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Back to Chapter 31
Chapter 32 - The witness
The following Monday, over the furious objections of their defense
attorneys, the trial of Mega-Town Associates Executives Richard Moore,
Joe Guerra, and Jeff �Cutter� Stern got underway. The Chief Justice of
the Danubian Supreme Court announced that, no matter what the defense
attorneys wanted, the trial would begin, because keeping the lower-level
mercenaries confined much longer in their current condition was not
acceptable.
Before the trial, the judge issued a stern warning to the defense
attorneys that, in Upper Danubia, a defense counsel was not permitted to
commit any act in court with the intention of deceiving the judge.
Evidence could be challenged only if its veracity could be called into
question, and the same went for witnesses. There was no such thing as a
motion to delay due to technicalities. Also, the sole purpose of a trial
was to determine guilt or innocence of the defendants. The judge had a
final statement to the lawyers:
�I want you to understand we are conducting this proceeding to find out
the truth about your clients. You will make no attempt to conceal that
truth or construe the facts to allege untrue events or motives. Perhaps
such things are acceptable in the courts of your country, but they are
not acceptable to the government of the Grand Duchy of Upper Danubia. If
I catch you making any effort to deceive me, I will prosecute you for
perjury, which in the Duchy carries a 20-year sentence as a convicted
criminal. We have 549 cases to resolve, and no one in this country has
time to listen to any deception.�
Of course, the judge�s instructions to the trial lawyers neutralized
many tactics they would have used in other countries. There would be no
trial delays, no omitting of evidence unless it was proven to be false,
and above all, no efforts to deceive the people running the proceedings.
A trial that in other countries might have lasted for months would be
resolved in Danube City within a few days.
The government�s plan was to prosecute the Mega-Town Executives first
and make and example out of them. To legal experts following the trial,
the strategy seemed rather odd, given that the normal strategy was to
prosecute lower-level members of the conspiracy first, get them to
testify, and then work up to collecting evidence against the organizers.
However, the participation of Jason Schmidt removed the need to conduct
the trial in the normal manner. The documents Jason provided the
Danubian government, plus his father�s recorded conversations to someone
he called �Cutter� on the phone, provided the evidence of both their
actions and their motives needed to convict the Mega-Town executives of
several serious charges. These included attempted murder, conspiracy to
commit murder, conspiracy to wage war against the Grand Duchy of Upper
Danubia, insurrection (because they were planning to be in Upper Danubia
during the coup), and the illegal importing of weapons and explosives
into the Duchy.
The conversations and documents from Jason�s three CD�s and six cassette
tapes would be the main part of the case the prosecutor was presenting
against the CEO�s. Jason�s role in the trial would be to verify that he
was the source of the evidence and explain how and when the CD�s and
cassette tapes were created. Cecilia would verify that she placed Jason
on contact with Cynthia Lee, who in turn would verify that she was the
person who transported the evidence to Upper Danubia and helped
translate the contents. Vladim Dukov and several officers from the
Danubian Secret Police would describe how they reviewed the information
and used it to intercept the coup�s participants. Finally, the officers
arresting the CEO�s would present additional evidence seized from them
that matched the information Jason had provided.
Under Danubian law, the evidence was enough to convict �Cutter� Stern
and Richard Moore of capital offenses. Guerra�s chances in court were
much better, because the direct evidence against him was not nearly as
strong. However, upon being convicted �Cutter� and Moore would be
offered a choice, either face the firing squad or testify against Guerra
and get life terms. Assuming that Stern and Moore were not particularly
courageous men (which they weren�t), the hope was they would provide
information about the coup not included in Jason�s documents to convict
Guerra, and in doing so save themselves.
The next phase would be to resolve the bulk of the cases of the
lower-level participants in the coup. Dukov already had promised to
extradite the nearly 300 foreign participants to their home countries,
but they had not been told about that arrangement and were terrified.
Many of them were providing valuable information that would be used to
prosecute the field commanders and coup organizers, whose trials would
take place immediately after the Mega-Town convictions.
The Danubian government hoped that the easy conviction of the top-level
conspirators in the case would scare everyone else involved into
cooperating. The message would be very clear: we don�t need to make any
deals with you, because, as you can see, we even had the evidence we
needed to convict your bosses. We got them, and now we�ll get you. Tell
us what you know about the coup, and maybe we�ll be lenient.
