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ASULON Chapter Three THE WOLF AND THE COBRA PDF FILE (208 kb) FREE AUDIO BOOK SAMPLES ON MP3 FILES PT 1 (12.2 mb) PT 2 (5.7 mb)TEXT (see below)
They sharpened their tongue as a
serpent, Poison of an adder is under their lips. -Psalm 140:3
In
a large, but otherwise unremarkable stone house in the oldest part of the city
of
"A war comes, gentlemen, a war between the old and the new, between
the rough and hoary shamans of the decaying religions of the world and us, the
tellers of truth, the philosophers, men of learning and of science.
“Know that we are engaged in a revolution, gentleman, but not a
tumultuous revolution of the sword and the catapult. No, we fight a quiet
revolution of the mind. Our battle will not be on the plains and in the valleys
of Asulon, but in each and every school chamber in the land. We fight for the
greatest prize of all; the future of humankind, for we wage our battle in the
very minds of our children. Shall we continue teaching our children mere facts
or shall we strive for something higher: to teach our children how to think and,
indeed, how to act for the greater good?
“Who, then, decides what a child will learn? Her father, though he be
an unschooled and illiterate farmer, or professional teachers like myself who
have studied long and hard, whose very life's breath is education?
“I know what you in this room feel and I am gratified."
Dew held up his hand as if to forestall applause. He eyed each man in the
silent room with the self-satisfied air of those secure in their own
righteousness. He continued.
"How, then, shall we free our children from the rigid attitudes,
narrow values and false beliefs taught by parents blind to the new and better
path we have chosen? Parents, whose only hold over these children is the mere
biological accident of their birth?
“My friends, I bring you the news that we have already won our first
battle in this war, and fittingly, with barely a blow being struck, for our
enemies did not deem the territory taken of any great value. We now control the
schools that teach our future teachers the noble art of teaching. I am happy to
report that these schools view our curriculum with the same reverence that the
most rabid followers of the old religions view their 'holy' scriptures.
“The next battle will be a far greater struggle, though, for it must be
waged in the schools that instruct our youth, and the enemy realizes the value
of that prize. I am confident we shall prevail, however, for this battle will be
fought by the very teachers we have trained, who now see themselves as apostles
of a new faith--a religion of humanity based on tolerance for all things and a
love of self, a religion where every person finds his or her own way and own
truth, so that humankind can rise above the myths and legends of the old
religions that have held us back for far too long."
Dew paused dramatically to take a slow meaningful look around the room.
"But we have enemies, gentlemen, who would try to hold back this new
age of progress. Let me read to you what one Senator has said of us."
He drew a small scroll from beneath his robes, unrolled it and began to
read aloud.
"My countrymen, disguise the fact as we may, there is in this
country today, and in both political parties, an element which is ripe for
centralized despotism. There are men and houses of vast wealth, whose iron grasp
spans this whole continent, and who find it more difficult and more expensive to
corrupt the thirteen provincial legislatures than one High Senate. It was said
of an Etruscan emperor of old that he wished the people of his land had but one
head, so that he might cut it off with a single blow. And so it is with those
moneyed kings who would rule this country through bribery, fraud and
intimidation. It is easy to see how; with all the powers of government centered
in Eboracium they could at a single stroke put an end to Asulonian liberty. But
they well understand that before striking this blow the minds of the people must
be prepared to receive it. And what surer or safer preparation could possibly be
made than is now being made, by indoctrinating the minds of the rising
generation with the idea that ours is already a consolidated government; that
the provincial legislatures have no sovereignty which is not subordinate to the
will and pleasure of the High Senate, and that our Founding Laws are the mere
creatures of custom, and may therefore be legally altered or abolished by
custom? Such are a few of the poisonous doctrines which hundreds of thousands of
Asulonian children are today drinking in with the very definitions of the words
they are compelled to study. And yet the man who dares to utter a word of
warning of the approaching danger is stigmatized as an enemy to education and
unfit to be mentioned as a candidate for the humblest office."
