LEGEND OF NEVETSECNUAC - THE CAPITAL CHANNING - SECTION 4
Back in his offices, Lamont Gudaren studied the full set of documents very carefully, astutely reading between the lines. He’d thought Luvet would make a perfect undercover agent; he had a clean record, and he was such a bookworm and rather dull academician. He was least romantic, a tedious oaf (boor, fool, klutz); so how did he get so enmeshed with Disaidun Agripe? Who would have thought Ceroz had it in him to do what he did. What really went on in that boat would be anyone’s guess? He’d read Zunrogo Tugo’s brief report also, talking about another disappointment.
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| 01- PM LAMONT GUDAREN 10-JP |
Lamont’s thoughts turned to his most pressing problem, his nephew Yekav. Personally, he didn't care much for the boy. His ward was a constant source of disappointment and now a definite liability.
“That idiot nephew of mine, Yekov, is sure to be
implicated in this crime, though it seems to be only indirectly. It may take some doing but I still have
influence enough to extricate him from all blame.”
Lamont Gudaren would have
said good riddance to Yekov, but in view of these recent developments, for if
he did not take certain measures in time to nip this in the bud, Lamont knew
that there would be far reaching consequences (repercussions) for him.
The charges were based
partially on the truth, this proof had been furnished to him, within a detailed
report he had commissioned earlier on, by his operatives (agents). If Lamont wanted to get well ahead of Egil Viggoaries
and his cronies, he could delay acting on this no longer.
“All avenues must be blocked; all incriminating
evidence eliminated at the source before the cursed eunuch Egil gains any real
advantage. Yekov (his troublesome nephew) will eventually be exonerated, but
this will be the last time I’ll go through this much trouble for that dastardly
boy. A fatal hunting accident while
visiting his half-brother Keigo Ro in Kensu Province… Hmm… that shouldn’t be
too hard, to arrange. “
Having settled on the
handling of the problem, Lamont Gudaren dispatched his trusted secretary with
the appropriate instructions to ensure that the cover-up was carried out
immediately, without a hitch. The matter
now settled, he leaned back in his plush chair and wearily closed his eyes.
This whole business with the boy, mounted upon his
other concerns, had irritated him a bit too much. At times like these, he was happy he had only
two female offspring. They were quite
beautiful, too, like their mother. He
was hopeful for their future prospects, but they were still too young for him
to include them in his machinations.
Lamont opened his eyes and stared at the stack
of documents that demanded his perusal and signature. Every
day was the same. However much he
delegated, his workload still seemed to increase. There were never enough manpower and funds to
allocate, to deal with all of it satisfactorily. In view of all the extravagant expenditure,
especially those of Royal Family’s, the State funds were fast being
depleted. The treasury accounting
records showed a consistent, mounting deficit year after year.
Owing (due) to
a summer drought last year in the western provinces and floods along the lower
Yawjun River this spring, the government granaries were at only half of the
level (capacity) they should be at this time of the year. Yet with the new military campaigns, the
lavish architectural projects, the bribes that must be paid to assuage the
rampant corruption, the fiefdoms granted almost at random, the taxes already a
burden, perpetually mounting, he wondered, where would it all end?
As a matter of fact, Prime Minister Lamont Gudaren was
at his wits-end trying to find a plausible solution to the failing economy, the
rampaging deficit, and at the same time to procure adequate funds for the
military and the growing demands for the so-called necessary expenditures
incurred for the benefit of the state.
The only partial relief came after the advocated wars when the
much-needed tribute was finally paid.
How much longer could they sustain this appearance of
a strong nation? The system was rotten
to the core. But would he dare to let
any criticism slip through into any of his reports? His Highness was most intolerant of any
failings, any weakness. Even the
Censorate Bureau, the Treasury Department, the Imperial spies, and Internal
Security had all acted as if one body, collaborating with him to obscure these
findings, stalling for time until a solution presented itself.
Despite all seeming appearances, his own personal
finances were in no great shape either; at least not in the kind of plateau
(area of stability) he would like it to be.
“Ah! But I have
had a few lucky breaks now and then, haven't I?” He stood up, clasped his hands behind his back and
slowly strolled over to the window.
“Mmm! “The
sweet scent of rare orchids rose from the courtyard to regale his
nostrils. His eyes fixed themselves to
the upright, solid lines of the gingko tree in the center as his thoughts moved
on to the upstanding Under Secretary Lenny Sukzor, a man well respected by the
Sovereign for his integrity, his strong character, efficiency resourcefulness
and his no-nonsense frankness.
In the crunch, it was
Lenny Sukzor who could be counted on to diligently carry out the most difficult
and delicate jobs that all others shunned for fear of failure.
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| 02- LENNY SUKZOR (2)JP |
Lamont Gudaren grinned wryly as he thought back to how the Under Secretary had, quite unexpectedly, disclosed in Court the entire amount of the bribe he had personally received from the emissaries from Kontu, forcing the rest of the Court bureaucrats to do likewise, though Lamont doubted their accuracy of the count, after all, even he had concealed a few small items.
