LEGEND OF NEVETSECNUAC - THE STATE OF THINGS - SECTION 34
At sunrise of the subsequent day with all accounts at the Inn quickly settled, Mouro and his company (Kade Luir and Dag Diez) quietly departed. Reaching the dirt road they then relentlessly surged forward at lightning speed leaving in their wake a trail (cloud) of dust. Mouro, with secret purpose in mind, led his group through a different sort of paths (that snaked over a rougher terrain) than the ones he had followed the previous night; nevertheless, despite the precarious topography, they had pushed on relentlessly not stopping to eat or rest until, finally, just before dusk, they arrived at the specific stone bridge, spanning a bottomless chasm.
There they met up with three mounted guards
who had taken an alternate route. Mouro frostily nodded to the fair-haired
guard in acknowledgement, a sort of greeting, ignoring the two stalwarts,
heavily armed, tall guards flanking him. Mouro held in check his fury, of the
two guards’ obvious failure.
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01- FAIR HAIRED GUARD |
No words were necessary, all dismounting at once, Mouro in the lead, they cautiously led their mount across the bridge. As they advanced a certain (foreboding) amount of trepidation, however, filled their hearts when no one accosted them on the opposite side; instead, an eerie silence prevailed, heightening the tension of the air. With only the sound of their footsteps filling their ears, those in front cautiously pushed open the half standing iron gates to the temple and stepped across the threshold. All at once (suddenly), the stench of death assailed their noses as they were struck by the sight of countless maimed and mutilated corpses littering the courtyard, floating in pools of their own blood.
"What treachery is
this?" The fair-haired guard pointed at the corpses and glared at Mouro.
"Why do you ask
me? This atrocity is clearly the work of
the assassin, Zonar." Mouro sneered as he froze Diez's hand on his sword
hilt with a commanding glance. “Not yet!”
It spoke. “He’ll be dealt with soon enough.”
"No, this is not
Zonar's work. These men were all
murdered by a coward, one who poisoned them before mutilating their corpses. There's no use denying it, I tracked you here
last night. Your game is up. Call the rest of your vile dogs out of
hiding." Fradel Rurik Korvald,
bristling, with fiery contempt in his eyes, rebuked Mouro.
Checking his surprise,
Mouro glared for a moment at the two companion guards of Fradel, seething with
burning rage for their incompetence which had now placed him in this
predicament; but then in a change of heart, he pinned his wrathful gaze back on
Fradel.
"How dare vermin like
you call me a coward to my face? I'll
wrest your quivering liver up through your throat and make you eat it with
those words."
Mouro’s hand involuntarily
clasped his sword's hilt, itching to strike Fradel down right then and there;
but curiosity getting the better of him, he released his grip and, suppressing
his fury, with a scathing sneer, he coldly demanded: "How long have you
known?"
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02- (PINNING HIS GAZE) MOURO KERR |
"From the start;" came Fradel's wry response. "I knew I was not being led to a meeting with my benefactor, Zonar. I went along; just the same, to see how far you and your goons would be willing to go."
Fradel, with not a shred of fear, knowingly
eyed his companion guards and then cast his gaze to the high compound walls
circling him that had just then become dotted with armed foes.
Fifty-nine formidable
warrior guards clad in full armor, specifically picked for their competence to
contest Zonar's prowess, brandishing their swords, stood their ground, in
readiness for the anticipated order for the onslaught.
It quickly (dawned on)
became clear to Fradel that these were the inferred agents in the previous
night's conversation between Mouro and Hecun, only they were planted, not by
Micen as the former had claimed, but rather by the culprit, cunning Mouro himself. Weaving the web of treachery ever tighter
they, accordingly, had spread wild rumors and suspicions about the wine to the
intended victims. But when, in turn,
they were invited by Hecun to partake of some, they had most willingly guzzled
it down, avoiding instead the laced water from the well to conclude the vile,
treacherous deed of barbarically annihilating the incapacitated where they had
fallen.
