Chapter 394: The Imperial Intervention
High above the endless, senseless carnage of the Central Plains, veiled entirely from the bloody reality of the world below by impenetrable, Heaven-grade cloaking arrays, the luxurious master suite of the Flying Ship was a sanctuary of decadent, unhurried indulgence.
Alaric reclined fortably upon a massive, silk-draped lounger. The plush velvet cushions absorbed his weight as he stared out the reinforced, one-way crystal window, his long fingers idly tracing the gold-rimmed edge of a crystal wine glass filled with deep, ruby-red vintage from the Snow Moon cellars.
He had observed the slaughter for over two and a half months. The initial, sadistic amusement of watching two ‘Sons of Destiny’ hurl their armies against one another had slowly faded, replaced by the cold, pragmatic calculation of a grandmaster evaluating the remaining pieces on a heavily depleted chessboard.
‘They have bled themselves pletely dry,’ Alaric noted internally, a cold, elegant smirk curving his handsome lips. He took a slow, savoring sip of his wine, the rich liquid coating his tongue. ‘Their formidable armies are fractured into disorganized remnants. Their vast, generational resources are depleted to the dregs. The martial foundation of two entire prefectures has been ground into the mud. It is almost time to descend and collect the shattered pieces.’
He fully intended to intervene. He would wait until the very last moment, when both Long Chen and Qin Wu were hovering on the precipice of absolute exhaustion and death, and then he would crush them effortlessly. He would present himself not as a conqueror, but as the absolute, untouchable savior of the ruined prefectures, ending the madness with a wave of his hand.
Before he could finalize the mand to lower the ship’s cloaking arrays, a sharp, pulsing light illuminated the obsidian table beside his lounger.
It was his munication artifact—a sleek, rectangular device of his own creation, functioning on principles of Void magic that the martialists of this realm could not even begin to prehend. The ‘Phone’ vibrated silently, demanding his attention.
Alaric reached out and accepted the transmission.
The magical projection did not display a face, only a crest—the emblem of a high-ranking noble house situated in the very capital of the Celestial Dragon Empire. The voice that echoed respectfully from the artifact belonged to Lady Bai Suyin.
She was a mature, exquisitely elegant noblewoman, possessing the refined grace and lush, heavy curves of a woman in her prime. More importantly, she was the legally wedded wife of the Imperial Guard mander, and one of the most devout, deeply conditioned, high-ranking followers of the Pure Maiden Holy Temple.
“Divine One,” Lady Bai Suyin’s voice filtered through the artifact, her tone trembling with an intoxicating mixture of absolute reverence and desperate, conditioned need. Even miles away, transmitting her voice to the Hidden Deity made her fair skin flush and her thighs slick with arousal. “Your humble servant begs forgiveness for interrupting your celestial contemplation. But a sudden, massive mobilization has occurred within the inner courts of the Imperial Palace.”
Alaric narrowed his ruby eyes, his interest genuinely piqued. He set his wine glass down on the obsidian table. “Speak, Lady Bai Suyin. What moves in the capital?”
“The Emperor has finally lost his patience with the border lords, Divine One,” the spy reported, her voice hushed, ensuring no palace servants overheard her treasonous munion. “He has decreed an absolute, immediate end to the regional conflict. A massive, imperial army has just departed from the capital gates, marching directly for the central plains to enforce an unconditional ceasefire.”
‘It was only a matter of time,’ Alaric thought, leaning back against the silk cushions. ‘A civil war of this staggering magnitude, burning through the economic and martial lifeblood of two prefectures, disrupts the empire’s internal stability far too greatly for the throne to ignore any longer.’
“Who leads this imperial force?” Alaric asked, his tone calm, analytical, betraying none of his internal calculations.
“General Bao, Divine One,” Lady Bai Suyin reported faithfully. “He marches with two hundred thousand elite, battle-ready soldiers of the Imperial Vanguard. They are heavily armed, fully supplied, and riding spirit-steeds. They are expected to reach the epicenter of the plains within the day.”
Alaric’s cold smirk widened into a genuine, dark, highly amused grin.
General Bao. The Iron-Blood Demon. The very man whose dignified, elegant wife, Lin Ruoli, the Guildmaster of the Jade Serpent, was currently sleeping in the adjacent cabin of this very ship, her fair skin marked with Alaric’s bite marks, her mind pletely and utterly broken into that of a devoted, needy slut.
