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Five

last update publish date: 2026-06-26 11:36:36

Jaladri scrambled back up the gentle riverbank and rejoined Wisnumurti and Bajul. The sun was already high overhead, beginning its slow drift westward.

After half a day on the road from Karang Bendan, they had found the perfect place to stop—a small stream with crystal-clear water winding through the countryside.

The three men ate lunch from the banana-leaf-wrapped meals prepared by Ki Soma’s household.

Now their stomachs were full.

They could ride straight through until reaching Kenipir, which lay west of Karang Bendan.

The route between the two settlements was well maintained. Because travelers moved along it frequently, the road remained wide and level enough for horses, wagons, and ox carts to pass comfortably.

It was also remarkably safe.

Bandits rarely preyed on travelers between Karang Bendan and Kenipir, allowing ordinary people to travel without needing large caravans or hired swords for protection.

Farther west and northwest, however—beyond Kenipir and toward the Royal City of Pasir—the landscape changed dramatically.

Dense wilderness. Steep hills. Untamed forests.

In those regions, horses and wagons became unreliable luxuries. Most journeys had to be completed on foot.

Or in sedan chairs, if one happened to be a noble. Or a king.

The road to Kenipir remained easy precisely because villages dotted the countryside between the two towns.

A traveler would pass through stretches of forest only to emerge into broad fields, rice paddies, and small settlements. Whenever exhaustion struck, a nearby village almost always offered food, shelter, and a place to sleep.

Hospitality was simply part of everyday life.

With full bellies and fresh horses, the three riders made excellent time. By midafternoon, they reached a more open stretch of country at the foot of a low hill.

“What village is this?” Wisnumurti asked as they rode past small fields and gardens.

“Srumbung,” Jaladri replied, glancing around. “Though it’s usually not this quiet.”

He looked again.

“It’s still early.”

Their horses slowed. The narrow road skirted the edge of the village.

Bajul’s eyes narrowed.

“I don’t like this.”

Neither did Wisnumurti.

“I feel it too.”

The three riders continued forward at a cautious pace. Questions began forming in their minds.

Then Jaladri saw it.

A thin column of smoke rising from somewhere inside the village. He immediately spurred his horse forward. The others followed.

A moment later he crossed the outer boundary of Srumbung—and rode directly into a nightmare.

The phrase “wiped off the map” didn’t begin to describe it.

No sign of life remained.

None.

The village looked as though a hurricane and a wildfire had struck simultaneously.

Homes had collapsed into heaps of blackened timber. Others had burned so completely that only ash remained.

Bodies lay everywhere. Dozens of them. Old men. Women. Children. The elderly. The young.

When Wisnumurti and Bajul arrived seconds later, even they could only stare.

“My God...!”

Bajul’s voice was barely audible.

“Looks like there was a party.”

The joke died the moment it left his mouth.

The three men immediately began searching the village. Nothing remained of Srumbung except its name and its ruins.

Bajul dismounted and used the tip of his machete to turn over several corpses.

“Cold-blooded slaughter.”

His tone remained calm. Too calm. As though scenes like this no longer surprised him.

Jaladri and Wisnumurti climbed from their own saddles and tethered the horses nearby.

“This was Lambang Merah?” Jaladri asked. “The cult yesterday we talked about?”

Wisnumurti crouched beside a body that had already begun to decay in the afternoon heat. The smell was overwhelming.

“No,” he examined the wound carefully. “Not them.”

He looked toward Bajul.

“What about yours?”

“Same thing,” Bajul nudged another corpse with his blade. “Knife or sword wounds. No poison. And the smell is horrific.  They killed the children too."

Jaladri swallowed hard. Scenes like this were not part of his everyday life. The horror disturbed him, but not as deeply as it once might have.

He had spent years listening to stories from Wisnumurti and especially Bajul.

Stories about bandits. Stories about rogue martial artists. Stories about local rulers and officials who treated entire villages as disposable.

Massacres like this happened when powerful men failed to get what they wanted.

Sometimes money. Sometimes obedience. Sometimes a woman.

According to Bajul, entire communities had been erased simply because a husband refused to surrender his wife to a local lord.