Now, the instant the armed
foe had sprung into view from their hiding places, Fradel had, with lightning
speed, turning their weapons against them, vanquished (bested) those formidable
assassins that had accompanied him. He then with his unyielding, unflinching,
solid defensive stance (posture) faced Mouro.
A momentary shudder
brushed against Mouro's heart; for unarmed as he was, Fradel Rurik Korvald
still looked most formidable.
Compounding his consternation, Mouro recalled
just then Fradel's unusual doggedness (grit) and fortitude (resilience) in the
court. How when he was on the brink,
incensed, chained though he was, he had strained his bonds almost to the
breaking point.
“A fine, heroic, picture
you represent.” Disregarding his strong
premonition of doom, Mouro, nevertheless emboldened by their numbers, simply
sneered.
He threw his head back and laughed
uproariously next. "What gall!”
“Hah; Clearly your
benefactor has abandoned you to fend for yourself; what makes you think that
you can take us all on, (unarmed) bare handed?" he scoffed.
"I have righteousness
as my armor and weapon; that is more than enough. All your evil ways will end
here! “Fradel responded sternly.
"And who appointed
you judge?" Mouro indignantly spat on the ground.
"You scholars disgust me, always spouting
useless, empty rhetoric! Why not just surrender to your fate, a pretty boy like
you, and get down on your knees to beg for mercy?" Dag Diez just then interjected scowling. He
next threw a quick knowing smirk at Mouro.
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03- DAG DIEZ |
Before Fradel could respond Mouro, highly incensed by Dag Diez's insubordination, had struck him a severe blow across the mouth with the back of his fist, knocking loose the guard's incisor teeth. The shamefaced Dag Diez, swallowing his fury, spat the teeth to the ground; next, submissively wiping the blood trickling off his chin, he grunted an insincere apology to Mouro.
Ignoring him entirely,
Mouro had instead locked his burning gaze on Fradel. Seeing Fradel now in a
different light, Mouro (with his hand signal) forestalled the order for the
assault and fixedly (keenly) at present, scrutinized this mystifying, worthy
adversary.
A scholar… He looked more Like a... Mouro could not rightly grasp the… thought.
Disregarding the feeling
of an ominous shadow falling over his own self perceived omnipotence and
coveting Fradel's noble air; with intense curiosity trampling reason, he scathingly
hissed:
"So, you’d
anticipated me all along, yet you willingly walked right into this ambush. That makes you either a very courageous man
or a foolhardy one. But tell me first,
since you are so smart at figuring things out, did you also guess that, to
create a diversion, the humane physician Sullen Adams would be sacrificed,
condemned to slow, torturous death in that iron cage in your stead?"
Mouro had pointed at the
discarded, upturned (overturned) prisoner’s iron cage off to the side; but
then, answered his own query (question) with a gloat, as he circled Fradel
menacingly.
"No, I see you did not. To tell the truth I felt no real animosity at
all towards Sullen personally, when I presented (offered, posed) the suggestion
to Micen Do. Mouro smirked.
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04- PHYSICIAN SULLEN ADAMS |
“Yes, he was rather an amiable fellow, and we are kinsmen, after all but," he shrugged his shoulders dispassionately; "he brought this on himself. He had become expendable you see. Foolishly ignoring all good advice, he kept on preaching justice and morality to Micen and me, as if in such precarious times that it mattered, and worse still, he always stuck up for the underdog, amassing (accruing) unwarranted enmity (rancor, malice)."
Mouro pursed his lips
mockingly, "He was supportive and obliging to you as well, was he
not? Well, I had to repay him for his
courtesy to you, since you were indisposed.
You scholars, so righteous and honor bound, you always insist on
settling all old accounts (scores).”
“Do you wish to know how I
did it, how I paid him back in full on your behalf? No need to thank me for it." Mouro threw his head back and laughed
menacingly.
