Chapter 114 Driving To The South Gate, Cao Mao Plunges
Into Death; |
When the order to
retreat was given, Liao Hua said, "A leader in the field is independent
and need not obey even the command of his prince."
Zhang Yi said,
"The country begins to resent these many years of war. Rather take the
occasion of the victory you have just won to return and pacify the
people."
"It is
good," said Jiang Wei.
A systematic and
orderly retirement began. The army of Wei, loth to forgo an opportunity,
followed, but the absence of the least confusion gave them no chance.
As he saw his enemy
disappearing in perfect order, Deng Ai sighed, "Jiang Wei is a worthy
inheritor of the warlike methods of Zhuge Liang."
Deng Ai did not
pursue but returned to his camp on Qishan.
On his return to
Chengdu, Jiang Wei had audience with the Latter Ruler, whereat he inquired,
saying, "Your Majesty has commanded me to return for an important
reason?"
The Latter Ruler
replied, "Because you have been so long on the frontier, Noble Sir. I
thought the soldiers must be weary. There was no other reason."
"Your Majesty,
thy servant had got his camps on Qishan and was on the eve of complete success.
To leave off thus in the middle just played into the hands of our enemies.
Surely Deng Ai found means of sowing distrust in me."
The Latter Ruler sat
lost in thought, and silent.
Jiang Wei continued,
"I am pledged to destroy those rebels and prove my devotion to my country.
Your Majesty should not listen to the babble of mean persons till distrust
grows in your heart."
"I do not
distrust you," said the Latter Ruler after a long pause. "You may
return into Hanzhong and await the next favorable opportunity."
Jiang Wei left the
court and betook himself into Hanzhong to the army.
Dang Jun went back
to the Qishan camp and reported his success.
Deng Ai and Sima
Wang rejoiced, saying, "In the River Lands, trouble is not far off when
the ruler and his servants do not live in harmony."
They sent Dang Jun
to Luoyang to tell his own story to Sima Zhao, who also rejoiced, for he ardently
desired to subdue Shu.
On this matter Sima
Zhao consulted Jia Chong, Commander of the Center Guard.
"What do you
think of an attack upon Shu?"
"Not to be
considered," said Jia Chong. "The Emperor does not trust you, and
your departure would be the beginning of trouble for you. Last year, when a
yellow dragon was seen in the Ningling well and all the officers were
felicitating the Emperor upon such a very auspicious occurrence, the Emperor
said, 'It is not auspicious; just the reverse. The dragon symbolizes the ruler.
To be neither in heaven, nor on earth among the people, but to be in a well, is
a dark portent and bodes evil.' He wrote some verses, and one stanza
undoubtedly points to you, my lord. It reads:
"The dragon like a prisoner is, |
The recital of the
poem annoyed Sima Zhao.
"This fellow is
very like Cao Fang, and if I do not remove him he will hurt me," said he.
"I will see to
it for you," said Jia Chong.
In the fifth year of
Sweet Dew, in Wei calendar (AD 261), during the fourth month, in summer, Sima
Zhao had the effrontery to go to court armed. However, the Ruler of Wei
received him with exaggerated courtesy.
The courtiers said,
"The services of the Regent Marshal are so magnificent, and his virtue so
high that he should be rewarded with the title 'Duke of Jin' and the Nine
Dignities."
Cao Mao hung his
head and kept silent.
And Sima Zhao
himself said discontentedly, "My father and my brother have all given
great services to Wei, and yet I deserves not being a mere Duke of Jin?"
"Should I dare
not do what you requested?" said Cao Mao.
"That poem
about the Lurking Dragon called us slimy creatures. What sort of politeness is
that?" said Sima Zhao.
The Ruler of Wei had
nothing to say, and the haughty minister left the chamber, smiling cruelly.
Cao Mao retired,
taking with him Minister Wang Jing, Adviser Wang Shen, and General of the
Cavalry Wang Ye, and they went to a privy chamber to consult. Cao Mao was very
sad.
He said, "There
is no doubt that Sima Zhao intends to usurp the throne---everybody knows that.
But I will not sit thereon patiently awaiting the indignity of being pushed
off. Cannot you gentlemen help me to kill him?"
"He may not be
slain," said Wang Jing. "That will not do. In the old state of Lu,
King Zhao could not bear with the Ji family, and ran away, thus losing his
country. But this Sima Zhao and his family have been in power very long and have
innumerable supporters, many of whom are quite independent of any act of his
whether loyal or disloyal. They support him under any conditions. Your
Majesty's guards are few and weak and incapable---not the ones for any
desperate effort. It would be most lamentable if Your Majesty could not bear
this trial. The correct course is to wait and not act hastily."