And perhaps something similar had happened here. Everyone had been killed.

Everyone.

Toddlers. Children.

Jaladri even spotted two infants among a pile of bodies near a collapsed house.

The dead appeared to have been gathered together before the killing began.

Many corpses lay in clusters. Stacked almost on top of one another.

“Not they,” Wisnumurti’s voice interrupted his thoughts. “He.”

Bajul looked up.

“One killer?”

Wisnumurti nodded.

“Look at the wounds,” he pointed toward a corpse. “The cuts are nearly identical.”

The three men examined several bodies.

Wisnumurti was right. Every victim bore a thin slash on the right side of the neck.

Same location. Same angle. Same depth. The wounds were remarkably small. Less than two inches long.

“The killer knew exactly where to strike,” Wisnumurti said. “The precise artery. Most of them died instantly. Probably without feeling any pain at all.”

Jaladri and Bajul checked several more victims. Every single wound matched. Identical. Almost surgical.

“Whoever did this,” Wisnumurti said, moving toward fresher air beyond the stench of death, “is exceptionally skilled.”

“Pangeran Langit?” Jaladri asked.

Wisnumurti shrugged.

“Could be anyone,” he looked back across the village. “But it was one person. And it happened recently.”

“How recently?”

“Yesterday afternoon at the earliest,” his eyes scanned the corpses. “Midnight at the latest.”

Silence followed. The kind of silence only death could create. Bodies surrounded them on every side. The smell hung thick in the air.

The fading sunlight cast long shadows across what had become a killing field.

Thin strands of evening mist were already beginning to gather.

Finally Jaladri spoke.

“What do we do with them?”

“Bury them,” Bajul answered immediately. “Of course.”

Jaladri stared at the devastation.

“There are too many.  The three of us couldn’t bury all of them in three days.”

“Exactly,” Bajul sighed. “That’s the problem.”

Wisnumurti turned toward Jaladri. “Is there another village nearby?”

“Jati. Why?”

“We ask them for help.”

Jaladri immediately stood. “I’ll go.”

He was already moving toward his horse.

“It’s less than six miles away.”

Within seconds he was in the saddle. The horse burst forward.

Soon both rider and animal disappeared among the trees.

After he left, Wisnumurti and Bajul began doing what they could. They started arranging the bodies into orderly rows.

A grim task. Necessary.

Neither man spoke much. Less than half an hour passed.

Then they heard it. Hoofbeats.

Fast. Very fast. Both men turned instantly. Hands ready. Prepared for trouble.

A horse exploded out of the trees. Jaladri. His face had gone white.

There was someone draped across the back of his horse.

Unconscious. Covered in blood.

Jaladri leaped from the saddle before the animal had fully stopped.

His voice came out hoarse.

“Jati is gone too.”

The words hit harder than any blade.

“Wiped out. Completely wiped out.”

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  • Toward the Sun   Nine

    “This just got interesting, didn’t it? Especially because we already know exactly who’s around you that could’ve trained you in martial arts. There’s Bajul. Ki Gede. Pratiwi. If any of them thought you had talent and wanted to help, they’d simply call you over—or better yet, drag you into a sparring match. So why all the cloak-and-dagger nonsense? Who was that man? Why did he choose you instead of Bajul?”“And you don’t feel anything unusual now, do you?” Bajul asked. “Because that kick from the Senopati wasn’t meant to scare you. It was meant to cripple you. I honestly thought you were dead. At the very least, unconscious for a week. But you’re walking around like nothing happened.”Jaladri rubbed the spot on his chest where Natpada’s foot had landed.“It hurt right here for a minute. I couldn’t breathe for a little while. Then... it just went away. I’m fine now.”“It was Senopati Natpada who took the real beating,” Wisnumurti said. “He’s probably still seeing stars. He flew halfway

