Capítulo 916: 873. To Create Champa Auxiliary Army & The Political Act Continues
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Go to Lieutenant said nothing. There was nothing left to say. He had done what he thought was right, and it had led here, to bondage. As he was led away to join the long, shuffling column of prisoners, he took one last look at the battlefield, a field of broken dreams, where the hope of home had died beneath the hooves of an enemy’s horse.
The silence that settled over the battlefield after the last weapon fell was profound, broken only by the moans of the wounded and the harsh, rhythmic commands of the Shi Clan soldiers as they began the grim work of processing their victory.
The Lieutenant, his hands bound tightly before him, was led away without a backward glance. The weight of his decision was a physical burden, bowing his head as he joined the long, shuffling column of his men. The dream of returning to Vijaya had evaporated, replaced by the uncertain future of a prisoner of war.
Shi Zhi remained atop his horse, his chest still heaving slightly from the exertion of the charge and the final, tense confrontation. He watched as his infantrymen moved with practiced efficiency through the field. They were not cruel, but they were firm.
Prisoners were searched, their remaining personal effects confiscated, and their hands bound with coarse rope.
The wounded were separated, with the Shi Clan’s own physicians beginning the triage, tending to both their own men and the captured Champa soldiers, a pragmatic mercy, as a live prisoner was more valuable than a dead one, and a well treated one had a higher chance of switching allegiances.
After a time, a captain approached Shi Zhi, saluting smartly. “General Shi Zhi,” the man reported, his voice crisp. “The initial count is complete. We have taken approximately five thousand prisoners. Our own losses were light, as expected. Mostly minor injuries from the scuffle. The enemy’s will was broken before we even struck.”
Shi Zhi nodded slowly, his gaze sweeping over the vast, dejected horde of captives. “Five thousand…,” he murmured to himself. “More than enough.” In his mind’s eye, he no longer saw defeated enemies, he saw the foundation of a new Champa Auxiliary Corps.
He saw laborers to rebuild the fortifications, porters for the supply lines, and eventually, soldiers who would fight under the Hengyuan Dynasty banner, their knowledge of the local terrain and customs making them invaluable. It was a cold calculus, but it was the calculus of empire building that Zhou Yu had so masterfully taught them.
“Secure them all,” Shi Zhi ordered. “Gather every usable weapon, every scrap of armor. Then, see to the dead. Our brothers are to be buried with honor. The dead Champa soldiers… burn them honorably. It is more efficient and will prevent disease.” He had no desire to desecrate the fallen, it was simply a matter of logistics and hygiene. The respect would be shown to the living, through the offer he was about to extend.
The cleanup took hours. The sun climbed higher, baking the field and the scent of blood and dust into the air. Finally, with the prisoners formed into a long, guarded column and the pyres for the enemy dead sending thick, dark smoke into the sky, Shi Zhi gave the order to return to the fort. The gates, which had opened to unleash a whirlwind of cavalry, now opened to receive a river of captives.
Inside, Shi Xin and Shi Hui were waiting. Shi Xin stood on the ramparts, his expression one of quiet satisfaction as he watched the procession file in. Shi Hui, meanwhile, was practically vibrating with nervous energy, his mind already racing over the linguistic and diplomatic challenges ahead.
As Shi Zhi dismounted and approached his brothers, Shi Xin clapped him on the shoulder. “A clean victory, Brother. You managed it perfectly. More prisoners than I dared hope for.”
“Their spirit was broken the moment they decided to run,” Shi Zhi replied, wiping sweat and grime from his brow. “The hard part begins now.”
Shi Hui nodded eagerly. “We must begin the recruitment immediately. While the shock of their capture is still fresh, and the memory of their own leaders’ failure is raw. That is when their loyalty will be most easily redirected.”
The three brothers made their way to the central courtyard of the fort, where the five thousand Champa prisoners had been gathered. The men stood in a packed, silent mass, their faces a mosaic of fear, exhaustion, and simmering resentment. The Lieutenant stood at the front, his head held higher now, a flicker of defiant pride returning to his eyes as he faced his captors.
Shi Xin stepped forward, his voice projecting across the courtyard with calm authority. He did not shout; he spoke as a statesman, a man offering a new path.
“Soldiers of Champa!” he began, pausing as his words were translated by a scholar who had been part of their expedition. “You have fought bravely. You followed your orders until the very end. There is no shame in your defeat today. The shame lies with the leaders who squandered your lives in a futile siege.”
He let that accusation hang in the air, seeing heads nod slightly among the prisoners. They knew the truth of it.
