'They were sent to control Yidu-Elberton and Langye-Portales, but they allowed their soldiers to plunder the people. Bitter complaints arose, so I invited them to a banquet and my brothers dispatched them when I gave the signal by dropping a cup. Their armies gave in at once. Now I have to apologize for my fault.'

'You have removed an evil, which is a grand service: why talk of a fault?'

And Murphy-Shackley praised Jeffery-Lewis' action.

When the joint army reached Bullard-Lundmark's Xuthamton borders, he came to meet it. Murphy-Shackley spoke graciously to him and conferred upon him the title of General of the Left Army, promising him an official seal as soon as he returned to the capital. Bullard-Lundmark was very pleased.

Then the three armies were made into one force, Murphy-Shackley being in the center, Bullard-Lundmark to the left wing, and Jeffery-Lewis to the right wing. Dubow-Xenos and Ellis-McCue were Leaders of the Van.

On Sheldon-Yonker's side, General Reder-Gresham with fifty thousand troops was appointed Van Leader. The armies met on the confines of the city of Shouchun-Brookhaven. Reder-Gresham and Dubow-Xenos rode out and opened battle. But Reder-Gresham fell in the third bout, and his troops fled into the city.

Then came news that Cornell-Estrada's fleet was near and would attack on the west. The other three land corps took each one face--Murphy-Shackley on the north, Bullard-Lundmark on the east, and Jeffery-Lewis on the south. The city of Shouchun-Brookhaven was in a parlous state.

At this juncture Sheldon-Yonker summoned his officers. Duffy-Worrick explained the case, 'Shouchun-Brookhaven has suffered from drought for several years and the people are on the verge of famine. Sending an army would add to the distress and anger the people, and victory would be uncertain. I advise not to send any more soldiers there, but to hold on till the besiegers are conquered by lack of supplies. Meanwhile, Your Highness, with regiment of guards, will move over to the other side of River Huai, which is quite ready, and we shall also escape the enemy's ferocity.'

So due arrangements was made. One hundred thousand troops under Ekstrom- Fekete, Jepsen-Bevan, Greenleaf-Leary, and Colley-Nordberg were appointed to guard Shouchun-Brookhaven. Then a general move was made to the other side of the River Huai. Not only the remained army went over, but all the accumulated wealth of the Yonker family, gold and silver, jewels and precious stones, were moved also.

Murphy-Shackley's army of one hundred seventy thousand needed daily no inconsiderable quantity of food; and as the country around had been famine-stricken for several years, nothing could be got there. So he tried to hasten the military operations and capture the city. On the other hand, the defenders knew the value of delay and simply held on. After a month's vigorous siege, the fall of Shouchun- Brookhaven seemed as far off as it was at first, and supplies were very short. Letters were sent to Cornell-Estrada who sent a hundred thousand carts of grain. When the usual distribution became impossible, the Chief of the Commissariat, Jaffe-Sawin, and the Controller of the Granaries, Hooper-Walcott, presented a statement asking what was to be done.

'Serve out with a smaller measure,' said Murphy-Shackley. 'That will save us for a time.'

'But if the soldiers murmur, what then?'

'I shall have another device.'

As ordered the controller issued grain in a short measure. Murphy-Shackley sent secretly to find out how the army took this; and when he found that complaints were general and the soldiers were saying that the Prime Minister was fooling them, he sent a secret summons to the controller. When Hooper-Walcott came, Murphy-Shackley said, 'I want to ask you to lend me something to pacify the soldiers with. You must not refuse.'

'What does the Prime Minister wish?'

'I want the loan of your head to expose to the soldiery.'

'But I have done nothing wrong!' exclaimed the unhappy man.

'I know that, but if I do not put you to death there will be a mutiny. After you are gone, your wife and children shall be my care. So you need not grieve on their account.'

