State Security headquarters
Nerbangal, Capital of Karzastan
Karzastan
Monday 16th February 2021
A cool evening breeze flowed in from the open window, it was a welcome reprieve from the scorching heat of a Kianese morning. Inside his office, Umid Musayev busied himself with paperwork the only sound being the scribbling of his pen and the slow rhythmic ticking of the clock on the mantle. He liked to work late, there was something soothing about writing by the warm glow of a lamp and there were fewer distractions to disrupt the flow of work.
The minister of state security was well known for his love of neatness and efficiency and his office was if nothing else an extension of this mindset. The walls were lined with well-spaced rows of family photos and framed qualifications, all of which were immaculate and cleaned daily. The bookshelf to Umid’s left was his pride and joy and was lined with the writings of histories greats, everyone from Thomas Nielson to the prophet Tariq.
The man was much like his office with his wrinkleless blue linen suit and carefully combed hair, he had a wide forehead and a long patrician like nose upon which a pair of horn-rimmed glasses rested. He had small brown eyes that seemed to have a permanent look of calm detachment about them, anyone who did not know the minister might have confused him for a schoolmaster or a university professor.
He paused his incessant scribbling for a moment to regard the mound of paperwork piled upon his desk, a sea of names and locations lined every page all requiring his personal attention. He sighed and set his pen down, as he massaged his writing hand, he noted that his throat was dry, hours of work causing him to neglect himself. He reach for the intercom button and paged his secretary.
“Minister?” a soft woman's voice asked
“Gulna, would you be so kind as to bring me some tea,” he asked gently
“Of course, minister” came the reply as Gulna
Umid liked Gulna, she had been working for him for some five years now and had proven an excellent assistant. He especially liked her lack of curiosity regarding her work, a rare and much desired quality, that and her willingness to work late. According to the files he kept Gulna’s husband was an officer in the people's army, she also had a small son at home who would be turning 5 in the coming year. Umid liked to know the people who worked for him both as a matter of security and as a means of building trust.
Moments later a small woman in a tan dress with a black headscarf entered the room carrying a metal tray of tea. Gulna set the tray down on the desk and poured Umid a cup of black tea from ornate porcelain lined with blue flowers. The designs on the bone pottery harked back to ancient Kian, that long-departed golden age and added elegance to this most common of rituals. He thanked Gulna who nodded before exiting the room.
Umid sipped his tea and sat back, allowing himself a moments respite from the mound of papers on his desk. After a moment he pulled another form from the piled and stared down at the name on the white paper “Izzat Yusupov” the name read in stern bold lettering. Umid grinned, the oil magnate had been rotting in a holding cell downstairs for the past month, the price of running afoul of the state,
He scribbled his signature on the form and reached for the phone, the president had given him the task of breaking Yusupov and Umid was ready to perform the final coup de gras. President Nerbangal had long feared that Yusupov’s ability and charisma might threaten his position as supreme leader, the arrest for embezzlement was merely a pretext used to remove a potential rival. Umid had been ordered to acquire Yusupov’s assets by any means necessary.
“Have prisoner #219 prepared for my arrival” Umid said in a commanding voice
“Yes sir!” the guard on the other end of the line replied likely saluting as he did so
Umid put the phone down and leaned back in his chair, he took one last sip of tea and then rose to leave. He paused only to collect his coat and then he was heading for the elevators.
Holding Cell #219
Izzat Yusupov whispered prayers to Allab from bloodied lips, the guards delighted in tormenting him with the threat of violence at all hours of the day. Sometimes he would go days without a single visit, then other times the guards would brutalize him for hours on end. It was all an attempt to make him crack, to make him sign over his assets to their narcissistic master. He had resisted them for weeks, but now he was starting to reach his limit, the potent mix of hunger, dehydration and fear was taking its toll.
What had been his crime? The official charge read embezzlement but that was merely a fabricated accusation. The truth was that it didn’t really matter if your crimes were real or imagined in Karzastan, either way the result was largely the same. Yusupov’s actual offence had been far graver then petty theft, he had been too good at his job and Nerbangal, ever the egotist had felt threatened by his talents. Of all the crimes a man could commit in Karzastan the most dangerous was displeasing the president.
