âThatâs easy for you to say. Yanzhou is the closest to Cangzhou, but the garrison there is also the army closest to the capital city. If the Yanzhou garrison is detached there and something happens in this city, they would never be able to make it back here in time.â
âThen who do you suggest we send? Yanzhou and the capital city are the only two cities near Cangzhou. Currently there are not enough troops in the latter, which means we either have Yanzhou send backup or watch the Cangzhou uprising get out of control!â
These people directly started quarreling with each other at the court meeting. Half of them advocated detaching Yanzhou garrison to Cangzhou, while the other half believed Yanzhou garrison should stay put.
âHis Majesty is still in a coma. If we donât figure out a way to tackle the issue of Cangzhou right away, Iâm afraid before long we are going to have some serious problems,â Zhao Zheng the Minister of War observed and then looked at Yuwen Tong. âWhat do you think, Marshal?â
On hearing his remarks, all the others at the meeting fell silent and shifted their gaze to Yuwen Tong.
Previously, Yuwen Tong had never expressed his opinions on this kind of matters, and most courtiers were uncertain of his position. Now that Zhao Zheng was asking Yuwen Tong about it, they immediately quieted down, intending to hear what Yuwen Tong would answer.
âRight now the Northern City Garrison Battalion is the only security force stationed in the capital city. They are not only guarding the imperial palace and city gates but also patrolling streets, despite the fact that theyâre badly short-handed. If any foreign enemies launch an attack on this city, we might not be able to defend against it, so the garrison in this city must not be drafted elsewhere.
Sending the military presence in Yanzhou is feasible. Yanzhou is the closest to Cangzhou. If we donât quash the rebellion in Cangzhou, sooner or later it will spill over to Yanzhou, so we must dispatch Yanzhou garrison there. Itâs just that there are two problems facing us.â
Those against detaching the garrison in Yanzhou were just about to speak when the Right Prime Minister and Zhao Zheng started talking.
âYouâve got a point, Marshal. The issue of Cangzhou is of utmost urgency. Once General Dai fails to hold back those rioters, it would be the capital city rather than Yanzhou thatâd be in the gravest peril. Given the severity of the incident that happened here a few days ago, we canât say for sure that it hasnât come to the knowledge of leaders of the rebel army. If by any chance they decide to attack this city, itâd be very difficult for us to defend against them with the men we have at our disposal, and weâd be forced to draft the garrisons in other cities here. Since drafting security forces in other cities is inevitable, we might as well launch a pre-emptive strike instead of deploying defense. Finishing the insurrectionary army once and for all is the only way to ensure long-time security.â
These words rendered those courtiers speechless. After all, the capital city was now indeed quite vulnerable and in dire danger.
âMay I ask what the two problems are, Marshal?â
After they quieted down, Yuwen Tong continued, âThe first one is that we need His Majestyâs authorization to detach the army in Yanzhou. As you all know, His Majesty passed out this morning and still hasnât come to yet. According to the director of the imperial hospital, his prognosis is rather gloomy, which means how to get his authorization is going to be a problem. The second one is that the commander of the garrison in Yanzhou is no less incompetent than Dai Cheng. If he leads the garrison to Cangzhou to back up Dai Cheng, Iâm afraid the only thing he would be doing there is get his men killed by the rebel force for nothing.â
âUh...â
âAside from that, we donât really know how the situation in Cangzhou is specifically, and neither do any of us know the real reason why Dai Chen got hurt, or any details about the insurrectionary army. The intelligence reports from Cangzhou are somewhat vague and ambiguous. I worry that the rebel army is not the only problem in Cangzhou â there might have been some changes in the garrison of Cangzhou, so the leader of the reinforcements must be someone having enough authority to have the officers toe the line.â
After hearing Yuwen Tongâs words, many courtiers at the meeting broke out in a cold sweat. Thereâd been some changes in the garrison of Cangzhou?
Then the capital city... Was the capital city still safe?
What with the spate of unforeseen events that had happened in the capital city recently, these courtiers were all like frightened birds and had no sense of security whatsoever.