Dew looked around the room in triumph, the truth of his case obvious to
him. He knew none in the room could deny his cause.
"Gentlemen, you must agree with me that these reactionaries, these
obstructionists, these self-deluded men who see the phantasmal hand of
conspiracy in every good work of ours, must be defeated! The next election for
the members of the High Senate will be upon us before we know it. Our candidates
must be properly funded in order to vanquish the foes of progress. Our cause is
just. Our people stand ready. The time for action is now!"
"Thank you, friend Dew," said Sargon, leading the polite
applause. It took Dew a moment to recognize the signal for him to take his seat.
One by one, other men rose to speak and various other matters were
discussed. Finally the general meeting came to an end.
"Surely you see the urgency in what must be done," said Dew to
Sargon, as he was guided towards the door.
"Yes, yes, of course you are correct," replied Sargon. "I
will speak to the financial committee about funding your candidates this very
day."
The great iron chamber door closed, echoing round the room.
The members of the financial committee remained in the chamber, the inner
circle of the Builders and its true leadership.
A man with silver hair spoke. "I think we should give Dew his gold,
if for no other reason than to relieve us from the need to hear his twaddle
again."
"If you think success will close that windy orifice he calls a
mouth, then you do not know our friend Dew," said Sargon. The men around
him chuckled. "But we will fund his candidates nonetheless, because his
enemies are our enemies."
They agreed upon an amount. No scribe took down the vote, for no scribe
ever attended a Builders Guild meeting. Later, Sargon would have a scribe write
out a document authorizing the funds to be transferred from an account set up
for such purposes.
Sargon knew that the teachers in the government schools adamantly opposed
anyone else teaching Asulon's children; this was what had brought Dew to the
meeting today. These teachers spoke loudly of the children's good, but, in
truth, simple fear of economic competition fueled their furor. In recent years,
parents in Asulon had taken to pooling their money to fund small private schools
or to placing their children into schools run by houses of worship. Some even
revived method successful for millennia, though mocked by the government
teachers, where parents teach their own children in their own homes.
The Builders Guild opposed these alternative methods of education for
their own reasons. The Builders saw the true nature of independent education. It
created a source of intellectual competition, which the men in the room could
not allow if their plans for the future of Asulon were to succeed. Dew and his
goals would be supported, for his enemies were indeed their enemies. A
generation ago, the Guild began a program to wrestle the government schools away
from the beliefs common to the people of Asulon and toward a belief system more
favorable to a world led by men like themselves. To this end, they began with
the schools that taught the teachers, conditioning them to think only in certain
ways and to believe only in certain things. The old ways of Asulon were mocked.
Sargon knew that, ironically, none of the men in the room sent their own
children to a government school, though they advocated such education for
others. No, their own children had private tutors and curriculums not very
different from those in the religious and private schools that their fathers
publicly opposed. Learning to be sheep was good enough for the masses, but their
own children would learn to be leaders.
A merchant across the table from Sargon mimicked Dew's whining pleas to
the amusement of the others. Sargon rapped his knuckles on the table. "Now
let us move on to something of truly immediate concern," said Sargon. He
looked gravely round the room and the men became silent.
"I have received a report from a fortune-teller in my
employ..."
"What? Are you listening to 'the spirits' now, Sargon?"
interrupted the head of another banking house, (publicly, a sharp competitor of
Sargon’s) who thought himself rich and fat enough to make a jest at Sargon's
expense.
"No, but many men and, in this case, one woman, foolishly speak
things to those 'spirits' that they would never tell to mortals," continued
Sargon. "I keep many people in my employ, including those to whom men will
confide things beyond anything they would tell a wife, brother or priest. Tavern
owners, prostitutes and, yes, fortune-tellers have their ears open for news and
their hands open for my gold. The wife of a certain senator close to Argeus
recently visited one such fortune-teller."
