11- LEGEND OF NEVETSECNUAC - EVIL PERSONIFIED - SECTION 5
Zakhertan, turning his attention
back on the task at hand, glowered (looked daggers) at the fourth stack of
documents on his desk needing his perusal, he impatiently tapped his fingers on
the desk and hissed. “Always the same…
“
Reluctant to begin, Zakhertan
with disdain briefly watched the dancing flames of the brazier as Neru
typically feed them, before reflecting on Lenny Sukzor’s latest submitted
report on the covert and highly illegal activities of Egil Viggoaries. The
slight discrepancy between Lenny’s and the subsequent information tendered by
Juyin, the lovely wife of Lenny Sukzor’s, on her husband's activities, caused
Zakhertan to frown.
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01- JUYIN SUKZOR (3)JP
The two statements varied
slightly on one minute detail; an irregularity so feeble that another in his
stead might have entirely missed it. Should
he be concerned with such a trivial contradiction (incongruity)? Was it an
oversight? No! He must not leave anything, no matter how slight, to chance.
Zakhertan’s
mouth formed into a snarl as he drew another blank parchment before him and
issued a set of specific orders to have the matter more thoroughly investigated.
“I’ll
wait and see where this leads to,” Zakhertan briefly pondered, after which
he quickly sealed the envelope, containing specific order, with his Imperial
seal. A single logo (motif) drawn on the envelope and explicit sequence of
numbers registered underneath, indicated the precise department and agent that
it was to be handed to; this too was summarily put aside along with the rest in
that growing pile.
Then there
is still that other matter, Zakhertan Yozdek irritatedly drummed his
fingers on the desk. No! There was no
need to review it again. Why was he even debating that issue still?
Such ambivalence angered him; the one thing he had always
taken pride in was his decisiveness and exceptionally retentive memory. One
glance at anything, any detail however insignificant or minute, and it would be
permanently embedded in his mind. Now tapping that innate advantage, Zakhertan
recalled with perfect clarity a certain trivial observation hidden in the
report the Royal Courier had submitted upon the completion of his mission. This
obtuse remark did not tally with the recently, thoroughly compiled accounts by
The Shadow Brigade men on the activities of the newcomer, Fradel Rurik
Korvald.
Ordinarily such a minuscule discrepancy would not have
elicited any concern from Zakhertan. Reflecting additionally on the independent
reports of Zyerne Stewor and Tizan, who had also curiously enough, raised
doubts about the Scholar and considering the recent happenings, Zakhertan
decided to delve deeper into the otherwise innocuous matter concerning Fradel
Rurik Korvald.
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02- FRADEL (NEVETSECNUAC) JP 7
He might
well have inadvertently transported trouble right to the Capital. This
farfetched notion now gripped his heart anew with a certain inexplicable
foreboding, for far too many had already come-in-contact with the illustrious
scholar. Zakhertan imagined the wide scope this investigation would entail, the
deployment of manpower it would take to, either get at the simple truth or,
expose all the subversives if his hunch proved correct. As it were, the
scholars had again been gaining one third measure of their former prominence
and along with it, their sphere of influence had expediently grown. In any event a quick confirmation of these
nagging concerns was warranted; he must question the couriers Canbir Nonng and
Cais Honger further, on the one minor irregularity in their report.
Zakhertan had always insisted on complete and accurate assessments and, if this
was the result of incompetence, sacrificing accuracy for expedience, then the
couriers would have to answer for it with their lives. Quickly he dispatched
another written order, this one to order the couriers to hand over their
mission to the one who would be sent in their stead and return in post haste to
the Capital.
That
was the end of it. Finally, Zakhertan leaned back and stretched out
his limbs.
Grand Secretary Qarzten Caimund
having concluded his assigned task expediently a short time earlier, had been
waiting patiently for Zakhertan to finish his; he now came forward on the
slight indication of Zakhertan Yozdek, to receive his verbal instructions in an
ingenious code so secret that it was known only to the two. Afterwards, Qarzten routinely picked up the
order packets and, after bowing respectfully, hurried out the door to
distribute them to the various department heads. All were required to work
longer hours than the Sovereign.
The door quickly closed behind the Senior Grand Secretary,
Zakhertan Yozdek watched with an uninterested blank stare Neru’s progress, then
sat motionless in deep contemplative silence, dark clouds of thought swirling
through his head and his guards only a whisper away.
