LEGEND OF NEVETSECNUAC - ON THE WAY TO THE CAPITAL - SECTION 32
With nothing else left to do, Tizan donned
(wore, put on) Captain Duko's attire over the light armor he kept on underneath
to protect him from arrows then, as ordered, went back below decks to retrieve
(fetch) Disaidun Agripe.
This time quite
unexpectedly, Disaidun’s spineless husband, having mustered all his courage,
charged at Tizan just as they were headed out the door.
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| 01- CEROS AGRIPE STRIKES BACK |
Though Ceroz Agripe was
half-crazed, filled with remorse and rage, he was still no match for the
Lieutenant of Imperial guards and so, with just one blow from the back of his
fist, hardly any effort at all on Tizan's part, Ceroz was hurled right across
the room, bloodied and almost cataleptic (almost out cold), to crash onto the
floor of the cabin.
"You dare oppose me, wretch!"
Tizan’s rage not assuaged, growling he went over to deliver a couple of vicious
kicks to the Ceroz's side; the force of the second kick was such, it lifted the
massive body up and slammed (smashed, crashed) it against the far wall of the
cabin.
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| 02- CEROS AGRIPE KICKED TO FAR END |
Tizan turned his fiery gaze back to the woman
Disaidun Agripe and bellowed. "What
have you done to him to bring him to such a state?"
Not condescending to
answer, Disaidun Agripe simply shrugged and walked on ahead.
“Quite the vixen, aren't
you?” Tizan smirked as he locked and barred the door behind them. In truth he liked a woman with such spunk
but, since Captain Zunrogo had taken special interest in her, she was
off-limits to him. Such was the rule he
had always lived by and continued to follow.
Grabbing Disaidun Agripe’s
arm forcefully next, and ignoring her volley of threats, he lugged (toted) her
to the barricade. "This is your
post. The captain forbids you to stray an
inch from this point…
Understand?" Only then Tizan
let go of her arm. He was inwardly thrilled at her repressed seething contempt for
him, and could not help but provoke her further, "We have only a few hours
now before the fog lifts. If you want to
pray for your salvation, go ahead; now may be your only chance." He smirked.
Her retort froze on her
lips when her eye just then caught the exceptionally crafted crossbow leaning
in the far corner. Walking over,
Disaidun Agripe picked it up, examined it carefully and said, “Where did you
find this? It’s magnificent."
Then, she sedately withdrew
an arrow from its quiver.
“Show off, as if you can discern a good weapon from a bad one. Some maven (expert, professional, doyen) you
are.” He’d inwardly scoffed,
fixing his cold gaze at her; Tzan once more could not resist goading (inciting)
her, "You do know how to use it, I trust?".
Disaidun Agripe did not
answer him but, instead, loaded the arrow in the blink of an eye then aimed it
directly at Tizan's heart and asked. “Do you want a demonstration?"
This was too much! Throwing his head back and trusting his hidden armor, Tizan laughed
heartily, "Go ahead, I dare you to."
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| 03-TZAN JP |
Just then Zunrogo appeared
on the scene, his stern looks at once sending Tizan without another word,
scurrying off to above deck, to take up his assigned post.
Disaidun Agripe’s
(Jepipi's) alluring approach was met with the same icy rebuke.
Not taking it to heart, she
behaved as if he bade her, sizing up Zunrogo from the corner of her eye and
admiring his heroic countenance.
“By the Gods, he is magnificent! “Gearing up for this single, bitter battle, she was positive he would
triumph over any foe, however invincible, before the end of the day.
~
For seemingly endless hours
now, Disaidun Agripe (Miss Jepipi) had fidgeted at her post. These times preceding an engagement (battle)
had always seemed to drag on forever; furthermore, the angry rants and ravings
of her half-crazed husband Ceroz, only two doors down aggravated her soul and ignited
her ire, making things far worse.
“Oh, why won't he shut up?”