----------
Jason Schmidt, Cecilia Sanchez, and Cynthia Lee, accompanied by their
police escort, left the hotel and walked past the Old City Wall to get
to the Central Courthouse. It was a beautiful May morning, a harbinger
of plenty of nice hot summer days the three college students could
expect to enjoy in that peaceful city. At that moment the world seemed
to open up to them, as each step towards the courthouse was a step
closer to fulfilling a very important part of their Path in Life.
For the first time in several years, Jason felt completely at peace with
himself. Today was the day he would make the final break with his
corrupted past. The wall in his soul, the barrier that separated the
person who he had been from the one he would become, already was in
place. Once he left the courtroom in the afternoon, that wall would be
complete. He could never go back to who he had been just a few weeks
before.
The three college students and their police escort made their way past
the security cordons and tanks guarding the Central Courthouse. The two
cops seemed relieved once they actually made it into the building,
because their duty to safely deliver their witnesses was completed.
Kimberly Lee and Vladik Dukov approached the three Americans and led
them into the main trial chamber. Kim took them directly to the witness
box, because she expected that at the very least Jason would be giving
his testimony later in the day. Knowing how important his evidence was
to the entire case, the trial judge had no intention of letting Jason
out of his sight until he had given his crucial statement about the CD�s
and cassette tapes.
Jason felt a tug at his arm. Cecilia, with her usual sarcastic smile,
grabbed his tie and straightened it. She brushed off his jacket and then
squeezed his hand as they sat down. As always, she wanted her man
properly dressed and looking presentable, not looking like some MTV
groupie.
�DOC-DOC DANUBE!�
The judge entered the courtroom and stood at his desk. The entire room,
including the witnesses, saluted.
Three arrogant looking middle-aged U.S. citizens, dressed in black robes
and restrained by chains, entered the courtroom with their police
escorts. They were visibly infuriated. Mega-Town Associates� CEO�s
simply are not treated this way by a country as pathetic as Upper
Danubia. They made that quite clear even before their lawyers had a
chance to greet the judges. It was obvious they were not off to a good
start, and equally obvious they did not realize the seriousness of their
situation. Of course they were going to get out of these ridiculous
charges�
The judge began with reciting the facts of the case. All three men,
along with their personal bodyguards, were picked up in their hotel
suites by uniformed officers of the National Police Force of the Grand
Duchy of Upper Danubia early in the morning on April 21. From the rooms
of Moore and Stern, the police officers recovered multiple documents
indicating the two men�s prior knowledge and participation in a planned
armed insurrection against the government of the Grand Duchy of Upper
Danubia, to be followed by a similar such insurrection against the
government of the country�s southern neighbor.
The Prosecutor presented the documents into evidence, following the
statements of the police officers making the arrests.
The chief of the Danube City precinct testified next, relating that, on
April 16th, he had received direct orders from the nation�s Prime
Minister to locate the defendants and detain them on the morning of the
21st. The defendants entered the country on April 17th via the King
Vladik International Airport, and were placed under surveillance pending
their arrests four days later.
Vladim Dukov spoke next. Even though he was the Prime Minister, he had
to salute the judge as a subordinate, because the judge was the boss of
the courtroom. In this trial Dukov was a witness, just like any other,
and had to address the judge as such. He described drafting the arrest
warrant as part of a major security operation aimed at disrupting an
armed insurrection against the Duchy. He described what he knew of the
plot at the time, but with emphasis on explaining why he decided the
three defendants needed to be detained.
For the record, the judge had a question:
�Prime Minister Dukov, you are stating that your actions against the
defendants were based on prior knowledge of their intentions?�
�Yes, your honor. My decision to detain the defendants was based on
information I obtained on April 7th of this year.�
�Would you please describe this information to the court?�
Dukov cited numerous scanned documents, calling out the items by their
assigned document number. As Dukov cited the documents, the Prosecutor
displayed them on a screen from a projector attached to a laptop. The
laptop contained copies of all the files scanned by Jason.
Rage and horror swept through the faces of the three defendants. So the
Danubians did have someone working for them on the inside! Then,
�Cutter� Stern, the man who had talked to Jason�s father, glanced over
and recognized Jason. Holy shit! That�s Schmidt�s kid! What the fuck is
he doing sitting in the witness box of this courtroom?!
