Capítulo 1007: 956. The Final Step Started
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The trap had been sprung, and he was at the bottom of it, watching the last light of his reign being blotted out by the silhouettes of the men who had dug the pit. The path to abdication, once a distant possibility, now stretched before him, paved with the bloody cobblestones of his own cities and the cold diplomacy of a doomed alliance.
The heavy, ornate door to the emperor’s study clicked shut, sealing Emperor Xian in a tomb of his own making. Outside, in the hushed, lamp lit corridor, the atmosphere shifted instantly from one of theatrical tension to one of quiet, professional satisfaction.
Zhuge Liang and Lu Xun stood a few paces away, their postures relaxing from the rigid formality they had displayed before the emperor. Moments later, the door opened again.
Fa Zheng emerged first, his steps measured, his face carefully arranged into something between relief and solemnity. Zhang Song followed, eyes sharp, already calculating how the next hours would unfold. Meng Da came last, his jaw set, satisfaction flickering briefly before being buried beneath practiced restraint.
Fa Zheng then approached the two Hengyuan envoys first, offering a respectful, shallow bow that was genuine in its gratitude.
“Master Zhuge Liang, Master Lu Xun,” Fa Zheng said, his voice low and smooth. “Our deepest thanks. Your performance was… impeccable. The timing, the tone, the unspoken threat of withdrawal, it painted the final brushstroke on the canvas of his despair. He now believes the alliance, his last lifeline, is irrevocably severed. The psychological blow is complete. Now… Han’s fall will appear legitimate in the eyes of the world.”
Zhang Song nodded, a rare, genuine smile touching his lips. “Indeed. To make the victim believe his rescuer is abandoning him… it is a cruelty that borders on artistry.”
Meng Da simply grunted in agreement, his arms crossed, the military man’s appreciation for a perfectly executed maneuver clear in his eyes. “The illusion of choice has been shattered.”
Zhuge Liang acknowledged their thanks with a slight wave of his closed fan. His expression was calm, but there was a subtle gravity in his eyes that tempered any sense of celebration. “It was necessary for the plan we all serve,” he replied, his voice measured. “Our duty is to Emperor Hongyi and the future of the Hengyuan Dynasty. Ensuring a smooth, legitimate seeming transition in Yi Province is paramount.”
He paused, his gaze sweeping over the three conspirators. The corridor was empty save for them, but he lowered his voice nonetheless. “However, there is one message I must impress upon you, on behalf of the broader vision His Majesty holds.”
Fa Zheng’s sharp eyes focused intently. “Please, Master Zhuge Liang. We are listening.”
“The chaos is a means to an end,” Zhuge Liang said, each word deliberate. “It is the fire that melts the old, stubborn shape of Han so it can be recast. But a fire left unchecked becomes a conflagration that consumes everything, even the valuable timber and ore we wish to salvage.”
He looked from Fa Zheng to Zhang Song to Meng Da, ensuring he had their full attention. “You must bring this to a conclusion with all possible speed. The moment Emperor Xian is removed, the instability must be quelled. Not with more violence, but with the immediate announcement of Hengyuan’s peaceful annexation and the restoration of order.”
Lu Xun, standing beside Zhuge Liang, added his quiet voice. “Innocent blood is a currency that spends poorly in the ledger of heaven and the hearts of men. Too much of it stains the ground upon which a new ruler must stand. His Majesty wishes to inherit a province, not a graveyard. The atmosphere of his arrival should be one of relief and hope, not the lingering stench of suffering and rage.”
The words were not a rebuke, but a stark reminder of the ultimate objective. They were not here to simply destroy Han, they were here to seamlessly absorb it into a greater whole. Excessive collateral damage would make that absorption painful and resentful.
Fa Zheng absorbed the message, his mind already calculating adjustments. He bowed his head again, this time deeper. “Your wisdom guides us, Master Zhuge Liang. We understand completely.” He turned slightly to his companions. “Isn’t that right?”
Zhang Song nodded solemnly. “The message is received and will be remembered. The plan accelerates from this moment. The goal is not prolonged suffering, but decisive political collapse.”
Meng Da’s voice was a low rumble. “The troops are poised. The moment the people breach the psychological barrier and march on the palace itself, we move. The ‘defense’ will be staged, the ‘surrender’ vote will be unanimous. The chaos will be shut off like a tap.”
Satisfied, Zhuge Liang gave a final nod. “Then our work here is done. Master Lu Xun and I will prepare to return to Xiapi. His Majesty is eager for news, and Yi Province has long been a jewel he wished to see set properly in the crown of Hengyuan.” With a final exchange of respectful glances, the two envoys turned and walked down the corridor, their footsteps fading into the palace’s vast silence.