At this news even the rival banker leaned forward with interest.
"This senator's wife came to my fortune-teller seeking
counsel," continued Sargon. "It seems that the Senate will vote today
on a new law dealing with the minting of coins and the Senator's wife wished the
'spirits' to tell her how she might profit from this proposed law."
"And why is this important?" asked the banker.
"It seems that Argeus has been made aware of our plans concerning
the Freedom Transfer Boxes."
Sargon paused so that his next statement would hit them all the harder.
He would need them fully committed to accomplish the next step in his plan.
"There is more. Argeus has seen the medallion…"
A man across the table let out a curse. Another struck the tabletop with
his fist.
Sargon held up his hands for silence, "…and now Argeus proposes a
law that will maintain the use of gold, silver and copper as the only metals to
be used as payment in Asulon, defeating our entire plan before it has even
begun. The Senate votes on the law today. I have sent word to the few senators
we still control, but I fear it is too late. I could do no more than state that
we did not want the law passed; I could not tell them why for obvious reasons.
If we had had more warning, we could have mounted a campaign against the
law--convinced the common people that the law would only benefit the rich and
all the unusual rubbish they so willingly swallow. But, as things stand, I
believe that this new law of Argeus's will pass."
"But how is this possible?" demanded the head of the largest
shipbuilding concern in Asulon. "You assured us the medallions would not
appear until we had regained control of the High Senate."
The powerful old men in the room grew angry, but fear lay under that
anger. They were not young zealots willing to die for a higher cause: they
fought for their own wealth and power, a cause that might now be in jeopardy.
"I have discovered the leak," said Sargon. "A low-level
clerk assisting in the counting of the medallions managed to smuggle out a
defective medallion, due to be melted and remade."
The fat banker shifted his great bulk back into his chair. "So tell
us. Who was he working for and has he been dealt with?"
"He worked for no one, as far as we can tell," replied Sargon.
"It seems that he found religion at some temple. The other clerks tell of
him coming to work one morning, acting unusually cheerful and trying to convert
them all to the worship of Yeshua.
“When I found that Argeus had seen one of our medallions, I ordered an
investigation. This clerk was an obvious suspect. Under interrogation, he told
all. It seems he believed that drivel about the Tri-Hex being an evil number,
stole a medallion and turned it over to his local priest, who then apparently
turned it over to that meddling cleric Simon.
“And that is why religion is such a dangerous element in society. It
makes men unpredictable. They do things that defy all logic. The clerk is dead
now and for what? A number on a coin?"
"But does Argeus actually believe that rot about the Tri-Hex?"
asked a man who made his wealth through theaters of the cheapest type. "I
would have thought an educated man such as he would not believe in those
children's tales."
A tall, distinguished man rose to speak. A famous retired senator who had
led a public crusade to raise taxes and "soak the rich" as he put it,
he had inherited great wealth himself. It amused him that none of the laws he
had ever proposed touched his own fortune, but instead prevented the very people
who voted for him from becoming wealthy themselves.
"It always escapes the notice of religious fanatics that the Tri-Hex
can be read from any angle and thus easily read on a coin or medallion,"
said the former senator. "In a device like the transfer box, even should a
medallion be put on the box upside down; the box will still be able to read the
central three numbers of the medallion. This way a merchant using the box will
know to simply turn the medallion around, rather than send the whole blasted box
back to us as defective!"
"Well said, sir, well said," agreed Sargon. Sargon knew what
angered the man so. The Gauls experienced this very problem two years ago, when
the medallion was introduced there and did not yet bear the Tri-Hex. The
creators of the box suggested adding a prefix, a three-digit entry code that
could be read by the boxes whether right side up or upside down. That number
turned out to be six hundred and sixty-six. If the central three digits were
read as nine hundred and ninety-nine, the box would still recognize these as
numbers and signal the merchant to turn the medallion around. The final
medallions, and even the tattooed marks that would replace them, included the
prefix.
