LEGEND OF NEVETSECNUAC - THE RENEGADE IMMORTAL - SECTION 16
"Once Zakhertan Yozdek had ascended the throne, the ensuing years had been the unparalleled goriest eon (era, age) in history." Hugen resumed his narrative (chronicle) after guzzling some more wine. When he held out the jug for Uyuk to partake some, the latter, however, had declined, saying he had far too much already, that he would abstain for a while till his head cleared a bit, he just needed a breathing space, a respite. Uyuk had urged Hugen nonetheless, to freely indulge, as the long night after all, stretched out before them.
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| 01- UYUK (20)JP |
Yea, right! Hugen inwardly scorned, despising Uyuk for this unwarranted deceit. Why feign such weakness? Hugen knew Uyuk had not reached his limit, not by a long shot…Latter could handle more, quite a bit more. Hugen knew this for a fact. Not as much as he can, perhaps. Still…
For a spell he considered goading Uyuk until the latter
dropped his guard and relented. Then
again, why bother, Hugen dismissing the notion, good humouredly shrugged
and helped himself to some more wine.
Uyuk, despite his feigned inebriated state, keenly, from the
corner of his eye had scrutinized Hugen, for the faint-hearted could not have
managed the quantity of strong spirits Hugen had consumed thus far and remained
still, maddeningly so, sober. Considering the extreme potency, the wine had
cost Uyuk quite a substantial sum; this brand of smooth, fruity blend being
particularly high in alcohol content, should have way before this intoxicated/incapacitated
the most resilient (robust constitution) of men, but not Hugen! Why was that?
The corner of Hugen’s mouth slightly lifted as if in amusement,
anticipating Uyuk’s inner query, and he looked away; fact is, he needed to
consume at least four or five times the amount, to be totally inebriated or
brought to a happy state; a condition he'd rarely indulged and always had done
so in solitude. After a while the amassed consumed quantity, however, had
eventually derived some adverse effect; the consequential fleeting moment of
light headedness and nostalgic reflections nevertheless, through sheer
willpower quickly dispensed (passed), Hugen once more reverted his somber gaze
on Uyuk. His head, his thoughts the
product of a cool, calculating mind once more lucid and unequivocally defined,
Hugen’s deliberations was again embroiled in the selfsame grave, harsh
realities of life.
What's more, after the subsequent several swigs (mouthfuls) of
this fruity concoction (booze), far from being mellowed out, his senses disappointingly
instead, had felt tauter (tense, wound up); hence, Hugen disdainfully put the
jug aside and, his breathing regulated, he indolently stretched out his limbs.
But this did little in dousing the fire coursing in his hot veins, his muscles
twitching and flexing in an invisible restless craze, yearning to engage in a mortal
combat with an invincible, (challenging)formidable foe.
Affixing his gaze to the far corner, his hankering heart
tinged with sadness, Hugen thoughtfully reflected on the multitude, past,
memorable combats; there was singular one that stood above the rest, General
Zonar Kuntzu, a warrior with indomitable prowess. Hugen had heard much about
his fame, his brilliant feats. Unfortunately, Hugen's line of work had kept him
always on a different course than the General’s; but once he had been fortunate
enough to have been an eyewitness to a friendly combat between the General
Kuntzu and another competent fighter. The breathtakingly spectacular fight had
ended the same way, with General Zonar Kuntzu being the victor as always.
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| 02-GENERAL ZONAR KUNTZU |
Hugen donned an ironic smile on his lips and looked away. How easily General Zonar Kuntzu had bested his opponent!
After that day Hugen had honed his martial skills so that one
day, he could try his own luck against the General; however, when finally, his
competence was up to par (the equivalence), fate had cruelly intervened to
cheat him out of that opportunity.
Inclining his head, Hugen with a blank stare studied Uyuk,
thinking inwardly how Uyuk unfortunately presented no such challenge. True, he had never pitted his martial skill
against Uyuk but he had observed Uyuk's ability in combat with others and,
though his partner was comparatively good, Hugen had concluded that he could
easily defeat (best) him without resorting to draw upon any of his special
expertise. There was one thing Uyuk
excelled in, however, his ability to... Hugen threw Uyuk a covert
look. Only that, he nodded. Yes,
I’ll have to watch out for that. In
a way Hugen was grateful for Uyuk's somewhat amenable company. At least Uyuk amused him, not like those
intolerable, overconfident, superstitious boors whose presence strained his
patience and made his blood boil.