Yusupov was in all likelihood a dead man, the only question was how they intended to dispose of him. They could drag him through months of show trials and public spectacles before deciding to execute him or perhaps they would deport him to a Labour camp and work him to death, the difference between sentences was trivial. But before they killed him, they would take everything he had built, his wealth would be snatched away to feed the greed of a man who already had everything. Years of careful business decisions and hard work would be undone by one signed confession.
All of that would have been fine, they could take his money, his company and even his life just so long as his family was spared. They had probably been herded into some vile detention center, it pained him to even consider what they might be enduring. He cursed his own carelessness, his own arrogance, he should have moved them to Midir years ago.
A hammering at his cell door jolted him from his thoughts, the slit slid open, and the darkness of his cell was momentarily illuminated. Two angry looking eyes glared at him as he tried to shield his eyes from the blinding light.
“You have a visitor” the guard snarled sternly and then the slit slammed shut
************************************************************************************
Umid watched as the guards hauled Yusupov into the interrogation room and forced him into the chair directly across the table from where Umid was sitting. The room was a dreary affair, harsh concrete walls and a single table beneath a painful white light lent it an oppressive air. The minister noted how dishevelled Yusupov had become, his normally clean-shaven features having been replaced by bloodshot eyes and weeks of dirty stubble. It was a far cry from the business magnate holding court in expensive Predicean suits while the press lavished him with attention, here was a man who had been pulled from a great height and broken.
“Your file says you have been in our custody for just over a month” Umid began calmy as he scanned the folder in front of him without looking up
“Wouldn't know, your men took my watch as soon as I was brought here” Yusupov replied in contempt filled voice
Umid didn’t reply, best not to gratify prisoner's defiance with a response, he had seen the hateful glare that Yusupov gave him a thousand times before. It was the look of a man who had nothing left but the stubborn need to resist, it was a look that always proceeded the final breaking. Umid could have left that task to one of countless different underlings, but he preferred to deal with high profile interrogations himself, he enjoyed the sense of power it gave him.
“You are accused of embezzlement and collaboration with hostile foreign powers, the penalty for these crimes is death but the state may show lenience if you sign a written statement of confession and gift your assets into the care of the state,” Umid said matter-factly as he pressed a white form across the table towards Yusupov
Yusupov eyed the form with disgust and then spat on the floor, a traditional Kianese gesture of outrage. Umid smiled and nodded to the guard standing behind Yusupov, a tall slab of muscle named Bahador. Bahador walked forward and with one brutal motion smashed his fist into the side of Yusupov’s face sending a spray of blood and tooth spilling to the floor. Yusupov groaned and his head lolled back, Umid signalled for Bahador who grabbed Yusupov and forced him upright.
“We both know my wealth has already been seized! Just take the assets and be done with it!” Yusupov hissed from bloodied lips
“Perhaps Mr Yusupov but we both know that Karzastan does not work that way, our leader demands a show of submission and you will provide it one way or another” Umid replied with a mocking smile
“You're enjoying this? Probably makes you feel like a big man doing this but you're just another tyrants Fingerman, he’ll dispose of you when you stop being useful and no one will mourn your passing!” Yusupov snarled in response
Umid sighed and motioned for Bahador who smacked Yusupov across the face with a violent backhand that left a welt on Yusupovs already bloodied features. Umid produced a pen and held it out to the stricken businessman.
“Sign and this can all end,” Umid said softly
“I want to see my family!” Yusupov yelled
Bahador stepped forward ready to punish the prisoner for his disrespect but Umid waved him off. He looked Yusupov directly in the eyes and adopted an expression of sincerity, false of course but so well practiced that it was indistinguishable from the real thing.
“You will, if you sign!” he said emphatically
He passed the pen to Yusupov who after a moment's hesitation took it and with shaking hands signed his signature upon the page. Umid watched him sign the document with growing glee, Nerbangal would be pleased and that meant Umid’s profile would rise even further within the government.
“There you have what you want! Now let me see my wife and son!” Yusupov said in a low, irritable, almost pleading tone
“All in good time,” Umid said as he rose from his chair and left the room, the metal door slamming behind him
Outside several guards waited, their green uniforms marking them as state security officers, they saluted as the minister approached. He nodded to the lead officer and motioned with his head towards the now closed interrogation room.