"If I can bear
this, what cannot I bear?" said Cao Mao. "But I will do something,
and if I die, what matters?"
He went into the
private apartments and spoke to the Empress Dowager.
Wang Shen, Wang
Jing, and Wang Ye sat outside talking.
"This matter is
coming to a head, and unless we want to be put to death and all our loved ones
with us, we had better go and warn Sima Zhao," said Wang Shen.
This advice angered
Wang Jing, and he said, "The prince's sorrow is the minister's shame, and
a shamed minister dies. Dare you contemplate treachery?"
Wang Jing would have
nothing to do with this visit to Sima Zhao, but the other two went to the Prime
Minister's palace to betray their prince.
Shortly after, Cao
Mao appeared, called the officer of the guard, Jiao Bo, and bade him muster his
force, as many as he could. Jiao Bo got together about three hundred, and this
little force marched out to the beating of a drum as escort to a small
carriage, in which sat the Ruler of Wei gripping his sword. They proceeded
south.
Wang Jing stepped to
the front and prayed Cao Mao to stay his steps and not go.
"To go against
Sima Zhao with such a force is driving the sheep into the tiger's jaws. To die
such a death is a vain sacrifice. Not that I want to live, but this can do
nothing," said Wang Jing.
"Do not hinder
me. I have made up my mind," replied the Ruler of Wei, heading toward the
Dragon Gate.
Presently Jia Chong
came in sight. He was armed and mounted on a fine horse. Beside him rode two
generals, Cheng Zu and Cheng Ji, and behind him followed a body of mail-clad
guards, who shouted one to another as they rode.
Then Cao Mao held up
his sword and cried, "I am the Son of God. Who are you thus breaking into
the Forbidden City? Are you come to murder your lawful ruler?"
The soldiers
suddenly stopped, for they were palace guards.
Then Jia Chong
shouted to Cheng Ji, saying, "What did Duke Sima Zhao train you for if not
for this day's work?"
Cheng Ji took his
halberd and turned to Jia Chong, saying, "Death or capture?"
"Duke Sima Zhao
said the man had to die," replied Jia Chong.
Cheng Ji rushed
toward the carriage.
"Fool! How dare
you?" cried the Ruler of Wei.
But the shout was
cut short by a thrust from the halberd full in the breast; another thrust, and
the point came out at the back, so that Cao Mao lay there dead beside his
carriage. Jiao Bo coming up to strike a blow in defense was also slain, and the
little escort scattered.
Wang Jing, who had
followed, upbraided Jia Chong, shouting, "Rebel and traitor! How dare you
kill the Emperor?"
Jia Chong got angry
and bade his lictors arrest Wang Jing and stop his tongue.
When they told Sima
Zhao, he went into the Palace, but the Emperor was dead. He assumed an air of
being greatly shocked and beat his head against the carriage, weeping and
lamenting the while. He sent to tell all the officials of high rank.
When Imperial Guardian
Sima Fu saw the dead body of the Emperor, he threw himself beside it, his head
resting thereon, and wept, saying, "It is my fault that they slew Your
Majesty!"
Sima Fu had a coffin
brought, and the remains were laid therein and borne to the West Hall. Therein
Sima Zhao entered and summoned the chief officers to a council. They came, all
but Minister Chen Tai. Sima Zhao noticed his absence and sent the Chair of the
Secretariat Xun Yi, his uncle, to call him.
Chen Tai wept aloud,
saying, "Gossips often class me and my uncle together. Yet today is my
uncle less virtuous than I."
However, Chen Tai
obeyed the summons and came, dressed in the coarse white cloth of mourning, and
prostrated himself before the bier. Sima Zhao feigned to be grieved also.
"How can this
day's work be judged?" said Sima Zhao.
"If only Jia
Chong be put to death, that will only be a slight atonement to satisfy the
empire," replied Chen Tai.
Sima Zhao was silent
and thought long before he spoke. Then he said, "How about a little less
severe?"
"That is only
the beginning. I know not other punishments less severe."
"Cheng Ji is
the ungodly rebel and actual criminal. He should suffer the death of
shame---and his family, too," said Sima Zhao.
Thereupon Cheng Ji
broke out into abuse of Sima Zhao and reviled him, saying, "It was not my
crime: It was Jia Chong who passed on your own orders!"
Sima Zhao bade them
cut out his tongue and put him to death. They did so; and Cheng Ji and his
brother Cheng Zu were both put to death in the market place, and their families
were exterminated.
"The Emperor must die," thus
spoke Sima Zhao full plain |
Wang Jing's whole
household were imprisoned. He himself was standing in the courthouse when he
saw his mother, Lady Zhao, being brought up a prisoner.
He knocked his head
on the ground and wept, saying, "O unfilial son to bring distress upon a
gentle mother!"
