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Now reading: Chapter 236: Crossroads from Building a Viking Empire with Modern Industry, a Historical novel by ZeroSin.

Abbasid Caliphate, Baghdad

The Caliph of the Abbasids stood upon the highest balcony of the Palace of the Green Do. Below him, the vast city pulsed with its usual life, rchants shouting prices in the spice souks, the call to prayer rising from a hundred minarets, the distant clatter of cal caravans arriving from the east.

Yet today the usual rhythm felt wrong, as though the entire world held its breath.

Thus the Caliph, Harun al-Mu’tasim, watched the horizon where the eastern road t the city walls. A dust cloud the size of a small mountain rolled toward Baghdad. Even from this distance he could see the glint of steel, tens of thousands of armored soldiers marching in perfect formation beneath crimson-and-gold banners that bore characters no Arab scribe could read.

His vizier, a trembling old man nad al-Fadl, knelt beside him, forehead pressed to the stone.

"Your Majesty," al-Fadl whispered, voice cracking, "the vanguard of the Tang Emperor has arrived. One hundred thousand n, they say. They demand passage through our lands to the barbarian west."

The Caliph’s jaw tightened until his teeth ground together. He could feel the old scar along his ribs burning as though freshly cut.

For years he had balanced the empire between the Frankish wolves to the north and the Tang dragon to the east, trading silk and spices while keeping both giants at arm’s length. Now the dragon had crossed the world and stood at his doorstep.

"Bring them," he ordered, "Let the eastern dogs speak. But keep the palace guard ready. If one wrong word is uttered, I want their heads rolling before the sun reaches its zenith."

While the vizier scurried away, the Caliph turned back to the horizon. His mind raced through cold calculations.

If he refused passage, the Tang would burn Baghdad to ash and march over its ruins. If he granted it, the Iron Father in the distant north would eventually learn that the Caliph had helped his enemies. Either choice could end the Abbasid dynasty.

Thus, when the massive bronze gates of the outer palace swung open, the Caliph was already seated upon the throne, surrounded by his most loyal generals and the full splendor of the court.

The Chinese delegation entered with the arrogance of n who knew they carried an empire at their backs. At their head walked a tall, armored diplomat nad Zhao Feng, behind him marched twenty elite Tang officers, each carrying a sealed scroll and a curved sword that had tasted the blood of a hundred rebellions.

They stopped exactly fifty paces from the throne... close enough to show respect, far enough to show they did not fear the Caliph’s guards.

Zhao Feng bowed. When he spoke, his Arabic was flawless, though heavily accented.

"Caliph of the Abbasids," he began, "the Son of Heaven, Emperor Xuanzong of the Great Tang, sends his imperial will. One hundred thousand soldiers of the Celestial Army march west to punish a rogue traitor who has fled to the barbarian isles. We require safe passage through your lands, unmolested supply lines, and open roads. In return, the Tang will rember your generosity when the world is remade."

Several Arab generals instinctively reached for their swords. One young commander, a hot-blooded captain nad Khalid, actually stepped forward, teeth bared.

"You dare speak to the Commander of the Faithful as though he were a common innkeeper?!" Khalid snarled.

"This is not so desert caravan route!"

Zhao Feng’s eyes never left the Caliph. A faint smile touched his lips. "We do not ask, Captain. The Son of Heaven commands. Refuse, and the Celestial Army will carve its own road through Baghdad... Your choice will determine whether your city still stands when the sun sets tomorrow."

The Caliph’s fingers dug into the arms of the throne until the wood creaked.

After a silence that felt like an eternity, the Caliph raised his hand. His voice, when it ca, was steady, though every man present heard the strain beneath it.

"We will grant passage," he said. "Your army may cross our lands under strict escort. Food and water will be provided at fair price. But no city will be entered by force, and no holy site will be desecrated. These are the terms of the Abbasid Caliphate."

Zhao Feng bowed once more, deeper this ti, "The Son of Heaven will rember your wisdom!"

As the Chinese delegation withdrew, the Caliph remained seated, staring at the empty space where they had stood.