Earlier on, against the
advice of many of his well-meaning associates and good friends who had strongly
advocated that he gain maximum benefit from the emissaries' offer, Lenny had
ruffled few feathers by seeking the Prime Minister Lamont's good council on how
best to refuse the gifts secretly lavished on him and return them to the
delegation from Kontu.
“Hopefully," Lenny
had hemmed and hawed at this point, making an outward show of humility,
"this can be done without stepping on any toes, instigating any ill will
or triggering any diplomatic incident."
In his heart of hearts,
Lamont Gudaren had always disliked the man and thought of him as too ambitious,
too pretentious, a tiresome boor and, an instigator of unwarranted troubles if
nothing else.
At the time, he had almost petulantly
(sullenly) dismissed him, for his audacity, which would have been a grave
mistake on his part. Meanwhile this irregularity raised his suspicions. “Since when, and for what reason our bold,
no-nonsense Under Secretary has become so circumspect and elliptical, all of a
sudden?”
Prudently Lamont had at first been rather
evasive with his response; but then on second thought, he had concealed his
true feelings and his immense annoyance at the upstart and had pretended to
acquiesce, with him. Lamont had very graciously then promised to intercede
diplomatically on Lenny's behalf and handle the matter of returning the bribes
for him.
Admittedly, that was a bothersome trifle but in the
end the benefits he would reap would certainly exceed all expectations.
Lenny Sukzor, not
concealing too well his disappointment, suddenly had a change of heart
(mind). Bowing low, he’d profusely
apologized for his thoughtlessness in troubling Lamont; then asserting that it
would be way too troublesome for Prime Minister and therefore not wishing to
impose, stated that, however hard it might be, he would personally handle this
matter.
In retrospect, Lamont saw
now, this was an underestimation of the man.
Alas,
he’d regretted since then, not anticipating Lenny's next move and upstaging the
upstart, by his returning the bribes in a timely manner; for as it happened,
Lenny Sukzor had shone like a bright star from that time on, in Sovereign
Zakhertan Yozdek's estimation; hadn’t he?
“No matter,” Lamont shook his head, but his face grew long and a
dark, as shadow fell over his eyes.
“Well, that's water under the bridge now; a missed opportunity is a
missed opportunity.” Lamont shrugged; but then his spirits lifted as he
thought, “Oh well, at least it wasn't an
entire loss. I still got a piece of Lenny Sukzor’s good fortune.”
Lamont picked up the top
document and perused it, “This one can wait.” He disdainfully set it aside.
His thoughts reverting to
Lenny Sukzor, “Hmm, it turns out he was
way too shrewd and certainly far-sighted. “Lamont admitted to himself.
Or perhaps he lacked concrete proof and hoped to
delicately forewarn me and the others of the impending disaster. That may be why he sought first my unneeded
advice when, with that glib tongue of his, he could have at any point in time,
resolved the matter himself.
The Prime Minister
considered for a time this well-calculated, politically astute move on Lenny's
part. “No, I'm giving him way too much credit.” He perfunctorily dismissed (rejected) the
notion; still, what had transpired next, with an unexpected turn of events, had
been a boon.
“It’s that devil Egil Viggoaries that rendered me this
great favor, despite him.”
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| 03- EGIL VIGGORIES -9JP |
The thought of his nemesis seething in rage brought a fresh broad grin of satisfaction to Lamont’s lips.
“I, myself, could not have thought of a better plan
than this stroke of luck. Always
plotting to undermine my efforts, it serves that mongrel- dog right that he
should now stew in his own juices.” The Prime Minister gloated.
Indeed, before he could
fulfill his promise to Lenny of returning the gold to the emissaries, a sudden
turn of events had dictated that he follows a different strategy and gain an
invaluable opportunity to add a prized addition to his web of secret affiliates.
Even though he had not moved thus far to collect on the debt, he was content
with the knowledge that Lenny Sukzor was now his to do with as he saw fit.
“Yes, Lenny Sukzor, with your unblemished reputation,
I now own, your body and soul, lock, stock and barrel.”
The Kontu emissaries had
struck a favorable bargain, wherein they had agreed to take the gold itself
back without any ill will but would, to mollify their Emperor, leave the rare
gifts with their recipient. Just before
Lenny's gold was to be transported back to them, however, a disastrous fire,
coincidentally started by lightning, had decimated (consumed) half of the Under
Secretary's mansion.
Though the gold in
question was stored in that wing of the building that was completely gutted by
the fire, it would still have been salvageable with a little effort once the
rubble was cleared. And lo and behold, when
they managed that, they found that the entire lot had simply vanished without a
trace.
Lamont had suspected that
arson was merely a cover-up for a robbery affected by the cooperation of one or
two of Lenny’s retinues (attendants).
However, his subsequent covert investigation failed to uncover least
trace of incriminating evidence at the scene.
This proved that the thorough job was executed by a professional group’s
backing; one capable and powerful enough to affect covert, illegal transaction
of disposing of a hot item, one such great mass (heap) of gold.