Disaidun Agripe groaned, for her conscience bothered her a little now; after
all, it was she who had brought him to this state.
“But it was necessary,” she told herself to
ease the guilt. “I had to do what I did to survive.
Why couldn't he be a bit more like his half-brother? Insipid fool brought this misfortune down
upon himself because he's less of a man, he’s so weak! “Her face contorted
in disgust.
~
Yesterday, upon her return
from her blissful experience with Zunrogo, she had hesitated for a few moments
outside the cabin door, just long enough to dishevel her hair, loosen her belt,
scratch her shoulders, and rip her bodice slightly, altering her appearance and
assuming a tragic countenance.
Let inside and, finally free (away) from
Tizan's prying eyes, Disaidun had then given an incredible performance of a
woman who had been both physically and mentally abused.
Ceroz Agripe already looked
haggard, his face unusually gaunt and pale, and his eyes sunken and
bloodshot. It tore at his heart and
ripped his bowels to shreds, nearly driving him to the brink of insanity to
hear Disaidun’s embellished accounts of the shameful mauling (pawing,
battering) that she had supposedly endured at the hands of that vile, lecherous
old official, Luvet. That’s right; not Zunrogo but Luvet, her husband was led
to believe, was the supposed sole perpetrator of this grievous sexual assault
on his beloved wife Disaidun.
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| 04- LUVET |
Luvet’d spared her face but
not her body, under her garments, she’d claimed, was all black and blue as
testament of his ill treatment. She had brazenly offered to show it to him but
Ceroz, the fool, trusting in her implicitly, simply taken her at her word.
Ceroz Agripe was further
led to believe that, behind Luvet's seemingly benign, quiet disposition lay a
calculating, sinister, greedy, licentious, and vindictive villain who had, from
the moment he’d laid eyes on Disaidun, lusted after her and from then on
shamelessly had striven (endeavored) to possess her.
The convincing story
Disaidun fed her husband was wretched enough in itself but her quiet tears, her
unspoken insinuations just compounded Ceroz’s already intolerable existence,
his unbearable misery. Highly incensed, Ceroz Agripe’d gnashed his teeth,
shaken his fist in the air and vowed to exact vengeance on that dog's spawn.
“He'd make him pay dearly for his vile deeds, enlist the help of his
half-brother, Zohuj Kez and his influential friends, if needs be.”
"And how do you
propose to survive this present danger?
You know you're powerless to stop him or them." Disaidun had rebuked him, then relayed to him
the information she’d overheard, when they thought she’d passed out, in Luvet’s
cabin.
Luvet the mastermind, Ceroz
Agripe came to believe, had conspired from the start with Captain Doku, the two
assassins, the Imperial guard Tizan and Captain Zunrogo, and the seemingly
upright scholar, to intercept in mid-stream a tribute vessel bound for the
Capital with its cargo of gold bullion.
The details of this grand
larceny had been worked out months in advance, down to the minutest point and,
the specific measures needed for smooth transition and the eventual execution,
now had been finalized. Many more were
involved in a scheme of this magnitude, including some subversives planted on
the targeted vessel. The few expendable passengers/witnesses, like them, were
all imprisoned in their cabins, to be dealt with later; their predictable
demise, however, would eliminate (eradicate) any possibility of trouble
later-on.
Then she reminded her
husband how she had wanted to disembark along with the other, lucky passengers
when the opportunity had availed itself, when there was still time.
She blamed him, on his
short-sightedness, his eagerness to reach his new post, and consequently, for
this terrible predicament.
Her ill luck had also been the contributor. She then softening, had exclaimed, looking as though she desperately
sought to exonerate at least in part, his guilt, which further endeared her to
him, “How wonderful she was; how so very
naïve to believe in nonsensical superstition.” Fool that he was, she could
read him like a book.