Requiring more solitude, Hugen pointedly lent an ear to the
howling of the gale force wind and the drumming, pounding of the rain pellets
outside. Oh, the nights are always so intolerably long. Hugen inwardly moaned thinking,
especially for one such as him who was an insomniac. Unfortunately, the pelting
hail outside was a good deterrent for a long, brisk stroll, which was what he
most desired at that moment. Resigned to
stay put, he shifted his weight to get more comfortable then, once more,
somberly resumed his narration where he had left off: "Yes, we weren’t the
only ones who’d suffered from his rancorous (malicious, spiteful ) wrath; all
who’d tried to undermine or obstruct Zakhertan Yozdek's aim, all suspected
loyalists and dissidents in Wenjenkun, were vengefully rooted out, vanquished
or incinerated."
Hugen’s eyes met Uyuk's gravely and he nodded. "Furthermore, all who griped or raised
even the slightest discourse of his harsh measures, among them countless
brilliant scholars from various backgrounds, the nobility, courtiers, religious
personages, priests, sages, hermits, even the stray beggars; all without
exception were persecuted relentlessly and tortured before an ignominious
death. The countryside, hence, is dotted with a multitude of man-made pits of
death, sepulchres and catacombs where Zakhertan’s countless past and present
enemies are all buried.”
Hugen paused for an effect and then resumed: “There are also
hidden subterranean chambers of torture, (constructed) in Channing, equipped
with abhorrent, specially designed instruments, which prolongs, any convicted
felons or dissidents’ excruciating physical and mental agony before their
ignominious (humiliating) end. Some of
the holding cells, chiefly used for minor offences, are all the same,
ingeniously constructed to perpetuate (beget) permanent insanity; and that’s
not all, but it would take me far too long to extrapolate on them
all." Hugen shrugged. "Perhaps
another time, eh… Anyway, to put it succinctly, Zakhertan Yozdek's reign has
been marked with extreme brutality unrivaled by anyone in history save perhaps,
only by Deng Hedenko in present times."
He threw his head back and laughed at Uyuk's baffled look.
"The Sovereign of
Korion, ignoramus (numskull) you," Hugen paused to savor the other's
stifled rage at the insult. "To continue; after consolidating his power
Zakhertan Yozdek lost no time in raising another mammoth (gargantuan) force,
this time to punish us anew, but by that time our Illustrious Sovereign Anguan
Binchan had succumbed to a fatal illness, thus robbing Zakhertan of his chief
grievance.”
“Korion, meanwhile, had been rocked by a volcanic eruption and
three subsequent earthquakes that ravaged two major cities and most of the
countryside which depleted the precious remainder of our valuable resources,
our strength and vitality. What real
resistance a devastated and leaderless nation could have offered? Of course,
that mattered little to such a blood-thirsty fiend Zakhertan; as a matter of
fact, he had even taken it into account and used it to gain an even more swift
and decisive victory." Hugen bristled.
"An honorable campaign was not something he’d consider in his evil
plans. In no time at all, his superior,
predatory forces swept across the adjacent, inconsequential provinces to
descend on us voraciously, with but one directive: to annihilate our race from
the face of the Earth.”
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| 03- ZAKHERTAN YOZDEDK (22) JP |
"Ah, but we (every citizen of Korion) were equally determined (resolute) to deny him his easy conquest. Even though from the start our defeat was a foregone conclusion, our patriots resisted Zakhertan for a year and a half. Hah! I'd venture to guess that it was the costliest and bloodiest campaign Zakhertan had ever waged. Alas! Despite our courage and brilliant strategies, our impoverished army was pitted against an invincible rapacious force that, at the crucial point in the struggle, received fresh reinforcements. I do admit that, towards the end Zakhertan's military manoeuvring and strategic offensives were flawless as only one who is the demon incarnate can devise. In one ingenious, final stroke he had both rebel cities capitulate simultaneously."
Hugen exhaled deeply, morosely, "And so, on the solstice
of the third lunar year of the reign of our Illustrious Sovereign Harkan
Konzuran Binchan, a terrible nightmare was unleashed on us all." At this point, Hugen's tongue was stilled by
the anger, bitterness, and scorn he felt at the core of his being.
"Is it true what I had heard? That after the Capital yielded Zakhertan had
our late Sovereign Anguan Binchan's corpse exhumed, supreme sacrilege that it
was, had it torn into minute pieces and then scattered in various cesspools
throughout the country?"
"Yes," Hugen nodded grimly, "and that's not
all. On Zakhertan’s orders his men went
on a rampage, digging up all the ancestral graves, some Centuries old. They desecrated the corpses and had the
remains discarded into fast flowing rivers.