The direction of the discussion, so far, satisfied Sargon. But would they
be willing to go the distance with him? What he sought had been done only once
before in his lifetime.
"It seems," continued Sargon, "that Argeus believes
himself to be the moral pinnacle of Asulonian monarchy and that any king who
comes after him would misuse the power that the Freedom Transfer Boxes would
give the king."
"But removing coinage from society would benefit every citizen in
the realm," protested the head of one of the three largest scribe services.
"Outlawing coins and making transfer boxes the only means of buying or
selling, will destroy every black market in Asulon. Theft will be a thing of the
past. Only criminals need fear our system."
"Perhaps Argeus fears that one day things that are now legal would
be made illegal," said Sargon, before someone else raised the point better.
"Balderdash!" replied the ex-senator. "New laws that
outlaw formerly legal things pass the Senate every day, and you don't see the
prisons overflowing with common citizens now, do you? No, the common man learns
to conform to a new law like a horse to a new rider. The people do not riot,
cause chaos or revolt because they know that the majority of laws are, in the
end, made for their benefit. They abide by them. The
few troublemakers there are, are soon found out and sent off to prison. The
transfer boxes will simply mean that the foxes cannot stay underground for
long."
"Do not forget," said an owner of a large western bank,
"how much our houses would prosper with such a system. No more bits of
parchment to be carried back and forth between merchant and banking house, no
more fraudulent writs, no more 'my
boy will send round your payment in the morning.' The savings to our
houses on clerks alone will be monumental. We will be faster, more efficient and
much more profitable".
He addressed Sargon. "And now you tell us Argeus wants to stop this
progressive move that will end so much crime in Asulon and profit us all?"
Well done,
thought Sargon.
"He does, and it goes beyond any prejudice to progress he has shown
in the past," said Sargon. "If he succeeds, millions that should have
been ours will be lost."
He fell silent, allowing that last sentence to sink into their minds and
do its work.
"That man is impossible to deal with," said the shipbuilder.
"This is not the first time his actions have cost us. Remember what he did
to us with the Senate's terms. Only two terms per senator! Now many in the
Senate think they no longer need our gold or our council. Half the old Senate
gone, and what did those new fools do once they came to power? Pass that idiotic
sales tax law, undoing all we have worked so hard on these many years."
The new tax system was simple, direct and fair and thus hated by many who
had used the old system to gain and retain power. Men, including many in that
room, who had never paid any great amount in taxes before, now had to pay the
same percentage as every other person in Asulon, which rankled them to no end.
Politicians, from senators to local magistrates, who had previously made
millions by changing the tax laws to favor one group or another for a time and
then made millions more to change the laws back again, now had no say in how
taxes were collected. The powerful men in this room now had one less avenue to
corrupt officials and influence policy. Argeus, in their eyes, was the ultimate
author of this tax law, for he made it possible for these new senators to be
elected and thus pass the law: and that was a wound they would never forgive.
Sargon looked around the room and saw men almost visibly shaking with
rage. In his mind's eye he saw them as a pack of caged wolves, snarling and
snapping, fangs dripping hatred, eager for the cage door to fly open so that
they could tear their prey apart.
"Argeus is the wrong king for this time," said the fat banker.
"Argeus is a senile old fool and should not be king at any
time," called out another man, giving voice to what they all had been
thinking.
"Argeus's son is not yet of age to become king," said Sargon,
"and Argeus himself will not step down until the prince returns from his
training in Logres ten years from now. If Argeus's term ended prematurely,
for whatever reason,
He paused for a moment, then, giving each word careful emphasis, he said,
"Just as men are not immortal, neither are their laws. What one man has
brought to life, another man may kill."
The room grew deathly silent as each man weighed the risks of what hung
unsaid in the chamber.