Dukov continued testifying, citing enough documents to convince everyone
that the arrests certainly were justified given the circumstances. Then
came the question: where did you obtain these documents? To answer that,
Dukov to ceded the witness stand to the American Cynthia Lee. Cindy
described how she found out about the CD�s and cassettes from the
Cecilia Sanchez, how she drove to Wisconsin to retrieve them from Jason
Schmidt, and finally her trip from Milwaukee to Danube City. She handed
her plane ticket stubs to a court assistant to enter into evidence.
Jason�s �little crack whore girlfriend�, as Mr. Schmidt described her,
testified next. She did a very good job toning down her accent as she
described getting a call from her boyfriend Jason Schmidt during Spring
Break. Jason had informed her that he had obtained information about a
possible assassination plot against Vladim Dukov and coup attempt
against the country�s southern neighbor. She relayed how she contacted
Cynthia Lee and how she convinced Cynthia that she needed to drive to
Wisconsin to retrieve the CD�s and tapes to give to Dukov.
Jason was up next. Given that he was the Prosecutor�s star witness, in
other countries the Mega-Town defense attorneys would have attacked him
statement by statement, but in this trial, no such interruptions were
permitted. Jason would tell his story uninterrupted, with a translation
provided by Kimberly Lee from English to Danubian.
Jason identified himself in court and began by explaining what he knew
about his father�s relationship with Mega-Town Associates. He admitted
that he was not very familiar with what his father did, but then went on
to quote various comments his father had made throughout the previous
year indicating his opposition to the Dukov government. Finally
discussed his father�s strange behavior during Spring Break that alerted
him that something was not right.
He moved on to describing the events that first night in the basement,
the night he made his first recording. He quoted what he remembered his
father saying that sparked his interest, and then what led him to record
his first cassette. The prosecutor held up a plastic bag with a cassette
tape.
�Mr. Jason Schmidt. Is this exhibit the tape you recorded?�
After Kimberly Lee translated the question, Jason examined the cassette.
�Yes sir. This is the first tape out of the six I made. This date and
time is my handwriting, what I put on it so I wouldn�t mix it up with
any others.�
�Why did you make this recording?�
�I made it, at first I mean�because I wanted to know what was going on.
I mean�my dad was talking about shooting, and pumping rounds himself,
and killing kids, and the airplane crash�I mean, I was curious to know
what he was doing.�
�Do you remember the moment your thoughts moved beyond curiosity and you
decided to take action to undermine your father�s intentions?�
�Yes sir. I remember the exact moment. It was the moment my father
attacked my girlfriend�s honor on the phone. When he did that, my
thoughts about him changed and I decided to see what I could do to stop
whatever it was he and his group were planning against your country.�
�Is that comment recorded?�
�Yes sir. I ask the Court to key the first tape to that part of the
conversation, because that�s what got me pissed off�I�m sorry�I mean
offended, and it�s kinda important for understanding why I did what I
did.�
That was the signal for the court assistant to play the following
comment. There were a lot of cracks, background noise, and static, but
the words were recognizable:
��you know, my idiot son�s little crack-whore girlfriend actually likes
that fucking commie bastard. You should've heard her last
Thanksgiving�it was kind of funny to listen to her, when you think about
it. ��Isn't that up to the Danubians? It's their country. Don't they get
to choose who's gonna lead 'em? Isn't that what democracy's supposed to
be all about?� Well, at any rate, it�s gonna be a hoot looking at that
little cunt�s expression when you guys have things wrapped up. I�m gonna
have to get my moron son to bring her back just so I can see that little
bitch�s face....�
The Danubians were shocked when they heard Kim�s translation.
Under no circumstances would parents in the Duchy ever refer to their
son�s girlfriend in such terms, even if they did not like her. Jason
continued:
�My dad�s like that. His soul is damaged because he hates everyone. It�s
not just me and Cecilia that he talks like that about, it�s everyone, my
mom, my sister, my cousin, everyone. I guess�that night, I just got
tired of it. I got tired of him and his stupid scams and his idea that
money is more important than people. I just got sick of it.�
One by one Jason identified the other cassette tapes as the court played
excerpts to demonstrate their relevance to the case. Finally Jason
described how he made the three CD�s. He discussed his reasoning for
scanning what he scanned, how long it took him to load the contents to
each CD, and the steps he took to clean up his sister�s computer after
he finished. He emphasized that even though he had used her computer,
Cassie had absolutely no knowledge about what he had done, nor did
anyone else in the household.