The valuable artifacts were all plundered then shamelessly carted off
(lugged) to their homeland." Hugen
dropped his head, swallowing hard.
"After the gruesome, ignoble execution of our Sovereign Harkan
Konzuran Binchan, anyone with even a trace of royal blood was rounded up and
humiliated in a public spectacle designed specifically to break our spirit
before they, too, were executed.
However, this had quite the opposite effect, for it only strengthened
(fuelled) our people's resolve."
Uyuk hissed; his absent gaze fixed at the far corner.
Hugen looked up sharply, pleased at the outrage in Uyuk,
noting his face flushed to beet-red, his chest palpitating with indignation at
the same time as his fists clenched so hard that, his nails drew blood from the
sheer force and intensity of his feelings.
For a spell Hugen had forgotten Uyuk's true origin, but then, suddenly
his thoughts darkened.
“Who are
you trying to fool? It was your kind,
your race that inflicted these atrocities on us.” He shook his head and bit his lip to contain
his inner contempt. It was a strange idea, a hard concept for this hard-core
patriot to swallow. “No matter what, I cannot conceive of how anyone can forsake their own
kind, their own race and country as absolutely as you have done, Uyuk! And for
what reason, a personal grievance?”
Seeing Uyuk in this light he questioned the other’s professed
loyalty to Korion. “What’s your actual ulterior motive? What kind of game are you playing at anyhow?”
With narrowing eyes, he covertly scrutinized his partner.
“Get a
grip on your-self!” he fought the urge to strike, to act
immediately. “There’ll be ample opportunity later.
Go along for now, soon enough he will show his true colors and expose
his dark heart. You can deal with him
then.”
But again, defiantly such bursting fury rose from deep
within. “Why on Earth had he bothered at all?
Why had he stuck his neck out for Uyuk in the first place? Was it the element of danger, the challenge
it posed? Had he wished to exploit Uyuk
as a game, a way to gratify his dark, morbid sense, his hatred for Uyuk's
kind? Or was it something entirely
different, an alien concept long since abandoned; plain old pity?” Hugen detested this new ambivalent feeling
and looked down (lowered his gaze), trying to think of something else.
In his silent brooding, now with his eyelids closed, he
reflected yet again how Wushing, his entire family, his colleagues and anyone
who had been even remotely connected with him had all been hunted down and brutally
eradicated (eliminated). It mattered not
whether they had been innocent lives, all ages of civilians. Their fate had all been the same. This extending to the (agrarian populations)
countryside, the manifold atrocities that had been committed back then, to date
hunted Hugen’s peace; countless ranchers (farmers, planters) had all been
mercilessly cut down, their mutilated and mangled corpses piled high in heaps were
then burned to ash.
“In summation, Zakhertan Yozdek’s fierce persecution had
extended way beyond those who had actively opposed him in both campaigns. There had been so much blood spilled that for
months after Korion's capitulation the rivers had ran red. When pestilence struck during those warm
months, it necessitated the burning of all the exposed corpses. So many bonfires dotted the land, that the acerbic
air stifled (burned) the lungs, while anguished wailing (cries) of mourners revibrated
the land.”
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| 04- HUGEN (54)jp |
These were the haunting sounds and images which, permanently etched into his mind, had robbed Hugen of least peaceful, any tranquil existence. Whether he was asleep or awake, the ongoing nightmares provided him no respite. To present, Hugen's love for his country, his Sovereign and his craving for vengeance were all, what sustained him and gave some meaning to his wretched life. But alas, perpetually no absolution (pardon, release) was to be had, with his precarious, oftentimes violent existence.
"And it is for certain that one thing Zakhertan Yozdek
had not counted on, was his own underestimation of the resilience of Korion’s
ordinary folk." Uyuk , interceding, spoke up loudly, partly to test
Hugen's state of (alertness) consciousness.
The slight frown on the other's features confirmed it, he was
(alert and) awake. Uyuk was, of course speaking from personal experience. Surviving the ignominious death of his mother
and sister, he was on the brink of expiring himself when he had been given
sanctuary and a second chance, by a tribe of nomadic herdsmen in Korion. His foster father was one Muxor Kenny, a
strong, stout warrior who never donned a smile.
Always rigid and stern, he had nevertheless taught Uyuk the survival
skills that had served him well up to the present day.
“Oh yes,” Uyuk inwardly
scoffed (rebuked, chided), as he sized up Hugen quaffing some more spirits: “I am well aware of your low opinion of me
and my skills. I may just one day shock the britches right off you, arrogant,
smug bastard!”