“Yes,” Lamont
sat in chair by the window, “in some ways
Lenny Sukzor is still naive. I could have perhaps prevented his open ended
(unrestricted, indefinite) investigation and spared him from all that dire
trouble; for all the good it did.” As
it were, from the first moment Lamont had heard of the fire, he’d guessed there
was a deeper plot at the crux of it all, and it wasn't hard for him to deduce
just who, considering the open altercation at Court Lenny had had with Egil
Viggoaries just the week before over that trivial matter, the perpetrator
(executor) behind it all was. The eunuch was most notorious for his
spiteful (malicious), vindictive nature and his greed, and hardly anyone else
had the power to get to Chief Inspector Yori.
“No, that wasn't it, at all. “The Prime Minister quickly dismissed
that feeble basis from his overall hypothesis (theory). “There was far more at stake here.”
Knitting his brows, he
inclined his head and digressed, reflected on how the Chief Inspector had been
a competent, reliable officer ever since Lamont Gudaren had handpicked him for
the position. Up until the fire there
had not been any cause, not even the slightest reason to question Yori's
integrity or competence. For eight years
of diligent work, he had maintained an unblemished record to his credit but in
the blink of an eye that had all changed when, despite the hints of arson, he’d
refused to consider any notions of foul play and had persisted in contending in
his otherwise meticulous report that it had been lightning that had caused the
destruction to Lenny's property. Of
course, Yori was a man who relied solely upon solid evidence to draw his
indisputable conclusions, and in this instance all the facts available pointed
to lightning as being the cause of the destruction.
There were no
irregularities to warrant Yori's suspicion, what else could Lamont have
expected of the man? The Prime Minister
had even asked himself what grounds he had to suspect the Chief Inspector.
“All right then,” the Prime Minister quietly conceded. “There must be another explanation for
Yori's unsatisfactory (botched, bungled) investigation of Undersecretary Lenny
Sukzor's case. “
“Perhaps I'm
being too harsh, too demanding of the man's ability?” For even his (Lamont’s) own team of experts had
failed to prove otherwise; as with all the findings, all the clues had tallied
perfectly with the Chief Inspector's original report. But Lamont Gudaren was
innately (instinctively) stubborn official; for countless hours hence, he had
poured over both the reports himself, meticulously examining every detail,
scrutinizing every recorded fact and, even though it all came to no avail (even
he could not detect any irregularities, no suspected insertions, or a single
dubious statements) still, he’d remained most insistent on his suppositions.
The more everything
appeared to be above board, the nagging feeling in the pit of his stomach
prodded Lamont to dig deeper, to investigate all avenues, even the seemingly
innocuous ones, to expose what, at present, stubbornly escaped all notice.
“Some elusive,
incriminating thread would eventually link things up. His hunches had not failed him thus far and
it was inconceivable that they would do so now.”
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| 04- CHIEF INSPECTOR YORI |
In truth he’d been rather fond of Yori, as much as he could be of any subordinate.
Despite any proof, on a
mere suspicion, Yori's life had been expediently forfeited, so coldly that,
even now, the Prime Minister shuddered when he thought about it.
“But it couldn't be helped.”
Lamont’d dreaded losing him but no sooner,
unbidden; names of several possible successors had come to mind. There was no shortage of competent men to
replace him with.
Lamont clenched his fists
and angrily turned his eyes away from the gingko tree to follow the tall
intertwining hedges that skirted a winding pathway which snaked behind a
man-made mountain. Going over, he quickly signed the other document he’d set
aside. “There, it was done. Yori
replacement would be Halsten Stig”
He stroked his beard,
suddenly saddened by the thought of what must inevitably follow.
Perhaps that fool Lenny had inadvertently,
without malice, unleashed this series of events; but the Prime Minister still
held him partially to blame. Why
couldn't he have been straight with Yori?
The proof of Yori's innocence had been obtained long after his
accidental death. All that could be done
had been done for his wife and surviving child, to ease Lamont's conscience,
and the financial burden was added to Lenny Sukzor's still unsettled account.
Why
should the Under Secretary be spared from the consequences of his actions? All because, when Yori had asked to receive
the statement of account of Lenny's losses, the missing gold had been
purposefully withheld from the list.
Lenny had remained apprehensive about the idle gossip that could flame
the belief that he had instigated arson himself to keep both his integrity and
the gold.
“So, he feared above all that his impeccable, precious
reputation should be tarnished.” Lamont
disdainfully pursed his lips, reflecting on how the Undersecretary’s arrogance,
for such a trifle, had wasted a good man's life. That, however, had been the
one weakness that had rendered Lenny Sukzor vulnerable to him and at the same
time, landed them both in deeper trouble.
At least that was what he had allowed the seeming consequence (upshot),
to be generally known. Fortunately, he
had been awakened to the underhanded ploy of his nemesis who, also perceiving
this weakness in Lenny; he had no doubt engineered the theft of the gold, not
just to discredit the Under Secretary, but also to snare the Prime Minister as
well, once Lamont had stuck out his neck for, in support of Lenny. And mistake
number two; to extricate himself from this trouble, he had pushed his team to a
more in-depth investigation into the case.
(END OF SECTION 4)

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