The Past…Utropollus MajorTime passed quickly as Venn Macbeth faded in and out of consciousness. A concussion of sorts left him drifting through the sands of time and space until he came to, in hospital scrubs, on a bed in a rather barren room. “Hello?” He said. The room was suitable for three people, but contained only him; the door was shut. “Hello?” He said again, this time beginning to shoot.
When he attempted to move his arms, he found that they were strapped down. When he attempted to sit up, he found that the rest of him was also strapped down. For lack of any explanation or anything else to do, he fought against them, pulling and straining uselessly against an advanced fabric well beyond any human being’s power to tear. “Anyone?”
Before he could say more, a legion of nurses and armed guards stormed into the room. A syringe was shoved into his arm, and before he knew it, he was back into the inky blackness of timeless unconsciousness.
* * * * *
He came to on a transport of some sort, the familiar thrum of repulsorlift engines buzzing away underneath the dark durasteel walls of the claustrophobic speeder. Chained back once again, still in drab hospital scrubs, Macbeth put his head back and attempting to collect his thoughts. It didn’t come easy; the memories in his head were fragmented, shattered by a blow he scarcely remembered. Vaguely he recalled the chain of events that had led him there, chained together by the irrepressible whim of fate, dragging him along as if on a leash. The visit of Elha to his office; the investigation into M’krah’s shady financial dealings; the warnings of Shevil and Torkle; the betrayal of Alisha.
Slowly the pieces of the puzzle swam together in his mind, coalescing to form a picture that led him irrevocably to that dank transport, but one that still lacked a vital piece. Why was he there? He understood what had drawn the wrath of M’krah’s various cronies, what had driven the infamous Shevil and Torkle to issue their warning, what had forced his wife out of their home. These were events connected by the obvious; by the prodding of Macbeth’s conscience. He had never considered whether or not to help Elha, or to continue when the aforementioned duo had arrived in his office demanding his desistence.
Nor had it ever occurred to him not to help Relina. The voice in the back of his head, the one which told him he would not sleep tomorrow or the next night were he to watch and do nothing, was forever speaking, a mile a minute. And so he had done all of those things, all of those things which were right. But now he found himself in a transport, restrained and treated like a criminal. Perhaps he was a killer – but had that not been only rightful retribution for the horrible crimes visited upon Relina? How now did he find himself held for doing justice?
The transport, after a time, ground to a slow halt, settling to the ground with a clank. The doors were thrown open, revealing the new night. “Venn Macbeth, come with us,” were the only words spoken with a menacing authority by one of the two UtroPol officers, authority which prompted Macbeth to stand quickly and exit out the rear of the speeder. He found himself in a place he had come to know with some intimacy as a district attorney; the receiving parking flat of the prisoner transport of the Plato District Jail.
Led into the drab reception hall of the jail, the front desk occupied by a tired-looking UtroPol officer. “Venn Macbeth, prisoner transfer from the Plato General Hospital, now fit for custody,” announced one of his two transporters. “To be held on charges of assault and homicide.”
The announcement hit Macbeth like a freight train, leaving him stunned and in disbelief as the man at the reception desk asked him some sort of question. The implications were obvious. Conspiracy theories flowed through his mind like a raging river, blasting all other thoughts aside.
“I asked you whether you would like to see your lawyer now,” the man asked impatiently. Numbly, Macbeth nodded his head and answered in the affirmative. As he was led away, he slowly emerged from his daze.
“I didn’t kill anyone,” he croaked. “I didn’t
murder anyone.”
“Right,” one of his two escorts muttered, distinctly disinterested. “Just walk, and keep your mouth shut.”
Through a twisting maze of hallways, Macbeth found himself in a room separated in the middle by a pane of transparisteel. Plunked down into the chair, he was informed he had some indeterminate time limit that he didn’t even bother to listen to. He hadn’t thought to ask who his lawyer was, but now that he saw he wished he had; before him in a very modern blue suit sat Shevil, gravely staring back at him. Through the tinny commlink he heard the lawyer greet him.
