LEGEND OF NEVETSECNUAC - EVIL PERSONIFIED - SECTION 3
“Was that it?
Was that the end of it?” Sovereign
Zakhertan Yozdek placed the last of the reports onto the stack and leaned back
to stretch out his limbs. A slight nod brought his ever vigilant and trusted
aide Neru forward at once to pick up the key and the stack that Zakhertan had
set aside on his desk. Neru then took the documents to a large metal vault
where they were locked up for future reference. The key was returned to His
Highness to join the others dangling from the Sovereign's belt.
The second stack by far the larger contained the
reports that were deemed to be trivial, uninteresting, or expendable and it was
on these that Neru next set to work, tearing them into fine bits and then
feeding them to the flames within a large brazier, specifically designed to
reduce any remnant to cinders.
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| 01-NERU |
Each night’s routine was the same; at an unspecified hour Zakhertan Yozdek, pending no unforeseen crisis or upset, would set aside some time to peruse all the crucial documents submitted by The Prime Minister Lamont Gudaren, other officials, as well as the reports from Internal Security. Through his special branch of moles, Zakhertan had continually kept apace of the activities of his Ministers, Provincial Governors, Generals as well as his own personal retinue and family, within his realm. No one eluded, evaded, shunned, averted, or circumvented his scrutiny, not even hermits, or the recluse of scholars, such as Fradel Rurik Korvald.
Zakhertan Yozdek had always lived by two
unassailable adages: one was to be vigilant in concealing least sign of
weakness from all; the second was to never rely on or place absolute confidence
in anything or anyone. A measure of confidence could be shown outwardly but
never acted on or believed inwardly.
History was riddled with examples of Sovereigns
ruined through treachery by the, oftentimes a most trusted vassals; Zakhertan
Yozdek therefore had always endorsed the principle (criterion) that to
persevere, no minister, priest, general or Prince of the realm should ever
exceed, in the open or in secret, in any one of the areas of power, influence,
acumen, awe and reverence, held in the person of the Sovereign.
The two stacks swiftly dealt with, Zakhertan presently
turned his attention to the third bundle and picked up the top envelope, broke
open the seal, removed the document within, and read it carefully. These detailed accounts were submitted by an
indomitable, invisible Shadow Brigade (division of Black Band Guard Regiment),
whose sole purpose was to monitor the Censors, informants and spies themselves.
This dual system of surveillance had served Zakhertan Yozdek well thus far;
hence, he had kept close tabs on all within his kingdom, and yet at the same
time was afforded a measure of truth sufficient to appease his suspicious
nature. As it were, the only cliques Zakhertan had allowed to exist in his
dominion were those that he easily manipulated; and periodically, he did enjoy
at being their puppeteer and making them do his bidding.
Moreover, far from employing only the most servile
of vassals, the civil and military courts had been staffed with men, all as
ruthless as wolves or tigers and more cunning than vipers and foxes. These
specially picked individuals acted like vultures, doing very much more than
their duty prescribed, yet nevertheless they were very much cowed and succumbed
to Zakhertan 's every whim. This effect had been achieved through incessant
pressure, unrelenting fear, and artful manipulation; actually, he respected those
most that had been the hardest to break. Individuals that posed the greatest
menace were the ones he kept at closest proximity; constantly monitored, for
any nuance (hint) of seditious activity; they were in the truest sense of the
word, only a hairsbreadth away from the executioner's blade. Their already
perilous existence was moreover tested by periodic rumors that accused one or
the other of subversion against Sovereign or The Wenjenkun Nation. This was not
done merely to keep them toeing the line or to incessantly feed Zakhertan’s
rapacious sadistic nature but to accurately gauge the rest’s true disposition
towards that individual or perceived incidence (occurrence).
Unfortunately, too seldom for Zakhertan’s liking,
one would advance an idea or theory he knew it to be unsound; akin to a beast
toying with its prey before the killing stroke, Zakhertan would then pretend to
be taken in, merely to see how far the dupe would go; he would subsequently,
delight in making veritable mincemeat of the fool.
Conversely, every so often he would refute a valid
suggestion by, one of his generals, courtiers or other and, advance plausible
yet purposefully flawed viewpoints. As these events occurred between long bouts
of predictable stability, Sovereign Zakhertan was able to appear even to his
liegemen, as elusive and cryptic.
