Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 737: The Plan Comes Together from Blackstone Code, a Mature novel by 三脚架.

“Your Majesty, Lynch revealed so army equipnt and related paraters at the salon—things we hadn’t yet uncovered.”

The emperor was watching an opera brought back from the Federation, being played on tape in the private screening room of the palace.

The palace had a small theater used exclusively by the emperor when he wanted to rest and unwind.

At that mont, he was fully engrossed. The Gephran cultural exchange delegation had shown open disdain for everything in the Federation. In the words of the delegation leader, The Baylor Federation’s culture is as worthless as cow dung—can’t even stand upright.

As soone with a refined cultural background, the delegation leader couldn’t stand the so-called lower-class artists of the Federation’s cultural world.

Aside from a few noteworthy artists, most of their work lacked any true artistic value—either self-indulgent nonsense or crude vulgarity.

From a selection of pieces he found utterly intolerable, he still bought the rights to a few, had them distributed, and vowed never to visit the Federation again.

To him, it was a cultural wasteland.

And yet, the very works he despised were beginning to show their influence.

For example, the emperor himself was thoroughly enjoying the opera.

He hadn’t dared outright say he wanted to watch a movie—in the past, he had taken a firm stance against Federation dia, convinced it led to moral decay.

So he chose an opera instead—its script originally written by a famous Gephran playwright. It was called Hayn’s Revenge or The Count of Hayn’s Revenge. The story followed a count who was betrayed and barely escaped, later exacting his revenge.

In the Gephran version, the count’s triumph stemd from cunning—he maneuvered among enemies using wit, sowing discord that led to their mutual destruction, eventually reclaiming power.

Many considered it a classic. The noble characters were rich in personality—cunning, devious, intelligent. Even the antagonists had undeniable charm. A rare gem.

The Federation’s version? Far bolder.

In Hayn’s Revenge, the Federation’s Count Hayn didn’t rely on wit—he used brute strength.

From his dungeon escape onward, it was all about physical prowess. A little cleverness, perhaps—but mostly force.

No intricate sches, no wire-walking tension—just brute-force justice, a different flavor of heroism.

Even in the Federation, so complained: If Count Hayn was this strong, how could a few unard villains strip him of his title?

Still, the story’s popularity surged—just like now, with the emperor completely absorbed.

Every ti Count Hayn crushed another foe and took one more step toward victory, the emperor felt a surge of satisfaction.

No need to think—just enjoy. The revised script wasn’t bad. If no one interrupted, it’d be perfect.

The projector stopped smoothly. Dim lights ca on—just bright enough to see without hurting the emperor’s eyes.

“Maybe he’s just bragging. Lynch is a talented businessman, and exaggeration is a rchant’s nature,” the emperor said with a hint of disdain—though mostly influenced by the opera’s content.

He quickly regained composure and asked, “Have professionals look into it. Ask the military engineers whether the data is fabricated or plausible.”

The man bowed again. “It’s been reviewed. Most of it aligns with the engineers’ estimates. They believe the data is likely real.”

A glint flashed in the emperor’s eyes as he stood and began pacing. “Send in more people. Record every word.”

“And contact the Federation moles. Have them investigate discreetly—just a few targets. I want to confirm the authenticity of this data.”

The emperor wasn’t one to blindly believe or dismiss. He wanted verification.

Mr. Truman and his strategy had succeeded. Gephra’s biggest issue wasn’t the navy—it was the army.

Every war had ended the sa: the army’s unreliability forced them to abandon advantages won by the navy. The consensus now was that the army’s combat effectiveness had to be urgently improved.

If not for the fact that Allia’s holand was coastal, even they might’ve failed to hold ground.

Each ti they crushed a region’s military resistance, the army would collapse within days, forced to retreat—making all victories aningless.

If the army had even a bit more strength, Gephra’s territory might have expanded many tis over.

There weren’t many ways to fix the army. One was to dominate through superior equipnt—reducing the importance of individual skill.

The other was to enhance individual soldiers’ strength, so the army could realize its full potential.

The latter was difficult, but the forr—worth considering.

Gephra had a secret plan underway for a complete army rearmant.

