Even though the Lord High President himself had
called for the official Inquiry into seditious teaching at the Arcalian
Academy, he had no need to actually oversee that Inquiry. He could swear
in any five High Councillors to sit upon the panel and report to him their
findings.
It surprised nobody, however, when President de Lœngbærrow announced
his intention to head the panel himself. Lord Dúccesci, as the
most senior member of the Arcalian Chapter on the High Council was his
vice-chairman. The Premier Cardinal who was Cerulian, Lord Arun, a Patrexean
and Lord Cronuos of the lesser known Dromeian Chapter, made up the quorum.
All of them were known as men of honour and of wisdom. No man of Gallifrey,
Oldblood or Newblood, held that in doubt.
Whether they would uncover the truth behind the cult of Arcalia was another
matter. There were some who thought the inquiry was a high profile waste
of time. They believed it was a publicity stunt that merely paid lip service
to the eradication of corruption within the educational establishments
of Gallifrey. There were others who doubted that there was any corruption
to uncover. They put the attempted assassination of the president down
to youthful over-ambition and rejected the possibility that any member
of the Arcalian faculty could have influenced their young minds.
The five men who arrived at the Arcalian Academy on the first day of Mí,
knew that neither was true. The corruption existed and they were pledged
to burn it, root and branch, out of Proud Arcalia’s heart.
The Presidential Inquisition was installed in the examination hall. High
above their heads was a domed roof with the seal of Arcalia inlaid in
gold. The floor was black obsidian with the same seal, again in gold.
The walls were inlaid with gold, too, but they were hidden behind heavy
black velvet drapes that hung from ceiling to floor. The table and high
backed chairs set out for the Inquiry were black lacquered wood that was
in keeping with the décor.
The chair set before the table for the witnesses was not in keeping with
the décor. It was made of dull metal with a leather seat and back.
The arms of the chair had special panels for the witness’s hands
and there was a headpiece that was fitted once he or she was seated. It
was not a chair that was made for anyone to relax in, and even if it had
been merely a chair, sitting in it and facing those five stern faced men
in their black and silver robes and skullcaps would have been daunting
enough.
But the students who came, one at a time, to sit in that chair, had more
than just those five faces to daunt them. They also had to deal with the
fact that the chair, with the headpiece and hand panels, was a tool of
interrogation. It was painless, it is true. It was meant for questioning
witnesses, not suspects, and it was meant to be a way of corroborating
their evidence. But it was a frightening experience, all the same, for
the sophomore boy who had the misfortune of being the first of the witnesses
to be called on the first day of the Inquiry.
“Please state your name loud and clearly,” Lord Dúccesci
said. Then your age and your mother’s given name, just to establish
the psychic connection with the machine.”
“I am Lucien Mordant,” the boy said after swallowing twice
and managing to speak above a squeak. “I am one hundred and thirty-two.
My mother’s name is Leeranne.”
As he spoke, a hologram appeared in the air above his head. It was a formless
mass, yet, with a ribbon of green light running through it. But that was
enough to tell the inquisitors that the boy had spoken truthfully on those
three questions. The truth reader was calibrated correctly.
“Lucien,” Lord Arun said to him in a calm, reassuring tone.
“You are a proud Gallifreyan, are you not?”
“Yes, sir,” he answered.
“And equally proud to be an Arcalian?”
“Not equal, sir,” Lucien replied. “Arcalia is my school.
I am on the sophomore fencing team. When we beat Prydonia last term, I
was proud of that. But Gallifrey is my world. I owe her my allegiance
before all else... even... even my own House.“
Again the line was green. The boy’s profession of loyalty was sincere.
“You have admitted to being a part of the student group calling
themselves Sons of Arcalia....” Kristoph made it a statement rather
than a question. The boys had all been required to make a written testimony.
Those who admitted to involvement in the seditious group were the first
to come before the Inquiry.
“Yes,” Lucien answered.
“Why?”
“Because... Because my friends were in it. Riven Maxic, Gynnell
Dúccesci... I wanted to be like them. But I wasn’t... I didn’t
really understand it all. I’m not really interested in politics.