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| 02-ZAKHERTAN YOZDEDK (40) JP |
Two decades now, he had maintained his unbounded, omnipotent rule; his subjects (firmly) believing that all under Heaven was his personal domain (including nations that were under his suzerainty) and that, all his decrees and proclamations were the mandates of Gods.
After all this
time, could he finally relax his vigilance? Could he dare be complacent? He
absolutely could not; must not, not for a single moment. Zakhertan through
clenched teeth quickly answered his inner query; his tight fist eased as anger
slowly, gradually ebbed. Yes, he had maintained his iron hold on the realm
(kingdom) thus far but in the deep recesses of his heart Zakhertan had of
course known, the futility of it all.
A Sovereign may subjugate most of his subjects with impunity, govern
his vassal's bodies and outward acts, and even sway or manipulate their minds
to some degree but there would always be one who would prove to be an exception
to the rule who could slip through the controlling net, or escape it
entirely. There would emerge some
renegade, a folk hero or martyr who would stoke the smoldering ashes of dissent
into a spark that would ignite the searing flames that would scorch the whole
Kingdom bare. If that is, he was not snuffed out, right at the start.
Zakhertan inclined his head to stare absently out
the window at the artificially illuminated garden, layer upon exquisite layer
of floral beauty; his mind perfectly composed, his face wearing an emotionless
mask of serenity. Misleadingly, he inwardly was in fact, taking meticulous
stock of his most recent and severest measures, which as a rule incorporated
further stringent laws and their equally brutal punishments, to determine if
they would suffice to rout-out or curb the latest, anticipated, impending trouble.
Moreover, the ’Divide and conquer’ strategy had
consistently proven to be a most effective policy. His thoughts veered (turned)
to past recourse that warranted akin to action. He may employ it again: First,
his subjects were led to believe that he, Zakhertan Yozdek, was (ostensibly) by
far the most generous Sovereign, rewarding meretricious acts as handsomely as
he was severe in his punishments. But then, Zakhertan mischievously grimaced,
reflecting quietly on how, every now and then, he unexpectedly rewarded an
individual or an official or two for no apparent reason, to sow discord,
disconcert or perturb others.
Eventually the targeted individuals became estranged
from their friends, colleagues, and family. Thoroughly demoralized and seeking
only to safeguard their own hide, the seeds of treachery would easily then be
planted in them, to be harvested in future. Zakhertan by manipulating the most
basic emotions of insecurity and mistrust, of any individual or a group, albeit
powerful and influential, those pegged troublemakers were then, easily and
without fail got purged (eradicated).
In his youth Zakhertan Yozdek had avidly studied
history and learned from its mistakes; subsequently, as a monarch, he had never
failed to utilize timely measures and inject acute fear into the hearts and
minds of all likely (budding) dissenters, way before trouble manifested.
Through artful manipulation he had also fostered the belief in his subjects
that he, their omnipotent Sovereign Zakhertan Yozdek, was all seeing, all
hearing. That nothing, however trivial or inconsequential, escaped his
attention. One of the means with which Zakhertan had achieved this end was, by
engaging Censors, which conducted semiannual tours of the countryside. The sole
purpose of these mobile forces was to check on the performance of the
Provincial and Military Governors and Magistrates, and Tribunes. Demotions,
promotions, rewards, and reprisals were all dependent on the outcome of
Censors’ report. Of course, the concept of
Censorate had been created during the reign of
Sovereign Zuronghan Therran Valamir. This Censorate
predecessor was vastly different from Zakhertan’s incarnation however, for one
thing the Censors of old Dynasty were appointed from the ranks of the Nobility,
Military, Bureaucracy, or Intelligentsia equally. The sole purpose of the
Censorate had been to keep all officials, high and low, under strict
surveillance and report any wrongdoing or illicit activity to their Liege and
in this capacity, Censors were empowered to criticize, if needs be, even the
Sovereign. Although they had little direct political power, they were not
constrained to divulge their sources of information even to the highest
authority and, for their fifteen-year term, they were immune to criticism or
punishment for their actions. The granting of these liberties, as well as their
proximity to the ear of the ruler, had left ample room for corruption, and
these posts invariably had left their holders wealthy and influential beyond
measure. The deficiencies of this system were never given the chance to correct
themselves before the overthrow of Sovereign Zuronghan Therran Valamir, and it
was Zakhertan who took this branch of the bureaucracy and reshaped it into its
present form. In the revised version, Censorate officials were now appointed
solely by Zakhertan Yozdek for seven
year terms and, unlike their forerunners, they could be indicted, subjected to
interrogation, including torture and, if found guilty, they and their families
would be punished twice as harshly as anyone in a normal position.
