The hermaphrodite

Website design By BotEap.com1 He had an iron peg for a nose; his future wife, named Kciroy, was a toothless dwarf and therefore they would soon be married, and that in itself is a long story that I will try to summarize in a flash. 2 She was the morbid princess of Oxas, a bewildered little kingdom in the high mountains of Bulgaria, during the early Middle Ages. 3 The king, on his daughter’s wedding day, gave his son-in-law Ailepho, gold double nose plugs, to cover those embraced nostrils, similar to a pig’s snout, no snout, only deep rooted holes. 4 They smelled worse than rotten game, skunk holes, you might call them, even worse than demon breath. 5 To be honest, there are no words in those distant vocabularies that would describe such a stench. 6 Ailepho was middle-aged, while his wife, half his age, and the father, twice Ailepho’s age. 7 Shortly after getting married, Ciroy gave birth to a hermaphrodite; the dwarf princess was enraged when she saw the girl, and also Ailepho. 8 As for the king, he did not take it differently from when his wife, now deceased, gave birth to Kciroy, that is, his daughter, and when he allowed his daughter to marry Ailepho, now his son-in-law. : -how to like, equal to equal, simply taking it as a human tragedy in short. 9 But going back to why the king allowed Ciroy to marry Ailefo: in a nutshell, it was like this: he got rid of all the rats, with that cursed smell of hers throughout the kingdom. 10 No more was said on the deal, lock-stock-and-barrel topic: “Ditch the fees, rats the fees!” 11 Well, now seven years had passed, and the old king was still alive; eighty-seven to be exact, and the boy was no longer a boy, he was a young man of formal reasoning. Thus, out of bitterness, it was not called “that” by the grandfather, of course, but by the mother and father: out of disgust.

Website design By BotEap.com13 Now, before continuing with this story, it must be explained, if only for the sake of psychology or understanding, what started as a good omen, or of goodwill, as is often the case, ends in a state of poor health . -Will. 14 A child knows at the age of six months, the nature of his mother and father, therefore, the child has to adapt, in order to survive, to smile when the child does not want to. 15 The child will cry when he knows that he can come out of that cry whatever he wants. 16 On another note, before we continue, evil knows evil, just as a fool knows the mind of a fool, just as a thief knows the heart of another thief. And let’s say, a king knows how long his people will take before they rebel, he knows what they need most, that will reassure them. With this in mind, I continue with the story.

Website design By BotEap.com19 Returning to the poor boy: was he ‘more’ a man than a woman? 20 Or vice versa? 21 This, of course, was gossip among the kingdom’s inhabitants. 22 Who will say? 23 I mean, does it really matter? And on the other hand, some things may never be known, and for the better, and less gossip. 24 The prince and princess never loved this boy, and that was the thorn, and the boy and the grandfather knew it, the boy in particular. 25 It was obvious; such things cannot be kept secret forever. 26 And the boy remembered when he was only three years old, one night, his mother had left the bedroom window open, waiting for the crows and the hawks and the ravens, and maybe even the great owls, to gouge out his eyes and gouge them out. The guts and they eat the child alive, little by little until his death, and low and behold, they profess that it was an accident. 27 But the boy was smart, that night he removed the gold plugs from his father’s nose and slept under his bed, so he was saved, and in the morning, he put the plugs back in his nose and he hurried to get into bed. With the windows open, this seemed to his parents an omen of some kind, that is, to leave him alone. 28 Well, the boy may have been a hermaphrodite, but he had a memory like an elephant. 29 At seven, the age of formal reason, this event came to haunt him (I’ll call it him now, because I really don’t like the name ‘it’, respectfully). 30 And to say the least, the boy was getting tired of looking so intently, at his mother and father, lest he stop and get poisoned, or pushed out of the tower wall, who can say what happens in a morbid mind.

Website design By BotEap.com31 It happened on the boy’s seventh birthday; sneaked into his father and mother’s bedroom, pulled the gold pegs out of the father’s noise, and it stunk the whole kingdom, to come to the kingdom, you might say, and no one could find the gold pegs, specially made with two closures. valves to be put deep into those big nostril-like holes. 32 Furthermore, he (gently) removed the iron nose that his grandfather had made for Ailepho, causing an even more deadly sticky and suffocating rampage. 33 Oh, it was terrible! everyone in the kingdom wore masks. 34 Day after day, they could not find those pegs, nor was the goldsmith around to make new ones; where he was, only the child knew, and he played dumb, he had paid him well, to take a trip to China or somewhere. , that same distance: again, who can say. 35 In any case, the persistence in these pestilential blasts of their noses was so disgusting, that they curled the eyelashes of men and beasts. 36 Well, what could the king do? 37 What started as a good omen, turned out to be bad, rebellion emanated throughout the kingdom; therefore, he had them both beheaded, for want of a crime, he called him, provoking rebellion. 38 And yes, ‘it’ took its rightful place as King and Queen of Oxas in due course.

Website design By BotEap.com39 And perhaps it is better to say it, in this case anyway: if one dares to overcome the resistance or the existence of another, it is engendered in hatred and chaos, if not in dark dreams and revenge. 40 As it is, in this case, where he liked it, he did not like it: the hunted becomes the hunter.

Website design By BotEap.comNo. 985 (1-1-2013)

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