I’m majoring in temporal physics. I want to do research on the Kasterborus
station. Politics baffles me most of the time. But my friends….
I went to the meetings with them and listened, tried to take it all in.
What the teacher was saying made sense at the time. He made it seem as
if we really had to do something to stop the degeneration of our society
into a... a... totalitarian dictatorship. I nearly felt as if I understood
it. But....”
The inquisitors listened to his words. But they also watched the hologram
above his head. The green line never once changed its shade. Lucien was
telling the truth. But images appeared in the air along with it, and those
images, though sometimes vague and shadowy, told a clearer picture of
what the boys had been doing than the young science major could express
in his words.
The images showed one of their gatherings. Nearly fifty of the students
were in one of the meditation rooms of the Arcalian Academy, surrounded
by symbols of calm and tranquillity. But they were far from calm or tranquil.
They were waiting for somebody to come among them who had something to
say to them. They formed a ring, seated on the floor, and took up a chant.
They repeated a name over and over again – the name of their leader,
their teacher.
“That’s no use,” Lord Arun said, expressing the disappointment
of all the inquisitors. “Tau Rho isn’t his real name. It’s
just one of those names the students use. I was Upsilon Mu when I was
a boy.”
“This isn’t a boy they’re calling for,” Lord Cronuos
pointed out. “Look...”
Lucien was still describing in halting words what he remembered from one
of the meetings while his memory of it was concentrated by the truth machine
and projected as a hologram. The students all watched in admiration as
a figure materialised in the middle of the ring – a man dressed
in black robes with the Seal of Arcalia across the front. He was also
wearing a mask. It was silver, with a man’s features moulded onto
it, but almost certainly not the features that lay beneath the mask.
“No good, unless we can see his face,” the Premier Cardinal
said. “Lucien, did this man... Tau Rho... did he ever reveal himself
to you?”
“No, never,” Lucien answered. “But he spoke to us in
a soft voice... not hard and demanding like so many of the Masters. He
asked nothing of us but loyalty. It was... I felt as if I liked him...
as if I wanted to do his bidding. But... he had no use for a science major.
I was not asked to be one of the core.”
“You may think yourself fortunate in that,” Lord Dúccesci
told him. “That ‘core’ group stand disgraced before
all Gallifrey. The rest of you merely suffered loss of extra curricular
privileges.”
“Yes, sir,” Lucien said. He bowed his head as if in shame.
“Sirs... may I ask... May I beg you…. Those extra curricular
activities include access to the observatory outside of class time. I
have told you all I know about Tau Rho. Might I be allowed....”
“The reward for telling the truth about wrong-doing is the cleansing
of your own conscience,” Kristoph said. “The punishment must
continue, at least until the end of term. If you continue to exhibit good
behaviour, I am given to understand that your Masters may restore your
privileges in the autumn. But it is entirely up to them. Even the Lord
High President has precious little influence over the Educators of our
world.”
“You may go, boy,” Lord Dúccesci added. “Thank
you for your honest testimony. It will be noted.”
Lord Arun helped him to remove the headpiece. The boy walked quickly across
the obsidian floor, his footsteps echoing in the silence. He was obviously
resisting the urge to run.
The next boy was called. His name was Milan Gallipo, son of a Newblood
Lord who’s deftness in the field of intergalactic finance had made
him wealthy. His son shared his passion for economics, and just like Lucien
whose thoughts were for pure science, he had become a ‘Son of Arcalia’
only because it was hard enough for an economics student to make friends
and he wanted to fit in with the crowd. He found Tau Rho’s teaching
compelling, but he didn’t fall under his influence completely.
And Tau Rho didn’t need an economist. Young Gallipo was left out
of the Core. Again, as Lord Dúccesci pointed out, that was why
he was still an Arcalian, studying within these peaceful and hallowed
walls, not in the Red Desert with those who had so disgraced themselves
by their actions.
They saw the depositions of four more young Arcalians before taking stock
of the evidence they had gathered so far.
“Of course, there is nothing wondrous about the way he appears among
them,” Lord Arun pointed out. “A simple teleport disc would
do it.”