The Prosecutor continued:
�So when you finished recording the CD�s, what did you do next?�
�For a few minutes I didn�t do anything. I mean, when you discover
something like that, it kinda takes a while for it to sink in. I felt
totally sick�I mean to know my dad�s capable of doing something like
that�it kinda blew me away. Then, I went over to my grandma�s place and
called Cecilia. I told her what I had found out, and she told me she�d
call Cynthia Lee and ask her what to do. Cynthia came up to Wisconsin
the next morning and picked up the CD�s, and that was it as far as what
I did. A couple of weeks later Cecilia and me spent the night watching
the news when the cable channels were showing the press conference about
the bomb.�
�But, Mr. Jason Schmidt, your participation did not end when you gave
the American Cynthia Lee the recordings. You decided to come here to the
Duchy and appear in front of us to explain this evidence. We, in the
Duchy, were very concerned about trying to process this case in a way to
protect your identity, but you ignored our concerns and chose to come
anyway. We believe that you have placed your life in danger by standing
up like this and presenting yourself to this court and the world. I
commend your courage, but I think our people are curious to know why you
came here. What was it that motivated you to come here and help us?�
�I came here because Cynthia Lee told me that she wasn�t sure you�d get
convictions against some of the defendants, unless you could present the
evidence that allowed Prime Minister Dukov to stop the coup in court. In
other words the stuff I got for you. You were in a dilemma about how to
prosecute without making your cops commit perjury. So, I felt I needed
to finish what I started. I want to make sure the truth about all this
comes out. I want to make sure that the people of Mega-Town lose a round
or two and maybe get forced to take their hands off your country for a
while.�
Jason waited for Kim to translate, and then continued.
�The other reason I came here is because of, as you guys would put it,
honor. My honor, my family�s honor, and my country�s honor. My father
has dishonored himself all of his life with his greed, and I have
dishonored myself by living off his money. I came here to redeem my
honor, and to redeem my family�s honor. What my father and his partners
wanted to do to your country was dishonorable, and I didn�t want to be a
part of that. What I ask, on behalf of the other members of my family,
is that you can forgive us, because my dad doesn�t speak for the rest of
us. None of the rest of us knew what he was doing.�
There was another pause while Kim translated, and then Jason repeated
what he had told the Prime Minister the week before.
�There�s a lot more to this than just the honor of my family, because
I�m also talking about the honor of the United States. I don�t want the
people of Upper Danubia to think that everybody in my country likes
what�s happening. I think that most people in the U.S. don�t like it at
all, what these corporations are doing to the world, but we don�t know
what to do about it. What I did was to try, as an American, to prevent
something that would have made my whole country look bad, or, as you say
it dishonors us; dishonors America. I�m doing this, I�m testifying for all
of us Americans who just are sick of the big guys always getting their
way, and making the rest of the world think we like what they�re doing.
I don�t support what Mega-Town has done to the world. I don�t like the
corporation and I�m opposed to the values people like these three
defendants have promoted.�
With that Jason returned to the witness box and squeezed Cecilia�s hand.
Then he exchanged glances with �Cutter�, who was staring at him with
pure hatred. Jason sat back and looked at the prisoner with complete
calm. It doesn�t matter anymore, �Cutter�, �cause I�m done. I�ve told my
story, and now you�re gonna get convicted. Hah! So you were wondering
who turned you guys in. Had a bunch of private investigators running
around all over the US trying to find out who it was. Well, now you
know. Surprising, huh? The Schmidt kid�who would have thought that? The
idiot Schmidt wimp and his �crack whore� girlfriend. We were the ones
who fucked up your plans, and now you�re goin� down.
----------
There was a brief break for a very late lunch, and then the trial
continued with the speed typical of the Danubian justice system. Several
lower-level mercenaries were brought into the courtroom to identify the
three defendants and verify some of the information on the maps that
Jason had scanned. It turned out that Jason�s CD�s were the gift that
kept on giving, because many of the scanned documents matched or
complimented documents seized from various mercenaries during their
arrests. The noose tightened around the three CEO�s as the evening
progressed and more and more witnesses confirmed what they were doing in
Upper Danubia.