More importantly, they were prohibited from ever
criticizing present Sovereign
Zakhertan’s policies; memorials of this kind having
been prohibited ever since Zakhertan Yozdek had assumed (usurped) the throne.
On demand Censors were expected to produce their evidence, sources and all
pertinent information to the Sovereign's special staff who would, in turn,
present it for Zakhertan Yozdek’s final analysis and judgment. Meanwhile, the
identities of these officials were kept a closely guarded secret, known only to
the Emperor, the Shadow Brigade and one other, Senior Grand Secretary Qarzten
Caimund. Each Censor was identified on the special documents only by a serial
number which was assigned upon their appointment to the position. If they were
ever exposed, they could expect no leniency; they would be summarily dismissed,
and therefore subject to the reprisals of their victims, banished to a remote
province, or summarily executed for violating the first duty of their office.
Within the Censorate itself the officials would be moved about at randomly set
intervals so that they could never grow complacent, relax their vigilance,
acquire a sphere of influence, or establish cliques as had been the norm in the
past.
Of course, Zakhertan could not take full credit for
these measures. “Let’s give some credit
where credit is due,” Zakhertan throwing a furtive glance at Qarzten
Caimund, who was seated at the far desk his head down overseeing some matters
Zakhertan had allocated to him, donned a sinister smile. Indeed, some of it had
been adapted from Qarzten's excellent proposals.
Returning his gaze back to the garden, Zakhertan
mused on another concern:
Back then, when he had revised the legal statutes, he had assumed that
he had left no room for those skillful manipulators of the letter of the law to
contravene in it.
He had the statutes so clearly worded and exactly defined that there
had been nothing left in doubt; furthermore, he had been explicit, that all
would be offenders, without fail, would be most rigorously prosecuted.
Obviously even the best effort had its failing.
Zakhertan shrugged, relieving the frustrations of
those bygone days. Sure enough, it had looked good (sound) as written
principles on the statute books, yet it had not been as effective, especially
in the outlying areas, when constrained by the incredible number of legal
restrictions, deception and corruption, turning it into new criterion
(hallmark) and instigating dangerous discord (strife) between the different
levels of Government. Having learned to
act swiftly and embrace change, Zakhertan had amended the laws in good enough
time, eliminating these dangerous practices before they became the norm.
“Pigs and
fishes; one and all” Zakhertan inwardly jeered with utter disdain. In fact,
a large part of his time had been taken up with constant monitoring of the
usage of his laws within the Empire.
“Virtue…
Bah,” Zakhertan again inwardly scoffed. “Talk
about an overrated, foolish concept.”
Back in the
early days, the situation had been such that anyone uttering that word
“virtue,” would have been scorned, accused of shirking his duty and then duly
punished. Zakhertan Yozdek had always clung to the truth inherent in the
ancient saying, "The man of inferior virtue clings to virtue and so has no
virtue."
It could be
said that Qarzten Caimund had never practiced virtue. Zakhertan
thoughtfully reflected as his eye caught a bird in the garden, wrestling an
insect out of a tree trunk. Yet, Zakhertan had long suspected that Qarzten was
the most virtuous of men. Or was that
only another facade of his?
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| 03-QARZTEN CAMUND (5) |
Zakhertan turned his stealth, suspicious gaze back onto Qarzten Caimund, studying him with penetrating eyes until a cold smile brushed his lips and he dismissed these speculations peremptorily.
Zakhertan reached for a blank sheet of parchment,
picked up his brush, and loaded it with the ink that Neru had prepared earlier
and began to write. Once the first set of orders had been quickly dispensed,
Zakhertan applied his crimson seal to the bottom, folded it into three, and
wrote its destination on the back then sealed it with, wax from a purple taper
and the impression of his signet ring. Before the molten wax around the ring
could set, his mind had returned to the past. Once the amendments to the laws had been put in place and rigorously
enforced, he had gotten the situation under control, except for, in the
furthest regions of the Kingdom.