Then the cold hard men in the room looked into the cold hard eyes of
their neighbors and found agreement.
"Are we of one mind, then, that this problem should be dealt with
expeditiously?" asked Sargon.
"Yes," said the southerner. "Aye, let it be as you
say," said another. One by one they gave their consent.
"I will see what can be done," said Sargon, smiling within
himself.
The meeting ended and the men in the room made their way to the door
without a word. The chamber door closed and Sargon had the room to himself.
After a moment he heard a slight scraping of stone behind him, but did not turn
around. He knew the sound of the concealed door opening. Only he and one other
knew of its existence, or of the tunnel behind it.
"Sargon, you did well, but you did not do all," said a voice
from the tunnel’s entrance.
Sargon turned to face a man so old and gaunt that Sargon wondered, each
time they met, that he could draw breath, let alone walk. The old man's thin
skin stretched like parchment over his bare skull. His bony hands were all
protruding knuckles and twisted blue veins. His white robes hung loosely about
him and overly long in back, so that they hissed against the floor when he
walked. Sargon always believed that the effect was deliberate. He reminded
Sargon of a very old and angry cobra searching for one last victim to set his
fangs into before he died.
Sargon bowed his head and greeted the old man in the expected manner.
"Welcome, Aesculapius, Master of the Great White Brotherhood, Greatest of
the Round Table of Nine, Philosopher-King of Philosopher-Kings. High Priest of
the Illuminati, I greet thee."
Aesculapius bowed his head in acceptance of the praise, though he knew
that Sargon was loyal to no one but Sargon.
The old sorcerer came to the council table and sat down, taking Sargon's
seat at the head of the table.
"You made no mention of our agreement regarding Prince Daniel at
your council with the merchants," said Aesculapius. He pronounced
'merchants' with a hiss, as if the word were distasteful to him.
"Our own discussions about the prince do not concern them,"
replied Sargon. "Keeping one secret of this size will be difficult
enough without compounding the problem with two."
Aesculapius' eyes grew cold. "I have told you that both Argeus and
his son represent a danger to us--the son more so, for the prophecy concerns the
boy. The father merely sired him."
"Prince Daniel can be dealt with much more easily in Logres, in a
hunting accident perhaps, than here with his father's guards watching,"
replied Sargon.
The moneylender hated these religious fanatics, but Sargon needed the
Illuminati for their control of the secret of the transfer boxes. Whether, as he
sometimes suspected, they stumbled upon some long dead alchemy or, as they
claimed, they created it themselves, he could not say with any certainty. But he
did know that they held the keys to the success of his grandest plan. He himself
could never be king in Asulon, but what if he could choose and control the next
king? Would that not be just as good? The transfer boxes would give him the
power to do precisely that.
Aesculapius tilted his head back and closed his eyes.
Oh no,
thought Sargon, here it comes.
The sorcerer began to speak in a low, breathless voice. In
fire's ring, where angels sing In
holies’ home, sheathed in stone Where
blood was spilt, one for all To
make amends for the Fall The
first of swords awaits the finding Of
one whose oath, blood is binding Wisdom,
strength, honor finding To
whose arm the sword is binding “When
we received this prophecy we were glad,” said Aesculapius, “for we thought
that it foretold this great weapon, the first of swords, given into our hands.
But then another prophecy came. Destiny, it seemed, had given us a rival. And
that second prophecy was this.’ When
True West's king dies without heir And
elder successor marries the fair Scion
lone shall find under stone The
first of swords, in fire's home Awaits
your master an avenging death Ashes
for words and smoke for breath In
all the world there is no room For
your prince to flee his doom
"Yes, yes, you have told me of these prophecies from your
soothsayers before," said Sargon.
Aesculapius' eyes snapped open as he turned on Sargon. "They were
given in the year of Argeus' birth, though at that time we had no way of knowing
that they referred to him. Now we have seen with our own eyes King Absalom die
without an heir and Argeus, with a lone male offspring, take his place on the
throne. We did not wish to move against the House of Asher directly, hoping that
the greatest of weapons would be delivered to us before this day. But my Master
does not wish to wait any longer."
