The Admonishments of
Kherishdar
M.C.A. Hogarth
FALSE WITNESS
naimeqet [ neye meh KEHT ], (adjective) — legally
antiquated; used of customs, laws or traditions that are held over from
earlier times and are not strictly consonant with existing custom.
I should have known I'd be caught.
I'd never heard of anyone getting away with a lie this big. But even as
the Guardians took me from my shop, I nursed a fierce satisfaction. She'd
been an uppity Noble and I'd gotten her stripped and chained up in a
public square. They'd take me to our Regal, now, and I'd get a sharp
talking-to, but it was all worth it.
But then the Guardians
marched me out of our district.
"Where are we going?" I
asked. None of them answered.
I started sweating. I'd
committed a wrong, yes. And it was against my Noble, so it was for our
Regal to administer the Correction.
So where were we
going?
I asked again later
that day, when they put me in a coach. And again, when we stopped at a
roadside inn. After that, I stopped asking, but I was afraid.
We went through a Gate, all
the way to First World.
To the capital.
To the plaza in its
center... and there was a pedestal there, waiting for me. By the time the
Guardians hauled me onto it and tied me with my back exposed, I was too
stunned to object.
"This male has been found
guilty of false witness, a testimony which incurred a Correction on an
innocent," a voice said with the sharpness of a scourge snapping, shocking
my ears, the plaza, the witnesses who gathered. "For this crime, he will
be bled in wine."
I jerked my head up, eyes
wide.
And then the lash licked my
spine, stripping the skin with it, and I screamed.
I screamed.
Oh ancestors, I screamed, I
couldn't stop, and it went on and I couldn't bear it but I couldn't stop
it and the silence all around me made me hear my own flesh squelching and
the blood hitting the stone and and and
stop—oh, god, is
it ove—
Smell of wine, bright,
bright wine soaked with citrus peels, how amazing it smells, fruit and
cloves and crisp and
it's splashing on my
open back
When I come to, I am on a
pedestal. I think it is the same pedestal but... no, the wounds are
distant and my body is clothed though my memories are patchwork, stitched
with fever.
I am home now. I recognize
these faces. And they... they recognize me, but there is something in
their eyes when they look at me. No, not something there.
Something missing.
They no longer trust me.
They
know.
And she is there, too, the
Noble against whom I spoke my spiteful lie, watching me from the back of
the throng. I expect hate, but the grief I see instead... my eyes narrow,
spill.
What have I done? I tell her from the
prison of our silences.
What have I done to us both?
Discussion.
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© 2007, M. C. A. Hogarth