~
Hastening out of the vestibule
leading from the Imperial Chambers, the Senior Grand Secretary Qarzten
Caimund’s head was full of the multiplicity of orders, arrangements, and duties
that he must complete before the day’s session was over. So entangled was
Qarzten Caimund in these thoughts that he did not see and nearly run into
(collided with) a similarly distracted Crown Prince Herleif, as Prince rushed
in the opposite direction armed with a stack of ancient scrolls and star charts.
"On yet another urgent
errand; are we, Master Caimund?"
Prince
Herleif’s tone, beneath that remark, grated on Qarzten Caimund’s nerves as it
always did. The Senior Grand Secretary’s face tightened, and he averted his
eyes for a moment, “You are such a
barefaced weasel; still suckling your mother's milk after twenty-three years.
Your derision is still palpable under that semblance of sarcasm.” Qarzten Caimund looked squarely at the prince
Herleif now and nodded tersely.
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| 03- -QARZTEN CAMUND (16)Bjp |
"I gather His Highness is
free now." The Crown Prince, with
typical arrogance, had completely ignored Qarzten's response to his barb and
spoke now in the icy tone he used for the servants. "You will step aside
to let me pass."
“This hall will fit five armored guards
marching abreast. Did you expect me to acknowledge this childish attempt to
flaunt your authority? Let us see just how far your authority will get you.” Qarzten
Caimund mocked the prince inwardly.
"By all means." Qarzten smiled
tightly as he half turned and shot a knowing glance towards the guards at the
chamber doors, moving as slow as he could to antagonize prince Herleif.
"I would like to mention
however, that this time may not be appropriate for an unannounced
visit." Qarzten Caimund informed the
prince, in his even tone. "Perhaps, you should defer your objective of
seeing His Highness this very evening unless, of course, it is a matter of the
utmost importance." Qarzten tautly grimaced; but kept the words, “particularly
the way you are clad; did you just leave one of your debauched (decadent, base)
bashes?” and derisively (scathingly, sarcastically) looked away.
"Impudent
wretch, how dare you treat me like an imbecile (dullard) child.” The
Prince Herleif's protruding earlobes had turned beet red, as he, seething in
contempt, violently shoved the Senior Grand Secretary aside. "Wait until I am your Sovereign, you
arrogant dog!" His face
suffused with anger and a stream of abuse gushing off inwardly, he strode
quickly forward to cross the vestibule in only a second.
Caught unaware by this outburst
of temper, the Senior Grand Secretary Qarzten Caimund had dropped one of the
sealed envelopes onto the marble floor. Anger smoldered in his breast as he
stooped to pick it up and his face distorted with contempt. Half-turning his
head, he witnessed the Prince Herleif’s way being barred by the two stout
guards who had crossed pikes in front of the door to the Imperial Chambers.
Herleif’s face reddened by rage
and pressed menacingly against the senior guard’s, the prince growled,
"Are you going to announce me or not? Fine! Step aside, for I mean to walk
in immediately and report your insolence myself."
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| 04-PRINCE HERLEIF YOZDEK (2) |
“Go ahead and slither in, you miserable worm, but you won't, will you?” Qarzten Caimund drew in a breath through his teeth then, catching the guard's eye, gave him a simple nod. He had proven his point.
"I shall inform His Highness
of your presence immediately." The stone-faced guard, not in the least
perturbed, responded mechanically. "Please wait here, Prince
Herleif." Turning smartly, he stepped
up to the door and knocked. After receiving begrudging consent, he opened the
door and abjectly entered. After crossing half of the room and bowing briskly,
he announced Price Herleif’s presence outside and his request to see the
Sovereign.
"What does that fool want now?' Zakhertan
Yozdek snorted impatiently, expecting no answer, and turned his back to the
guard to stare out at the serene scenery.
Awaiting orders, the guard had stood silently
at attention, while at outside, under the transitory (brief) amused gaze of the
departing Qarzten Caimund, Prince Herleif had for a spell simmered at his
father's disdainful words. Then, he took in a slow breath and composed himself;
subsequently, his hand reached inside his pocket, withdrew a rolled-up
document, and waited.