“Help Bahador get the room cleaned,” he said knowing full well what that phrase meant
Yusupov had been right when he had said that he was a dead man, Umid had never had any intention of showing him lenience, save that is for sparing him a lengthy public trial. With Yusupov’s assets seized all that was left to do was to “clean” the room and divide the spoils.
Umid smiled as he made his way to the elevator, today had been a productive day, he was in a good mood and pondered stopping at the local supermarket for wine and chocolates, he would spoil his wife and children tonight in celebration. He briefly considered the soon to be disappeared Yusupov, Umid had not been entirely lying when he had said the businessman would see his wife and son again, he had simply neglected to inform Yusupov that it wouldn’t be a reunion made amongst the living.
The truth was that he had ordered Yusupov’s family eliminated weeks ago, it was a standard tactic, divide a family and eliminate them without the other knowing, made for great leverage. As the lift arrived Umid began to hum and old Kianese love song, the deaths on his conscience entirely forgotten.
**********************************************************************************
Yusupov whispered a silent prayer to Allab and prayed for the safety of his loved ones, he knew the end was close, there was something in the minister's expression as he had left the room. He grinned slightly knowing that despite Nerbangal’s supposed victory the dictator had known nothing about Yusupov's insurance policy.
Upon his death news, agencies across Eras would receive an anonymous series of documents implicating Nerbangal’s government in the murder and countless other crimes. It was unlikely to topple a regime given the preeminence of national sovereignty in Eras, but it would embarrass the president and that for a narcissist like Nerbangal that would hurt almost as much. Yusupov’s only regret was that he would not live to see it.
The opened and several officers marched in, it was time, Yusupov closed his eyes and began to recite a prayer to Allab asking for forgiveness for himself and those who had wronged him. In his mind's eye he cast his memory back to a hot summer's day in his uncle's estate in Midir, the leaves had been tawny-coloured and the sun bright, Olma had told him she was pregnant beneath an old oak tree. He smiled and allowed himself to mediate on that happy thought.
Something tight and sharp was wrapped around his neck and he felt the chair give way, he fell backwards struggling and kicking as he was strangled by the garrote. His vision grew dark and he felt himself begin to drift off into the blackness. His final thought before going limp was of his family.
“Allab...Olma....forgive me”
Nerbangal, Capital of Karzastan
Karzastan
Monday 16th February 2021
A cool evening breeze flowed in from the open window, it was a welcome reprieve from the scorching heat of a Kianese morning. Inside his office, Umid Musayev busied himself with paperwork the only sound being the scribbling of his pen and the slow rhythmic ticking of the clock on the mantle. He liked to work late, there was something soothing about writing by the warm glow of a lamp and there were fewer distractions to disrupt the flow of work.
The minister of state security was well known for his love of neatness and efficiency and his office was if nothing else an extension of this mindset. The walls were lined with well-spaced rows of family photos and framed qualifications, all of which were immaculate and cleaned daily. The bookshelf to Umid’s left was his pride and joy and was lined with the writings of histories greats, everyone from Thomas Nielson to the prophet Tariq.
The man was much like his office with his wrinkleless blue linen suit and carefully combed hair, he had a wide forehead and a long patrician like nose upon which a pair of horn-rimmed glasses rested. He had small brown eyes that seemed to have a permanent look of calm detachment about them, anyone who did not know the minister might have confused him for a schoolmaster or a university professor.
He paused his incessant scribbling for a moment to regard the mound of paperwork piled upon his desk, a sea of names and locations lined every page all requiring his personal attention. He sighed and set his pen down, as he massaged his writing hand, he noted that his throat was dry, hours of work causing him to neglect himself. He reach for the intercom button and paged his secretary.
“Minister?” a soft woman's voice asked
“Gulna, would you be so kind as to bring me some tea,” he asked gently
“Of course, minister” came the reply as Gulna
Umid liked Gulna, she had been working for him for some five years now and had proven an excellent assistant. He especially liked her lack of curiosity regarding her work, a rare and much desired quality, that and her willingness to work late. According to the files he kept Gulna’s husband was an officer in the people's army, she also had a small son at home who would be turning 5 in the coming year. Umid liked to know the people who worked for him both as a matter of security and as a means of building trust.
