The Tragedy of the Butcher General
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[edit] Dream Trigger
Black Cave - Maze of Darkness - Examine the second soldier's corpse.
[edit] Transcript
- Everyone knows this general as "The Butcher."
- He is strong in battle, a skilled tactician, he has mastered the techniques of turning the
- specifics of topography and timing to his advantage, and he is outstanding, above all,
- in the skills of an individual warrior.
- Victory on the battlefield, however, does not lead straight to butchery.
- Many generals have been nicknamed for their military prowess-
- the Victorious, the Indomitable, the Invincible-
- but only one is known as the Butcher.
- "Do you know why that is, Kaim?"
- the general himself asks as he gloats over the vast mountain of corpses
- Kaim does not reply. He entered the fray as a mercenary, but his exploits far outclassed
- those of the regular troops. For the general to call a man into his presence and speak to
- him face-to-face is apparently an honor beyond even most officers' wildest dreams.
- "Not just from winning battles." the general goes on. "That would be too simple: just kill
- the enemy general. Take the big one's head and the battle's over. Right?"
- Kaim nods in silence. That is how this battle should have ended instead of continuing for
- three days. The enemy general proposed a surrender on the first day. He offered his
- head in exchange for the lives of his men and villagers. But the Butcher rejected the
- offer and continued his all-out attack on an enemy that had lost the will to fight,
- annihilating them in the process. The last day was used to burn down the forest into
- which the unresisting village had fled.
- "The real battle doesn't end when you raise the victory song on the battlefield.
- If even one person survives, the seed of hatred lives on. I'm talking about the desire for
- revenge. Nothing good can come from leaving that behind. You must cut the cause
- of future troubles at the root."
- This is why the troops under the general's command killed the young men of the village
- after they were through exterminating the enemy troops. They also killed the unarmed
- old poeople. They killed mothers fleeing with children in their arms. They killed the
- children they stripped from those mothers' corpses.
- "Do you think me cruel, Kaim?"
- "I do." Kaim answered, nodding.
- The officers gathered around them went pale, but the Butcher himself smiled
- magnanimously and went on.
- "You didn't do any of those things, I gather."
- "My job is to kill soldiers on the battlefield. My contract doesn't call for anything else."
- "And i'm saying that that is a follish line of thinking.
- The soldiers you killed have brothers and children. Do you plan to go on living in
- fear of their revenge? That is sheer stupidity. If you wipe out the entire family, you
- can live without such worries, you see."
- The general laughs uproariously, and the surrounding officers all smile in response.
- Kaim, however, his expression unchanged, starts to walk away.
- "Where are you going, Kaim?"
- "We are through talking, aren't we? My contract has ended."
- "Never mind that. Just wait."
- When the general says this, several soldiers stand to block Kaim's way.
- "Listen, Kaim. I've had reports of your performance from the front lines.
- What do you say to fighting under me from now on? You can exploit your
- martial talents to the full."
- "I am not interested."
- "What's that?"
- "I will never draw my sword on an unarmed opponent."
- The Butcher is momentarily taken aback, the shock written clearly on his face.
- "You still don't understand, do you? You should try reading a little history.
- You'll find that hatred only breeds more hatred. This is what inevitably brings
- down even the most prosperous nations and powers, which is why I make
- absolutely sure to sever it at the root."
- "If you ask me, general, war and butchery are two different things."
- "What are you-"
- "The same goes for valor and brutality."
- "You, a lowly mercenary, dare to lecture me...?"
- "Let me tell you something about hatred, too, general.
- It doesn't evaporate from cutting off a life.
- It remains-in the earth, in the clouds, in the wind.
- I have lived my life in that belief, and I intend to go on doing so."
- "You stupid-"
- "Butchery is the work of cowards. That is what I believe."
- "Where do you get the nerve...?"
- The general glares at Kaim, and his men draw their swords.
- At that very moment, from within the scorched forest come the cries of soldiers.
