They were approaching the Transduction Barrier. Kristoph
was preparing for another tussle with the civil servant on duty today.
He was not prepared for the terse voice that ordered him to pass through
the Barrier and go to the co-ordinate transmitted to the TARDIS.
“What do you mean?” he demanded. “Who is this? And by
what authority do you interfere with my TARDIS?”
“Go to the co-ordinate voluntarily or your travel capsule will be
forcibly detained.”
“Kristoph?” Marion came to his side and he put a reassuring
arm around her shoulders.
“I don’t KNOW what’s going on,” he said. “But
we have no choice. The order came from the Castellan’s office. We
must do as ordered.”
He set the co-ordinate and prepared to pass through the
Transduction Barrier. Marion shivered with fear. The Castellan, she knew,
was the man in charge of the Chancellery Guard, the sort of cross between
an army and a police force that was responsible for the internal security
of Gallifrey. But what would the Chancellery Guard want with them?
“The co-ordinate is in the secure compound,” Kristoph said.
“I really don’t know…” He held her closer and
kissed her forehead. “Whatever it is,” he promised her. “I’ll
sort it out. Nothing for you to fret about.”
“I hope so,” Marion answered. “Just when I was actually
looking FORWARD to getting home.”
She called it HOME. Kristoph noted her use of that word. It cheered him
as he felt the TARDIS materialise at that secure co-ordinate. It was the
only thing that DID cheer him. The lifesigns monitor told him that there
were a number of people outside. He didn’t turn on the viewscreen
because he didn’t want to alarm Marion. He took her by the hand
and headed for the door.
As soon as they stepped out of the TARDIS they were flanked by Chancellery
Guards.
“What is the meaning of this?” Kristoph demanded in his most
authoritative tones. By what right are you detaining me?”
“Come with us now, and do not make any attempt to flee,” replied
one of the guards.
Marion screamed as Kristoph was pulled away from her and two men and a
woman in white clothes that looked medical took hold of her.
“You will come with us,” she was told.
“I will not,” she answered. “You have no right. I have
done nothing wrong. Nor has Kristoph. Where are they taking him? Let me
go.”
She struggled to free herself but to no avail. She screamed
again as the female produced what looked like a space age syringe. It
had no needle to penetrate the skin, but when it was applied to her arm
she felt the knock out drug course through her body.
Marion woke up in a bed in a white room that hurt her eyes
as she tried to focus. She tried to reach to shield her eyes and found
her arms were restrained. She turned her head and saw the female in white
standing next to the bed.
“Why am I here?” she demanded. “Why am I held like this?
Let me out.”
“You must remain here. There are tests which must be performed.”
“What tests?” Again ‘demand’ was the appropriate
word. Marion didn’t quite know herself where she got the strength
to make a ‘demand’. She was frightened and confused. She was
aware that her clothes had been changed. She was wearing a long gown made
of some sort of paper. “That had better have been YOU,” she
said. “If either of those MEN touched me… Who are you anyway?
And where am I?”
The woman repeated the same unhelpful explanation.
“I’m not submitting to ANY tests. I want to go home. Where
is Kristoph? What did they do with him?”
The door opened and she gasped with relief to see Lily and Thedera.
“Get those restraints off her now,” Thedera
demanded. “Where are her clothes?” The female nurse or guard,
whichever she was meant to be, flinched under Thedera’s steely expression.
Reluctantly she did as she was told. The restraints were released and
she opened a cupboard that fitted flush into the featureless wall, where
Marion’s clothes had been stored.
“She may dress for now, but she cannot leave the facility until
the tests have been completed.”
“We’ll see about THAT,” replied Lily as she helped Marion
to dress herself.
“WHAT tests,” Marion demanded. “Lily, what is going
on? Where is Kristoph? Where did they take him?”
“He is under arrest. He has been detained at the Chancellery Guard
compound. Aineytta has gone to try to see him. His father is at the Inquisitor’s
Chamber trying to get the charges dropped.”
“WHAT charges?” Marion asked. “What has Kristoph done?
What have I done? Is this… is it about Li? I thought all that was
sorted.”
“It’s not about him,” Lily assured her. “We need
not speak of that here in the presence of a stranger. Marion… A
complaint was made and somehow…”
“Kristoph has been charged under an ancient statute that nobody
has enforced for generations. The Purity Laws.”
“The….”