Wellnigh unchecked, the situation there (in such a short span) had
grown extremely volatile and at the most inopportune of times as well. The bulk
of Zakhertan’s militia had been engaged in a difficult and demanding campaign
in Korion and the remainder of his forces had been reserved for the police
actions against the northern nomads, to end their persistent incursions into
Wenjenkun's territory.
Zakhertan Yozdek had been strapped, caught short
handed hence, in effectively bringing a swift resolution to this far region.
What he had needed at that time, short of another army appearing from thin air,
an able vassal, one most ruthless and cunning, who could conduct this
challenging task with the minimum of arms and workforce. That man appeared in
the person of Qarzten Caimund, who had been an unknown minor official until
then.
“Oh,
but you were a sly one right from the start, Qarzten Caimund,” Zakhertan
mused.
“Imagine getting none other than Egil
Viggoaries to recommend you for service when in fact you were the proponent of
Prime Minister Lamont Gudaren the whole time.” This very fact had intrigued Zakhertan Yozdek
right from the start and had won Qarzten Caimund the certain singular
distinction he rightly deserved.
During the entire interview Qarzten Caimund had
admirably withstood the grueling mental tightrope and impressed by Qarzten's
astute rationalism, his vast knowledge of the legal statutes, his courage, wit,
and martial ability among a multitude of other talents, Zakhertan Yozdek had
allowed himself to overlook those minor flaws, the prejudices, and biases
barely discernible in Qarzten’s character, and had appointed (assigned) him to
the unenviable post.
Rising the challenge to complete the subjugation of
the north in a set time upon peril of his life, Qarzten had requisitioned and
received Zakhertan Yozdek’s approval for a free hand in rectifying the
situation. Qarzten Caimund’s subsequent, steady progress had read like a
textbook case, but what had really interested Zakhertan Yozdek, was the
ingenious, though unorthodox measures the new commander had taken. While
appearing lenient, Qarzten had been, from the very beginning, selectively
ruthless. As good as his word, he had laid stress on severe implementation of
the full rigors of the law, even to the Royal relations who had grown too
overbearing and daring away from the prying eyes of Zakhertan. Given free reign
Qarzten had killed men summarily, tortured suspects
until they confessed or died and practiced other most effective measures to
spell out his message to one and all. He
had personally cut off quite a few of the heads of convicted officials and had
made mincemeat of several (not a few) formerly lofty citizens.
In a noticeably short spell, Qarzten Caimund had
brought all within his authority(jurisdiction) under his absolute control. Once
law and order were restored, he moved on to the next region and then the next;
his reputation preceded him until all areas were pacified. Qarzten Caimund’s
savage reputation for adapting bold, ruthless tactics, had naturally won him
Zakhertan's favor, especially since every step, every victory, was secured well
within the established time.
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Of course, there had been copious amount of (flood of) litigations and hundreds of indictments from these regions, which had to be passed over to the Chief Justice due to their importance and, despite the increased amount of nightmarish paperwork that had to wind its way through the sluggish bureaucracy. Zakhertan had taken no action against Qarzten; in fact, been secretly pleased deeming these as proof, of his appointed vassal’s competency. Fortunately for Zakhertan, Qarzten’s beloved wife Bren had died just then from a bizarre accident leaving Qarzten free to marry. As it was Zakhertan’s way, after the appropriate time for the mourning had passed, Zakhertan’d proposed, more like dictating a propitious marriage between Zakhertan’s distant relative’s (cousin’s) beautiful second daughter Kelda and Qarzten Caimund.
Qarzten
Caimund, competent as he had been in everything that mattered; he had never
been, fortunate in matters of love, family, or marriage. To date, a well-kept
secret, especially from Zakhertan, this arrangement unfortunately had been a
loveless marriage from the start, as Kelda had already been secretly betrothed
to a young warrior Adrian Kenzor, whom she had been infatuated with since
childhood.
In fact, Kelda’d been secretly impregnated by Adrian
at the time her family forced this marriage with Qarzten Caimund on her.
