All Chapters of Hijacking the Three Kingdoms with My System : Chapter 61
- Chapter 70
72 chapters
Chapter 61: Bronze Age Biohazard Protocol
The air in the courtyard of Xuzhou's south gate felt frozen. The groans of the soldier who had been bitten by the wild dog echoed softly in the dim alley, marking the beginning of a microscopic apocalypse. Liu Bei, Guan Yu, and Zhao Yun stared blankly at Jo Fan. The words "three days" and "no one left alive" that had just come from the mouth of their genius advisor sounded more terrifying than the roar of the hundreds of thousands of Wei troops outside. “Dead in three days?” Liu Bei repeated, his voice trembling violently. The Imperial Uncle stepped forward, gripping Jo Fan’s robe. “Master Jo, you must be joking! A disease can’t possibly spread that fast! If we separate the sick and clean their wounds…” “Boss, you listen to me!” Jo Fan snapped, cutting off Liu Bei’s panic. The young man gripped the Imperial Uncle’s arm back, his eyes wide and wild with an
Chapter 62: A War of Minds
The twelfth day of the Xuzhou siege. The sky above the city was no longer filled with a rain of stones or rotting corpses, but the air trapped inside the walls felt much heavier than lead. The mass cremation protocol and the vinegar disinfectant that Jo Fan had enforced had indeed prevented an apocalypse in seventy-two hours. Thousands of lives were saved from instant infection. However, 21st-century science executed with bronze-age equipment could never be one hundred percent perfect. The plague had managed to infiltrate. In the inner city courtyard, the makeshift medical tents were filled with heart-wrenching groans. Hundreds of civilians and local Xuzhou soldiers lay on dirty straw. They were vomiting a yellow liquid mixed with black blood. Severe diarrhea had shriveled their bodies into living skeletons in just a few days. The city’s medicine storage was completely empty. There were no more
Chapter 63: A Bloody Chemistry Recipe
The night in Xuzhou felt increasingly suffocating. The echo of the war drums from the Wei camp outside continued to beat, bringing a psychological terror specifically designed to break one’s sanity. However, inside a large kitchen in the back wing of the Xuzhou Town Hall, the sound of the drums was drowned out by the crackling of fire from a dozen clay stoves. “Get out. Everyone, get out of this kitchen, now!” Jo Fan’s hoarse, shrill voice echoed loudly. The young man stood in the doorway, his face still stained with dried blood from slapping himself. His blazing red eyes radiated an aura of madness that made the Xuzhou military cooks shiver with fear. “B-but Master Advisor, we have to prepare the remaining rations for—” “I said GET OUT!” Jo Fan snapped, kicking over a wooden basket. “From this moment on, this kitchen is
Chapter 64: The Army of Green Ghosts
The thick night fog in front of the west gate of Xuzhou instantly transformed into a scene from the worst nightmare. The Wei patrol soldiers, who had been drowsy, now stood frozen. The spears in their hands trembled violently. Before their eyes, hundreds of shadows that emitted a bright, neon green light were shooting through the darkness. The light didn't flicker like a torch flame in the wind. The green light was a constant, thick glow, and it moved with a very unnatural speed. There were green shadows that crawled wildly on four legs. There were silhouettes of hunched-over humans that glided forward without a single footstep. There was even a giant, long-headed monster that ran unsteadily through the fog. “Th-those are… spirits… the spirits of the Xuzhou people we slaughtered…” a Wei soldier mumbled. His knees were trembling so hard he dropped his spear on the muddy ground. “They
Chapter 65: The Tyrant's Logic and the Unleashing of the Devil's Chains
Dawn broke over the giant encampment of the Wei army, but the morning sunlight brought no warmth at all. The air was very cold and smelled of urine mixed with the tang of blood. The remnants of the chaos from last night’s stampede were still scattered about. Hundreds of military tents were collapsed flat. Logistics carts were overturned, spilling grain into pools of mud. The patrol troops who were supposed to be on guard were now standing with trembling knees, their faces pale as they stared at the ground. In the middle of the cleared encampment field, fifty front-line soldiers were kneeling with their hands tied behind their backs. They were sobbing, begging for mercy from the figure of a man in a maroon robe who was pacing in front of them. “Prime Minister Cao! Forgive us! We really saw the vengeful spirits of Xuzhou!” a squad captain wailed, his tears washing away the dust on his face. “The Sky