“The complainant said that the two of you were away for the weekend
without a chaperone and that ‘intimacy’ took place between
you.”
“THAT is a crime on Gallifrey? I thought… the whole thing
about staying with Lily until the Alliance. I thought it was a TRADITION,
not a law.”
“It is,” Thedera said. “At least it has been for about
a thousand years. But it USED to be a law. The adultery statute is still
in force. This part of it, it has not been used for so long. But it was
never abolished, only forgotten. And somebody has invoked it now and Kristoph
is…”
“But ‘intimacy’ hasn’t taken place. We have never….”
“THAT is what the TESTS will determine,” said the guard woman.
“WHAT!” Marion stared in disbelief. “They want to test
me to find out if Kristoph and I have…”
Lily and Thedera exchanged glances.
“Yes,” Lily said.
“NO!” Marion shouted angrily. “No, I will NOT. I will
NOT be violated in such a way. Nobody has a right to make me submit to
such a test. I will not… NO.”
“If you do not, then your fiancé will be publicly humiliated,”
said the guard. “He will be flogged in the city square as a deviant.
He will be imprisoned and his status as a privileged citizen of Gallifrey
will be stripped. He may even lose his right of inheritance. And you,
of course, will be expelled from Gallifrey as an alien with no right of
abode here.”
“So that’s what this is all about,” Marion cried out.
“This is Idell’s doing, somehow. This is about her son being
named as heir. This is what THIS is all about.”
“Oh, I don’t doubt it,” Thedera agreed. “But Marion…
if you refuse… Would you put Kristoph through all that to save yourself
a few minutes of discomfort? If you and he have truly never consummated
your relationship, then that’s all it takes. A few minutes. I agree
it is a disgrace. You should not be forced to submit. But for Kristoph’s
sake. Marion, you have no idea. To see him disgraced. Taken out into the
public square as a prisoner, stripped and flogged. His poor mother. The
shame would kill her.”
“Kristoph once told me he would die for me. And I believe he would.
He would NOT want me to submit to anything against my will. He would not
WANT me to do that. And I will not. I will NOT. I demand that somebody
listens to me. This world, this society sets such store by honour. I demand
that my WORD of honour is taken as proof. I will NOT be probed or scanned
or tested to determine that I am telling the truth.”
“Quite right, too,” said a voice and she looked around to
see Kristoph’s father, the Lord de Lœngbærrow at the door.
His second son, Remonte, was with him. Both looked grim and angry, but
Lord de Lœngbærrow held out his arms and smiled at her. “My
dear child,” he said as Marion ran to his embrace. “No, you
will not submit to any humiliation, and nor will my son. We are to have
a private audience before the High Inquisitor. Come, Marion. Lily, Thedera...”
The two women flanked Marion as they walked through the stark white corridors
of the hospital facility. Outside there was a car that sped off as soon
as they were inside. It was all a blur. Things seemed a little better
now she was not tied to a bed in a horrible room, but she was still very
frightened.
They reached the Citadel, the great hexagonal building with the impossibly
tall tower rising up from it where the Panopticon was housed as well as
the offices of all the most important officials of Gallifreyan government.
It was an imposing building at the best of times and right now Marion
looked on it in fear. She was going to attend an Audience with the High
Inquisitor. No matter how you looked at THAT, it was bad.
The waiting room they were brought to was a good deal
more pleasant and comfortable than the hospital at least. There were soft
furnishing and hot drinks and sandwiches available. Marion turned away
from the chairs and the food and drink though and stood at the long window
which looked down from a dizzy height from what must have been near the
top of the hexagon. She could see almost the whole of the city. With so
many tall buildings and spires and towers it was like looking at the Manhattan
skyline – though a decidedly ALIEN Manhattan.
That was another thing about this. She had begun to look
at Gallifrey as familiar and as home. She had begun to see the Capitol
as something normal. Now, because of another round of petty vindictiveness
it had become alien and hostile to her again.
“Marion, try some food and something to drink,” Lily coaxed
her. “You need it. It’s been hours and we don’t know
how long these proceedings might take.”
“I don’t want to eat,” she said. “I want.. I want
Kristoph here with me. I want this OVER. Lily, how CAN anyone be so mean?
Even Idell? Is she SO jealous she would hurt Kristoph this way?”
“I think this is beyond jealousy now,” Remonte said as he
came to her side. “Marion… I…”
“How many times do you have to apologise for her?” Marion
asked. “You shouldn’t have to. It’s not you’re
fault, Remonte. I don't hold you responsible for her.”