- "Here are some! Five of them still left!" "No, six!" "Over there! They went that way!"
- Distracted by the shouts, the general commands his men.
- "Hurry, capture them! Don't let even one of them get away!
- Hurry! Hurry! You can't let them escape!"
- The men blocking Kaim begin to fidget, and none of them thinks to stop him
- as he calmly walks away.
- "Do you hear me? You must not let them escape! If even one of them gets away.
- I'll have your heads-all of you!"
- The general's calls are clearly those of a coward.
- The Butcher presided over many battles after that.
- and he burned countless villages to the ground, butchering all of their inhabitants.
- Then, one night, something happened.
- The general felt a strange itching sensation on the back of his hand.
- It was different from an ordinary insect bite or skin eruption. It was deeper down
- and felt like a kind of squirming.
- "This is odd..."
- He clawed at his skin, but the itch would not subside. It was very strange:
- there was no redness or swelling or sign of a rash.
- "Maybe i touched a poisonous moth..."
- The general had burnt yet another village to the ground that day. Surrounded by
- beautiful countryside, the village in times of peace had been extolled as the "Flowering
- Hamlet." In keeping with the name, the villagers poured their energies into cultivating
- flowers of their hues, and the ones in full bloom in this particular season had the colour
- of the setting sun.
- Indeed, the entire village looked as if it had been dyed the color of a beautiful afterglow.
- This was the villager that the general burned down with flames far redder than any sunset.
- The villagers, who ran in circles begging for their lives, he killed on at a time. Far redder
- than the sunset, far redder than the flames was the blood that soaked into the earth.
- "But this is how it always is. I didn't do anything special today."
- Shaking the hand that refused to stop itching, the general took a swallow of liquor.
- And in that moment it happened.
- Tearing through the thin skin of the back of his hand,
- a number of small grain-like things that emerged from within.
- No blood flowed.
- No pain accompanied them.
- Exactly the way plants sprout from the earth.
- No, the things that covered over the back of his before his very eyes were,
- unmistakably, plant sprouts.
- Horrified, the general took a razor to the back of his hand and tried to shave the
- things off.
- When the blade came in contact with them, however, they gave off sounds like
- human moans-sounds exactly like the moans of a human being dying in agony as
- his entire body is slashed by swords.
- Or like the moans of a person who is being burned alive.
- "Shut up, damn you! Shut up, you hellish-"
- Holding the razor in one hand to shave the other, he could not cover his ears.
- His body was soaked in a greasy sweat by the time he succeeded in shaving
- the horrible things from the back of his hand. To salve his own anger, he
- shouted for the men who were supposed to be guarding him.
- "Where the hell have you been?"
- "Sir?"
- "You should have come running when you heard unusual voices coming from my tent!
- That is your job as my guards!"
- The guards gave each other puzzled looks, and the first replied hesitantly to the general,
- "Forgive me, Sir, we were standing just outside the entrance,
- but we never head any such..."
- The general glared at his guards, enraged, but after struggling to keep his welling
- anger in check, he shouted. "Never mind, then. Get Out!"
- He was too upset to waste time on subordinates.
- Almost immediately, the itching attakced the back of his hand again.
- But this time it was not limited to his hands:
- his flanks, his shoulders, his buttocks, behind his knees,
- his whole body started to itch.
- Alone again, the general tore off his nightclothes and inspected his entire body
- in the moonlight seeping through the roof of the tent.
- The things were sprouting from everywhere now, and some even had leaves
- beginning to grown on them.
- The general raised a soundless scream and began wildly attacking the growths
- wherever he could reach them.
- Each one he cut from his body released a horrible moan- horrible, horrible,
- horrible...
- His bed sheets turned green before his eyes, and soon the numberless sprouts
- were transforming into numberless human corpses. They covered not only his
- bed, but the whole earth, before they melted into the darkness of night and
- vanished.
- One sleepless night followed another in endless succession.
- The horrible things kept sprouting from his skin however he cut them off.