If the truth were to be
known, Uyuk had it in his power to alter that opinion and countless times had
been sorely tempted by Hugen's goading to show off and expose his deeply hidden
talents. Indeed, Uyuk knew far more than he let on. Despite his youth he had experienced numerous
hair-raising, daring escapades that, if recounted, would boggle Hugen's mind,
and earn him the respect and recognition he felt was his due. Fortunately, his good sense had prevented him
from doing that very thing.
Hugen, as if he had surmised other’s thoughts, suddenly looked
up and meeting Uyuk's eyes directly, smirked; then in a conciliatory gesture,
offered him the jug which the younger man this time obligingly took and raised
it to his lips.
Even though Uyuk was parched, he took care to drink only a
moderate portion however, just enough to wet his mouth, for it would not do if
he were to become totally inebriated, despite the reliable company and
relatively safe circumstances. Feeling
suddenly famished, he reached over and drew his bundle to him. Groping about inside the sack, he found what
he was looking for: the remainder of the dry rations. He handed some to Hugen and, without ceremony
the two began to tear and chew, the hard bits of venison to gratify their
hunger. Afterwards Uyuk stretched out
his limbs and urged Hugen to continue with his recounting of his history.
Now more favorably disposed, Hugen picked up from where he had
left off: "Time after time having encountered the gritty, dogged
(resolute) resistance from every citizen of Korion high and low (ordinary
folk), it soon became apparent to Zakhertan Yozdek that, Korion could not be
governed by anyone other than our own.
The pacification of the rebellious tribes in the remote mountains proved
particularly arduous and sanguinary. The
many costly expeditions aimed at annihilating these guerrilla fighters only resulted
in a string of ignominious defeats at the hands of these nomadic herders. Many
skirmishes, including those led by your foster-father Muxor Kenny, which
incidentally, you’d failed to mention in your recruitment (enrolment)
application.”
Hugen at this point, had abruptly fell silent, and then simply
tossed Uyuk a knowing, fleeting smirk.
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| 05- MUXOR KENNY - KORION'S NOMADIC HORSEMAN |
“To put it succinctly, these frays in time gave rise to other sporadic pockets of rebellion and soon after, there arose widespread, well organized, resistance of all sorts erupting simultaneously in all parts of the country.”
“Yes… we had demonstrated to them, once and for all, how this
nation even though subjugated, could not be enslaved and all the oppressive
measures, stringent laws and brutal, savage punishments would never, ever,
crush our spirit or resolve!" Uyuk, getting a grip and pretending to be
caught up in the moment’s hype (excitement), hissed.
Hugen gave (threw) him a pointed look, "As you seem to
know the rest, I may as well save my breath." But Uyuk hastily leaned
across to touch his shoulder and in an earnest voice protested his
ignorance. He confessed that, in his early
pubescent (teenage) years, wanting to prove his worth to his foster-father
Muxor Kenny, he had partaken in some acts of sabotage (resistance) but that he
had never truly grasped the complete political picture; for his subsequent adolescent (later teen) years were
spent, totally cut off from any civilization, in the sacred Shouyou
Mountains. Appearing unusually
co-operative, Uyuk without prodding volunteered that, this period had been lost
to him, because he had been paying a penance for his serious breach of a key
tribal law.
"What law?"
Uyuk's response was curt and cryptic.
“Have it
your way.” Hugen inclined his head and inwardly scoffed: “I’ve offered you a chance to be straight
with me, and yet again you’ve failed.
It’s your loss.” Of course, he knew all there was to it, he’d been
well informed about Uyuk's unforgivable offense (felony, crime) and the
consequential chastisement and more, much, much more. He covertly kept Uyuk in his side-view as he
grimaced coldly.
“Yes,
that detailed report had encompassed data that, I suspect, even you are unaware
of, my foreign friend. I've trained my
informants well, so well that they can even make the dead speak. You would be surprised, no, shaken to your
core if you knew what I know, that the one who had betrayed you, the key
conspirator, was none other than you’re...” Hugen averted his eyes. “No; why should I rattle your feathers?
Why destroy the only semblance of?”
Hugen turned (reverted) his stone-cold gaze back to Uyuk to look him
straight in the eye. But then suddenly
an unexpected strong compassion seized his heart and his piercing pupils
momentarily softened and he nodded.
When Uyuk once more entreated (beseeched) Hugen to enlighten
him on the political aspects of Korion's and Wenjenkun's shared histories,
Hugen quietly acquiesced, if only to pass the time. Yet he did not begin right away, instead, he
lent an ear for a spell longer to the pelting rain, which seemed to be tapering
off.
(END OF SECTION 16)
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