During the defense of the city, what Tyutkalá did was even more outrageous. He demolished houses for heating and fed people. All kinds of evil deeds are unbelievable.

In addition to letting the soldiers rob and plunder in the city, after Kossuth fled Budapest, he also occupied the palace and transformed it into his own harem.

At first, Tyutkalá's targets were prostitutes and socialites who tried to cling to power, but soon he got tired of it and extended his evil hands to his subordinates' wives and daughters and his own students.

After the Hungarian rebellion began, Tyutkalá was also awarded the position of president of the University of Hungary, responsible for teaching the "bravery" class.

Later, when he saw no hope, Tyutkalá became even more unscrupulous. The number of people in his harem once exceeded 800. In order to increase fun and solve the food crisis, he even came up with some more inhuman ways to play.

Tyutkalá also built a huge underground palace filled with all kinds of gold, silver, jewelry, antiques, and artworks, the value of which was enough for Kossuth to buy a large army from Britain and France.

Another secret underground palace was filled with food, bacon, and even canned food.

But these riches could only become spoils of the Austrian Empire at this time, and added fuel to the destruction of the Hungarian Empire.

What Tyutkalai did was really despised, but at the trial, it was the Hungarians who denounced him most fiercely.

Tyutkalai's behavior even made those villains who had long given up their human identity feel sick. If it weren't for this greedy and stupid guy, Budapest would never fall so easily, and they wouldn't live such a life of neither human nor ghost.

In fact, the trial of Tyutkalai at this time solved the doubts of Heinau and a group of Austrian generals, because they did not restrict the supply of the Hungarian army.

After all, Franz's plan was only to eliminate the living force of the Magyars. This was not out of humanitarian considerations. He was just afraid that the Hungarians would surrender early.

However, Tyutkalai, this fool, inadvertently helped Franz a lot. Instead of surrendering, he made people angry.

In fact, even if Qiutkalai was not stupid and evil, a city under siege for a long time would inevitably have many evil deeds, but his actions amplified this effect.

"Death penalty! Death penalty! Death penalty!"

"We can't let him go!"

"Death penalty is too easy for him! Burning!"

"Piercing!"

The judges of the temporary court did not react much, after all, they had seen a lot of such scum along the way.

Instead, Qiutkalai cried first.

"I don't want to die! I'm innocent! They framed me! I know a lot of secrets, and I am willing to be loyal to His Majesty the Emperor!"

Qiutkalai shouted like this, and the whole situation became more chaotic. The angry crowd wanted to rush up and beat him to death immediately.

Now, whether it is the loyalists, the rebels, or the passers-by, they are very disgusted with the devil in front of them.

However, as the highest-ranking Hun Empire official captured so far, his symbolic significance is naturally extraordinary, and this person is very likely to have key intelligence.

For a moment, the judges were somewhat at a loss. Their choice was to concentrate on the trial first, then sentence, and use this time to summon to Vienna for Franz to make the decision.

If Franz was here, he would be extremely angry, because before these judges arrived in Hungary, he had already set the tone that all trials must be carried out quickly and strictly, and even if it was Kossuth, there was no need to ask for permission to hang him directly.

The actions taken by the temporary court at this time clearly violated Franz's original intention, and Qiutkalai was locked up amid angry condemnations.

Before leaving, he did not forget to boast that he was a loyal minister of the Austrian Empire, and at the same time cursed the Hungarians present as barbaric traitors. The scene was once very chaotic.

The subsequent trials also fully demonstrated the diversity of species, all kinds of scum, all kinds of evil, which made everyone's anger reach its peak.

Everyone was waiting for the execution a week later. People must make sure that the scum deserved their crimes and watch how they died.

The main force of the Austrian Empire began to withdraw gradually, preparing for the next attack on Debrecen. Subsequent auxiliary troops entered and began to treat the wounded, resume production, and rebuild the city.

However, at this moment, something unexpected happened. The night sky in the distance was bright red. Some people thought it was beautiful fireworks, but senior officials of the Austrian Empire knew what it meant.

"It's red light! Red light!"

A personal soldier broke into Heinau's tent and shouted, and the latter immediately jumped up from the bed.

"What direction?"

"Northwest!"

"Northwest?"

"It's northwest!"

The personal soldier answered affirmatively, and countless thoughts exploded in Heinau's mind. Northwest? Could it be that the Hungarian army bypassed him and attacked Pressburg directly?

But how could that be possible?

Heinau hurriedly picked up the oil lamp and walked to the map to check, but there was no strategic point on the map, and where did the Hungarian army come from to threaten such a large army?

Until he saw an area marked in red by Franz-Busen Dam.

"Tu(艹盘艹)! Quick! Get everyone out of the city and onto the high ground outside the city! Blow the horn! Blow the whistle! Triangle!"

Heinau yelled in a panic.

In fact, Heinau had seen this tactic in a military anecdote written by an unknown person many years ago, but this tactic was too shocking and a bit outlandish, so it did not attract the attention of the Austrian military.

However, Franz had marked many red areas on the map before, and believed that these areas might change the situation of the war at a critical moment.

Heinau linked the two together, and with his understanding of Hungary's environment and climate, he immediately understood what the red flares were warning.

Ice floods, Hungary's most terrible natural disaster, are even worse than wildfires.

However, due to Franz's Danube River regulation plan, ice floods have rarely occurred since the construction of the Busen Dam.

Franz did not dig up the dam when the war was intense before, and it is naturally impossible to do such a stupid thing now that he has already won.

There is only one possibility, that the Hungarians blew up the dam themselves.

In fact, it was the secret Hungarian troops who blew up the Busen Dam at the instruction of Kossuth.

According to Kossuth's idea, the Austrian army was to be annihilated in one fell swoop under the city of Budapest. Even if the main force of the Austrian Empire could not be directly annihilated, it could delay its attack and pave the way for him to defeat them one by one.

What he didn't expect was that Tyutkalai's troops were so weak that they lost Budapest in just one day.

Kossuth didn't expect that Franz had already thought of the possibility of the dam being blown up and arranged an early warning system.

One after another, red flares rose up, illuminating the sky with red.

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