Chapter 66: The Unarmored Giant
The Wei war horn blew loud and clear. Its long, shrill sound tore through the hot afternoon air over the lands of Xuzhou. Unlike the slow, provocative drums of the previous night, the sound of the horn this time carried a thick, deadly intent. On the city walls of Xuzhou, the guards swallowed hard. They stared at the sea of dust in the distance. The ranks of the elite Wei army were advancing again. But this time, something was different. There was no giant shield formation being pushed slowly forward, no siege engines, and no rain of fire arrows. “What are they planning?” Liu Bei mumbled. The Imperial Uncle squinted against the glare of the sun. “They aren’t bringing siege towers. They aren’t bringing a battering ram either. Has Cao Cao run out of ideas after our illusion last night?” Guan Yu, who was standing beside his brother, didn't answer immediately. The God of War’s eyes w
Chapter 67: The Fall of the Xuzhou Gate
BLAAAAAAARRRR! The shockwave from Dian Wei’s double halberd slash slammed into the remains of the Xuzhou east gate wall like a localized earthquake. The outer layer of the gate, which had already been severely cracked, now shattered into pieces. Splinters of ironwood flew into the air like shards of glass. The Xuzhou defensive wall was completely exposed. There was no more protection. Only a thick dust separated the city’s defenders from the sea of enemies outside. Seeing the city gate finally gaping open, a cheer erupted from the tens of thousands of Wei soldiers outside. “LONG LIVE PRIME MINISTER CAO! LONG LIVE GENERAL DIAN WEI!” Their thunderous voices sounded like the roar of a giant monster ready to swallow the city whole. The morale of Cao Cao’s army, which had been shattered by the phosphorus dog illusion, had now fully returned, fueled by the
Chapter 68: Zhang Fei's Raging Blood
An explosion of dust and splinters of ironwood still filled the air in the courtyard of Xuzhou’s east gate. The defense that the Pingyuan army had painstakingly built was annihilated in the blink of an eye. The barricade was broken, the gate had collapsed, and the path to the city’s heart now gaped wide open, unprotected. An absolute panic immediately exploded like an invisible plague. “Run! The gate is breached! The monster is inside!” a Xuzhou militia lieutenant shrieked. The man dropped his sword to the ground, his legs trembling so violently he fell to his knees in the dust. The civilians who had been hiding behind the second-line barricade began to scream hysterically. Mothers pulled their children’s hands, old men shouldered what few belongings they had. They ran in a panic toward the still-safe west gate. The chaos made the Pingyuan infantry who were guarding the courtyard waver as well.
Chapter 69: Seizing the Opportunity
On the command tower, Jo Fan saw the entire incident very clearly. Liu Bei was already panicked and preparing to go down. Guan Yu had also raised his weapon with a furious expression. They all thought Jo Fan would explode with anger at seeing Zhang Fei once again acting outside of command and breaking the defensive line. However, unexpectedly, Jo Fan just let out a soft laugh. The young man from the 21st century leaned his hands on the edge of the wall. A very deadly, cunning smile spread across his pale face. “Crazy. This is what you call a windfall,” Jo Fan whispered, his eyes sparkling as he looked at the arena below. “What windfall do you mean, Master Jo?!” Liu Bei asked, confused. “My brother is being surrounded by thousands of enemies in an open courtyard!” “Boss, try to think logically,” Jo Fan replied quickly. He turned to Liu Bei, Guan Yu, and
Chapter 70: A Blood Oath Under Military Law
The air in the courtyard of Xuzhou’s east gate seemed to be sucked out completely. Oxygen vanished, replaced by an incredibly thick, killing pressure from the two monsters who were facing each other. Zhang Fei had lowered his stance. The veins on the black-armored giant’s neck and arms were bulging, pumping blood at an insane speed. Across from him, Dian Wei had crossed his two massive halberds, preparing to launch his massive body forward to destroy anything that stood in his way. The two titans were only five paces apart. Their muscles were perfectly tensed. Death was at the tip of their weapons. In the thousandth of a second before the two giant weapons were about to collide and blow up the bloody courtyard. “HOLD! DON’T DUEL YET!” A very loud and shrill voice tore through the air. The voice was amplified by the last of the battery from Jo Fan&rsq