“I should be,” he answered. “If she can invoke millennia
old purity laws, perhaps I should invoke some of the archaic vows of Alliance
and make her subject to my will.”
Marion remembered some of those vows. She had read them in a book of Gallifreyan
rituals and thought they were horrendous. If they were invoked fully,
a Gallifreyan wife could not leave the family home without her husband
or a designated chaperone, could not speak without his leave, could not
have any money or own any property in her own name. She had to submit
to her husband in the bedroom whenever he demanded. There were even rules
about how she should dress.
Kristoph had laughed about it and said nobody actually enforced such vows.
They were simply a form of words that had never been changed over the
centuries. But the Alliance vows WERE legally binding and a man COULD
enforce them on his wife if he chose.
“No,” she said. “That’s not how we do things on
Earth - at least not the part of it I come from. I would not wish to live
that way. And I would not wish it on Idell. I just wish she would…
she would…”
Marion forgot what she was going to say because at that moment the door
opened. Aineytta rushed in and her husband rose to embrace her. Behind
her came two Chancellery guards, then two more with Kristoph between them.
Marion gasped in horror to see him shackled hand and foot like a criminal,
but she ran towards him, putting her hands around his neck and kissing
him. He responded to her as if they had been parted for days, not merely
a few hours. One of the guards tried to pull her away but she screamed
at them to leave her alone and she heard Remonte and his father both protesting
loudly.
“Enough,” called out a commanding voice from
the door. The guards stood to attention and Remonte and Lord de Lœngbærrow
both bowed their heads respectfully as the High Inquisitor herself stepped
into the waiting room. “Unfasten those shackles,” she commanded
of the guards. “This man is no criminal and he is no more a prisoner
than I am. Unfasten him and then go from this place and resume your proper
duties.”
The guards obeyed. The inquisitor looked at Kristoph as he enclosed his
freed arms around Marion and told him there would be a short delay before
the hearing. Kristoph said nothing but he managed to nod to her. Once
the guards and the Inquisitor were gone, he seemed to sag into Marion’s
arms, though. He was trembling with emotion. He almost seemed –
Marion was shocked to realise it – afraid.
“When they closed the cell door,” he whispered hoarsely. “I
felt… it was if I was a prisoner of war again. Only this time my
own people… my own people were doing it to me.”
“Come, my son,” said Aineytta. “Sit and rest. Eat something.”
“Yes,” he answered her, rallying himself. “Yes. Of course.
I AM hungry. Marion, my dear. Come and eat with me.”
Somebody had said something to him telepathically, Marion thought. Somebody
had told him to bear himself up for her sake, and to try to make her eat
with him. She still felt sick and scared, but with him at her side she
could be braver. She did manage to eat and drink something.
There was still a hearing to go through, though, and she still felt worried.
There WAS a law that they were deemed to have broken, and if they could
not prove they didn’t Kristoph would be punished. So would she.
Then what? When she was deported to Earth, after he had
been flogged and imprisoned, would he follow her? Would he become a renegade
like Li or…
Or would she never seen him again?
“Nobody will part us,” Kristoph assured her. “Nobody.”
And he held her hand so tightly that she could have believed him literally.
At last, a man in a uniform not unlike those of the Chancellery
Guard but blue and gold instead of scarlet and gold told them that the
Inquisition was ready. They all stood and followed him along a short corridor
to a door that said ‘Private Hearing’ above it.
It looked like a small courtroom. There was a high table and seat where
the Inquisitor would sit and a low one beneath it where a man who in any
costume, in any place, looked like a lawyer waited. Two sets of seats
were arranged opposite each other. On those farthest from the entrance
nobody was entirely surprised to see Idell de Lœngbærrow and a woman
who could only be her sister, Shion Malthis, the civil servant who operated
the Transduction Barrier. Her clothes were those of somebody who worked
in an office and her expression when she saw Marion and Kristoph matched
that of Idell.
Kristoph sat on the front row opposite them and Marion
sat beside him. Aineytta sat beside her and Kristoph’s father, Lord
de Lœngbærrow took the seat next to his son. Remonte, with
Lily and Thedera, sat behind them. There was a brief silence before the
usher called them to stand and acknowledge the Inquisitor. She stood at
her high seat and nodded to the assembled court before all but the lawyer
and Kristoph sat once more.
