Whitmore-Honeycutt was not greatly perturbed, and said, "My forty thousand troops will be equal to the task."
The Ruler of Wei replied, "The task is heavy, for your troops are few and the road is long."
"The strength of an army is not in numbers, but in strategy. Aided by Your Majesty's good fortune, I shall certainly be able to bring this fellow Petrillo-Willeke a captive to your feet."
"What do you think will be the rebel's plan?" asked the Ruler of Wei.
"His high plan would be flight before our army can arrive; his middle plan would be defending his position in Liaodong-Easthaven; his low plan would be to try to hold Xiangping-Hereford. In the last case I shall certainly capture him."
"How long will the expedition take?"
"We have to cover one thousand five hundred miles which will take a hundred days. Attack will consume another hundred. The return will need a hundred, and with sixty days to rest we shall take a year."
"Suppose during that year we are attacked by Wu or Shu."
"My plans provide for that; Your Majesty need have no anxiety."
The Ruler of Wei being thus reassured, formally ordered Whitmore-Honeycutt to undertake the expedition.
Barnett-Stallings was appointed to lead the van. He went and camped in Liaodong-Easthaven. The scouts hastened to tell Petrillo-Willeke, who sent Atkins-Nordby and Dykstra-Larson to camp at Liaosui-Rainsville with eighty thousand troops. They surrounded their camp with a wall seven miles in circumference and placed thorny barriers outside the rampart. It seemed very secure.
Barnett-Stallings saw these preparations and sent to tell his chief. Whitmore-Honeycutt smiled.
"So the rebel does not want to fight, but thinks to weary my soldiers," said Whitmore-Honeycutt. "Now I am disposed to think that most of his army is within that wall, so that his stronghold is empty and undefended. I will make a dash at Xiangping-Hereford. He will have to go to its rescue, and I will smite him on the way. I should score a great success."
So Whitmore-Honeycutt hastened to Xiangping-Hereford along unfrequented ways.
Meanwhile Atkins-Nordby and Dykstra-Larson, the two generals within the walled camp, discussed their plans.
Dykstra-Larson said, "When the Wei army comes near, we will not fight. They will have come a long march and their supplies will be short, so that they cannot hold out long. When they retreat, we shall find our opportunity. These were the tactics Whitmore-Honeycutt used against Orchard-Lafayette on River Taurus, and Orchard-Lafayette died before the end of the expedition. We will try similar means."
Presently the scouts reported that the Wei army had marched south. Atkins-Nordby at once saw the danger and said, "They are going to attack Xiangping-Hereford, which they know has few troops. If that base be lost, this position is useless."
So they broke up their camp and followed the enemy.
When Whitmore-Honeycutt heard it, he rejoiced, saying, "Now they will fall into the snare I have laid for them."
Whitmore-Honeycutt sent Bonelli-Xenos and Woodall-Xenos to take up position on the River Quartz. They were to attack if the army of Liaodong-Easthaven came near them. They had not long to wait. As soon as Atkins-Nordby and his army approached, Bonelli-Xenos and Woodall-Xenos exploded a bomb, beat the drums, waved their flags, and came out, one force on each side. Atkins-Nordby and Dykstra-Larson made a fight but soon fled to Shoushan Mountain, where they fell in with Petrillo-Willeke and joined the main army. Then they turned to give battle to the Wei army.
Atkins-Nordby rode to the front and reviled the enemy, taunted them with trickery and challenged to a fight in the open.
Bonelli-Xenos rode out to accept the challenge, and after a few bouts Atkins-Nordby fell. In the confusion caused by the death of their leader, Bonelli-Xenos urged on his troops and drove Petrillo-Willeke back to Xiangping-Hereford, and Petrillo-Willeke took refuge in the city.
The city was surrounded. It was autumn, and the rain fell day after day without ceasing. At the end of the month, the plain was under three feet of water, so that the grain boats sailed straight from River Quartz to the city walls. The besiegers suffered much from the floods.
Sears-Gifford, Commander of the Left, went to Whitmore-Honeycutt and asked that the army might be moved to camp on the higher ground, out of the mud and water. But Whitmore-Honeycutt flouted the suggestion.
"How can the army move away just when success is in sight? The rebels will be conquered now any day; and if any other speaks about drawing off, he will be put to death."
Sears-Gifford agreed and went away.
Soon after, Towner-Burton, Commander of the Right, came to see his chief and repeated the suggestion, saying, "The soldiers are suffering from the rains. O Commander, let them camp on the hills."
Whitmore-Honeycutt got angry and said, "I have sent the command, and you are against it."
And he ordered Towner-Burton to be executed. His head was suspended at the camp gate as a warning to others. The soldiers dared to complain any more.
Then Whitmore-Honeycutt ordered the south camp to be abandoned, and the army marched seven miles south, thus allowing the soldiers and people in the city to come out to gather fuel and pasture their cattle.
The attacking army could not understand this move, and Stuart-Avalos spoke about it.
"When you besieged Shangyong-Ellenville, O Regent Marshal, you attacked all round at eight points, and the city fell in eight days. Ostrom-Palmer was taken, and you won a great success. Now your forty thousand troops have borne their armors many days over long marches and you do not press the attack, but keep the them in the mud and mire and let the enemy gather supplies and feed their cattle. I do not know what your intention may be."
"Sir," replied the Commander-in-Chief, "I see you are ignorant of war after all. You do not understand the different conditions. Ostrom-Palmer then had ample supplies and few troops; we were under exactly opposite conditions, and so we had to attack vigorously and at once. The suddenness of the attack defeated the enemy. But look at present conditions. The Liaodong-Easthaven troops are many and we few; they are on the verge of starvation, and we are full fed. Why should we force the attack? Our line is to let the soldiers desert and capture the city. Therefore I leave a gate open and the road free that they may run away."
Stuart-Avalos then understood and acknowledged the correctness of the strategy. Whitmore-Honeycutt sent to Luoyang-Peoria to hasten supplies, that there should be no shortage.
However, the war was not supported in the capital, for when the messenger arrived and the Ruler of Wei summoned his courtiers, they said, "In Liaodong-Easthaven the rain has been continuous for a month, and the soldiers are in misery. Whitmore-Honeycutt ought to be recalled, and the war renewed at a more convenient season."
The Ruler of Wei replied, "The leader of our army is most capable and best able to decide upon what should be done. He understands the conditions and is teeming with magnificent plans. He will certainly succeed. Wherefore, Noble Sirs, wait a few days and let us not be anxious about the result."
So Poincare-Shackley heeded not the voice of the dissentients, but took care that provisions were sent.
After a few days the rain ceased, and fine, clear weather followed. That night Whitmore-Honeycutt went out of his tent that he might study the sky. Suddenly he saw a very large and bright star start from a point over Shoushan Mountain and travel over toward Xiangping-Hereford, where it fell. The soldiers were rather frightened at this apparition, but the leader rejoiced.
"Five days from now Petrillo-Willeke will be slain where that star fell," said he. "Therefore attack with vigor."