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| 05-CEROS AND DISAIDUN AGRIPE |
“Oh, darling husband, what can we do, what can
you do to save me?” Once more she had wept unconsolably, heart
wrenchingly. After which, when she,
feeling terribly parched, dried her eyes, and asked her husband to fetch her
some water from the jug.
Her husband eager to please
and to console her had rushed to do her bidding.
It was at that point in time, when she looking
even more dismal (gloomy), robbed him of least hope, by telling him that before
she was sent back, she had been told, but was afraid to tell him till then, how
the villain Luvet intended to murder Ceroz and the baby and if she did not agree
to be his concubine in future, he threatened to sell her into slavery
(bondage).
As for the reasons why, she
had been sent back, it was simply to allow her to say her final farewells, while
they finalized their plan and corrected prior overlooked areas of incongruity
(conflict ).
"Oh, dear husband our
bliss has been so cruelly cut short; as doomed individuals we are, robbed of
ecstasy of growing old together. You’ll never see your son grow up. He’ll never
grow up! “Disaidun Agripe had looked at him with hurtful, resigned eyes then
burst into loud sobs to once more, wrench his heart.
She’d watched (seen) from
the corner of her eye how self-loathing and reproach gnawed at his entrails,
how flustered, how sickened at heart he’d suddenly felt, in his dire
predicament.
For a brief second, seeing
how she had broken him with her words, she had felt the stirring of remorse
tugging at her conscience; but she had already resolved in Zunrogo's cabin to
carry this ploy through to the bitter end.
"Don't worry,
husband," her heart again hardened, she had seized this opportunity to add
salt to his open wounds.
"I will not blame you for what will
happen to me in future. As I said earlier, I was born under an unlucky star; it
has been my curse my entire life. I
don't see why it should change now. I'm
grateful for this one brief period of happiness you have given me. It will be one fond memory I will carry with
me to my grave."
Then once again Disaidun
Agripe had recounted in detail, the shameful episodes with Luvet; at the end of
which, she’d thrown herself at her husband’s feet, imploring him to have mercy
and, by killing her right there and then, put an end to her torment.
Of course, Disaidun knew Ceroz was totally
incapable of such an act. It was just
one more pummel of guilt, another whack of disgrace, all, fostering chagrin, to
further constrict the loop (strap, noose, snare, rope) around her husband’s
neck, to sap his honor, his manhood and ultimately, push him over the edge.
Egged on by her pleading
the fool had tried, given it his best shot too; to predictably in the end,
when, she had started to turn ashen, when her eyes had bulged out only a little
and, she had started to emit slight gurgling sounds, he had suddenly broken off
his grip on her neck and then, with a horrified look on his face, fallen back.
"I can't go through
with it! I'm no murderer." He’d cried out.
“What did I almost do?” Traumatized Ceroz
Agripe had glared hatefully at those still partially clenched, despicable hands
that had almost taken the life of his beloved wife.
He had next, burying his
face and fallen on his knees, had sobbed hysterically, uncontrollably, like a
child.
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| 06- DISRAUGHT CEROS AGRIPE |
Disaidun Agripe, her senses
restored to norm, though inwardly sullen, going over, had murmured her
encouragement. "It’s all right, dear.
You did nothing wrong. I asked you to; I made you do it. You are not to
be blamed. You are a good man; you always were.
We’ll be all right." She'd
then sobbed inconsolably as she cradled him and rocked his head soothingly in
her arms. "Please don't cry.”
Drying her tears, she’d then to further shame
him, promised resolutely, “You need not try, dear; I’ll find the strength
somehow for us both and, avenge this wrong. This time I'll find it in myself too..." She did not have to complete her sentence,
for he had understood (grasped) her meaning.
Disaidun would rather end her own life by throwing herself into the cold
river and perishing in the watery grave, than suffer further shame.
Her strong determination
only belittled him further, robbing what little bit of humanity was left within
him. He felt smaller than a maggot,
slime, a piece of offal.
~
(END OF SECTION 32)






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