“Understood,” Alaric said, his voice a low purr. “You have done well, Lady Bai Suyin. Maintain your observation. When I arrive in the capital, your devotion will be deeply… rewarded.”
“Thank you, Divine One! I live only to serve!” she gasped, cutting the transmission before her overwhelming arousal became entirely obvious to anyone outside her chambers.
Alaric pocketed the artifact. The prospect of playing with the imperial general added a delightful, highly entertaining plication to his grand design.
He felt a soft, heavy weight press against his side.
Saintess Ceanna crawled up the length of the lounger, dragging her body against the silk. Following their intense, violent session an hour prior, she was a flushed, beautifully disheveled mess. The pristine, holy white silk robes of the High Priestess were bunched up around her waist, pletely ruined. Her fair, milky-white skin was slick with sweat and marked heavily with his claiming bruises.
She rested her head on his broad chest, her azure eyes looking up at him in absolute, fanatical devotion. Her massive, heavy breasts pressed warmly against his ribs, the sheer white silk clinging to her large, dark pink nipples.
“Is there a problem, Master?” Ceanna whispered, her voice husky, tracing the muscles of his abdomen with a delicate finger.
“No problem, Saintess,” Alaric murmured, his large hand dropping to firmly stroke her smooth, fair, incredibly curvy thighs. “Just a shift in the wind. The Emperor sends his dog to stop the dogs from biting each other.”
“Shall we descend and crush them all?” Ceanna asked eagerly, her hips shifting, rubbing her wet, swollen core against his leg.
“Not yet,” Alaric declared, his hand sliding down to squeeze her luscious, heavy buttocks, leaving a fresh red mark on the pale flesh. “We will delay our descent. I am eager to see how the exhausted, desperate heroes handle the overwhelming, disciplined might of the imperial throne. Let the Emperor’s General break their spirits a little further before I break their minds.”
“Any beauty you desire, any victory you seek, is yours by divine right,” Ceanna nodded, her fanaticism flaring brightly. She kissed his chest. “But for now, as we wait… your servant is still hungry, Master.”
“You wear the clothes of a saint, yet you beg like a tavern whore,” Alaric chuckled darkly, rolling over to pin her beneath him on the lounger.
“Only for you, Master!” Ceanna cried out in religious ecstasy as he parted her thighs. “Only for my Deity!”
Far below the clouds, the central plains were a horrific, pulverized testament to human stubbornness and absolute martial fury.
The daily slaughter was in full effect. The mud was thick, a grotesque slurry of earth, shattered weapons, and drying blood. The air was a suffocating miasma of conflicting elemental Qi, thick with the stench of ozone, burned flesh, and stagnant water.
Long Chen and Qin Wu were engaged in yet another brutal, unpromising clash, their bodies moving faster than the mortal eye could track. They were far away from their main armies, having carved out a massive, cratered arena of absolute destruction for their apex duel.
Long Chen did not utter a single demand. His previous attempts at negotiation had been met with dark Sword Qi and curses. His ocean-blue eyes were locked onto Qin Wu with lethal, unyielding intent. His Invulnerable Body, normally a blinding beacon of aquatic energy, flickered sluggishly, his reserves of Battle Aura dangerously low. His chest was covered in shallow, hastily healed lacerations, the aquatic bloodline struggling to keep up with the constant damage.
He radiated the dense, crushing pressure of the deep sea, channeling his remaining Battle Aura into his right arm. He unleashed the Blue-Silver Vine. The spirit plant whipped through the dusty air, no longer a vibrant azure but a dull, blood-stained silver. It moved like a massive, thorned serpent, seeking to pierce directly through Qin Wu’s heart.
Qin Wu was equally silent, his face a mask of brutal, exhausted determination. He gripped his heavy dark iron sword with both hands. The malevolent artifact within his Dantian, the Abyssal Soul Bead, pulsed frantically, tasting the ambient bloodshed, funneling necrotic energy into his weary muscles.
He evaded the whipping vine with terrifying, erratic speed. He utilized the ‘Phantom Step of the Void Walker,’ a footwork technique he had absorbed from a fallen Grandmaster, his body blurring into a dozen dark afterimages across the muddy terrain.