“Not so simple,” Dúccesci argued. “That is the
Great Meditation Hall of Arcalia. It is shielded against both electronic
and telepathic influences from without in order to ensure uninterrupted
meditations. It almost has the aura of a Zero Room. No ‘simple’
teleport disc would get him into the Hall. He must have a very sophisticated
teleport device. But I agree that is no great wonder. We are Time Lords.
Such things are mere trinkets to us, and easily enough obtained. It’s
not as if he used a Time Ring that would have to be registered with the
Castellan, or a TARDIS which are even more closely monitored by the authorities.
Teleport discs are not registered. Anyone could use one. He need not even
be an Arcalian. He might be teleporting in from any location within the
Capitol or beyond.”
“Don’t grasp at straws, Dúccesci,” Lord Arun
told him. “The chances are it IS an Arcalian. Why else use boys
from that Academy? You are here to judge impartially, remember, not to
seek to excuse your Chapter from High Treason.”
“I do not seek to do any such thing,” Dúccesci protested.
“I am merely pointing out that the conspiracy may well go beyond
the Academy. If Tau Rho is identified as a master of these Halls, I shall
be dismayed, as will all Arcalians. But I shall be glad to see such filth
purged from our midst if it is so. If it is not, then it will be necessary
to cast the scope of this Inquiry wider.”
“None of the boys saw his face. He wore that mask all the time.”
Lord Cronuos moved onto the other point of interest to them all. “A
clever conceit. Even the boys he brought closest into his confidence did
not know his true face.”
“That mask,” Kristoph said. “It fits perfectly. That
means it has been specially made, moulded to his own features. It would
take a master silversmith to do that. Even on Gallifrey only a few men
would be so skilled. That’s work for the Castellan and his men,
seeking out the man who took that commission. With the will of Rassilon,
an honest silversmith may have the information we need.”
“It is subtle stuff, even so,” the Premier Cardinal said.
“Working upon the minds of our children... sowing seeds of dissension
that might lay dormant for years... for decades...centuries... until those
boys are men in strategic positions within our government.”
“But he showed his hand early,” Kristoph pointed out. “By
compelling the Dúccesci boy to attack me, the plot unravelled.”
“The plot unravelled because you survived,” Malika Dúccesci
told him. He had shuddered when Kristoph drew attention to the fact that
it was his own younger brother who had committed that terrible act of
treason. “If you had died... with the government in disarray, Gynnell
would have become the lone scapegoat... perhaps executed, or committed
to Shada... without anyone considering who was behind the plot. And this
Tau Rho... whoever he is... could have continued to brainwash more boys
and turn them to tools of his corruption.”
“For that reason among others we may be thankful that the plot did
not succeed,” The Premier Cardinal said. “But what now? Do
we continue to interview these boys? Is there more to be learnt from their
testimony? Will they not simply corroborate each other?”
“We continue,” Kristoph said. “It is weary work. But
we must try. It is possible one of them learnt something more than the
others learnt – some clue to Tau Rho’s true identity...”
“We can only hope,” Lord Dúccesci agreed. He nodded
to the Presidential guard who waited to call the next Arcalian sophomore
to be questioned by the Inquiry. They saw ever more testimony about the
charismatic figure who had persuaded so many youths to stray from their
first loyalty to Gallifrey and the Lord High President of the High Council.
Most of the boys were hesitant and vague in their oral statements, but
that didn’t matter. The truth machine probed their memories of the
events being recalled and provided a clear record of what had taken place.
“You found his words inspiring?” Lord Dúccesci asked
a boy called Jerell Bourek who faced the five inquisitors late in the
afternoon.
“I did,” the boy admitted.
“What was it that so impressed you?”
“I... don’t know,” he said after a pause. “I...
can’t remember... only that... what he said was uplifting and inspiring...
and... like nothing I ever heard before. It made me want to... to….”
He bowed his head before the Lord High President himself. “My Lord...
I am sorry. I was weak and foolish. I know that now. I was led astray
by his words.”
“Yes, you were,” Kristoph replied. “But you didn’t
act upon those words. Even on Gallifrey we don’t punish anyone for
what they think, and rarely for what they say. It is deeds that are judged.