~
Sovereign Zakhertan
Yozdek with a blank expression, meanwhile, had continued to stare outside at
the placid (tranquil) garden; his stern gaze next, focusing on the oblivious
bird, taking in a drink or two from the fountain. Different troubling thoughts however,
grievously (incorrigibly) and unbidden, anew robbed him of the peace he sought.
“If only
Qijerrik had not turned on me.”
Zakhertan’s cold eyes blinked, filled with a deep hurt as he hissed out
a long breath and shook his head. “If
only my firstborn had lived instead of this wretched spawn.” The grievous loss, the events of those days
long gone, rushed in to crowd his mind again, searing his heart and soul with
self-recrimination and regret. When the stabbing constriction in his chest
became too overwhelming, Zakhertan summoned his will to push it aside and
concentrated instead, on the positive attributes of his late son.
Zakhertan recollected fondly now with perfect
clarity his proudest moments of Qijerrik. From the start, he’d been an
offspring worthy of his sire. Not only Prince Qijerrik was most handsome
warrior, as he was tall and athletic, though bit more handsome than him; but he
had also been endowed with the same temperament, the same wits, tactical brilliance,
and akin (parallel) martial ability (prowess) to Zakhertan at a corresponding
age.
Zakhertan had hung great many hopes on his son
Qijerrik’s shoulders after noting the potential in the boy, especially after,
at age fifteen Prince Qijerrik had become, under his strict tutelage
(guidance), an accomplished and indomitable warrior. What was more, Prince
Qijerrik thrived on dangerous military campaigns just as Zakhertan did. The
more perilous the task or more challenging the combat action the greater the
thrill, the deeper the sensation the young Prince would derive from it. This
feeling was one only Zakhertan would understand and, they were not just father
and son but kindred spirits.
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| 05- QIJERRIK YOZDEK (4)JP |
But then cruel, capricious fate had instigated, on
that fateful seventeenth’ year of his son's life, those infamous chain of
events that had led up to his son’s betrayal, all of which were now permanently
etched in Zakhertan 's memory by the same cursed talent that served him so well
in his bureaucratic duties. Consistently every evening, as soon as he had time
to himself, they had surfaced despite his best efforts to quash them and,
fiercely, obsessively haunted his peace and tormented his soul.
If only
he had acted more swiftly and without qualm to stem the divergent tide earlier.
As it was Zakhertan had been
preoccupied with obliteration of resurgent rebel forces at
Wenjenkun’s western borders, while same time
he was constrained to adopt far more severe, more brutal measures to eradicate
the infestation the serious unrest by the rising literati (intellectuals or
educated class) within Capital Province Holger. Unfortunately, while he was
otherwise engaged, the contrary seed had been planted and had germinated in the
one Zakhertan had least expected. That single oversight had cost him his
firstborn son. When he became aware of this fact, of course by then he could
not have altered the outcome, not in the slightest.
Again, considering his then options in hindsight,
Zakhertan shrugged with a certain resignation, admitting to himself that he
could not have done otherwise for, on that cursed day when the dark flotilla of
clouds congregated ominously on the horizon atop the rising sun, his beloved
son Qijerrik, had insisted on, and unfortunately received, his permission to
lead vanguard in the attack against the rebel scholars. After all, Zakhertan had no reason to doubt
his son's competence.
The campaign had gone well enough, with the
Imperial forces emerging victorious as expected; after which came the punitive
action that wreaked total devastation on the entire populous which had aided
and shielded the defiant scholars. Unfortunately, something had gone awry,
something else quite unforeseen had transpired either on the battlefield or in
aftermath, which had forever altered his beloved son Prince Qijerrik.
The rebel army had fought gallantly and employed
brilliant tactics right up until the bitter end, but that would not have
brought about that kind of change in Qijerrik, for he had bested gallant foes
before. Was it the gruesome mass suicide of the rebel forces when all hope had
been lost? Or was it the subsequent events, the countrywide hunt for and the
extreme persecution of the many sympathizers? Could it have been the madness of
the pillaging, the extensive carnage and mass extermination of the scholar class?
Or was it simply the proliferation (creation) of the earthen mounds that had
contained within it, countless living bodies of men, women, and children? Could
any of these or all, have been the contributing factors?
