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Ma Yunlu, who had been quietly observing until now, finally spoke. Her voice was soft but carried an edge. "Respect is earned, Elders. And right now, none of you are acting like men worthy of it." The room erupted into chaos. Voices overlapped, accusations flew, and for a moment, it seemed the meeting would dissolve into outright hostility.
Then Ma Chao rose.
"Enough!" he bellowed, his voice cutting through the noise like a blade. His fist struck the table with enough force to rattle the cups. The hall fell into stunned silence.
He looked at each face around the table, weathered, weary, some defiant, some worried.
He exhaled slowly, his gaze sweeping over each of them. "We do not have the luxury of infighting," he said, his voice low but firm. "We are no longer arguing about territory or honor. Our rebellion has failed. We are talking about survival. I called this meeting not to defend myself, but to discuss our only path forward. We must escape Wuwei."
The words hit like thunder.
Ma Guan, father of Ma Dai, a seasoned warrior himself, and one of the few voices of reason among the elders, leaned forward while narrowing his eyes. "Escape? Are you certain, Nephew? Those are not words we take lightly."
Ma Chao nodded slowly. "I am. Jincheng is lost. Without it, we are surrounded by enemies and cut off from potential allies. We cannot win a war from here. If we stay, we will die. Not just the warriors, but all of us. The Ma Clan will end."
One of the elders pounded his cane against the floor. "And what of our pride? Our legacy? Are we to be remembered as cowards who fled with their tails between their legs?"
Ma Chao's eyes blazed. "Do you think I care so little for our name? I loved my father more than anyone. I watched him die for this dream. But he told me, told all of us, to live to fight another day if we failed. If we die here, everything he stood for dies with us. I refuse to see one of my siblings buried. I refuse to watch Ma Xiu or Ma Tie or even Ma Yunlu fall in battle for a hopeless cause."
Ma Dai, who had been silent until now, finally spoke. "He's right," he said quietly. "If we stay, we die. If we flee, we live to reclaim our honor when the time is right."
The elders looked among themselves, their earlier bluster fading into reluctant acceptance. They were warriors, yes, but they were not fools. They knew the reality of their situation.
Ma Yunlu, seated at the edge of the table in defiance of the usual customs that excluded women from such meetings, met her brother's gaze. Her eyes shimmered with emotion, but she nodded, resolute.
"What do you propose then, brother?" she asked.
Ma Chao turned to the table and unrolled a map, the edges weighed down with bronze pieces. "We split into three groups. One will head east across the mountains, passing through outside of the Great Wall at the Xiongnus territory, and then enter into Lie Fan's domain. We've had tense relations with them, but with proper gifts and diplomacy, they may allow us to pass us."
"Another will move south, toward the border of Shu, passing through Hanzhong and then head east toward Lie Fan's domain as well. We can only seek shelter to Lie Fan, as he has proven to be a worthy ally even though sadly he can't help us more in our rebellion. The third will stay behind for a time, to create a diversion and delay pursuit."
"And who will lead the diversion?" Ma Dai asked.
Ma Chao looked at his cousin, his expression grim. "I will."
"No!" Ma Yunlu stood. "That is madness, elder brother! You're our leader! If you die—"
"Then another will rise," he interrupted gently. "But if I don't lead this, if I don't make them believe we still intend to defend Wuwei, they'll see through our escape and chase you down. I won't let that happen."
At this time, Ma Guan clenched his fists and sighed. "Nephew, let me lead the third group. As Yunlu has said, you're the leader of the Ma Clan now, and you need to prioritize your own survival as well to lead our clan."
The silence in the hall was thick again, but this time, it was not from tension, it was heavy with emotion. Ma Guan's voice, calm and steady, still echoed faintly in the air, hanging above the heads of those gathered. His unexpected offer had shifted the tide of the meeting entirely.
No one had expected the grizzled veteran, who had long served as one of the clan's most reliable pillars, to volunteer for what amounted to a suicide mission. The diversion group would be the first to meet the enemy and likely the last to survive.
No one had expected this, least of all Ma Dai, whose face paled as if struck. Ma Dai's jaw tightened. "Father," he said, rising slightly from his seat, his voice catching on emotion and defiance, "you can't. You're too old. Let me go. I'll lead them. I'm still strong. I can escape if I must. You—"
"No, my son," Ma Guan interrupted, his voice as calm as a still lake but firm as steel beneath it. His eyes, lined with age and experience, were resolute. "You are the future of the Ma Clan. Your life will serve the clan better than my death could. I have lived long enough. I've seen our rise and our fall. If I can delay the enemy long enough for you and your cousins to survive, then I will have done my duty."
"But—" Ma Dai began again, only to stop short when his cousin raised his hand.
