Huo Ce knew he was referring to Switzerland's refusal to abandon its neutral stance and its rejection of the Allied Forces' passage.
He instead showed a smile: "You have completed your mission. Leave the rest to me."
A few hours later, thirty thousand soldiers of the Prussian-Austrian Alliance Army launched an attack on Zurich.
Although Switzerland produces many mercenaries, its own army consists of only two or three thousand men, and it is severely lacking in artillery.
The Swiss garrison resisted only until noon, then gave up.
Afterwards, a dense multitude of Allied soldiers entered the city.
It should be noted that there are just over twenty thousand residents in all of Zurich at this moment.
Huo Ce and Blucher rested briefly in the city, and at dawn the next day, proceeded in separate directions, according to the previous plan.
Huo Ce led his twenty thousand Austrian Army troops to Lausanne, from where he would strike at the French hinterland.
