LEGEND OF NEVETSECNUAC - ON THE WAY TO THE CAPITAL - SECTION 37
The passenger official,
Ceroz Agripe had tried his utmost to keep his beloved wife alive, but her
injuries being so grave, she did not live long. After her (hastily improvised) impromptu
funeral where her corpse also ended up in the river, the official Ceroz Agripe
had remained in deep mourning and mostly sequestered in his cabin. He was
naturally devastated and from then on incessantly mourned her loss. In his
bereavement he ceased all communication and activity, as well, frequently
refused any intake of sustenance (provisions, nourishment).
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| 01- TORMENTED CEROS AGRIPE |
He did not appear idle, rather, seemed to be contemplating something dire; meanwhile, he’d remained always in bad temper and often lashed out at the crew members, or whoever called on him. Ceroz’s angst (dread) and mounting heartache, meanwhile, had raised no alarms, as there were ample other more pertinent concerns and great deal still to do on aboard.
The infant’s death was
attributed to crib-death, a common occurrence at that time, which often befell
(occurred), one in every four babies.
The official Luvet,
despite Zunrogo's assurances, had also chosen most of the time to remain
isolated (quarantined) in his cabin. He
had never had any dealings with Ceroz Agripe, yet at his wife Disaidun Agripe’s
funeral, his blatant (unconcealed) hostility towards him, his intense
(penetrating), fiery (blazing) antagonistic gaze (eyes), had both mystified and
greatly alarmed official Luvet. He’d
subtly questioned Captain Zunrogo’s Lieutenant Tzan about this matter, but
Lieutenant’s response had been less than satisfactory; moreover, his not so
subtle, cryptic words had thence (thereafter) hunted Luvet’s peace. He could
not shake the feeling that he’d somewhat been set up (accused, blamed for
something he didn’t do) and ominously, a cruel, ignominious fate had awaited
him. But how could he escape this impending catastrophe when he was constrained
as passenger in a fair size vessel (craft, boat) temporarily stymied (because
of necessary repairs) in the center of the vast expansive river, with the
shoreline barely visible. He was not a competent swimmer and there was no small
dinghy (dory, rowboat) on this cursed ship.
Last few nights, burdened
with deep concerns, Luvet had hardly touched his supper but drunk heavily to
ease his mounting trepidation (fear, anxiety). Pacing back and forth across the
room, he stayed up most of the evenings contemplating a plausible plan to ward
off this impending disaster. He could
not shake the terrible foreboding in the crux of his being, that if not now, in
matter of days, even if he succeeded in evading (escaping) the grave, lurking peril
(danger, hazard, risk), his life would still be forfeited.

02- LUVET
Scholar Fradel Rurik
Korvald, meanwhile, from the very start, had refused to be sequestered in his
cabin; not wishing to remain idle, he’d instead, had done his bit in expediting
the mending of the ship.
Under Tizan's competent
supervision, in no time at all the vessel had been made sail-worthy; hence, the
fourth day at dawn, taking full advantage of the sudden rise of a north wind,
they’d charted a course over the wide river that would bring them at a swift
pace into the port city of Hanbrak, the river port immediately before the
Capital city of Channing.
Once they had docked,
Zunrogo and company were to precede post haste from then on, on horseback, to
the Capital.
~
Midway to reaching the
port city of Hanbrak, no one other than Zunrogo, had anticipated the sudden and
unexpected tragic turn of events.
In the dead of night, as
all the other tired souls, including Fradel Rurik Korvald clutched their
pillows in deep slumber; Ceroz Agripe suddenly snapping out of one of his
catatonic (inert, withdrawn) states, had sat bolt upright and guardedly looked
about him.
With wild gleam in his
black pupils, he quietly rose from his bed and went over to pick up his
sleeping baby. But the crib was empty, his precious Tait was not there, he’d
gone missing!
Suddenly his memory served
him a faint recollection, how in his anguished state, before the battle on
board had started, trying to quieten the bawling (wailing) infant, he had
pressed his precious boy to his chest and, tragically, smothered (suffocated) him.
“But when did they take him away? Where was Tait now?”
His mind once more
becoming unhinged, his memory fogged, and he felt suddenly confused. He looked
down at the empty crib, “There you are,” this time he clearly saw his precious
boy Tait fast asleep.
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| 03- BABY IN CRIB |
Smiling, he gingerly picked up the small pillow, which he’d often used to protect the baby from the edge, his arms swaddling (enveloping) it, he held the precious cargo close to his chest. Suddenly the baby was awakened and began to squeal.
“There, don’t cry Tait…
Mommy will be here soon.” He gently rocked the bundle in his arms till the baby
was quiet.
Bending his head, he
gently kissed Tait’s forehead. His beautiful son seemed to be smiling at him.
“Oh, you are such a good boy” He blew him another string of kisses.
Again, confusion set in,
but just as quickly it went away; his mind was much clearer now, suddenly he
knew what he must do. Going over, he
edged out the door of the cabin and locked it behind him.
Once in the dimly lit
corridor, hugging the walls, he inaudibly crept two doors down to Luvet's cabin
and quietly slipped inside. Three paces
into the room he stopped. With the mad
fire burning in his eyes, he quickly surveyed the immediate surroundings: his
eyes momentarily rested on the table which was cluttered with dishes, food left
uneaten, but there was the discarded wine stained cup, the empty wine jar tipped on
its side; then he observed the stack of documents on the night table and the
flickering oil lamp teetering dangerously over the edge; finally, his gaze came to rest on the sleeping
official.