"Oh, but it was entirely, my pleasure,
your honor (eminence)," then slightly inclined his head mockingly.
"Yes, you require details…But I'll be
succinct. After his visit with you I had
his tongue cut out, his face mutilated and then, bound up like a pig about to
be taken to the market for slaughter, he was stuffed in there, to rot in your
stead. But then, it was a strategic (importance)
imperative that he took your place and, “Mouro smirked. “Also, that you now
perish here, by my hand."
Mouro, facing Fradel squarely
(directly) now, brandished his sword.
"Now I will double my pleasure by doing the same to you, only
worse! I'll savor your death in bits. My
sword will split you asunder like a ripe melon and leave you swimming in your
own entrails."
The absence of fear or
emotional reaction of any kind on the stone (wooden) face of Fradel Rurik
Korvald infuriated Mouro to the point of total exasperation.
“This is truly a momentous
occasion, well deserving of attribution from posterity, for within the next few
minutes the overrated illustrious Fradel Rurik Korvald will cease to
exist. He will be no more!" Mouro
had uttered the last sentence in resounding voice, disguised as boastful
proclamation, as the specific command for the armed force that had already
encircled Fradel, to stand ready for the assault (onslaught).
"The only thing you
will savor will be your own end."
Fradel's retort was, at first, in an even tone. "By your own vile
deeds, you have flouted Heaven's will.
The time for retribution is near at hand, yet you are too blind to see
it. Very soon, in the afterlife, you
will be judged and asked to account for your abhorrent crimes against humanity. Instead of boasting about your prowess, you
should be on your knees, trembling in fear, and begging for redemption."
As he’d continued,
Fradel's voice by degrees had grown in intensity, thundering across the ground
to send cold shivers down Mouro's spine and make his hair stand on end.
"Enough
said!" Mouro regained his grip on
himself then, on his hand signal, simultaneously with the rest of the guards,
launched a deadly assault on the scholar Fradel.
Fradel repulsed them
all. Dodging and swerving to avert the
many murderous, repeated blows, the strikes from swords, spears and halberds as
they were thrust at him from all directions, now on the defensive, now on the
offensive, in a maneuver unseen before and waylaid dozens of them in a flash.
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05--FRADEL (NEVETSECNUAC) |
Then in an astonishing turn he delivered a fierce, swift kick directly to Mouro's chest which hurled Mouro up into the air and, flipping him over, landed him flat on his rear end on top of the others who had fallen. His sword flew from his hand, landing upright a few feet away. Had Mouro not worn his armor under his civil garb, he would not have been able to get up off the ground in one piece.
As it was, his ribs were unbroken and only
his pride was hurt.
"All of you stay
back! He's mine!"
Mouro fiercely bellowed his order as he rushed
to pick up his sword from the ground.
Then he charged (on horseback) like a mad bull straight for Fradel Rurik
Korvald, wielding the sword in zigzag, across and interlaced styles.
The well-armed guards,
silently nursing their grievance, picked themselves up off the ground and, in
compliance, joined the others to assemble into a tight, impenetrable cordon
encircling the combatants. There, with
blood boiling and burning eyes pinned to Fradel Rurik Korvald, they studiously
traced his every maneuver, his every move during the ensuing hours of fierce
fighting. Avidly they searched to find
any weakness in Fradel's combat style, but he appeared to be invincible and
continued to be just as lethal without a weapon as his opponent was when armed.
Mouro was a competent
fighter in his own right, with an untarnished record of victories over many
worthy opponents and famed champions.
Mouro's style of fencing, especially his waterwheel and reverse
dragonfly styles, was superb; still, it soon became apparent that he was
experiencing difficulty in keeping Fradel Rurik Korvald at bay, let alone in
besting him. Whirling like a devil,
Mouro struck, thrust and hacked at Fradel repeatedly but all his efforts were
in vain. After ten rounds, as hungry as
his blade was to taste blood, it could not effect (realize) even so much as a
scratch on Fradel Rurik Korvald. Worse
still, while the scholar had maintained his strength, Mouro's effort looked to
be waning.
