A Failure of Words
He was not in a good mood, things were not going well. To compound it all was a certain letter that now lay upon his desk.
General Luo Zhongyi,
As stated before, you are forbidden from entering negotiations with the Jin Bo. They are rebels and traitors and as such they are not to be negotiated with. You have already crossed the line many times too often with your kindly treatment of proven traitors and rebels. We know of your sympathies in the Capitol and strongly admonish further activities such as that. To continue upon your path will undoubtedly lead in forcing us to take action. We wish you victory General.
-War Minister Tan Lanming
He had admittedly disobeyed those orders. Insubordination was grounds for a court-martial, very good grounds in fact. In that case he would be court-martialed and in the most likely scenario stripped of his commission. His peers, with a few exceptions, did not look kindly upon his known sympathies. The peers he knew who would defend him were few in number and would not be part of any military tribunal that would judge him. General Li Fang was besieged in Puyi while Zhou Yu was in Heaven knows where.
He had deliberately refused to accept the order and warning in the letter sent to him by the War Minister. He had dared to hope and gambled on the fact that the Jin Bo was willing to negotiate since the beginning of hostilities a few years ago. He had been wrong, completely wrong. The Jin Bo was anything but willing to negotiate. The beginning of the session was hopeful though that was dashed moments into the negotiations.
We are not willing to accept anything short of the institutionalizing of democratic principles.
Ah yes, after two years of war and death you still carry the same position?
Very well, we would be willing to accept the continuation of the Imperial Monarchy that would be completely subservient to the said democratic institution that would come into place.
The rest of the meeting was short and tense, with his hopes long dashed. He knew then that he was essentially doomed. It was very likely that any subordination would have been overlooked if he had been successful in reaching a compromise with the Jin Bo that the Emperor would accept. As that was not that case, he would be left alone to deal with the powerful and angry bureaucracy and with good measure.
His own subordinates and the soldiers he had under his command were unaware of the orders and thinly veiled reprimand he had received from the War Minister; it would have been damaging for morale. Yes, he wanted the war to end but he wouldnt risk the lives of his soldiers for his own personal desires. His dream of an unified Qiankun that would stand strong against the Telcari were for naught.
His military success and prowess on and off the battlefield had allowed him to keep his position as he pushed back the Jin Bo and maintained some semblance of order in the territories he occupied. Unfortunately, politics was not one of his finer points and that was why he was secretly here waiting for a decision from the capital after he had reported himself for insubordination.