But his mother
laughed.
"Who does not
die?" cried she. "The only thing to be feared is not dying the proper
death. Who would regret dying like this?"
When next day the
family were led out to execution, both mother and son smiled as they went past.
But the whole city wept tears of sorrow.
Mother Yuan was famous at the rise of
Han, |
Imperial Guardian
Sima Fu proposed that the body of the late Emperor should receive a royal
funeral, and Sima Zhao consented. Jia Chong and those of his party urged Sima
Zhao to assume the Throne and replace Wei, but he refused.
"Formerly King
Wen had two-thirds of the empire, and yet he supported and served the state of
Yin to its end. Wherefore Confucius called him 'Complete of Virtue'. Emperor
Cao of Wei would not replace the Hans, nor will I accept an abdication of
Wei."
Those who heard this
felt that in these words was an implication that he intended to place his own
son Sima Yan on the throne, and they ceased to urge him to act.
In the sixth month
of that year, Cao Huang, Duke of Changdao, was raised to the throne as Emperor,
the period-style being changed to Wonderful Beginning, the first year (AD 260).
Cao Huang was a son of Cao Yu, Prince of Yan, and a great grandson of Cao Cao.
[e] Jin state occupied the western part of the empire, in the mountainous area north of the Yellow River. During the Spring and Autumn period, under the leadership of Duke Wen and his successors, Jin grew into a very large state, which broke into three states in the Warring States period. ..... |
Sima Zhao was made
Prime Minister and Duke of Jin*. Beside, he received gifts of one hundred
thousand gold coins and ten thousand rolls of silk. All the officers were
promoted or received honors.
When these doings in
Wei were told in Shu, Jiang Wei seized upon them as pretext for another war, to
punish Wei for the deposition of its ruler. So letters were written calling
upon Wu to help, and a memorial was sent to the Throne. The army raised was one
hundred fifty thousand, and there were many carts with boxes made to fit them.
Liao Hua and Zhang Yi were the Leaders of the Van. Liao Hua was to march to the
Ziwu Valley, and Zhang Yi to the Luo Valley, while Jiang Wei took the Xie
Valley road. They marched at the same time and hastened toward Qishan.
Deng Ai was still on
the Qishan Mountains training the Wei soldiers when he heard that the Shu
armies were once more on the war path. He called his officers together.
And Adviser Wang
Guan said, "I have a plan to propose, but I will not tell it openly.
However, I have written it down for your consideration."
Deng Ai took the
envelop, opened, and read it.
"Though
excellent, I fear it is not enough to beguile the leader of Shu," said
Deng Ai as he finished reading.
"I am willing
to stake my life on it," said Wang Guan, "and I will lead the
way."
"Since you have
such confidence you may try. You ought certainly to succeed."
So five thousand
troops were put under the leadership of Wang Guan, and they set out for the Xie
Valley, where they fell in with the scouts of Jiang Wei's force.
Seeing these, their
leader, Wang Guan, shouted, "We are deserters. Tell your leader!"
So the scouts told
Jiang Wei, who replied, "Hold up the soldiers, letting their leader only
come to me."
Wang Guan went
forward and kneeled before Jiang Wei, saying, "I am a nephew of Wang Jing,
and I hate Sima Zhao for what he has done to the Emperor and my family, and I
wish to join you and my five thousand soldiers with me. I also desire to be
sent against the rebel army that I may avenge my uncle."
Then said Jiang Wei,
"Since you are sincere in your desertion, I must be sincere in my
treatment of you. The one thing my army needs is grain. There is plenty at the
border of the River Lands. If you can transport it to Qishan, I can go
straightway and take the Qishan camps of Deng Ai."
This reply rejoiced
Wang Guan, who saw that Jiang Wei was just going to walk into the trap. So he
agreed at once.
"But you will
not need five thousand troops to see after the transport. Take three thousand
and leave two thousand as guides for me."
Wang Guan, thinking
that suspicions would be raised if he refused, took the three thousand of his
troops and marched away, and the other two thousand were attached to the army
of Shu.
Then Xiahou Ba was
announced, and, when he was come in, he said, "O Commander, why have you
believed the tale of this Wang Guan? In Wei I never heard that Wang Guan was
related to Wang Jing, though it is true I never made particular inquiries. You
should look to it, for there is much pretense in his story."
"I know Wang
Guan is false," said Jiang Wei, with a smile. "That is why I have
taken away many of his force. I am meeting trick with trick."
"How do you
know for certain he is a false?"
"Sima Zhao is as
crafty as Cao Cao. If he slew all Wang Jing's family, would he have left a
nephew and sent that nephew to the pass beyond his own reach with soldiers? You
saw this, as did I."