Moments later a small woman in a tan dress with a black headscarf entered the room carrying a metal tray of tea. Gulna set the tray down on the desk and poured Umid a cup of black tea from ornate porcelain lined with blue flowers. The designs on the bone pottery harked back to ancient Kian, that long-departed golden age and added elegance to this most common of rituals. He thanked Gulna who nodded before exiting the room.
Umid sipped his tea and sat back, allowing himself a moments respite from the mound of papers on his desk. After a moment he pulled another form from the piled and stared down at the name on the white paper “Izzat Yusupov” the name read in stern bold lettering. Umid grinned, the oil magnate had been rotting in a holding cell downstairs for the past month, the price of running afoul of the state,
He scribbled his signature on the form and reached for the phone, the president had given him the task of breaking Yusupov and Umid was ready to perform the final coup de gras. President Nerbangal had long feared that Yusupov’s ability and charisma might threaten his position as supreme leader, the arrest for embezzlement was merely a pretext used to remove a potential rival. Umid had been ordered to acquire Yusupov’s assets by any means necessary.
“Have prisoner #219 prepared for my arrival” Umid said in a commanding voice
“Yes sir!” the guard on the other end of the line replied likely saluting as he did so
Umid put the phone down and leaned back in his chair, he took one last sip of tea and then rose to leave. He paused only to collect his coat and then he was heading for the elevators.
Holding Cell #219
Izzat Yusupov whispered prayers to Allab from bloodied lips, the guards delighted in tormenting him with the threat of violence at all hours of the day. Sometimes he would go days without a single visit, then other times the guards would brutalize him for hours on end. It was all an attempt to make him crack, to make him sign over his assets to their narcissistic master. He had resisted them for weeks, but now he was starting to reach his limit, the potent mix of hunger, dehydration and fear was taking its toll.
What had been his crime? The official charge read embezzlement but that was merely a fabricated accusation. The truth was that it didn’t really matter if your crimes were real or imagined in Karzastan, either way the result was largely the same. Yusupov’s actual offence had been far graver then petty theft, he had been too good at his job and Nerbangal, ever the egotist had felt threatened by his talents. Of all the crimes a man could commit in Karzastan the most dangerous was displeasing the president.
Yusupov was in all likelihood a dead man, the only question was how they intended to dispose of him. They could drag him through months of show trials and public spectacles before deciding to execute him or perhaps they would deport him to a Labour camp and work him to death, the difference between sentences was trivial. But before they killed him, they would take everything he had built, his wealth would be snatched away to feed the greed of a man who already had everything. Years of careful business decisions and hard work would be undone by one signed confession.
All of that would have been fine, they could take his money, his company and even his life just so long as his family was spared. They had probably been herded into some vile detention center, it pained him to even consider what they might be enduring. He cursed his own carelessness, his own arrogance, he should have moved them to Midir years ago.
A hammering at his cell door jolted him from his thoughts, the slit slid open, and the darkness of his cell was momentarily illuminated. Two angry looking eyes glared at him as he tried to shield his eyes from the blinding light.
“You have a visitor” the guard snarled sternly and then the slit slammed shut
************************************************************************************
Umid watched as the guards hauled Yusupov into the interrogation room and forced him into the chair directly across the table from where Umid was sitting. The room was a dreary affair, harsh concrete walls and a single table beneath a painful white light lent it an oppressive air. The minister noted how dishevelled Yusupov had become, his normally clean-shaven features having been replaced by bloodshot eyes and weeks of dirty stubble. It was a far cry from the business magnate holding court in expensive Predicean suits while the press lavished him with attention, here was a man who had been pulled from a great height and broken.
“Your file says you have been in our custody for just over a month” Umid began calmy as he scanned the folder in front of him without looking up
“Wouldn't know, your men took my watch as soon as I was brought here” Yusupov replied in contempt filled voice
Umid didn’t reply, best not to gratify prisoner's defiance with a response, he had seen the hateful glare that Yusupov gave him a thousand times before. It was the look of a man who had nothing left but the stubborn need to resist, it was a look that always proceeded the final breaking. Umid could have left that task to one of countless different underlings, but he preferred to deal with high profile interrogations himself, he enjoyed the sense of power it gave him.