Now, with the Federation’s equipnt specs leaked, engineers had valuable reference points. They could even reverse-engineer the Federation’s land combat capabilities based on the paraters.

This would be critical in the next potential war. At the very least, they’d have a rough understanding of the Federation’s army strength—no longer charging in blindly.

“Those fools aren’t entirely useless after all…” the emperor smirked as he sat down again. “Keep a close watch.” He raised his hand, the lights dimd, and the opera resud.

Word quickly spread through the nobility that Lynch had clashed with mbers of the Privy Council over a heated army debate. Nobles who hadn’t attended the salon ca to find out more.

Nobles, often seen by the public as parasites feeding off the state, weren’t always entirely negative.

At least when it ca to patriotism, they were more invested—because if the nation was weak, they suffered too.

Only when the country was strong could they continue to live in power and luxury.

Unexpectedly, the incident triggered so side effects—such as a Federation spy embedded in the imperial capital catching wind of it.

“Boss, I need to take so ti off…” said an employee at a café near the palace, suddenly requesting leave.

The boss frowned slightly. “Is there a reason you absolutely have to leave?”

The young man looked a bit shy. “I’m going to pick up my girlfriend from work…” The boss’s expression turned sour—he didn’t think coaxing a girlfriend was more important than work.

But then the young man added, “I’m planning to propose to her tonight!”

The boss’s expression imdiately softened. He looked at the young man, smiled with pursed lips, and nodded. “Alright. Do you need an advance on your salary?”

The young man shook his head, thanked the boss for his generosity, quickly changed clothes, and left.

From the mont he stepped out of the café, the anticipation and nervousness on his face gradually faded, replaced by a deep, hidden anger.

There’s a traitor among us!

As he was thinking this, soone suddenly bumped into him. Instinctively, he slipped a hand into his coat—pure reflex.

He stumbled forward a few steps, then turned back with a look of apology. It was another young man with unusually large pupils—his eyes seed off.

The man clutched a briefcase labeled Pleasure Daily Editorial Departnt.

Pleasure Daily was a local third-rate tabloid focused on escort listings. It had so circulation but was considered very lowbrow.

“Sorry, I didn’t see you,” the first young man said, cautiously testing whether the other was sent to probe him.

He even stepped forward and reached out as if to touch the supposed reporter.

The man who’d been bumped backed away, hugging his briefcase tighter.

“No, it’s fine. I didn’t see you either. Are you alright?”

The exchange was perfunctory—both seed eager to leave quickly.

The young man nodded, turned, and left swiftly, scanning his surroundings as he disappeared down the street.

anwhile, the reporter turned and sprinted off.

Had the young man paid closer attention, he would’ve noticed a faint tallic tang—the scent of blood—on the reporter.

The man burst breathlessly into the newsroom, drawing everyone’s attention.

“B-big news. Huge news! We’re about to blow up!” he shouted, waving his briefcase before rushing into the editor-in-chief’s office.

The editor, a bespectacled man in his forties with a neatly trimd mustache and an air of old-fashioned intellectualism, was calmly sipping a fifteen-Sol-a-pound floral tea blend.

He didn’t look annoyed as the young man stord in. Instead, he raised his eyes lazily. “What kind of news is so earth-shattering?”

The reporter panted a few more tis, face flushed with excitent. “Evidence of fraud at Harmony Capital!”

The editor shot to his feet. His tea spilled onto his carefully maintained mustache, but he didn’t care.

All he knew was—this was the story that would make the paper famous.

You are reading Blackstone Code Chapter 737: The Plan Comes Together on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Empire of Shadows cover
Same author

Empire of Shadows

三脚架 ·Historical

Mostpeoplearebornordinary,buttherearealwaysafewwho,evenifbornintomediocrity,aspiretogreatness.Fromanamelessexploitedlaborertoagodfatherintheshadows...

Lord of the Truth cover
Trending now

Lord of the Truth

TruthTeller ·Action

RobinBurtonisayoungmanwhogrowwitheverythinganyonecanhopefor,immensetalentforcultivation,sharpmind,awealthyfamilythatwillstopatnothingtoprotectandnu...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.