“The accused is charged with trespass against the
ancient and sanctified Laws of Purity in that he has committed lewd intercourse
with a woman who is not his lawful wife by the Bond of Alliance,”
intoned the lawyer and then the usher asked Kristoph how he pleaded.
“I have no need to plead,” he replied. “This is a hearing
not a trial. It is to determine whether a crime has been committed not
to condemn me or ruin the reputation of anyone. And I am not the ‘accused’
I am His Excellency, Chrístõ Mian de Lœngbærrow, Magister
of the Southern Continent, Ambassador for Gallifrey in the Seven Galaxies.”
The lawyer looked uncertain for a few moments before drawing himself up
and addressing the Inquisitor.
“Gallifreyan law is even handed. The defendant’s social position
is irrelevant.”
“That is so,” answered the Inquisitor curtly. “Continue
with the evidence you intend to bring before a full court should I consider
that it justifies such a step.”
“Madame Inquisitor,” continued the prosecutor. “The
evidence is circumstantial, but it is overwhelming. The defendant has
continuously flouted the law and the honour of Gallifrey by consorting
with the woman who, even now, before this court, he holds hands with.”
“Holding hands is not against any rule or law that I know of,”
said the Inquisitor. “And this is NOT a court, it is a hearing room.”
“Nevertheless, it is perfectly obvious that inappropriate behaviour
has been going on. And I should like to call my first witness…”
Shion Malthis was asked to stand and tell what she knew of the passage
through the Transduction Barrier when Kristoph had informed her that he
and Marion were travelling without a chaperone. Marion was astonished
that this piece of ‘gossip’ was being taken as evidence of
wrong doing.
“Three nights the defendant was offworld with this woman, without
a suitable chaperone. We may draw our own conclusions.”
“Well we might!” Remonte murmured under his breath. “With
minds like that.”
Shion was told to sit and Idell was called upon. Marion listened in astonishment
to a list of occasions when, according to her, she and Kristoph had been
engaged in unlawfully lewd behaviour. She mentioned their weekend at the
Lodge. She alluded to the fact that they had been living together on Earth
for more than a year. All of which could not be denied. But she also made
accusations which were complete fabrications, about Kristoph staying overnight
at Maison D’Alba, or of her going out to meet him at night for ‘assignations’.
“Let it be noted,” the lawyer added as Idell sat down, smiling
triumphantly. “That the woman in question refused to submit to a
purity test earlier this day. Such a refusal is surely proof of guilt.”
“It is NOTHING of the sort,” Marion burst out, unable to stay
quiet any longer. “It is proof that this whole affair is sordid
and disgusting and I won’t be bullied.”
“Madame, please do not shout,” said the Inquisitor “You
will be heard in time.”
Her time was next. Marion was called to stand. She did so shakily but
with as much dignity as she could muster, and she answered truthfully.
Yes, she and Kristoph had spent time at the lodge. No, he had never spent
the night at Maison D’Alba apart from the time when she was injured
and unconscious and he sat by her bedside. No, she had never met him in
a secret assignation. That was a lie.
“But you did sleep in the same bed as him for a year?”
“Yes,” Marion answered. “On Earth.”
“I think that speaks for itself,” said the lawyer.
“No, it does not,” Marion answered.
“No further questions,” said the lawyer. “You have condemned
yourself and the defendant out of your own mouth.”
“No,” Marion said. “I will be heard. You said before
that Gallifreyan justice is even-handed. So stop your innuendos and listen
to me. Yes, Kristoph and I slept together on Earth. Yes, we slept together
this weekend at the home of our friend, Hillary Bar Dey Greibella of Haollstrom
IV. She… he… is a diplomat. I am sure she would confirm that
nothing improper occurred.”
“Sleeping with a man you are not joined in Alliance with IS improper.”
“Sleeping is not a crime anywhere in the universe, I don’t
think,” Marion said. “We are not talking about sleeping. We
are talking about ‘lewd intercourse outside of marriage.’
And I have not done anything of the sort. Kristoph and I ARE married on
Earth. We had every right to… to do anything we liked there. But
we didn’t. We promised each other we would wait until we were married
on Gallifrey, too. We HAVE waited. And anyone who says otherwise is a
liar.”
“I’m sorry,” the Inquisitor interrupted. “Did
you say you were married on Earth?”
