IshitaChakraborty
A rebel general. A disgraced imperial commander. A dying empire. They are destined to destroy each other, unless they can save the world first.
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The Cheng dynasty is in its last decade. The great river floods year on year, the harvests fail, and the tax men still come. The capital glitters. The south is rebel country. At the far edge waits a warlord who would happily let the whole empire bleed out, then take it.
The heroine. Gu Yan.
Born in a drowned delta village, orphaned by flood and famine, she joined a rebel column as a child runner. She rose by being right, over and over, when everyone above her was wrong. Now she leads the largest peasant army in the south. The soldiers call her the Ash General, partly for the scorched ground she leaves, partly because she rose from ash. Her gift is tactics. Her wound is that she has only ever survived by winning, so mercy feels like a luxury that gets her people killed. Her arc is learning what victory costs the people who follow her.
The hero. Pei Heng.
Last son of the Pei, a great clan the throne purged on a false charge. Stripped of his name, he re-entered the imperial army as a nobody and became the one commander who still wins. He defends a court he despises, because he believes its fall would be worse for ordinary people than its rot. His wound is divided loyalty. His arc is finding out exactly how rotten the throne is, and deciding what is truly worth his sword. Not the throne.
They meet first across a parley, then a battlefield. Each is the only opponent the other respects. The warlord at the edge forces them into an alliance neither will admit they want. The real question of the book sits under all the war. Is there any peace in which neither of them has to destroy the other?
ORIGINAL WORK