So Jiang Wei did not
go out by the Xie Valley, but he set an ambush there ready for any move of Wang
Guan. And indeed, within ten days, the ambush caught a man with a letter from
Wang Guan to Deng Ai telling him what had come about. From the letter and the
bearer thereof, Jiang Wei learned that Wang Guan would divert a convoy of grain
to the Wei camps on the twentieth and Deng Ai was to send troops to Yunshan
Valley to help.
Jiang Wei beheaded
the courier. Then he sent another letter to Deng Ai by a man dressed as a Wei
soldier, the date being altered to the fifteenth instead of the twentieth.
As a preparation,
Jiang Wei ordered many wagons to be emptied of their grain and laden with
inflammables, covered with green cloth. The two thousand Wei soldiers were
ordered to show flags belonging to the Shu transport corps. Then Jiang Wei and
Xiahou Ba went into the valleys in ambush, while Jiang Shu was ordered to march
to the Xie Valley, and Liao Hua and Zhang Yi were sent to capture Qishan.
The letter,
apparently from Wang Guan, was sufficient for Deng Ai, and he wrote back to say
it was agreed. So on the fifteenth day, Deng Ai led out fifty thousand veteran
troops and moved in sight near Yunshan Valley. And the scouts saw endless carts
of grain and fodder in the distance zigzagging through the mountains. When Deng
Ai got closer, he distinguished the uniforms of Wei.
His staff urged him,
saying, "It is getting dark, O General. Hurry to help Wang Guan escort the
convoy out of the valley!"
"The mountains
ahead are hazardous," said the general. "If by any chance an ambush
has been laid, we could hardly escape. We will wait here."
But just then two
horsemen came up at a gallop and said, "Just as General Wang Guan was
crossing the frontier with the convoy, he was pursued, and reinforcements are
urgently needed!"
Deng Ai, realizing
the importance of the request, gave orders to press onward. It was the first
watch, and a full moon was shining as bright as day. Shouting was heard behind
the hills, and he could only conclude it was the noise of the battle in which
Wang Guan was engaged.
So Deng Ai dashed
over the hills. But suddenly a body of troops came out from the shelter of a
grove of trees, and at their head rode the Shu leader, Fu Qian.
"Deng Ai, you
are stupid! You have just fallen into the trap set for you by our general.
Dismount and prepare for death!"
Deng Ai halted and
turned to flee. Then the wagons burst into flame. That flame was a signal, and
down came the army of Shu.
He heard shouts all
round him, "A thousand ounces of gold for anyone who captures Deng Ai, and
a lordship of ten thousand households as well!"
Terrified, Deng Ai
dropped his arms, threw aside his armor, slipped from his steed, mingled with
the footmen, and with them scrambled up the hills. The generals of Shu only
looked for him among the mounted leaders, never guessing that he had got away
among the common soldiers. So he was not captured.
Jiang Wei gathered
in his victorious army and went to meet Wang Guan and his convoy.
Having made all
arrangements, as he thought, complete, Wang Guan was patiently awaiting the
development of his scheme.
But suddenly a
trusted subordinate came and told him, "The ruse has been discovered, and
Deng Ai has already suffered defeat!"
Wang Guan sent out
some scouts, and the report was confirmed, with the addition that the Shu armies
were coming against him. Moreover, clouds of dust were rising. There was no way
of escape, so Wang Guan ordered his troops to set fire to the convoy, and soon
huge flames were rising high into the air.
"The case is
desperate," cried Wang Guan. "It is a fight to the death!"
He led his force
westward, but the army of Shu came in pursuit. Jiang Wei thought Wang Guan
would try at all costs to get back to his own side, but instead, Wang Guan went
on toward Hanzhong. As his troops were too few to risk a battle, Wang Guan
ordered them to burn and destroy all military stations and even the Plank Trail
as he went. Fearing the loss of Hanzhong, Jiang Wei made all haste along the
by-roads after Wang Guan. Surrounded on all sides, Wang Guan jumped into the
Black Dragon River and so died. Those of his soldiers who survived were slain
by Jiang Wei.
Though a victory had
been won and Wang Guan killed, it was costly. Many wagons and much grain had
been lost, and the Plank Trail had been destroyed. Jiang Wei led his army into
Hanzhong.
Deng Ai made his way
back to Qishan. From there he reported his defeat to the Ruler of Wei and asked
for degradation as a penalty. However, Sima Zhao saw that Deng Ai had rendered
good services, so he did not degrade the general, but, on the other hand, sent
him magnificent gifts, which Deng Ai distributed to the families of the
soldiers who had been killed. Sima Zhao also sent him fifty thousand troops as
reinforcement lest Shu should attack again.
Jiang Wei set about
the restoration of the Plank Trail ready for the next expedition.
The next chapter
will tell who won.
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