“But today marks not an end, but a new beginning,” Shi Xin continued, his tone shifting from condemnation to offer. “The Hengyuan Dynasty is not here merely to conquer. We are here to build. To bring order, prosperity, and a lasting peace to these lands. And we invite you to be a part of that future.”
He outlined the terms, his voice persuasive and steady. “Those of you who swear allegiance to the Hengyuan Dynasty will be integrated into a new Champa Auxiliary Corps. You will be given safety, far more safety than you knew in your own crumbling army. You will be given a career, with regular pay and the chance for promotion based on merit. You will be given the opportunity for riches, a share in the spoils of a stable and expanding empire.”
Then, he delivered the masterstroke, the promise designed to bypass loyalty to a king and appeal directly to the heart. “And most importantly, we offer safety and prosperity for your families. Your wives, your children, your parents. When the region is pacified, they will live under the protection of the Hengyuan Dynasty. They will know peace. They will know security. Your service to us will be the guarantee of their well being.”
It was a powerful offer. For men who had been starving, led to slaughter, and then captured, the promise of food, pay, and the safety of their loved ones was a potent lure. The Lieutenant listened, his face unreadable, but Shi Xin could see the calculation in his eyes. The man was a pragmatist. He had mutinied to save his men’s lives, would he now lead them to swear allegiance to save their futures?
The recruitment process would take days, involving individual oaths, registrations, and the gradual dismantling of old loyalties. But the seed had been planted. As Shi Xin finished speaking, he saw not just defeat in the eyes of the prisoners, but the first glimmers of consideration. The conquest of Champa was shifting from the battlefield to the human heart.
A world away, in the sophisticated, incense filled halls of the Imperial Palace, a different kind of theater was unfolding. Here, the weapons were not swords but words, and the battlefield was the chamber of the newly formed Public Deliberation Committee.
The hall was packed. The Three Excellencies and all the key Ministers of the court were present, arranged in a semi circle, creating an atmosphere of grave import.
The subject of deliberation was the most significant proposed reform in a generation, the abolition of the current system of personnel recommendation, a system rife with nepotism and factionalism, and its replacement with a dual system of a revised Nine Ranks of Imperial Officials and, more radically, an Imperial Examination open to men of talent from all backgrounds.
To the observers, particularly the conservative aristocrats and officials who benefited most from the old ways, the scene was intensely gratifying and satisfying. The debate was heated. Voices were raised, sleeves were flung in rhetorical fury, and the air crackled with intellectual conflict.
On one side, arguing passionately for the immediate finalization of the reforms, were some of the court’s most formidable minds, Jia Xu, Chen Qun, Zhuge Liang, Lu Su, Sima Yi, and Chen Gong. They spoke of meritocracy, of strengthening the dynasty by tapping into the vast reservoir of talent currently ignored, of creating a bureaucracy loyal to the state rather than to individual patrons.
Arguing for caution, for a slower, more measured approach, was the other side, Xun You, Mi Zhu, Liu Ye, the Director of the Censorate himself, Pang Tong. Their arguments were sound, designed to give the opposition hope. They spoke of the destabilizing shock of such a change, of the potential for unqualified men to game the system, of the risk that it could lead to the dynasty’s downfall if implemented poorly.
Pang Tong’s presence was key, as the head of the Censorate, his role was to root out corruption and ensure fairness. His apparent skepticism made the entire debate seem utterly genuine and believable.
The aristocrats and officials who opposed the reform watched from the edges of the hall, their faces carefully neutral but their hearts singing. They saw division at the highest levels! They saw the great Pang Tong himself urging caution! They quietly congratulated themselves, believing their system of patronage and inherited privilege was safe.
A few, emboldened by the apparent discord, even dared to approach members of the “cautious” faction during recesses, whispering encouragements, offering subtle support, and trying to sway the debate their way. They were like mice nibbling at cheese, unaware the trap was already set for them in motion.
What they failed to see were the subtle exchanges beneath the surface of the theatrical debate.
While Chen Qun and Zhuge Liang engaged in fiery public rhetoric, they also took time to speak quietly with the younger, idealistic officials in the court, those who hungered for a system based on talent. They were not debating, they were recruiting, building a silent coalition for the future.
While Mi Zhu publicly worried about financial instability, he was discreetly, in his private chambers, modeling the immense long term savings and increased tax revenue a efficient, merit based bureaucracy would bring.
While Chen Gong argued vehemently with Pang Tong in the hall, he was simultaneously drafting the initial legal edicts that would enforce the new system, the ink drying on parchment that would shatter the old order. And overseeing it all, from the solitude of his private royal study, was Lie Fan himself.
______________________________
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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