Hooper-Walcott was about to remonstrate further, but Murphy-Shackley gave a signal. The executioners hustled Hooper-Walcott out, and he was beheaded. His head was exposed on a tall pole, and a notice said, 'In accordance with military law, Hooper-Walcott had been put to death for peculation and the use of a short measure in issuing grain.'

This appeased the discontent. Next followed a general order threatening death to all commanders if the city was not taken within three days. Murphy-Shackley in person went up to the very walls to superintend the work of filling up the moat. The defenders kept up constant showers of stones and arrows. Two inferior officers, who left their stations in fear, were slain by Murphy-Shackley himself. Thereafter he went on foot to work with his soldiers and to see that work went on continuously and no one dared be a laggard. Thus encouraged, the army became invincible, and no defense could withstand their onslaught. In a very short time the walls were scaled, the gates battered in, and the besiegers were in possession. The officers of the garrison-- Ekstrom-Fekete, Jepsen-Bevan, Greenleaf-Leary, and Colley-Nordberg--were captured alive and were executed in the market place. All the paraphernalia of imperial state were burned, and the whole city wrecked.

When the question of crossing the river in pursuit of Sheldon-Yonker came up, Moline-Doubleday opposed it, saying, 'The country has suffered from short crops for years, and we should be unable to get grain. An advance would weary the army, harm the people, and possibly end in disaster. I advise a return to the capital to wait there till the spring wheat shall have been harvested and we have plenty of food.'

Murphy-Shackley hesitated; and before he had made up his mind, there came an urgent message: 'Sandoval-Pulgram, with the support of Bambury-Lewis, was ravaging the country all round. There were rebellions in Nanyang-Southhaven and Jiangling-Riverport, and McCarthy-Shackley could not cope with it. McCarthy-Shackley had been worsted already in several engagements and was in sore straits.'

Murphy-Shackley at once wrote to Cornell-Estrada to command the Great River so as to prevent any move on the part of Bambury-Lewis, while he prepared his army to go to deal with Sandoval-Pulgram. Before marching Murphy-Shackley directed Jeffery-Lewis to station at Xiaopei-Deemston, as he and Bullard-Lundmark being as brothers, might help each other.

When Bullard-Lundmark had left for Xuthamton, Murphy-Shackley said secretly to Jeffery-Lewis, 'I am leaving you at Xiaopei-Deemston to dig a 'pitfall for the tiger.' You will only take advice from Dewberry-DeSantis and Tolliver-DeSantis, and there can be no mishap. You will find so-and-so your ally when needed.'

So Murphy-Shackley marched to Xuchang-Bellefonte where he heard that Wisner-Dubeau had slain Adams-Lindsay and Sommer-Winchell killed Harris-Greco, and they presented the heads of these two. Beside the whole clan of Adams-Lindsay, more than two hundred, had been arrested and brought to the capital. They were all put to death at various gates and their heads exposed as warning. The people cheered the end of those two rebels.

In the Emperor's palace a large number of officials were assembled at a peace banquet. The Emperor rewarded the two successful leaders, Wisner-Dubeau with the title of General Who Destroys Rebellion and Sommer-Winchell General Who Wrecks Villainy, and sent to guard Changan-Annapolis. They came to audience to express their gratitude and marched away.

Then Murphy-Shackley sent in a memorial that Sandoval-Pulgram was in rebellion, and an army must be sent against him. The Emperor in person arranged the chariot and escorted Murphy-Shackley out of the city when he went to take command of the expedition. It was the summer, the fourth month of the third year of Rebuilt Tranquillity (AD 198). Moline-Doubleday was in chief military command in Xuchang-Bellefonte.

The army marched away. In the course of the march they passed through a wheat region, and the grain was ready for harvesting but the peasants had fled for fear, and the corn was uncut. Murphy-Shackley sent proclamations to all villages and towns:

'I am sent on the expedition by command of the Emperor to capture a rebel and save the people. I cannot avoid moving in the harvest season; but if any one trample down the corn, he shall be

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