Share

Six

last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-06-27 12:09:58

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 surrendered to the agony.

Wisnumurti pressed several pressure points along the man’s body, slowing the bleeding.

“What are his chances?” Jaladri asked.

“None,” Wisnumurti said quietly. “But I can wake him once. Maybe long enough so he can tell us who did this.”

A chill crawled up Jaladri’s spine as he watched.

Moments later, the man’s breathing steadied slightly. Then Wisnumurti touched a nerve in his neck.

The man’s eyes snapped open. Jaladri winced. If Wisnumurti was right, this would be the last time he could open his eyes.

Ki Sanak,” Wisnumurti said gently, speaking as one would to a frightened child, “can you tell me who did this to your village?”

The man’s lips parted. No sound came out.

“What?” Wisnumurti leaned closer.

The dying man’s eyes widened. Gathering the last scraps of strength left in his body, he forced out a single name.

“K-Ki Ja... Ki Jalung...!”

Wisnumurti frowned.

“Ki Jalung?”

The man nodded weakly.

“Who is Ki Jalung?”

He drew another agonizing breath, spending it all on two words.

“A guest... an important man...”

“Is he a nobleman? A religious leader?”

The man shook his head. Then he went still.

Wisnumurti froze for a moment. Quietly murmuring a prayer, he reached out and closed the dead man’s eyes.

“Ki Jalung...” Jaladri muttered as he folded the corpse’s hands across his stomach.

“Apparently, the killer was looking for this Ki Jalung,” Wisnumurti said. “He passed through Srumbung, then Jati. Probably on his way to see Ki Gede Nipir. When the killer couldn’t find him, he took his anger out on the villagers.”

“Who do you think this Ki Jalung is?” Bajul asked.

“Most likely someone from the martial world. If he really was headed to Kenipir, he may already be under your uncle’s protection,” Wisnumurti turned toward Jaladri. “What villages lie between Jati and Kenipir?”

Bajul stared at him.

“You’ve wandered around the east and north so long you forgot the map? Or is your memory finally rotting from old age?”

Wisnumurti laughed.

“Old age, my ass. I’ve just been away awhile. Besides, villages get wiped off the map often enough. New ones appear.”

“No new villages.” Bajul shook his head. “Still the same as before you disappeared. Between Jati and Kenipir there’s only Brabo.”

He grinned.

“Remember? We spent a night there. Jaladri got chased around by a lonely widow. Hah!”

Both men laughed. Jaladri managed only a painful smile. The story was true.

During one of Ki Soma’s caravans, they had spent the night in Brabo. Jaladri’s clean-cut appearance and obvious wealth had attracted more than a little attention, including from a widow who had been without a husband for years and was actively looking for a replacement.

“But that means we need to reach Brabo fast,” Wisnumurti said, striding toward his horse. “If Ki Jalung passed through there too, the place may already look like this.”

A shiver ran through Jaladri.

“Good point.”

As if whipped forward by the same thought, all three mounted up and galloped away from Srumbung.

They passed through Jati without stopping. Bodies still littered the village exactly where they had fallen. There was nothing they could do. Wisnumurti could only hope they might reach Brabo before it suffered the same fate.

Beyond Jati, the road cut through dense mountain forest. The scenery was beautiful in the fading afternoon light.

None of them noticed.

By late afternoon they reached Brabo, a larger settlement with a far bigger population. The village sat close enough from Kenipir, many residents traveled there daily for work and returned home before nightfall.

They slowed their horses as they entered the farming district.

The air grew cooler. The sun sank lower. Dusk was approaching.

Soon a house appeared ahead, partially hidden among shrubs and trees.

Then they heard it. A woman screaming.

Again. And again. Sobbing. Begging.

Wisnumurti cursed viciously and snapped his reins.

Dust exploded behind them as three horses surged into a full gallop.

They reached the scene moments later.

In front of a villager’s house, six armed men were dragging an entire family outside by force, a middle-aged husband and wife and a teenage girl no older than thirteen or fourteen.

The men shoved them to the ground.

Only then did Jaladri notice the infant cradled in the woman’s arms.

The baby slipped loose when she fell and immediately began wailing until she snatched it back.

Rage shot straight to Jaladri’s head. He leapt from his horse and charged forward.

For one reckless instant, he forgot that all his martial arts training had never once been tested in a real fight against real enemies.

Then a voice thundered across the yard.

“DON’T INTERFERE!”

The command carried terrifying authority.

Jaladri stopped cold. Only then did Wisnumurti and Bajul notice the man—and the crowd surrounding the house.

Dozens of villagers knelt silently along one side of the yard.

Not one dared move. Not one dared speak. They knelt in deference to a high-ranking official.

The very man who had shouted.

He stood before them with several hard-faced retainers at his side, a drawn kris gleaming in his hand.

The man was heavily built, dressed entirely in black, wearing an elegant headband. His mustache was so meticulously groomed it looked as though it required a specialist’s care.

Wisnumurti and Bajul immediately dismounted. Not out of fear.

Out of respect.

From his bearing alone, the man was clearly a noble warrior—likely a senior commander. A senopati.

“This is a matter of the Royal Court!” the man barked again. “I am Senopati Natpada, acting under the direct authority of His Highness Prince Candrakumala. Their lives and deaths are mine to decide. No one may interfere. My words are the Prince’s words. My will is the Prince’s will.”

Wisnumurti held his breath. He tugged at Jaladri’s sleeve, forcing him to kneel respectfully. Bajul did the same.

All three instantly understood what was happening. The cause was almost certainly the teenage girl.

She was undeniably beautiful.

Her skin carried the weathered tone of a village girl from the interior, but that only sharpened her appeal.

It was hardly unusual for regional rulers, their relatives, and their officials to claim any woman they desired.

And no one—not even a husband—was supposed to stand in their way.

Which made one question impossible to ignore. What exactly had happened here to provoke a confrontation like this?

Patuloy na basahin ang aklat na ito nang libre
I-scan ang code upang i-download ang App

Pinakabagong kabanata

  • 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

Higit pang Kabanata
Galugarin at basahin ang magagandang nobela
Libreng basahin ang magagandang nobela sa GoodNovel app. I-download ang mga librong gusto mo at basahin kahit saan at anumang oras.
Libreng basahin ang mga aklat sa app
I-scan ang code para mabasa sa App
DMCA.com Protection Status