“No! Absolutely
not! Qijerrik was no weakling coward. “Zakhertan once
more vehemently denied that hurtful notion. It had to have been something
entirely different, something inconceivable and one day he (Zakhertan) would
surely pinpoint the real cause. Zakhertan
yet again lied to himself. Technically that had been the day he had lost his
firstborn son for, from that day forth Prince Qijerrik had undergone a drastic
change in heart, mind, and character. He had become increasingly unruly and
finally, downright disobedient.
“If only
my son had been a fallen casualty in war.” Zakhertan mulled over,
though he surmised that, in a sense, Qijerrik had been just that.
“Could
the fault have been partly his? He should have listened to his son more?”
“If only
he’d paid more attention and timely intervened with apt measures to protect and
isolate Qijerrik from those damaging influences, instead of reacting in anger
and ostracizing his son for being contrary and too outspoken?”
Zakhertan once more pondered on the nagging concerns, with his empty gaze
affixed on the swaying trees (that seemed to be bowing obsequiously), for the
wind had just then picked up in the garden.
“Had he been too stringent? Had he pushed
his son too hard, too soon? No, that was not it either.” Zakhertan scowled.
Whatever he might have done wrong, one thing was for certain: he had never been
lax in Qijerrik’s upbringing or discipline. In fact, up until that time,
Zakhertan had taken an active interest and taken great care in ensuring that
Qijerrik had received proper, well-rounded education in both civil and military.
“Then,
how could he have failed to instill in the boy, the most important filial
virtue, right alongside loyalty and honor?” Zakhertan was angry and remained at a loss to
find reasons for that drastic change in Qijerrik and the subsequent,
catastrophic series of events. Searing fury rose in him anew as he recalled the
distressing incident in Council when his son sharply stood up in front of all
assembled, to openly oppose him. Admittedly, it was over a minor issue, but the
act was still one of open, brazen defiance; a legitimate move under the law but
it harbored graver undercurrents which would expose Zakhertan’s single weakness
and challenge his overall authority in Imperial Court.
Zakhertan
Yozdek regretted now not using right there and then the provisions in the law
which would have allowed him to exercise his option to incarcerate Qijerrik
summarily. If only he had imprisoned him, indefinitely or even executed him,
instead of banishing him?
Zakhertan had repeated the same haunting question
thousands of times and each time the same regret, recrimination, hurt,
disappointment, furious rage, and bitterness gripped his heart, in that
merciless, wrenching grip. Had he done that, he would have spared himself the
mortifying, wounding torment of knowing that his beloved son, his own flesh,
and blood, was capable of such treachery against him and all he stood for.
There was one other in the family, his youngest
sister, who had likewise betrayed him; but Zakhertan had understood and
eventually forgiven her for her misplaced loyalty, for she’d from the first,
been deeply infatuated (besotted) with her husband, Lord Shonne Gulbrand. But
to be so betrayed by his once beloved son was something Zakhertan had never
expected or imagined as a possibility. Each time that memory surfaced, the same
fierce indignation and fury welled up from the depths of his soul and he
suffered that akin, bittersweet sensation of bile rising to his mouth, as the
day Prince Qijerrik’s war slogans had reached his ears.
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| 06- QIJERRIK YOZDEK (3)JP |
Zakhertan’s eyes had burned with intense heat from
reading those seditious adages posted for all to see in the towns’ squares, which
rallied the populous restive and ripe, for an all-out rebellion. Those
contemptible words (like gnawing parasites) were permanently etched (engraved)
in his brain. One of those had said: “Arise good people who has suffered for so
long under the severity of despotic Zakhertan Yozdek's oppressive regime, time
to oppose his repressive laws and demand reckoning for the wrongs that had
never been redressed; unite and take up arms, for yours is the righteous
cause!”
“My son,
my most beloved son; how deeply you’d injured me!” Zakhertan’s mouth presently, creased into a
grimace of pain for each one of those seditious words had been a stiletto in
Zakhertan’s heart and the damage hence, had been irreparable.
Zakhertan would have judged Qijerrik more
leniently, had all this been done because of high ambition, Prince wanting to
seize the throne for himself; that Zakhertan could have lived with, but
Qijerrik had taken on the mantle of a liberator.
This had been unforgivable, and it had unleashed
the culmination of all that unbridled fury Zakhertan Yozdek had amassed in him;
consequently, he had acted swiftly and more savagely than ever before to bring
about total devastation of innumerable (myriad) Wenjenkuners.
(END OF SECTION 5)
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