Qarzten was of course no fool and had quickly found out about this;
nevertheless, taking pity on her had kept his silence and when a healthy,
infant son (named Stokner Tchort Caimund) was born, he had pretended that he
(Qarzten) was the natural father. This happenstance had suited Qarzten Caimund
well; for in childhood Qarzten had had a terrible accident that had destroyed
any chance of him to ever propagate (reproduce, breed) later in adult life.
This had been a closely guarded secret that no one, not even Sovereign
Zakhertan Yozdek, knew at that time.
When a son, Stokner Tchort Caimund, was born to him,
Qarzten playing the part of a dutiful father had provided the boy, with every
available means of education; however, from earlier on, he had been
disappointed about the boy’s aptitude and innate character. Not liking what he
saw, he gradually distanced himself from his son Stokner and quickly packed off
his estranged wife Keida and son Stokner to a distant province where Qarzten
Caimund had a vast estate.
05 - QARZTEN'S UNFILIAL WIFE KELDA AND HER LOVER ADRIAN KENZOR -JP (78)
Alas, when Qarzten Caimund’s learned that his wife
had secretly renewed her old liaison (relationship) with Adrian Kenzor, enraged
Qarzten had Kelda, Adrian Kenzor and anyone who knew of this, at various times
of course, murdered. Five perished because of a terrible accident; three
swiftly passed away from ingesting poison while few others expired from a fatal
illness. Only his son Stokner’s life was spared. Meanwhile Qarzten Caimund
playing the role of a mournful (grieving) twice widowed, unlucky in love
official, vowed never to remarry and from then on gave his undivided attention
instead, to state matters and, to his official duties in Capital that had
markedly increased by then.
Sovereing Zakhertan Yozdek’s focus (concentration)
at the time had been totally taken (preoccupied) by the difficult governance of
Wenjenkun and the renewed foreign aggression; as a result, he relied heavily on
Qarzten’s brilliance and ruthless efficiency and to date, he had not been
disappointed. Unfortunately, at the right time Qarzten Caimund had created so
much enmity, especially among the prominent nobility that thirty-five grievous
slanders grew around him, though to no avail. Naturally, having foreseen this
outgrowth of his work, Qarzten Caimund had kept meticulous records and had not
shared any of the vices that had caused the downfall of so many of his
predecessors. Though Qarzten was a person of diverse interests, he had neither
any real attachment nor damaging aversions; he had no sexual perversions, took
no bribes, did not drink to excess, and curbed any ambition or greed, through
cerebral forte (strong suit) and a healthy caution. To date Qarzten Caimund had
upheld a modest lifestyle and kept a Spartan house in Capital. While he could
be the most unassuming of pacifists, one could also meet with dire woe should
one incur his anger or cross his wishes. Zakhertan understood Qarzten held long
grudges and was intolerant of stupidity that misrepresented itself.
It often amused Zakhertan to observe the way
Qarzten struck back with such pernicious (spiteful) precision, at the foe that
dared to cross or encumber him. Caught
off guard, the adversary invariably succumbed to whatever weapon was chosen:
the deadly strike of the sword, or a severe tongue-lashing from Qarzten
Caimund. Yet, overall Qarzten advocated peace and perseverance; it could even
be said he was deeply religious. He detested liars, yet when and where warranted
he was not above acting the hypocrite to get the more vital job done. Yes, by employing his many unconventional
methods Qarzten had, within that specific time, checked all crime and restored
the complete rule of law and order to the far (rebellious) regions. In other
words, Qarzten Caimund succeeded where others had failed miserably. Impressed
by these results, his unrelenting zeal, boundless energy, no-nonsense attitude,
and impartiality where it counted most, Zakhertan had steadily promoted Qarzten
Caimund in a brief three years' time to the position of Chief Justice to
Military Tribune of the Capital Region then to the exalted posting as Senior
Grand Secretary. No other Civil Minister
could boast of such a feat. What was more, his unmarred efficiency and
impeccable record to date had given Zakhertan absolutely no cause for
complaint. Still, even though Zakhertan
Yozdek relied on Qarzten a great deal more than the others, the truth was that
Qarzten Caimund’s position was neither more nor less precarious than any of the
others.
…..
(END OF SECTION 3)

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