âI volunteer for the mission.â Someone suddenly stepped up. It was the General Zhongwu (AKA the General of Loyalty and Valor) who was already in his fifties.
All courtiersâ eyes flashed in his direction. Yuwen Tong also looked at the General Zhongwu and gave a smile. âI was just about to suggest you.â
On hearing this remark of Yuwen Tongâs, the courtiers came to know that the General Zhongwu being the commander of the reinforcements sent to Cangzhou was now a sure thing.
Someone proposed Yuwen Tong be the leader, but the Right Prime Minister and Zhao Zheng objected to it and the proposer had to give up.
âNow that weâve got a commander, the only thing we need is His Majestyâs authorization. Which one of Your Lordships is willing to talk to His Majesty about it?â said Yuwen Tong after his eyes swept across everybody present.
âIâll go. Lord Zhao, Lord Liu, how about you two go with me?â
âItâd be a pleasure, Right Prime Minister.â
Currently, all civil officials were looking to the Right Prime Minister for leadership. Owing to the attempted usurpation, half of the courtiers had been executed, and the emperor was unconscious. None of the vacancies in the imperial court had been filled, so the court seemed rather empty and bleak, and not many of the courtiers were competent enough to help improve the situation.
The Right Prime Minister, accompanied by the Minister of War and the Assistant Minister of Revenue, paid a visit to the imperial bedchamber. When they walked out, all their faces clouded over with deep apprehension.
âWhaâWhat happened, Your Lordships? Did you get His Majestyâs authorization?â
âHis Majesty is still comatose, and a court physician said that His Majesty probably... didnât have much time left. Heâs been relying heavily on medication to keep himself alive, and now Iâm afraid it wonât be long before he breathes his last.â
At this juncture?! Everybody at the court meeting exclaimed in shock, their hearts sinking so low that they felt as though the bottoms had dropped out of their stomachs.
âThe Ministry of Rites... has got to start making preparations.â
âI see,â the Minister of Rites answered and then exchanged glances with Yuwen Feng.
âWhat should we do now? Without His Majestyâs authorization, nobody could detach the garrison in Yanzhou.â Now everybody came to realize that the issue had got tricky.
Subconsciously, these people shifted their gaze to Yuwen Tong, who hadnât shown a single sign of alarm and had been unhurried and collected all along from the very beginning. As though he was their âstability anchorâ, they all started to depend on him in spite of themselves.
âAre there any other adult members of the imperial clan?â Yuwen Tong looked at the Right Prime Minister.
The Right Prime Minister looked back at him, made a slight bow and replied, âOnly an uncle of His Majestyâs. Heâs in his nineties and has been lying in bed to nurse his illness since last year. Also, his mind is not very clear. He frequently mistakes people for others and has a memory like a sieve. Itâs very inadvisable to put him in charge.â
There had originally been more members in the imperial clan, but because of the emperorâs suspicious mind and his sudden changes of mood lately, he had had almost all of them executed on various pretexts. Just a few days ago, an imperial member involved in the King Duanâs attempted usurpation was beheaded.
As things stood, to put it simply, the two underage princes were the only candidates.
When almost everybody was at their witsâ end, someone stepped up and suggested, âWe might as well have the Eighth Prince make the decision.â
âThe Eighth Prince is only ten. What could he possibly do to help?â
âBut what choice do we have? The Great Yue has reached a point where its very existence is at stake!â
âFaugh! The way I see it, youâre just doing this for your own gain. Everybody knows youâre the Eighth Princeâs grandfather.â
âYouâ!â
âThatâs enough,â said Yuwen Tong flintily.
The hall fell silent again.
âLetâs invite the Eighth Prince to this meeting.â
With his back to the others, the Right Prime Minister looked up at Yuwen Tong, puzzlement in his eyes.
Yuwen Tongâs countenance remained unchanged. After giving it some thought, the Right Prime Minister said, âOkay, then. Letâs hear what the Eighth Prince has to say.â
Aside from anything else, the Eighth Prince was just an underage prince. His mother hadnât been in the emperorâs good graces for many years, and his motherâs family wasnât very powerful. He himself used to be under the shadows of his many big brothers, striking people as rather weak.