"Your
master?" Sargon was surprised. Aesculapius never before had
referred to any authority in the Illuminati higher than himself.
The old man's eyes came alive. "A man, great in power and secret
knowledge, like one of the Enlightened Ones of old, is our earthly prince and
our strength. He must live, for if he dies my order dies with him. My Master's
Master has ordained it!"
His 'Master's Master’? thought Sargon. This old scarecrow
never speaks but in riddles. Sargon tired of Aesculapius more quickly than
usual. But he smiled when he answered nonetheless.
"I did not appreciate the urgency of the matter. It will be my
pleasure to see to a result that pleases you, your master, his
master and any other masters you have."
"Do not even think to patronize me, child," snapped the
sorcerer, eyes flashing. "You will do as I say to gain your precious black
boxes. But know this: Prince Daniel will be dead before he leaves Asulon or you
will stand before us and explain why you failed."
With that, Aesculapius turned and disappeared into the blackness of the
tunnel. Sargon pressed the concealed lever and the door closed, the wall
becoming a wall once more. He stood for a time staring at the wall, then,
satisfied that the sorcerer would not return, closed the hidden grate that had
allowed the sorcerer to hear what was said in the room.
Pity I can't have the tunnel sealed up with that snake within it, he
thought.
Sargon knew he could deal with this new law Argeus proposed. In fact, it
would serve him well, for it ensured that every Guild member’s hands were as
bloody as his. They would not dare give his name in any future investigation,
lest they be caught up in the net as well. All in all, the death of Argeus would
strengthen Sargon's position as leader of the Builders Guild. The Guild would
never know that the king's death had been planned long in advance, and had been
ordered by those outside of the Guild. To the retired senator, the fat banker
and the others, it would be Sargon who had killed a king, it would be Sargon who
could get big things done quickly.
Sargon found that he was suddenly very hungry. A bowl of apples, a
remnant of the previous autumn’s crop had been brought up from the cold cellar
and set upon the council table. Sargon reached out and took the topmost apple
from the pile, knocking two more apples from the bowl onto the table. About to
put them back into the bowl, he stopped, held up the first apple and smiled.
Here we have useful fools like Dew,
Sargon thought to himself.
He held up a second apple before him. And here, the pack of wolves I
lead, but dare not turn my back on.
He placed both pieces of fruit in his left hand and took up a third in
his right. And here we have those lunatics of the Illuminati.
Smiling to himself, he tossed first one apple, then the other, into the
air, juggling them.
Keep this one happy, then that one, now this one here.
He kept the fruit flying through the air.
I am not a moneylender, I'm a juggler!
He threw the fruit higher and began to laugh. He tried to catch an apple
in his mouth but missed. Sargon bounced the falling fruit off his knee and
deftly caught it on the top of his foot where it miraculously stayed balanced.
Surprised at himself, he took another apple from the bowl and began to juggle
those three while standing on one foot balancing the fourth. Growing more
daring, he kicked the apple from his foot into the air and tried to add it to
the three but missed and all four apples fell to the floor.
"Well, sir," he said out loud, "you should know how to
quit while you are ahead--and you do."
Sargon left the chamber.
COPYRIGHT 2005 WILLIAM R. MCGRATH
*Note: The "Senator's" speech that Dew reads comes from the 1886 book "Poison Drops in the Federal Senate" written by Assistant Attorney General Zachary Montgomery (see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zachariah_Montgomery) . I've included his words in this chapter because they ring so true for our own times. You can read the entire book free of charge here: http://www.timsaylor.com/misc/Poison_Drops.pdf The section I used can be found in part 6 "Political poison in the public-school books". Scroll down to the 8th paragraph from the bottom.
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