The Admonishments of
Kherishdar
M.C.A. Hogarth
SOCIOPATHY
fol [ fohl ], (adjective) — imperfect
The Ai-Naidar are insufferably
smug. You know,
aunera. You've sat through their self-righteous
sermonizing on the perfection of their society, their worlds, their very
selves. They're so sure of their own rectitude that even when presented
with the evidence of their failures they can't believe them. I had to make
three attempts at destroying the world Gate before they could conceive of
the notion that I was
trying to blow it up.
As you will guess, they gave
me to Shame. They fully expected him to reform me. But I have never been
interested in forgiveness. I don't want to be healed, because I am not
broken. All my life, my parents, my teachers, my elders, they have
tried to mold me. But I will not be molded. I
am. And so I laughed
as Shame tried everything. Pain. Guilt. Reminders of duties I never
accepted. When none of them worked, his attempts to Correct became
attempts to break. He sent me to the Bleak. He starved me of food,
company, light, sleep. He tried to work me to shattering. He wanted me to
submit.
No. Not me. Never.
I laughed when I recognized the
frustration he hid behind inscrutable eyes. I am laughing now as the
Guardians lead me up the ramp to the executioner's Vines, where he's
waiting with the Emperor's sword. I did not succeed in destroying the
Gate, that's true. Instead, I will take this victory: I will destroy a
man. I will be his great failure, the crack in his confidence. I will die
as Shame's shame, publicly, bloodily, without recourse.
And I will take him with me, and
break him just as he tried to break me.
I never fit into Kherishdar. I hated
this world that had a place for me, an inescapable place. I wanted to
force it open, to compel it to
breathe... and barring that, to
unmake it.
It is better to die free than to
kneel.
I know you understand,
aunera.
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© 2007, M. C. A. Hogarth