Ma Chao's hand was steady, palm raised just high enough to command silence, yet soft enough to signal understanding. Ma Dai gritted his teeth and slowly sank back into his seat, his face tight with frustration and sorrow. His hands balled into fists in his lap, his knuckles white.
Ma Chao watched his cousin's face twist with grief, the way his fingers dug into his thighs as if to physically restrain himself from arguing further. He knew that pain, the helpless rage of watching someone you love walk toward death.
Then he turned to Ma Guan, his expression unreadable for a moment. Then, he exhaled, slowly, the weight of leadership pressing visibly onto his shoulders.
"Uncle," he said, his voice low, "are you truly certain? You could replace me as clan head, at least until Tie and Xiu are fit to replace you. You know our people, our customs. You'd be the natural choice."
Before Ma Guan could answer, Ma Tie and Ma Xiu stirred, both drawing sharp breaths as if to protest, but catching themselves. They exchanged a glance, then looked to Ma Chao, remaining silent. Their youthful faces were drawn, tense, caught between reverence and fear.
Ma Guan gave a small nod. "I am sure, Chao'er. And I thank you for your words. But I have lived my years. I have seen war enough for two lifetimes. This, now, this is the moment that defines us. Our blood has never run from battle, but neither should it run headlong into slaughter. Let me protect you all one last time. That is the most I can offer to our clan now."
His voice held no bitterness, no resignation. Only clarity.
Ma Chao's jaw tightened, but finally, he gave a solemn nod. "Very well. Then it is settled. You will lead the third group and hold the enemy off long enough for the rest to flee. Your name will be remembered, Uncle. I swear it."
Ma Dai looked at his father with eyes full of unshed tears, shaking his head slightly, but saying nothing. He knew this decision would not change. His father's will was unbreakable once set.
Ma Guan caught his son's gaze and gave him a slow, meaningful look, a mixture of pride, apology, and affection. Then he nodded once more, signaling that nothing else needed to be said.
Ma Yunlu, who had been silent after saying her words that provoked the elders, now pressed a hand to her mouth. Her eyes shone, but she did not weep. She understood, as they all did, that this was the only way.
With that, Ma Chao turned back to the rest. His tone hardened again, returning to that of the commander. "Then the meeting is concluded. Begin preparations immediately. We don't have much time before Cao Cao's forces reach the gates of Wuwei."
He let the words sink in like a blade into the bark. "We'll wait for the moment when the enemy commits to the assault. That will be our window. Once their attention is fully drawn, we split."
The elders gave weary nods and slowly filed out of the hall, their feet dragging as if burdened by the decisions made within. Some looked back once, at Ma Guan, at Ma Chao, at Ma Dai, but no one spoke.
Once the chamber emptied, only Ma Chao, Ma Tie, Ma Xiu, and Ma Yunlu remained.
The air in the room felt thinner now, filled with the heaviness of impending separation.
Ma Tie was the first to break the silence, his voice tentative. "Eldest Brother... do you really believe Lie Fan will accept us into his territory? Will he take us in after all this?"
Ma Chao turned to him, nodding firmly. "Yes. He will. Our alliance may have been strained, but it still stands. He's proven his honor and his foresight. You remember he stationed his army along the border with Cao Cao, not to provoke, but to pressure him. That was no small risk. He also has shared his knowledge with us that I brought back here."
Ma Xiu tilted his head slightly. "But he didn't attack, did he? He didn't lift a hand to help us."
Ma Chao's gaze sharpened at his younger brother, but there was no anger, only weariness. "He didn't. Because he couldn't. You know as well as I do that Lie Fan's campaigns against Liu Bei have possibly stretched his resources thin. He's taken Jing Province from Liu Bei and gained Jiaozhi with Shi Xie's allegiance. Do you understand what that means?"
Ma Tie furrowed his brows, already nodding. "He has to stabilize the new territories. That means food, troops, administrators..."
"Exactly," Ma Chao said. "He's feeding tens even possibly hundreds thousands of civilians, resettling refugees, and holding two provinces together with fresh blood. The fact that he sent an army to the border at all is proof of his commitment to our alliance. He's walking a fine line. If he moved any further, he might provoke Cao Cao into an all out war, one that would tear everything he's built apart."
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Name: Lie Fan
Title: Overlord Of The Central Plains
Age: 34 (201 AD)
Level: 16
Next Level: 462,000
Renown: 1325
Cultivation: Yin Yang Separation (level 9)
SP: 1,121,700
ATTRIBUTE POINTS
STR: 951 (+20)
VIT: 613 (+20)
AGI: 598 (+10)
INT: 617
CHR: 96
WIS: 519
WILL: 407
ATR Points: 0