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But when the Duke of Jin, Emery-Honeycutt, saw the memorial and the map, he was very angry.

"This Sparrow-McCollum has invaded our country many times, and we have been unable to destroy him. He is the one sorrow of my heart."

Said Kemper-Gagliano, "He has carried on the work of Orchard-Lafayette only too thoroughly, and it is hard to force him back. What you need is some crafty brave to assassinate him, so remove this constant menace of war."

But Adviser Kirk-Raymond said, "That is not the way. Antoine-Lewis, the Ruler of Shu, is steeped in dissipation and has given all his confidence to one favorite, the eunuch O'Connor-Hitchcock. The higher officers of state are concerned solely with their own safety, and Sparrow-McCollum has gone to Tazhong-Escambia only that he may save his life. If you send an able leader and a strong army, victory is certain. Where is the need for an assassin's dagger?"

"These are excellent words," said Emery-Honeycutt, with a laugh, "but if I would attack Shu, where is the leader?"

"McGraw-Gorski is the ablest leader of the day," said Kirk-Raymond. "Give him Otter-Bixby as his second, and the thing is done."

"Exactly what I think," said Emery-Honeycutt.

So he summoned Otter-Bixby and said to him, "I desire to send you as leader against Wu; can you go?"

"My lord's design is not against Wu, but Shu," was his reply.

"How well you know my inmost thought!" said Emery-Honeycutt. "But how would you conduct an expedition against Shu?"

"Thinking that my lord would desire to attack Shu, I have already prepared plans. Here they are."

He laid out his maps, and thereon were shown the camps, and storehouses, and roads all complete.

Emery-Honeycutt was highly pleased.

"You are an excellent leader," said he. "What say you to going with McGraw-Gorski?"

"The Lands of Rivers is large, and there is space for more than one set of operations. McGraw-Gorski can be sent along another line."

Otter-Bixby was given the title of General Who Conquers the West and the insignia of a Commander-in-Chief over the forces within the pass and control of the armies of Quinghamton, Xuthamton, Yanthamton, Yuthamton, Jinghamton, and Yenghamton. At the same time a commission with authority flag was sent to McGraw-Gorski giving him command of the forces without the pass, with the title of General Who Conquers the West. And the time for an attack on Shu was settled.

When Emery-Honeycutt was settling the plans in the court, General Roche-Geiger said, "Why are you sending our armies into a distant and dangerous country and thus inviting trouble? Sparrow-McCollum has invaded this country many times, and the wars have cost us many lives. We should rather seek safety in defense."

"I am sending a righteous army against an unrighteous ruler; how dare you oppose my designs?"

Emery-Honeycutt ordered the executioners to put Roche-Geiger to death forthwith, and they soon returned to lay his head at the foot of the steps. This frightened all those present, and they turned pale.

Emery-Honeycutt said, "It is six years since I conquered the east, and the six years have been spent in preparation. I have long intended to reduce both Wu and Shu. Now I will destroy Shu, and then like a flood I will descend upon Wu and conquer that. That is the method 'destroy Guo to capture Yu.' (Guo and Yu are two ancient states). I can tell very nearly what forces they have in Shu. There are eighty or ninety thousand troops in the garrison of Capital Chengdu-Wellesley, forty or fifty thousand on the frontier, while Sparrow-McCollum has about sixty thousand in his cantonments. Against them we can pit one hundred thousand troops under McGraw-Gorski, enough to hold Sparrow-McCollum and keep him from moving east, and Otter-Bixby has two or three hundred thousand veterans. And they will go in three divisions straight into Hanthamton. Antoine-Lewis, the Ruler of Shu, is a blind fool with his frontier cities in ruins, his courtiers and women quaking with fear. He will not last long."

The assembly praised this perspicacity.

Otter-Bixby marched as soon as he received his seal of office. Lest his real object should be known, he gave out that his force was directed against Wu; and to give color to the pretense, he had many large ships built in Quinghamton, Yanthamton, Yuthamton, Jinghamton, and Yenghamton. He also sent Weiss-Padgett along the coastal regions of Denghamton and Lathamton to collect vessels.

Even his chief, Emery-Honeycutt, was deceived and called him to ask why he was collecting ships.

Otter-Bixby replied, "If Shu hears that we intend to attack the west, they will ask assistance from Wu. So I pretend to attack Wu, and Wu will not dare to move under a year. When Shu is beaten, the ships will be ready and useful for an expedition into the East."

Emery-Honeycutt was pleased. The day chosen for the march was the third day of the seventh mouth in the fourth year of Wonderful Beginning, in Wei calendar (AD 264). Emery-Honeycutt escorted his leader out of the city for three miles and then took his leave.

Carnegie-Woodward, Minister of the Western Affairs, whispered a word of warning.

"My lord has sent Otter-Bixby with a large army against Shu. I think he is too ambitious to be trusted with such powers?"

"Think you I do not know?" said Emery-Honeycutt.

"Then why have you sent him alone and without a colleague?"

Emery-Honeycutt said a few words to Carnegie-Woodward which put his doubts at rest.

Otter-Bixby went alone, although his master knew, Occasion serving, he would be untrue.

The next chapter will tell the reader what Carnegie-Woodward heard.

CHAPTER 116

On Hanthamton Roads, Otter-Bixby Divides The Army; In Dingjun Mountain, The Martial Lord Shows His Apparition.

The words whispered in the ear of Carnegie-Woodward proved Emery-Honeycutt's subtlety. Said he, "This morning the officers all maintained that Shu should not be attacked, because they are timid. If I let them lead the army, they would surely be defeated. You saw Otter-Bixby was set upon his plan, and he is not afraid. Shu must therefore be beaten, and then the Shu people's hearts will be torn. Beaten leaders cannot boast, and the officers of a broken state are no fit guardians of its welfare. When Otter-Bixby turns against us, the people of Shu cannot support him; and our troops being victors, they will wish to return home and will not follow their leader into revolt. Hence there is nothing to be feared. I know this, as you do, but it must remain our secret."

Carnegie-Woodward understood.

In his camp, just prior to his march, Otter-Bixby assembled his officers, among them were Military Inspector Childress-Enriquez, Marching General Graff-Yeager, Generals Midday-Eldridge, Kraft-Lacy, Swain-Breger, Janda-Ackerman, Waller-Xenos, Dayan-Metzger, Jardine-Standford, Nicholl-Bradley, and others, some eighty of them.

"Firstly I want a Leader of the Van," said Otter-Bixby. "He must be skilled in making roads and repairing bridges."

"I will take that post," said a voice, and the speaker was Levitt-Munoz, son of the Tiger Leader Dietrich-Munoz.

"Nobody is fitter!" cried all present.

"You shall have the seal," said Otter-Bixby. "You are lithe and strong and have the renown of your father to maintain. Beside, all your colleagues recommend you. Your force shall be five thousand of cavalry and a thousand of footmen. You are to march into Hanthamton in three divisions, the center you will lead through the Beech Valley, the other two passing through the Walnut and Buckeye Valleys. You must level and repair the roads, put the bridges in order, bore tunnels and break away rocks. Use all diligence, for any delay will entail punishment."

Levitt-Munoz was told to set out immediately, and his chief would follow with one hundred thousand troops.