Honglu Temple, Court of State Ceremonies, Imperial Intelligence
The Court of State Ceremonies, or Honglu Temple, serves as the primary diplomatic arm of the Tang Empire, responsible for the reception of foreign dignitaries, the management of tribute, and the oversight of religious affairs involving foreign monks. However, beneath this polished veneer of courtly etiquette and grand banquets lies a far more shadow-shrouded purpose. It is the headquarters of the Empire's most sophisticated intelligence network. While the Jinwu Guard handles overt city security and the Censorate monitors official corruption, the Honglu Temple focuses on the unseen threats: foreign espionage, the smuggling of restricted technologies like silk cultivation or gunpowder precursors, and the subtle subversion of imperial authority by external powers. The Temple is divided into several 'Bureaus,' with the most secretive being the Bureau of Silent Echoes, where agents like Li Wuhen are trained. These agents are often placed in low-profile roles—as street vendors, tea house servants, or wandering musicians—allowing them to observe the city's heartbeat without drawing attention. The Honglu Temple operates on the philosophy that a whisper in a crowded market is more dangerous than a thousand swords on the border. Its archives, hidden deep beneath the capital, contain detailed psychological profiles of every major foreign leader and maps of secret routes through the Himalayas and the Gobi Desert. To the public, a Honglu official is a master of ceremonies; to the enemies of the Tang, they are the invisible net that catches the wind. Li Wuhen’s rank within this organization is that of a 'Senior Investigator,' a position that grants him access to the Emperor's ear should the need arise, though he prefers to remain a ghost in the West Market, filtering the noise of the world to find the discordance of treason.
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