The Council Chamber was a small room decorated like a vast hall. There were little frescoes in the oddest of corners, between floral trim of unabashed gilt. One particularly puzzling illustration, immediately to the left of the Chair’s head, was of a terrifyingly un-childlike infant Iesus, staring directly at the witness box with an oddly pleased expression. As though, perhaps, infant Iesus was pleased that this Eruvist was being subjected to this indignity. A quiet whispering pervaded the chamber, the source of which was impossible to discern. It was as though the walls themselves had gossiping mouths.
“Your Majesty, do you swear to tell the truth, the whole of the truth, and nothing that is not truth?” the chair intoned, his voice hardly muffled by the room’s heavy air.
“I do. In the name of God, I swear it.” his Majesty, Peté Tar-Ilium, first of his name, gruffly replied. Closing his mouth, it returned to a pained scowl.
“Your Majesty,” the chair paused, a trace of a smirk on his face, “Did you hire Chostamir Dalonmabar to murder Rothis Vrotrith?”
The Empereur stared stolidly in the same direction he had since he had sat down in the witness box. For three long seconds he was silent, then, he quietly said,“I did not hire Chostamir Dalonmabar.” Tar-Ilium continued, “I asked him to execute Rothis Vrotrith.”
The chamber was enveloped in a sudden, brief silence. Then, before most of the Council had time to react, Councillor Avon Vrotrith cried “Murderer!” A clamour picked up then, with mingling voices all about. “God’s name..” one could make out, “who does he,” “Outlander maniac,” “The man insane?”
“Order!” the chair barked, slamming his golden gavel against his desk, “Silence!” The roaring reduced in volume to a quiet stream of whispering. “Whatever do you mean?” the chair asked. After a moment, he added, “Your Majesty?”
A frowning Peté responded, “Rothis Vrotrith is a traitor to this Empire. He sold his House’s votes on the Schooling Bill for money from the Co-operative Commonwealth.” Shouting interrupted the witness again, as Avon shouted “LIES!!” followed by a dozen more raised voices, cacophanously shouting at one another. Ignoring the hubbub, Peté continued, difficult as his voice was to make out, “In this folder I have all one needs to see it, bank transfer records, an interview transcription, and a dossier on the CCC agent who arranged it.” Peté raised a thick manila folder into the air demonstratively.
“Your Majesty!” the chair interjected “But you can’t just do that, you’re not a Court, that’s illegal!” he spluttered.
“If the Empereur does it, it’s not illegal.” Peté angrily rejoined.