When Mouro's blade,
meeting resistance under Fradel's grip, suddenly snapped in two in the midst of
the fierce fighting, Mouro quickly jumped out of the combat circle to retrieve
another weapon. Diez and the rest of the
guards, anxious to display their might, seized this opening and, brandishing
their weapons, were spontaneously spurred into action, launching offensive
after offensive. As they continued to
engage Fradel, Mouro, having flung aside his broken ancestor sword, pried loose
the good sword from the half-severed hand of Hecun then charged back in fury
through the lines to join in the fray and again combat Fradel Rurik Korvald
head on.
Just then on the opposite
side Diez, taking advantage of the general mayhem, had ducked and swerved
fiercely to get into a position to fiercely thrust his sword at Fradel's lower
back. Meeting a resistance, he received
instead a serious blow to the head which then knocked him to the ground,
unconscious.
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06 -FRADEL (NEVETS) |
Mouro, deflecting the second blow aimed in his direction, managed to fall behind the lines of fighting men then rushed to Diez's side.
Instead of lending him assistance, reviving
him or pulling him aside, as everyone expected he might do, he instead severed
Diez's head from his limp body in one swift stroke of his blade then, stepping
squarely over the headless corpse, pushed on ahead through the line of combat
to launch his deadly assault on Fradel Rurik Korvald anew.
In the ferocity of the struggle, no one had
stopped to make sense of this treachery except for Fradel, who readily
understood in light of what he had heard of Mouro's conversation the previous
night. Mouro's precaution had made it
apparent that part of the tale he concocted for Hecun was the truth.
As the Earth was mantled
in darkness, beacon fires had been lit to assist the crescent moon in lighting
up the dilapidated temple grounds.
Meanwhile the fierce fighting continued without pause as the battle
cries filled the silence of the night, disturbing the dead.
Despite the guards' effective armors, their
superiority of arms and their joint deadly assaults, their combined tactical
offensives against one unarmed man whose wounds had not yet completely healed,
with all the odds seemingly against Fradel Rurik Korvald he still managed to
turn the tide of destiny in his favor.
Besides effectively
repulsing their ineffective assaults, unyielding in strength and resilience as
he was, he seemed to be endowed with a superhuman ability, striking swiftly
like the wind. So powerful were his maneuvers,
his deflections and his counter assaults that, in a whirling feat, the blades
of his opposition snapped asunder at the hilts, spears got entangled and
halberds became totally ineffective as his fierce blows penetrated through the
armor to vanquish them all.
All, that is, except Mouro.
Realizing the hopelessness
of their situation well before the rest, Mouro, in mortal fear for his life,
created a diversion and had turned tail and ran, abandoning his men in the
thick of battle to their own devices of defense or, more specifically, to their
own impending doom but Fradel, disposing of the rest in one sweep, had raced
after Mouro.
The culprit, Mouro, having
previously scouted the temple grounds, knew well which turns to take or which
path to follow to avoid the many pitfalls, perilous snares and booby-traps that
the years of neglect and the ravages of nature had compounded.
Having led Fradel to a maze of underground
tunnels in the interior, designed specifically by the former denizens to entrap
unwanted intruders, Mouro, weaving in and out, tried his utmost, though
unsuccessfully, to shake Fradel off of his trail.
“He is so formidable; just
my luck to come across someone so prodigious, so entirely relentless….”
Suddenly an inexplicable fear filled Mouro’s heart realizing his own measure of
inadequacies, limitations, while being pursued by this invincible foe.
What kind of Scholar was he… endowed with such
incessant superhuman qualities? Or was he a Demon posing as a scholar?
~
(END OF SECTION 34- THE CONCLUSION OF THE STATE OF THINGS)