They stared at each other for a long time, neither sure of what to say, the dynamic of their relationship drastically altered. Finally, Macbeth was the one who broke the silence. “Why am I here?”
Shevil blinked. “You don’t know?”
Macbeth shrugged. “I know what I did. I know that people save lives aren’t usually herded around like dangerous criminals.”
Shevil shook his head sadly, sighing deeply several times, muttering “oh my,” under his breath. “Then I assume that you didn’t rape her?”
“
Rape her?” Macbeth nearly spat. “I
killed the man who was raping her, with my own two hands.”
“I’m fully aware you killed him.” Shevil bit his lip. “You’re absolutely certain?”
“
You can fucking ask her yourself!”
“They didn’t tell you?” He asked. “I thought you knew. You were there…”
“Knew what?”
Shevil glossed over the question, surveying his client with pitying eyes. “Do you know who that man you killed was, Venn?”
“I don’t care who he was!”
“You should,” Shevil replied. “You’re being held for a
double murder; Relina Kvel is dead, Macbeth. She died in that alleyway, alongside the man you say raped her. That man was Shard M’krah, the son of Tallon, and heir to the M’krah family fortune. And you’re being held for both of their murders, and the Kvel girl’s rape.”
Macbeth sat; stunned yet again as the hole he had dug for himself grew deeper still. He thought back to his time in the alley; he remembered Relina’s breathing stopping. “How can that be? I saved her. This doesn’t make any sense. Hasn’t UtroPol even
looked at the crime scene? Do you know what he did to her? It shouldn’t be very hard to figure out what happened. You’re accusing the knight in shining armor of killing the damsel.”
“I’m not accusing anyone, Macbeth. I’m your lawyer, and we’re on the same side. But it’s going to be very hard for me to represent you if you won’t be entirely truthful with me. The police found your prints all over that crime scene, all over her. They found the…
genetic evidence, as well. This case is open and shut unless you can give me something.”
“They tampered with the crime scene. M’krah has bought UtroPol; he’s had a hand in their operation for years, it wouldn’t be hard. He’s buying my conviction.”
“That’s a stretch. Relina Kvel and Shard M’krah have even been romantically connected. You dropped the case against him, remember? Why would he do this?”
“That’s bullsh
it. Why would Relina be interested in the son of her husband’s killer?”
“But you dropped the case, didn’t you?”
Macbeth hesitated. “No, I didn’t.”
Shevil closed his eyes, opening them to reveal a new iciness. “I told you to drop it.”
“And you thought I would?”
Shevil shook his head. “If what you’re saying is right, you’ve brought this on yourself. And I don’t even know how to begin going about proving it.”
“What in the fu
ck are you talking about? Because I wanted justice done to M’krah, I deserve this? Relina deserved this?”
Shevil shrugged.
“Are you going to let some juvenile grudge dictate how you defend me?”
The guards returned through the durasteel door. “Your time is up.”
* * * * *
One Week LaterMacbeth didn’t feel any better in his own clothes on the day of the arraignment. That fateful day had come abruptly, the space between flying by in a haze of insomnia and arguments with Shevil, none of which served to comfort him. And so as he came before the judge feeling distinctly unprepared, the feeling of helplessness that threatened to consume him was greater than ever.
“Venn Stoudius Macbeth, you are brought before the High Court of Utropollus by the sovereign Government of Her People as a criminal against them and against the state. You are hereby charged with one count of aggravated sexual assault with intent to maim, one count of brutal sadism, and two counts of murder in the first degree. How do you plead against these charges?”
Shevil looked pleadingly at his client. It had been the elder lawyer’s contention that only by pleading guilty could he escape spending the rest of his life in a maximum security prison; that, with an airtight case against him, his only hope of ever seeing the light of day again was to confess to what he had not done.
The prosecution attorneys hired by the M’krah families were highly paid and professional, he was told, aided by an infinite well of financial support and an army of legal aides. A legal army, whose only goal was the complete destruction of one Venn Macbeth. All for crimes he had not committed; all for acts of selflessness and justice.
And though the answer did not come easily, it was not uncertain when it came. “Not guilty, your honor.”