Fa Zheng watched them go, then turned to Zhang Song and Meng Da, his expression sharpening back into its natural state of cold command. “We advance the timeline,” he stated. “The emperor’s spirit is broken. The Hengyuan’s act has been dangled and withdrawn. The people’s anger is at a boil. We apply the final heat. Let us ensure the pot overflows… tomorrow.”
Two days later, the cauldron of Yi Province did not just overflow; it shattered.
The mass unrest had fermented into a raw, bloody frenzy. The clashes between rioting citizens and the “imperial” forces grew more frequent and brutal. The “bandit” raids continued, spreading a pervasive sense of lawlessness that made the government seem not just oppressive, but utterly incapable. Fear and hunger had curdled into a collective, reckless fury.
The catalyst, when it came, was a masterpiece of staged barbarity. In a large square near the palace district, where a tense standoff had persisted for hours, a city guard captain, a man secretly loyal to Meng Da, selected his moment.
An elderly couple, too slow to move back with the surging crowd, found themselves separated at the front of the protest line. The captain stepped forward, his face a grotesque mask of official cruelty. Without a word, he raised his heavy baton and brought it down on the old man’s head.
The crack was sickeningly loud. As the old man crumpled, the woman cried out, throwing herself over him. The captain kicked her in the ribs, then delivered another blow to her back.
He then stepped back, his voice ringing out over the sudden, horrified silence. “Let this be a warning from His Majesty, Emperor Xian!” he bellowed, spitting the name like a curse. “Stand down! Go back to your hovels! Or a harsher punishment awaits every last one of you!”
For a heartbeat, there was absolute stillness, broken only by the old woman’s weak sobs over her husband’s still form. Then, a sound rose from the crowd, not a shout, but a deep, guttural roar of pure, unadulterated hatred.
The last thread of restraint snapped. The protest was no longer about taxes or injustice; it was about blood. The crowd surged forward not as petitioners, but as avengers.
What followed was not a battle, but a choreographed retreat. The city guards and imperial soldiers, under strict orders, put up a show of resistance just long enough to make the push seem hard won, then fell back in a “rout,” funneling the enraged mob straight toward the one place that symbolized all their woes, the Imperial Palace.
As the roaring tide of people crashed against the outer gates of the palace complex, an emergency court session was being convened within the main hall.
Emperor Xian had been “summoned”, a polite term for being escorted by stone faced guards who answered to Meng Da. He sat on his throne, a pale, trembling figure amidst the panicked chatter of the assembled officials. The sounds of the mob, a distant thunder at first, grew louder, a terrifying physical pressure against the palace walls.
Fa Zheng stepped into the center of the hall. All eyes turned to him. His face was a portrait of grave, statesmanlike distress. “Your Majesty! Honored ministers!” he called out, his voice cutting through the noise. “The people… they are at the gates! They are not just rioting, they are demanding your abdication! They cry out that you have become a tyrant, that your edicts have bled them dry, that your indifference has sown chaos across the land!”
The words were a precisely aimed dagger. Emperor Xian stared, his mouth agape. A torrent of rage, humiliation, and helplessness choked him. He shot to his feet, his finger pointing a shaking accusation at Fa Zheng. “LIES! ALL LIES!” he screamed, his voice cracking.
“These edicts, these taxes, this violence… they were your doing! Yours and your conspirators’! I tried to stop you! I pleaded with this court! You have used my name, my seal, to commit these atrocities, and now you dare to lay the blame at my feet?!”
His outburst echoed in the suddenly silent hall. Many officials looked away, doesn’t care or scoffed at him. Others, those in on the conspiracy, watched with cold indifference. Fa Zheng did not flinch. He met the emperor’s furious gaze with an expression of pained disappointment.
“Your Majesty is understandably distraught,” Fa Zheng said, his tone dripping with false sympathy. “But the seal on the tax decrees was yours. The order for the suppression bore your insignia. The people outside do not see our private counsels. They see the results. They see suffering, and they see the throne from which that suffering emanates.”
He spread his hands, a gesture of tragic inevitability. “The mandate of heaven… it is not given by birthright alone. It is maintained through the welfare of the people. And the people… have spoken.”
As if on cue, a thunderous crash echoed from the direction of the main gate, followed by a renewed surge of angry shouts. The palace shuddered. The carefully staged “breach” was beginning.
The trap, engineered over weeks with rumors, economic torture, and staged violence, had finally sprung its final, inescapable jaws. Emperor Xian stood alone on his dais, surrounded by the men who had orchestrated his ruin, hearing the roars of the people he had failed to protect, a people who had been systematically turned against him.
The path forward was no longer a path. It was a cliff edge, and the three foxes were there, not to push him, but to politely suggest he jump before the mob arrived to tear him apart. The vote for the future of Han was about to begin, and he already knew its result.
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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
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Reborn In The Three Kingdoms-Chapter 1007: 956. The Final Step Started
Chapter 1007
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