- Ointments had no effect. He tried taking every poison-quelling tablet he could get
- his hands on, but nothing worked.
- He could not speak of this to his subordinates.
- If a rumor spread that strange plants were sprouting from the Butcher's body,
- it would embolden his enemies and discourage his allies.
- One of his subordinates might even try to take his head at night.
- His cowardice had earned him, the name of the Butcher, and that same cowardice
- was what turned the general into a lonely, isolated man.
- He had no one he could tell about this.
- Each night the general would wage his lonely battle-
- through perhaps it could not be called a battle precisely. The things merely sprouted
- from his body and put up no resistance. When he took the razor to them, they
- would simply moan and fall away. What the general was engaged in on his own
- was less a battle than lonely butchery.
- Several more nights went by.
- The sprouting continued with undiminished force. The single fortunate aspect, perhaps,
- was that the things only sprouted in places on his body where the genral could reach
- with his razor. This could as well have been a curse, however. The general had no
- choice but to go on shaving the things precisely because he could reach them.
- Precisely because he was able to perform the butchery by himself.
- He could not call for help.
- His lonely butchery continued.
- His sleepless nights continued.
- The general's flesh wasted away.
- Why is this happening? the general asked himself.
- Why did this have to happen to me?
- This is a time of war. I am here on the battlefield. I have to kill
- the enemy in order to survive. In order to give myself future peace
- of mind, I have to kill them all, both armed and unarmed.
- "It is simple common sense," the general all but spit out the words.
- "All I have done is the sensible thing in the most sensible way"
- This night again the sprouts emerged from his body.
- This night again the general had to shave them off.
- Again the countless moans.
- Again the countless bodies.
- Again he heard the cock crow to announce the end of the night.
- Again the general passed the night without the comfort of sleep.
- The general's own body, once superbly conditioned on the battlefield, withered away
- before his own eyes. But more than his body, his mind became unstable.
- He spent his days sprawled on his bed.
- Eyes open or closed, he would see images of his past scenes of butchery.
- Now he began to recall the words of a skilled but insolent mercenary.
- Hatred doesn't evaporate from cutting off a life.
- It remains-in the earth, in the clouds, in the wind.
- The general wanted to see that man again-
- to see him and ask him again, "Have i been wrong all these years?"
- The man himself, a man of few words, would probably not answer his question.
- Still, the general wanted to see him again, that mercenary, that Kaim fellow.
- The sun went down. The night gradually deepened.
- As always, the itching started and the plants began to sprout.
- But the general, grasping the razor in fing:ers that now looked like withered branches,
- no longer had the strength to shave them off.
- His back began to itch.
- This was the first time the things had sprouted someplace beyond his reach-
- as if they had been waiting for this opportune moment.
- Sprawled on his bed, the general let the razor drop from his hand.
- Enough
- I don't care anymore.
- The sprouts kept growing, creeping over him,
- and before long they had covered him completely.
- At that point his back split open and an unusually large sprout emerged.
- By dawn the sprout had fully matured, and before the cock crowed,
- it produced a single blossom the colour of an evening afterglow.
- Many long years have passed
- Visting the old battlefield, Kaim finds a flower garden there.
- Blooming in profusion are flowers of cleary different shape and color
- than the ones along its border.
- Beside the garden stands a stone monument inscribed with the garden's history:
- In this place, a great general met his end. He was known as
- the Butcher. He died suddenly one night, and from his body
- grew many flowering plants. These were Evening Flowers, a
- blossom unique to a village the general had burnt to the ground.
- An ancient legend tells us that the seeds of the Evening Flower
- lodge in the bodies of those who nourish hatred in their breasts,
- and the roofs of the plant feed the flowers with the person's flesh
- The garden's flowers, the color of the setting sun, sway in a gentle breeze.
- Kaim stands there for a time, gazing at the countless flowers given birth by hatred,
- before walking on in silence.
- It is said that in the very center of the garden lies a disintegrating suit of armor,
- but no one has ever found it...
End