‘His physical defenses remain abnormal, even in this state,’ Qin Wu analyzed internally, his breathing ragged. ‘My wide arcs are useless against that aquatic armor. I need to bypass his exterior and strike his spiritual core directly. I must end this today. Mu Qing cannot wait any longer.’
Qin Wu planted his boots firmly into the vitrified glass of a nearby crater. He gripped his sword, his Battle Aura flaring black. He countered with a focused, lethal thrust.
“Nine-Desolations Sword Art: Soul Piercing Fang!”
Instead of a wide arc, Qin Wu sent a highly concentrated, needle-thin beam of dark, corrosive Sword Qi tearing through the air, aimed directly at the center of Long Chen’s chest.
Long Chen recognized the lethal density of the attack. He raised his left hand, invoking the blessing of his Sea God bloodline.
“Oceanic Wall of the Abyss!”
A massive, incredibly dense wall of pressurized water erupted from the earth beneath him. The water was spinning at terrifying speeds, acting as a grinding shield. The needle of dark Sword Qi struck the wall. It pierced halfway through, the corrosive energy fighting the purifying water, before dissolving with a deafening, violently loud hiss of steam.
‘He fights like a cornered, rabid beast,’ Long Chen observed coldly, his own lungs burning for air. ‘He refuses to fall. I need to find a way to trap him pletely. I cannot let him use that phantom footwork again.’
The Blue-Silver Vine retracted and instantly multiplied, sprouting dozens of secondary, razor-sharp tendrils. They shot through the steam, attempting to bind Qin Wu’s limbs and drain his remaining vitality.
Qin Wu roared, a sound of pure defiance. His dark artifact flared. He dropped his sword stance and thrust his left hand forward, executing the ‘Soul-Devouring Palm’. He grasped the thickest of the encroaching vines, forcefully absorbing its spiritual aquatic essence. The plant withered temporarily, turning gray and brittle, dropping to the mud.
Long Chen’s eyes narrowed into dangerous slits at the sight of his spirit plant taking direct spiritual damage. He had had enough. He summoned the last dregs of his Battle Aura, forming a massive, ethereal trident of pure, highly pressed water Qi. He gripped it with both hands, the weapon humming with destructive force.
Qin Wu recovered his heavy dark iron sword, coating it in the darkest, thickest shroud of necrotic Sword Qi he could muster.
They launched themselves at each other, intending to end the stalemate with one final, apocalyptic clash.
But before their weapons could meet in mid-air, the earth itself began to tremble.
It was not the localized tremor of an Earth Qi technique. It was a rhythmic, continuous, mechanical shaking that vibrated deep within the bones of every batant on the plains. It was a sound that manded absolute, terrified silence.
The daily slaughter was abruptly halted by the synchronized, earth-shattering march of two hundred thousand heavily armored boots.
From the eastern ridge, cutting through the perpetual dust storm, the Imperial Army of the Celestial Dragon Empire arrived.
They were a terrifying, awe-inspiring sight. They did not charge like the wild desert clans, nor did they flow loosely like the aquatic sects. They marched in flawless, impenetrable, interlocking block formations. Two hundred thousand men clad in uniform, highly polished, heavy steel armor that gleamed even in the dim light. They moved as a single, massive organism, their polearms raised in perfect alignment.
At the absolute vanguard of this mechanical behemoth rode General Bao.
He sat atop a massive, heavily armored spirit-steed—a Crimson-Scaled Qilin that snorted jets of hot steam from its nostrils. General Bao was a man of imposing, mountainous stature. His face was a map of old scars, hardened by decades of brutal warfare and absolute imperial discipline. He wore heavy, ornate plate armor adorned with the golden dragons of the Emperor.
General Bao did not hide his power. He radiated a suffocating, incredibly dense Battle Aura. He stood at the absolute peak of the Martial King stage, his foundation so solid, so incredibly refined, that he was merely a hair’s breadth away from the legendary Half-Step Martial Emperor realm.
His presence alone exerted a physical, crushing pressure over the battlefield. It felt as though a leaden sky had suddenly dropped upon the shoulders of the exhausted soldiers of the East and West. It forced men to drop to their knees, their weapons slipping from their tired grips, their breathing turning ragged and shallow under his overwhelming aura.