The first day of the trial adjourned at 10:00 p.m. nearly 14 hours after
the proceedings started. There would be just enough time for everyone to
go home, get eight hours of sleep, and return the next day to continue.
During the second and third days of the proceedings, Jason and Cecilia
could just sit back and enjoy watching other witnesses come forward to
confirm the details about the testimony presented on the first day.
Jason felt deep satisfaction from knowing that even if he was killed, no
longer would his death do anything to avert the looming fate of his
father�s associates. Hour after hour he sat with his eyes glued to
�Cutter� as the testimony dragged on.
----------
In the end the defense attorneys did not have many options when their
time came to counter the Prosecutor�s case presented during the week of
the trial. Because of Danubian property law, they could not challenge
much of the evidence, in spite of the fact that Jason had recorded the
documents without his father knowing about it. In Upper Danubia personal
property always belonged to the entire household, never to any
particular individual within the household. Danubian law mandated that,
because Jason was a member of his father�s household, anything that went
on in the house was fair game as far as collecting information was
concerned. The same was true for entering his father�s home office and
using his sister�s computer. There was nothing illegal or questionable
about what Jason had done, because the Danubians considered those
resources communal property of all four members of his family.
None of the evidence collected during the arrests in April could be
challenged without good reason, nor could any of the mercenaries�
statements identifying their superiors be thrown out. In such
circumstances, a Danubian Spokesperson would not seek to challenge any
evidence, but instead try to find circumstances to mitigate the alleged
motives of the defendants and have the charges reduced. The problem was,
there were no mitigating circumstances. There was no doubt whatsoever
why Richard Moore and �Cutter� Stern had traveled to Danube City. There
simply was too much evidence, real and circumstantial, that proved their
intentions. The evidence did not directly implicate Guerra, but the
Prosecutor already knew how to address that issue. More testimony would
be forthcoming very quickly, the statements needed to convict the third
defendant.
Thursday afternoon of the following week, just ten days after the trial
began, it ended for two of the defendants. Richard Moore was found
guilty on all counts, while �Cutter� Stern was cleared on the weapons
charge, but convicted of everything else. Guerra�s case would not be
adjudicated that day.
The verdict? Death by firing squad, to be carried out Saturday morning
at sunrise in the courtyard of the Central Police Station. Suddenly the
entire courthouse, as well as the crowded Central Plaza outside, began
shouting:
�DOC-DOC DANUBE!� DOC-DOC DANUBE!� DOC-DOC DANUBE!� DOC-DOC DANUBE!��
-----------
That night, as reporters converged on the Central Courthouse and filmed
the jubilant crowds outside the National Parliament Building, frenzied
negotiations were taking place between the attorneys of various
defendants and the Prosecutor�s Office. Dukov�s cold calculation was
paying off as suspects stepped forward to plea and testify to avoid the
death sentence. Police video cameras rolled and translators stayed up
all night as defendant after defendant confessed to his part in the
scheme and named his associates.
Of course, the defense attorneys of Moore and Stern were desperately
trying to save their own clients� lives, and in doing so played right
into the Prime Minister�s hands. Sure�your clients can avoid the firing
squad�if they talk�
And talk they did. Moore and Stern turned on Guerra that Friday. Guerra
struck back and further implicated the other two, as well as giving up
information on the U.S. Commercial Attach� who still was trapped in the
Embassy. Moore and Stern then turned on each other and offered
additional testimony to convict the field commanders and CEO�s back in
the U.S.
Saturday came and went with no executions, but during that time the
Danubian nation listened transfixed to TV�s and radios as one revelation
after another came out about the details of the coup. Throughout the
following week the foreign defense attorneys attacked and undermined
each other as the entire proceeding degenerated into a massive fight
between various defendants and their councils. The capitol�s newspapers
printed everything their reporters could get their hands on by press
time. More and more unsavory details came out about Mega-Town Associates
and the cowardice and ruthlessness of its leaders.
As the revelations continued pouring out in court during the third week
of trials, the Danubian National Police quietly began deporting
lower-ranking mercenaries whose home countries had promised to prosecute
them. By the end of the week the number of low-ranking foreign suspects
still being held in the country had dropped to under 100. The remaining
prisoners would be leaving the country as soon as their home countries
promised to put them on trial, not before. By the end of the fourth week
yet another 50 would be gone.