When he entered the hall, his face was still a little pale. His eyes raked the courtiers and then moved to Yuwen Tong, and with that he walked up and said, âMarshal.â
âItâs an honor to meet you, Your Highness,â said Yuwen Tong.
After the Right Prime Minister briefed the Eighth Prince on what was at issue, the latter paled even further and also appeared somewhat scared. âBut... I donât have a clue how to deal with this kind of thing, and neither can I right an imperial edict.â
âThe Right Prime Minister will draft the imperial edict for you. All you have to do is stamp the imperial seal on it,â observed Yuwen Tong.
âThe imperial seal?â The Eighth Prince was flustered.
The others also looked at Yuwen Tong. âMarshal, itâs inappropriate for anybody other than His Majesty to touch the Privy Seal, isnât it?â
âHow about you find us a better way of solving this tricky problem?â Yuwen Tong looked at him.
Unconvinced as the speaker was, he had no choice but to shut his mouth.
After all, the Right Prime Minister and the couple of ministers raised no objections to this. Given that all the top-ranking courtiers were keeping silent, he felt that as an inferior official, heâd better keep his mouth shut.
The Right Prime Minister drafted an imperial edict, and then the Eighth Prince was brought to the imperial bedchamber. When they exited it, the imperial edict in the Right Prime Ministerâs hand bore the imperial seal.
The General Zhongwu took the imperial edict and left.
All courtiers in the hall raised their hands to wipe the sweat from their foreheads, feeling that the circumstances in which things had gone at this meeting were rather suspicious, but they were also fully aware that at this point in time, there was no way to look into the details.
They had found a solution to the issue of Cangzhou, but it meant that there would be no garrison left in any of the cities near the capital...
...
In the Ling Mansion.
âHave some rest. Are you hungry? Theyâll serve lunch soon,â said Ling Zhang, proffering Yuwen Tong a cup of tea.
Yuwen Tong took it, drank the cup of tea in one gulp, exhaled deeply and replied, âThe garrison of Yanzhou were detached. Barring accidents, theyâll be able to hold back the rebel army in Cangzhou for some time.â
âHowâs everything going in Cangzhou exactly?â asked Ling Zhang.
âDai Cheng is wounded. Wang Cai took advantage of the opportunity and took command of half of the army. Troops are not happy about it, but thereâs nothing they could do, because heâs got an imperial edict. On top of that, Wang Cai did a lot of things behind Dai Chengâs back that the rioters found provocative, which was the very cause of the turmoil that happened afterwards,â said Yuwen Tong.
âSurely it wonât get out of hand?â Ling Zhang was worried.
âThe General Zhongwu has set out for Cangzhou, so thereâs nothing to worry about. Heâs far more capable than Dai Cheng,â observed Yuwen Tong.
âHe is? But I have barely heard of him,â said Ling Zhang.
âThatâs because you donât know that he used to be my fatherâs comrade-in-arms and they performed some wartime exploits together. Itâs just that after I achieved fame, the emperor transferred him back to the capital city to let him live out his life in retirement,â said Yuwen Tong.
Ling Zhangâs eyes dilated with astonishment. âAre you saying that heâs actually an old acquaintance of yours?â
Yuwen Tong inclined his head. âIâll tell you more about it another time. Anyway, with him being in Cangzhou, the situation will be stabilized. From the vantage point of the present, the emperor wouldnât last long. In all likelihood, heâll kick the bucket in a day or two, and when he does, news will soon spread through the whole country, and troublemakers will emerge from all sides. Iâve already taken adequate preparations in the south, but the north... is the most part.â
Ling Zhangâs brows were furrowed at these words. He had a lot of questions to ask, but...
âThen what do we do? The emperorâs death will leave the imperial court leaderless. Itâs very likely that the Eighth Prince will be enthroned by the courtiers, right?â
âCurrently, there is but one person whose words carry weight with the imperial court.â
âWho is it?â
Yuwen Tong looked at him. âMe, of course. Who else could it be?â