The imperial soldiers fanned out rapidly, executing plex, massive battle formations. They did not just stand in lines; their array masters linked the Battle Auras of the two hundred thousand soldiers into a singular, colossal network. It was the ‘Heavenly Dragon Subjugation Formation’, designed specifically to trap, suppress, and crush high-tier cultivators. It was a formation capable of inflicting severe, fatal injuries on even a group of Half-Step Martial Emperors if they dared to resist.
‘Such flawless, terrifying discipline,’ Qin Wu observed bitterly. He landed softly on the mud, slowly lowering the tip of his dark iron sword. His manic intensity faded into harsh, pragmatic reality. His forces were battered, starving, and bleeding. Engaging this fresh, perfectly coordinated imperial army would be utter, undeniable suicide.
‘The Emperor finally moves his hand,’ Long Chen thought, his teeth grinding together. He recalled his Blue-Silver Vine, letting it wrap securely around his arm. He knew the limits of his Pirate Coalition. His depleted, exhausted forces could not withstand the imperial vanguard for more than an hour. The war was over.
General Bao rode his Crimson-Scaled Qilin to the very center of the muddy, blood-soaked battlefield, ing to a halt between the two exhausted manders. His heavy, judging gaze swept over Long Chen and Qin Wu, finding them both lacking.
“By the absolute decree of His Imperial Majesty, the Celestial Dragon Emperor, this senseless, barbaric slaughter ends today!” General Bao’s voice boomed like thunder, carrying the weight of the throne, brooking absolutely no argument.
No one in the entire Celestial Dragon Empire wished to offend General Bao. His martial prowess was legendary, his strategic mind was unmatched, and his loyalty to the throne was absolute. He was the sword of the Emperor.
The soldiers of the East and West, recognizing the insurmountable threat, slowly, cautiously backed away from the front lines. The fighting, which had raged for months, ceased instantly under the overwhelming threat of imperial annihilation.
General Bao dismounted effortlessly, his heavy steel boots sinking into the blood-soaked mud. He stood tall, towering over the exhausted protagonists.
“You have ravaged two entire prefectures,” General Bao stated, his voice a cold, hard lash of authority. “You have burned trade routes, slaughtered citizens, and bled the empire’s martial foundation dry for your petty squabbles. Ground your weapons immediately, or face the full, unyielding might of the capital.”
Long Chen and Qin Wu stared at each other, their flared pride and burning hatred warring with the absolute certainty of their destruction if they refused. Slowly, reluctantly, heavily, both men plied. Long Chen dismissed his ethereal halberd, and Qin Wu drove his dark iron sword deep into the mud, stepping away from the hilt.
“Secure the perimeter!” General Bao barked to his lieutenants. “Establish a neutral zone. Any man who raises a blade is to be executed on sight.”
The imperial forces moved swiftly, creating a massive, enforced wedge between the two battered armies, entirely neutralizing the battlefield.
An hour later, a hastily erected, heavily warded imperial mand tent stood on a raised hill overlooking the plains.
General Bao stood at the head of a large tactical map table, his arms crossed over his armored chest. He did not offer seats. He summoned Long Chen and Qin Wu into the tent, treating them not as legendary heroes or rulers of their domains, but as unruly, destructive warlords who needed to be disciplined.
Long Chen stood stiffly, his aquatic aura suppressed, his face tight with anger. Qin Wu stood opposite him, his dark eyes glaring daggers at the Sea Devil.
“You have cost the empire immense, irreplaceable resources,” General Bao began, his gaze hard and unforgiving. “You have disrupted the delicate balance of the four prefectures. The Emperor demands an explanation for this madness. Speak. Why did the East and the West march upon the central plains?”
“He abducted Princess Hai Lan!” Long Chen erupted, unable to contain his fury any longer. He pointed a battered, blood-stained finger directly at Qin Wu. “This Desert Demon infiltrated the capital of the Eastern Archipelago! He dragged her from the Pure Maiden Holy Temple! He has greatly humiliated the Eastern Prefecture, slaughtered our people, and assassinated my manders in the dark like a coward!”