Meanwhile, the prosecutions against 23 higher-ranking defendants
continued. In the end, they showed themselves for what they were, men
with absolutely no concept of honor or loyalty, not even to each other.
They became nothing to the Danubians, pathetic shells of human beings
with broken souls. The public demands to execute them died down, because
they were too contemptuous even to warrant the dignified death of a
formal execution. Let them live out their lives, in absolute disgrace.
Unfortunately for the defendants, there was such a sentence under
Danubian law, a lifetime of absolute disgrace, or �life without honor�.
A sentence of absolute disgrace ensured that Dukov could keep his
promise to foreign leaders not to execute any of the prisoners, but at
the same time satisfy his own people�s thirst for revenge. In Upper
Danubia �a life without honor� was the lowest a person could sink, a
lifetime of insult even worse than death.
After three weeks of trials and sensational revelations, 26 naked,
chained defendants crossed the Central Plaza with their police escorts
one last time to receive their final sentences. The group included the
three Mega-Town CEO�s and 23 other higher conspirators.
When they entered the courtroom, the judge gave a short speech to the
defendants. They had proven themselves greedy, bloodthirsty thugs and
cowards, incapable of demonstrating any kind of loyalty, even to each
other or their bosses at Mega-Town Associates. They had chosen to live
in dishonor, and thus would continue to live in dishonor.
�We gave you the opportunity to end your lives in dignity, but you
proved afraid to face the Creator with your actions. Instead you chose
to continue dishonoring yourselves with your betrayals of each other. In
this country, no matter how heinous a criminal you may be, we expect you
to at least uphold the trust of your peers. You failed to do even that.
I therefore have no reservation of implementing our harshest punishment,
a life without honor.�
An ominous silence settled throughout the courtroom as the criminals
were collared, one by one. While the collaring continued, workers spread
out several tarps along the edge of the room and erected fencing
normally used to corral animals. Why the tarps and fencing were
necessary would become evident momentarily.
Once collared, the criminals were forced into a kneeling position by
several cops threatening them with electric cattle prods. Meanwhile, 26
young and middle-aged women lined up at the foot of the judge�s desk.
One by one they signed a contract and each was handed a police switch.
None of the women had kind expressions, because each one was the widow,
the sister, or the mother of a soldier or police officer killed in
combat the month before. The contracts allowed each woman to continue
receiving her loved-one�s salary in exchange for taking responsibility
for carrying out the pending sentence against one of the criminals. The
women saluted the judge, who stood up and saluted back.
The rear door of the courtroom then opened and two cops wearing pigs�
masks stepped in and saluted the judge. The crowd started laughing, and
laughed even harder upon hearing the following announcement.
�The mistresses have arrived, your honor.�
�Very well, show them into the courtroom. Our defendants shall be
honored to meet their new custodians.�
The crowd started chanting:
�N�K SVINI�KT POKCH�KT V�SHU! HADN�SH ON�CKT HAR�SH!�
Cynthia leaned over to Jason and Cecilia to translate:
�They�re chanting, �the pig is your mistress, serve her well.��
As the chant grew louder and louder, 26 young sows suddenly ran through
the backdoor into the courtroom. The animals grunted and squealed as
they ran along the fencing and clustered into a makeshift pen near the
judge�s bench. Obviously they were scared, being in a strange place with
hundreds of people chanting in the room. However, the 26 sows had
nothing to be scared of. They were destined to enjoy very pampered lives
as a result of the pending sentences.
The sentencing judge assigned each criminal to a �mistress�: one of the
breed sows. Each animal was issued a certificate of custody that
obligated the criminal to spend his life catering to her needs. The
conditions of care were very exacting and strict, forcing each criminal
to maintain his �mistress� in pristine condition at all times. To
enforce the conditions of the sentence, the National Police had hired
the 26 women, paying them their dead husbands� full salaries. All day,
every day, each woman�s only duty was to stand over her assigned
criminal with a switch and make sure his pig was properly cared for. She
was free to beat the convict as much as she wanted, since the normal
restrictions protecting criminals did not apply in a sentence of �life
without honor�.
The dishonored criminals would not be allowed to roam freely within a
collar zone, but instead would be restricted to wherever the pig was
being kept, which in most cases would be a rural police station.
Wherever the sow went, the criminal in charge of her had to go. The
criminal could not let the pig out of his sight, ever, not even at night
when the animal went to sleep.