What stopped you from joining the group who were prepared to follow Tau
Rho into seditious actions?”
“He didn’t want me,” Jerell answered. “I asked
to be one of the core, but he said my mind was weak. He said it was full
of inconsequential matters... like the multidimensional chess championships.”
“You are good at multidimensional chess?” Lord Arun asked
him.
“Yes, my Lord,” the boy replied. “But I was suspended
from the Arcalian inter-Academy team when my involvement with Tau Rho
was discovered.”
“That is a punishment you must bear until it is lifted,” Kristoph
told him. “But you may bear this much in mind, young man. What Tao
Rho saw as a weakness was nothing of the sort. He was unable to fully
control you because your passion for multi-dimensional chess was stronger
than his brain-washing. In other words, your hobby may have saved you
from damnation.”
That had been the case with all of the boys who had not been admitted
to the inner core. An overriding interest in chess, in science, botany,
rock-climbing, had somehow been a shield against the baleful influence
Tao Rho had over the likes of Gynnell Dúccesci who had been persuaded
to assassinate the Lord High President, or Rivan Maxic who had been so
enthusiastic a spokesman for the cult. They were young men whose ambitions
lay in the political arena, and were somehow in tune with Tao Rho’s
own plans.
How easy it was to misuse young minds. And how easily that misuse had
been hidden within the walls of the Academy. It was a wake up call for
them all. They could take nothing for granted about their society.
By the time the inquiry adjourned on its first day the only thing they
knew for sure was that Tau Rho was a very real threat to the peace and
stability of Gallifrey. Who he truly was, and what his real motive for
his sedition might be, they were still far from discovering.
“Are you staying in the Capitol tonight?” Lord Dúccesci
asked Kristoph as they prepared to leave the Arcalian Examination Hall.
They were the last. The other three Inquisitors had already left for their
homes. “My wife is at our town house. She would be glad to entertain
you at dinner.”
“That is a tempting offer,” Kristoph answered. “But
I promised Marion I would be home for a quiet dinner tonight. I look forward
to the peace of my demesne on the southern continent and a few hours without
worrying about conspiracies.”
“I understand,” Lord Dúccesci told him. “The
company of my lady will be a balm to my soul, too.”
Then both men were distracted from domestic thoughts. They looked towards
the far wall of the magnificent hall. The velvet drapes were disturbed
by a sudden displacement of air, and a figure materialised. He was dressed
in black and silver, with a mask of silver covering his face. He stared
back at the two startled men through the eye-slits and laughed a cold,
hollow laugh that sounded all the more sinister for being heard through
the mouth piece of a silver face mask.
“Guards!” Kristoph cried out. He himself crossed the floor
in an eyeblink. The men who had guarded the Hall through the day were
close behind him. But they were not swift enough. The air shimmered and
the figure vanished again.
Kristoph swore in Low Gallifreyan and pulled his sonic screwdriver from
his robe. It confirmed the presence of decaying ion particle residue.
It was a teleportation of a physical body, not just some kind of hologram
projection. Tau Rho had briefly entered the room where the presidential
inquisition were sitting.
“Blatant!” the Premier Cardinal declared. “He is taunting
us.”
“That he is,” Kristoph responded. “Tomorrow, we begin
our inquiry with a thorough investigation of how a teleportation device
could penetrate the examination hall of the Arcalian Academy. Tonight...
Dúccesci, I suggest that you and your lady wife come and have dinner
with Marion and I and enjoy the tranquillity of the southern continent.
My house is overrun by Presidential Guards who will ensure our safety.
The Castellan can provide security for the other three members of our
quorum.”
“You think there is need?”
“Let us not take any chances,” Kristoph replied. “Until
this man is brought to justice, we must all be vigilant.”
Dúccesci nodded his assent to the President’s suggestion.
“He WILL be brought to justice,” Kristoph added reassuringly.
“The Arcalian Chapter will be rid of his influence. Those boys we
have seen today will yet sit in this room for their final examinations
before becoming young Time Lords and loyal citizens of Gallifrey. I promise
you that, Malika. On my Oldblood honour.”
“I believe you, sir,” Dúccesci replied gratefully.
“Thank you.”
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