“Lies! Absolute, fabricated lies!” Qin Wu snarled, stepping forward, his hands balled into fists. “You aquatic bastard! You stole my dear lover, Mu Qing! You raided our hidden caves! You led your beasts to raid our oasis towns, slaughtered our elders, and burned our resources to the ground!”
General Bao frowned, his sharp, battle-tested mind immediately analyzing their furious, contradictory claims. He looked between the two men, studying their body language, the tone of their voices, and the raw, genuine desperation burning in their eyes.
‘Neither of them is lying about their core motivations,’ General Bao deduced internally, his strategic intellect parsing the information rapidly. ‘A man does not burn his own army to the ground for a falsehood he knows to be untrue. They truly, fervently believe the other mitted these horrific acts.’
“Silence,” General Bao manded, releasing a fraction of his Battle Aura to press them back.
He uncrossed his arms and placed his hands on the map table.
“The Imperial Intelligence Network has been mobilized for the past two months, investigating the origins of this conflict,” General Bao stated flatly, delivering facts with the cold precision of a blade. “We have scoured the borders. We have interrogated merchants and border guards. And I must inform you, Qin Wu… they have not found a single shred of evidence of an Eastern raid or a naval incursion into the Western Prefecture prior to your massive mobilization.”
Qin Wu froze, his eyes widening. “What? That is impossible. He took her! My agents found the signs of his sea-magic in the cave!”
General Bao turned his heavy gaze to Long Chen. “And furthermore, Lord Long Chen… the Imperial Network has found absolutely no trace, no magical signature, and no witnesses of any Western desert martialists operating within the capital of the Eastern Archipelago prior to Princess Hai Lan’s disappearance.”
Both protagonists stood pletely paralyzed. The absolute, undeniable certainty of the imperial intelligence clashed violently with the specific, perfectly tailored rumors they had so blindly and furiously acted upon.
“Then where are they?” Long Chen demanded, his voice cracking slightly, the heavy mantle of the Sea Devil slipping to reveal the exhaustion and sheer, mounting terror of a man who realized he had lost everything. “If he didn’t take her… who did?”
“Where is Mu Qing?!” Qin Wu echoed, his dark aura flaring uncontrollably in panic. “If the East didn’t raid the cave… who planted the evidence?”
“That is precisely what His Imperial Majesty intends to find out,” General Bao replied, his voice grim. He looked down at the map, tracing the vast distances between the East and the West, a deep, horrifying suspicion settling into his brilliant mind.
‘This conflict was not born of border disputes or resource scarcity,’ General Bao thought, the pieces clicking together into a terrifying mosaic. ‘This entire war was ignited over a profound, perfectly engineered misunderstanding. The lovers of both prominent warlords vanish simultaneously, without a trace. And then, perfectly tailored, highly specific rumors are planted in their respective territories, sparking a continent-spanning war.’
“There is a highly probable conclusion to be drawn here,” General Bao informed them, looking at the two devastated men. “There is a third party. A mysterious, hidden organization with immense resources, incredibly deep intelligence networks, and a terrifyingly high level of magical proficiency, is pulling your strings.”
He let the silence hang for a moment, letting the weight of his words crush them.
“You have not been fighting a war of righteous vengeance,” General Bao stated coldly. “You have been manipulated into butchering each other for the amusement or the strategic gain of an unseen puppeteer.”
Long Chen and Qin Wu shared a look. The hatred that had burned between them for months evaporated, replaced by a horrifying, gut-wrenching realization. The sheer, manipulative scale of the deception dawned on them. They had burned their armies, sacrificed their brothers, and bled their lands dry… all for a lie. They had been played like absolute fools.
And somewhere out there, a monster held the women they loved.
“Keep your forces grounded,” General Bao ordered, turning his back on them. “You will not move a single battalion without my express authorization. Imperial investigators will scour the continent to find the true culprit.”
Long Chen and Qin Wu stumbled out of the tent, their worlds entirely shattered, their spirits broken not by defeat in battle, but by the devastating realization of their own manipulated foolishness.
General Bao remained in the tent, staring at the map, pletely unaware that the mastermind who had orchestrated the entire war, the man who had stolen the women, and the very man who had thoroughly broken and claimed his own elegant wife, was currently floating securely in a cloaked Flying Ship just a few miles above his head, laughing at the tragedy he had wrought.
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