“You are accused of embezzlement and collaboration with hostile foreign powers, the penalty for these crimes is death but the state may show lenience if you sign a written statement of confession and gift your assets into the care of the state,” Umid said matter-factly as he pressed a white form across the table towards Yusupov
Yusupov eyed the form with disgust and then spat on the floor, a traditional Kianese gesture of outrage. Umid smiled and nodded to the guard standing behind Yusupov, a tall slab of muscle named Bahador. Bahador walked forward and with one brutal motion smashed his fist into the side of Yusupov’s face sending a spray of blood and tooth spilling to the floor. Yusupov groaned and his head lolled back, Umid signalled for Bahador who grabbed Yusupov and forced him upright.
“We both know my wealth has already been seized! Just take the assets and be done with it!” Yusupov hissed from bloodied lips
“Perhaps Mr Yusupov but we both know that Karzastan does not work that way, our leader demands a show of submission and you will provide it one way or another” Umid replied with a mocking smile
“You're enjoying this? Probably makes you feel like a big man doing this but you're just another tyrants Fingerman, he’ll dispose of you when you stop being useful and no one will mourn your passing!” Yusupov snarled in response
Umid sighed and motioned for Bahador who smacked Yusupov across the face with a violent backhand that left a welt on Yusupovs already bloodied features. Umid produced a pen and held it out to the stricken businessman.
“Sign and this can all end,” Umid said softly
“I want to see my family!” Yusupov yelled
Bahador stepped forward ready to punish the prisoner for his disrespect but Umid waved him off. He looked Yusupov directly in the eyes and adopted an expression of sincerity, false of course but so well practiced that it was indistinguishable from the real thing.
“You will, if you sign!” he said emphatically
He passed the pen to Yusupov who after a moment's hesitation took it and with shaking hands signed his signature upon the page. Umid watched him sign the document with growing glee, Nerbangal would be pleased and that meant Umid’s profile would rise even further within the government.
“There you have what you want! Now let me see my wife and son!” Yusupov said in a low, irritable, almost pleading tone
“All in good time,” Umid said as he rose from his chair and left the room, the metal door slamming behind him
Outside several guards waited, their green uniforms marking them as state security officers, they saluted as the minister approached. He nodded to the lead officer and motioned with his head towards the now closed interrogation room.
“Help Bahador get the room cleaned,” he said knowing full well what that phrase meant
Yusupov had been right when he had said that he was a dead man, Umid had never had any intention of showing him lenience, save that is for sparing him a lengthy public trial. With Yusupov’s assets seized all that was left to do was to “clean” the room and divide the spoils.
Umid smiled as he made his way to the elevator, today had been a productive day, he was in a good mood and pondered stopping at the local supermarket for wine and chocolates, he would spoil his wife and children tonight in celebration. He briefly considered the soon to be disappeared Yusupov, Umid had not been entirely lying when he had said the businessman would see his wife and son again, he had simply neglected to inform Yusupov that it wouldn’t be a reunion made amongst the living.
The truth was that he had ordered Yusupov’s family eliminated weeks ago, it was a standard tactic, divide a family and eliminate them without the other knowing, made for great leverage. As the lift arrived Umid began to hum and old Kianese love song, the deaths on his conscience entirely forgotten.
**********************************************************************************
Yusupov whispered a silent prayer to Allab and prayed for the safety of his loved ones, he knew the end was close, there was something in the minister's expression as he had left the room. He grinned slightly knowing that despite Nerbangal’s supposed victory the dictator had known nothing about Yusupov's insurance policy.
Upon his death news, agencies across Eras would receive an anonymous series of documents implicating Nerbangal’s government in the murder and countless other crimes. It was unlikely to topple a regime given the preeminence of national sovereignty in Eras, but it would embarrass the president and that for a narcissist like Nerbangal that would hurt almost as much. Yusupov’s only regret was that he would not live to see it.
The opened and several officers marched in, it was time, Yusupov closed his eyes and began to recite a prayer to Allab asking for forgiveness for himself and those who had wronged him. In his mind's eye he cast his memory back to a hot summer's day in his uncle's estate in Midir, the leaves had been tawny-coloured and the sun bright, Olma had told him she was pregnant beneath an old oak tree. He smiled and allowed himself to mediate on that happy thought.
Something tight and sharp was wrapped around his neck and he felt the chair give way, he fell backwards struggling and kicking as he was strangled by the garrote. His vision grew dark and he felt himself begin to drift off into the blackness. His final thought before going limp was of his family.
“Allab...Olma....forgive me”