising."
Han Myeong stood and clasped his hands respectfully before him. "The meeting with the Yamatai emissary is concluded. I bring my full report."
Li Wei inclined his head slightly, gesturing toward the low table beside him. "Sit, and speak."
Han Myeong obeyed, lowering himself to the mat. He began with the formalities, the exchange of greetings, the delivery of the letter, then moved to the details that mattered. He spoke of Lord Kaito, his posture, his words, the way his fingers had brushed the seal with almost imperceptible scrutiny.
He described the camp layout, its organic sprawl, its pragmatic design for harsh winds, and the disciplined calm of the soldiers. "They are not careless," Han Myeong concluded, his tone grave. "They are fewer than us, perhaps by a third, but every man moves with purpose. This is not a rabble drawn by coin. These are warriors steeped in a culture of obedience."
Li Wei's fingers drummed lightly against the table as he absorbed each word. His expression did not change, but his eyes flickered with the glint of new patterns forming, lines of strategy stretching beyond the canvas walls.
"There is more," Han Myeong continued, his voice dropping a degree. "Beside Lord Kaito stood a man of Silla stock. His bearing… was not that of a mere servant or interpreter. He had the air of one who once commanded halls, not tents. His robes, though simple compared to Kaito's, bore the weave of a noble house. And his tongue—" Han Myeong paused, recalling the cadence of the man's speech, "—was the tongue of Silla's court. He called himself Jin."
Li Wei's brow arched ever so slightly. "A noble in exile."
Han Myeong nodded. "I believe so. Perhaps one close to the royal line. There are whispers, as you know, that the Yamatai court shelters the Silla's royal family and also high ranking personnel and their family. If that is true…"
"Then their claim to legitimacy does not end at the sea," Li Wei finished for him, his voice soft, almost musing. He leaned back, the lamplight catching on the polished surface of his jade clasp.
"This is valuable, Han Myeong. More valuable than you realize. The presence of such a man changes the tone of any negotiation. Yamatai does not merely speak for themselves, they may claim to speak for Silla reborn."
Han Myeong bowed again, cupping his hands. "I live to serve, Director."
Li 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.
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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