He turned to his vizier, "Send riders to the Iron Father imdiately. Tell him the dragon from the east is coming. And tell him... the Caliphate will not stand in his way."

...

Constantinople, Byzantine Empire

Two days had passed since the first urgent ravens arrived from the eastern frontier, and now the full weight of the intelligence lay spread before him on a massive ebony table: maps, coded scrolls, and the trembling hands of three exhausted spies who had ridden without sleep from the Abbasid border.

Basil’s fingers tightened around the edge of the table. The reports were unambiguous. The Tang Emperor Xuanzong had indeed mobilized one hundred thousand professional soldiers and was forcing the Abbasid Caliphate to grant them unhindered passage westward. The Caliph, paralyzed by terror, had already begun pulling garrisons away from the Anatolian frontier to defend Baghdad itself.

The ancient enemy that had bled Byzantium for generations was now distracted, its gaze glued to the approaching eastern dragon. The very borders Basil had dread of reclaiming for decades suddenly lay exposed, guarded by skeleton forces and frightened commanders who expected no threat from the north.

A slow smile crept across the Emperor’s face even as his free hand unconsciously crushed the edge of a parchnt scroll.

The contradiction burned inside him: he hated the Abbasids with every fiber of his being for the lands they had stolen, yet now he almost pitied them. Almost. Because their panic had just handed him the greatest opportunity since he had taken the purple.

"Leave us," Basil commanded. The three spies and the attending secretaries bowed deeply and retreated without a word.

Only his most trusted generals remained: the grizzled Strategos Nikephoros and the young but brilliant Dostic of the East, Bardas. Both n stood at rigid attention, sensing the storm gathering behind their Emperor’s calm exterior.

Basil turned from the balcony, "The Caliph trembles," he said, "He has ordered every available garrison pulled back to Baghdad to face the Tang host. The Anatolian thes are stripped bare. Cities that have flown the black banners of the Prophet for two hundred years now stand defended by little more than frightened levies and aging walls."

Nikephoros ground his teeth, "Your Majesty... this is the mont we have prayed for. But one hundred thousand Tang soldiers are marching through the Caliphate. If they turn their eyes toward us after they finish whatever madness drives them west—"

"They will not!" Basil cut in sharply, slamming the crumpled scroll onto the table.

"Xuanzong marches for one reason only: to destroy or capture the Iron Father before his industrial secrets spread. While the dragon and the lion tear each other apart in the frozen north, we will take back what is ours!"

He began pacing, "I have already issued the secret orders. Every the commander from the Taurus Mountains to the Euphrates has been instructed to mobilize in silence."

Bardas, the younger general, stepped forward, "Majesty, the risk... if the Caliph discovers our movents before his army is fully committed to the east..."

"He will not discover them," Basil snapped, spinning on his heel to face the man. "Tarsus. litene. Edessa. All the lost frontier cities that the Amorian fools surrendered will fly the double-headed eagle once more. And when the Caliph finally turns his gaze westward, he will find his empire bleeding from a wound he never saw coming."

The Emperor stopped pacing directly in front of the great map of the known world.

"Tell the provincial commanders this," he continued, "Any strategos who hesitates, who shows rcy, or who allows even one Arab garrison to escape will answer to personally. We move at first light in three days. The cataphracts will ride under cover of the winter storms. The thes will rise as one. And the Abbasid Caliphate will wake to find its eastern border has ceased to exist."

Nikephoros dropped to one knee, fist pressed to his chest. "It shall be done, the lost cities will burn with Byzantine fire before the Tang even reach the Abbasid heartlands."

Basil placed a hand on the old general’s shoulder, "Go, and rember this mont. History will record that while the East and the North tore each other apart, the Roman Empire rose once more from the ashes of its own sha!"

As the two generals departed to carry out his will, Basil returned to the balcony. The wind howled across the Golden Horn, carrying the distant sounds of the city below, rchants haggling, priests chanting, soldiers drilling in the Hippodro. None of them yet knew that their Emperor had just lit the fuse of a diterranean war that would reshape three continents.

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