Ceroz Agripe’s pulse again
raced as the shiver of fuming rage and seething contempt rippled through him.
Gingerly, as if wary of waking his infant son from sleep, Ceroz put the precious bundle down in the plush, oversize chair in corner and, reaching into his left pocket, retrieved a long, red, silk cord.
This crimson silk cord had been his former
wife's favorite fashion accessory. He
took a shuddering breath as his gaze rested on it, recalling the multitude of
purposes she had put it to. Now it would
serve a new purpose.
He caressed it lovingly, touching it to his
cheek, then to his pallid lips. The
lingering perfume it held misted his eyes with the memories it evoked, and he
moaned softly in pain and dropped his head.
Abruptly anew the ire
erupted in his chest, and he clenched the cord taut with indignation and bile
until his knuckles whitened and cracked.
Just then Luvet stirred in
his deep slumber, uttered some incomprehensible phrase, and then turned onto
his side. Ceroz was rooted to the spot,
holding his breath as he considered his recourse should be the cursed official
awake now and catch on to his presence in the room!
Then, however, a
lugubrious, loud snoring resounded in the air.
“Vile cur; how dare you sleep without a care… Death is too good for the likes of you!”
A wave of sickness, disgust and anger washed
over Ceroz Agripe as he gritted his teeth.
“Your flesh should be ripped (torn) into minute pieces
and fed to the wild dogs! I swear, even
if it is the last thing I do, I will gauge-out your eyes and stuff them up to ….
where they belong. Your manhood and your
black heart I shall trample underfoot. I
will make certain that you will never be born again in any condition to defile
a good, virtuous woman!” He spat; his anger barely contained as he
shivered once more.
His body was rocked with
an all-consuming-wrath, and he clenched his fists to steady his steps as he
determinedly approached Luvet.
He stopped at hairsbreadth away from the edge
of the bed. His nostrils dilated as he
glowered at the official; before him lay an ordinary official with plain nose, ordinary
beard and mustache and typical lips, nothing special at all. In the dim light, Ceroz noted how his reddish
hair was scraggly (disheveled) and few strands hung loose at the sides. There was nothing remarkable about him,
nothing that would betray to an onlooker in the least his vile, contemptible
nature. There was no trace of inhumanity
which Ceroz could detect in that oblong, rather impassive (blank) face, yet
this mangy dog Luvet was assuredly the lowest of the lowest.
Surging contempt consumed
Ceroz as he felt the bile rise in him once more.
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| 05- CEROS AGRIPE -GONE MAD |
In the next instant the cord looped around Luvet's neck and tightened with such unusual force that it bit two inches into his neck. The convulsions of the struggling body were kept under control only by the application of Ceroz's total weight upon the dying man.
When Luvet finally
expired, Ceroz drew from his other pocket the knife his wife had given him as
her instrument of revenge.
In the next few minutes, he set off to work,
fulfilling his promises of defacement to the letter. When he was done, he discarded the knife onto
the table and stepped back.
As if now reconciled with
the dead official, Ceroz smiled and calmly walked over to the corner to pick up
the baby once more. Going above deck, he
moved slowly and serenely, looking as if he was merely taking the infant out
for some air.
Before any of the watch could realize his
intention and stop him, he simply stepped over the edge of the boat and
disappeared instantly in the foam of the wake.
“Man overboard…Man
overboard!” In dead of night, the warning sounded.
But the vessel, as
ordered, kept on (with its speed) going.
They could not have rescued him anyhow, even if they were any such
order. Driven by the strong northern
wind, the vessel was moving way too fast to stop or try turning back, without
grave risk to all.
The gruesome sight of
Luvet's mutilated corpse was discovered soon after. Without exception, every member of this
rugged crew was chilled to the bone.
Enough incrimination evidence was left behind to leave no question as to
the murderer's identity.
The motive was framed
variously in everyone's mind but most chalked it up to simple insanity induced
by the tragic loss of his beloved wife Disaidun Agripe, his infant boy Tait and
the recent events, such as the terror and violence of the battle.
It was generally determined that, being weak
in nature already, Official Ceroz Agripe had simply cracked under
pressure. A few, however, speculated
that the mutilation stemmed from the settling of an old grudge (score). Some guessed that it was a crime of passion,
and that the wife must have had an illicit affair with the bureaucrat Luvet.
Fradel (Nevetsecnuac)
suspected that Zunrogo was somehow at the root of it all and despised him even
more for it. However, he had nothing
solid on which to base his suspicions (allegations), therefore he buried his resentment
and concentrated on the serious concerns that lay ahead of him once they
reached the Capital.
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| 06- TZAN JP |
Tzan, by piecing together the snippets of information and what he’d astutely observed, in the end discerned the true probable cause. Tizan absently nodded as he wrapped up the pieces of the official's corpse; then with a sinister grin, he covertly eyed Zunrogo, telling himself to never ever for an instant let his guard down, to never underestimate (take too lightly) the captain’s capacity for ruthlessness, or misjudge in future Zunrogo’s devious powers of manipulation.
~
(END OF SECTION 37- END OF BOOK 8 – ON THE WAY TO THE
CAPITAL)
(LEGEND OF NEVETSECNUAC EPIC STORY CONTINUES IN BOOK 9- THE CAPITAL CHANNING)





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