“Yes,” Marion answered. “Nearly a year ago now. In a
church. Legally and properly. We have a certificate. It is in my room
at Lady Lily’s house.”
“A marriage outside the jurisdiction of Gallifrey is not valid,”
said the prosecutor. “Only the Alliance of Unity as laid down in
our statutes is recognised.”
“That is not so,” the Inquisitor corrected him. “Gallifrey
recognises the law of other planets with which it has diplomatic or trade
ties. The Earth confederacy is one of our allies.”
“Not in the 20th century where SHE comes from,” replied the
prosecutor.
“The 20th century is a civilised period of Earth history with laws
we would fully recognise as binding. And if a marriage took place in that
time and place it is binding.”
The lawyer looked about to argue but the Inquisitor stood up and the usher
waved him to his seat.
“It is my judgement that there is no case to answer here. The prosecution
case was based on hearsay and gossip and did not take into account the
fact that the defendant IS in fact legally married to the woman he is
accused of committing lewdness with. There are no further proceedings
against the defendant.” The inquisitor paused just long enough before
raising her voice. “HOWEVER, there is a case, I think, for slander
and perjury. Idell De Lœngbærrow Malthis, stand up and remember this
is not a court, but a hearing. Nevertheless I am a High Inquisitor and
to lie to me is a serious matter.”
Idell stood. The Inquisitor looked at her.
“Did you KNOW when you made your accusations that Chrístõ
Mian de Lœngbærrow was married on Earth?”
Idell swallowed hard and looked around at Remonte. He would know if she
told a lie. He could expose her in front of them all.
“Yes, I did,” she answered in a quiet voice that nevertheless
carried well enough.
“Very well, you are found in contempt. You will be fined a sum that
the bailiff will fix at a later time. You are also found to have acted
dishonourably. There is no statutory punishment for that, unfortunately.”
She glanced at Marion before continuing. “I visited Earth once many
years ago. In what is called the “Tudor” period. They had
some barbaric methods of justice which fortunately were abandoned as they
became civilised. But they also had a way of dealing with wicked liars
and gossips. Those found guilty would be set in something called a pillory
for a term of hours. There was also something called a scold’s collar
which prevented gossips from speaking. If it were in my power I would
recommend a period of such punishment for you.”
Idell blushed with humiliation. Marion suppressed a vision of her in a
pillory or fitted with a scolds collar and tried not to look pleased by
Idell’s discomfort. Then, to her surprise, Remonte stood up.
“Madame Inquisitor, before you dismiss this gathering may I beg
a moment of your time in order make something official that has, until
now, been unofficial. I wish to formally set aside my wife, Idell De Lœngbærrow
Malthis. I acknowledge my financial responsibility towards her, but no
more than that. Furthermore, I set aside all rights of inheritance formerly
due to the children of our union. If you will acknowledge this, then it
is binding and irrevocable.”
“So acknowledged,” said the Inquisitor in a calm voice. Idell
looked anything but calm as the Usher showed her and her sister out of
the court. Remonte stood, looking inscrutable. Kristoph went to his side
and put his hand on his shoulder.
“It was going to happen anyway,” Remonte said. “She
only hastened the day.”
“I am sorry,” Kristoph told him.
“There is something you should know,” said the Inquisitor
and the two men looked at her. “Just now I have been delivered a
message from the Panopticon. The High Council has just this minute formally
abolished all of the Purity Laws except the one relating to adultery.
The vote was more than the two-thirds majority and the Lord High President
gave his seal to the abolition. They did not make it retrospective, so
if there HAD been evidence a trial would still have been necessary. But
it means that no such accusation can be laid in future.”
“Thank Rassilon!” said Kristoph. He reached
out his hand to Marion and she came to his side. “Madame Inquisitor,
I don’t think you have been formally introduced to my wife.”
“I had hoped I would be at your Alliance,” she replied. “That
will not be necessary now, you realise. It was, surely, only a formality
before?”
“Oh, no,” Marion said. “We will wait still. We must
have the Alliance. We have waited so long. Kristoph and I… we decided
we would wait until the Alliance. And it is almost all arranged.”
“Quite so,” Kristoph agreed, smiling warmly at her. “The
Alliance goes ahead. Meantime, should my wife and I take any weekends
offworld, or a trip to the Lodge, we shall be free to do so?”
“There is no law to prevent you doing so,” said the Inquisitor.
“And I think no gossip who would dare make any comment.”
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