Police officers quickly separated sows, chained criminals, and
enforcers. Each group was led out of the courtroom and into the
plaza, where the angry crowd continued to chant:
�N�K SVINI�KT POKCH�KT V�SHU! HADN�SH ON�CKT HAR�SH!�
As police vans took the coup leaders away to live out their bleak lives
scattered about the country, Cynthia commented:
�Sometimes dying isn�t the worst thing that can happen to a person. The
foreign governments thought they got themselves a deal, by forcing Prime
Minister Dukov to promise them he wouldn�t let the police shoot the coup
leaders. But he had to do something to �em, �cause this country had to
have its revenge. You do something bad in the Duchy, and you�re gonna
suffer for it. That�s the way people here think. This just isn�t a
�forgive and forget� society.�
----------
Later that night, Prime Minister Vladim Dukov watched the tanks and Army
trucks move out of the Central Plaza. The capitol would be returning to
normal, now that the trials had ended and the convicted conspirators had
been shipped out to the provinces. The other foreigners were gone as
well, quietly deported while the nation�s attention was focused on the
sensational revelations coming out over the last two weeks.
Dukov was relieved. He was grateful to the Ancients that the world did
not have to witness the spectacle of mass executions that seemed
inevitable just two weeks ago. He had managed to settle the entire
matter in a way that satisfied everyone except the 26 men who most
deserved to be punished. In the eyes of the Danubian nation, their
humiliating sentences overshadowed the deportations of the others. In
the eyes of foreign governments, the deportations of their citizens
overshadowed the 26 sentences. Now everyone could move on, because the
crisis had passed.
Once the Plaza was cleared of military equipment, Dukov re-entered the
Central Police Station to watch the sorting of the impressive collection
of weapons and ammunition seized the previous month. A wealthier country
might have simply destroyed the arms in a public ceremony, but Upper
Danubia could not afford such wasteful luxury. Instead, the chief of the
Danube City Precinct of the National Police would have to distribute the
weapons to various police stations around the country to replace their
aging arsenals. Hundreds of Danubian police officers would be getting
new issues, courtesy of Mega-Town Associates.
Much later, Dukov excused himself and walked alone through the quiet
entryway of the National Police Station. He stepped outside, and
proceeded to the middle of the Central Plaza. The Plaza was completely
empty after having been packed over the last month with soldiers, police
officers, and demonstrators. The only other person within sight was a
single street sweeper, and she was too far away to recognize the lone
figure as the nation�s Prime Minister.
A new day was coming. Dukov could see it: a faint lightening of the sky
to the east. A new day for Upper Danubia. A new hope for the Danubian
people. The defeat of the nation�s enemies, a secure southern border
(which would be finalized in just two weeks), jobs for the restive
eastern provinces, the safeguarding of the nation�s natural resources,
and a re-negotiated entry into the European Union. The Ancients had
blessed the country after all.
It�s been a very hard two years since I took office, thought Dukov to
himself, but I think we will succeed and take our proper place in the
International Community. I think we will be able to join the world on
our terms, not someone else�s. But of course, we must not be complacent.
Another thought went through the Prime Minister�s mind, his next idea
for bringing his country�s ambitions in line with its reality.
The name of our country, the Grand Duchy of Upper Danubia, is a lie. We
are not a Duchy. We haven�t been since 1942. And there is no such place
as Lower Danubia. That hasn�t existed since 1502. The only Danubia is
the one that exists today. There is no other, and if the Creator is
willing, never again will we have to change our borders. I want our
people, and the world, to understand that reality.
As the pre-dawn sky brightened, Dukov began pondering a proposal to
officially change the country�s name. He mulled over several
possibilities, but finally two stuck in his mind: the Republic of
Danubia, or simply, Danubia. As soon as things settled down in
Parliament, he would address the nation and suggest the change. Many
people would not like it, but the country needed to have the debate as a
nation. The symbolism would be extremely important, because the best
symbols are always the ones that reflect reality, not wishful thinking.
Dukov noticed more people milling about. It was time to leave, because
certainly people would find it strange to see the Prime Minister
standing alone like a statue in the Central Plaza. It just wouldn�t look
right. He entered the Parliament Building to get a few hours of sleep in
his office.
The
Freshman - Chapter 33
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