  • Toward the Sun   Eight

    The bedroom door opened.Wisnumurti stepped inside, yawning. He shut the door behind him.Jaladri and Bajul, already stretched out on the wide wooden platform bed, immediately sat up. Both had been ready to sleep, wrapped in the sarongs Ki Soma had packed for them before they left home.“I thought you were planning to stay up until dawn,” Jaladri said, yawning as well.“Ki Buyut and the others certainly hoped so,” Wisnumurti replied as he removed his lower garment and pulled a sarong from his travel bundle. “They love it whenever a martial artist passes through. Those old men can talk all night about anything—ghost sightings, haunted places, strange happenings.”Jaladri leaned against the bamboo wall. Truth be told, he was no different. As long as Wisnumurti was telling stories, he could stay awake until sunrise without complaint.“So it’s true?” he asked. “Senopati Natpada was actually going to have Sarni’s family beheaded just because Sarni was sick? I heard Ki Rantang talking about

  • Toward the Sun   Seven

    The young village girl was almost certainly the latest beauty Prince Candrakumala had decided to add to his collection of concubines. Perhaps one of his men had heard about her while passing through villages like Brabo and carried the story back to him. The prince became interested, and now his senopati had arrived to collect her.As a wanderer, Wisnumurti had seen scenes like this far too many times. Normally, he would have stayed out of it. The affairs of royalty were dangerous ground.The problem this time was the violence. He understood exactly why Jaladri had nearly exploded moments earlier. They had just come from two villages where infants and toddlers lay butchered among the dead. Seeing a baby tumble from her mother’s arms after three armed men shoved her to the ground was enough to send anyone’s blood pressure through the roof.Perhaps the family had shown less than perfect obedience. Perhaps the girl herself had resisted. It was only natural. She was about to be taken from

  • Toward the Sun   Six

    They moved quickly. Wisnumurti took hold of Jaladri’s horse while Bajul swiftly lowered the wounded man to the ground.“The same throat wound?” Wisnumurti asked.“Exactly the same,” Jaladri replied. “This man probably wasn’t in the village when it happened. He must have run into the aftermath and tried to escape. The other injuries are different. Maybe a tiger got him. Or a wild boar.”Wisnumurti and Bajul crouched beside the man, who looked about the same age as Ki Soma. He lay unconscious, drenched in blood. Deep gashes covered his chest, stomach, even his neck. The wounds certainly looked like the work of a wild animal.He had lost far too much blood. There was no saving him.But he was still alive.His chest rose and fell in ragged, desperate breaths, every inhale a battle against pain that must have been unbearable. Ordinary people—those without the heavy physical training as soldiers or martial artists—often died not from the wounds themselves, but because their bodies simply su

  • Toward the Sun   Five

    Jaladri scrambled back up the gentle riverbank and rejoined Wisnumurti and Bajul. The sun was already high overhead, beginning its slow drift westward.After half a day on the road from Karang Bendan, they had found the perfect place to stop—a small stream with crystal-clear water winding through the countryside.The three men ate lunch from the banana-leaf-wrapped meals prepared by Ki Soma’s household.Now their stomachs were full.They could ride straight through until reaching Kenipir, which lay west of Karang Bendan.The route between the two settlements was well maintained. Because travelers moved along it frequently, the road remained wide and level enough for horses, wagons, and ox carts to pass comfortably.It was also remarkably safe.Bandits rarely preyed on travelers between Karang Bendan and Kenipir, allowing ordinary people to travel without needing large caravans or hired swords for protection.Farther west and northwest, however—beyond Kenipir and toward the Royal City

  • Toward the Sun   Four

    “Wake up.”The whisper was so faint it was almost inaudible. Yet something inside it carried enough force to yank Jaladri out of sleep instantly. And the very first thing he realized was that he was trapped in sleep paralysis—fully conscious, eyes open, but unable to move a single muscle.It had happened to him before. What was unusual was the voice. He was certain he'd heard someone whisper.Had it been real? Or was it one of the spirits rumored to haunt the estate? His family's residence had a reputation. Guards and servants regularly claimed to see headless ghosts wandering the grounds, giant black-furred creatures lurking in the gardens, or shrouded specters floating among the mango trees beside the pavilion.Jaladri, however, had never seen any of them. Not once.“Relax. I’m not a ghost.”His heart slammed against his ribs. As his eyes adjusted to the darkness, he noticed a shadow standing in the corner of the room near the door. The figure was difficult to make out, almost compl

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