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Back to Chapter 33
Chapter 34 - A night in the Temple of the Ancients
Following the trial, Jason and Cecilia faced the reality of having to
live their lives as a normal unmarried couple in Danube City. What that
meant was staying with families in two separate houses and adhering to
the social norms of one of the most conservative countries in Europe.
They could see each other whenever they wanted, were free to travel
about Danube City and to any other part of the country, and could spend
their time as they pleased. What they could not do was sleep together.
Sleeping together came to an abrupt halt the day they checked out of
their hotel room.
Vladik Dukov came by in his police van to pick up the three Americans
from their hotel rooms the day after the trial ended. They had different
destinations: Cynthia would stay with her sister Kimberly and her
husband Sergekt Dolkiv, Jason would stay with the Prime Minister�s
friend Alexi Havlakt and his wife, and Cecilia would stay with the Prime
Minister�s brother.
Both Jason and Cecilia knew that they could expect to be treated kindly
by their host families and that the arrangement was necessary to make
sure they lived in houses of people the Prime Minister could trust. He
valued their contribution to his country and wanted to safeguard their
lives. He also wanted to make sure their difficult transition to a life
in the Duchy was made as easy as possible by people guaranteed to treat
them well.
There was another issue that concerned the Prime Minister, and that was
the public image of Jason and Cecilia. Like it or not, the Americans now
were public figures in the Duchy. They were unofficial representatives
of the United States and would serve an important role in helping to
soothe the anti-American sentiment now sweeping the capitol. They
absolutely had to lead honorable lives that satisfied the social norms
of the country and present themselves to the Danubian public as living
proof that not everyone from the U.S. was a money-grubbing degenerate.
Following the trial Jason and Cecilia would have to follow daily
routines typical for any unmarried young Danubian. In spite of their
huge contribution to the country, the special treatment Jason and
Cecilia received from their hosts would be rather modest. They were
given what Dukov considered necessary to lead secure and productive
lives, including full university scholarships and student visas, free
study materials, a small weekly allowance for entertainment, and free
room and board. They were expected to use those resources to move ahead
with their career goals, but also they were expected to fit into the
culture of Danube City. Their moment of notoriety came and went, and now
it was time for them to live normally and settle into the society as
ordinary citizens. They had been assigned their place in Danubian
society, which would only change if they got married or left the
country. They would move in with Danubian families and be subjected to
the expectations and restrictions typical of most �proper� households.
Before the newcomers had a chance to balk at their situations, Kim was
quick to explain the Danubian concept of �household�. A person who lived
in a Danubian household was considered a full member of that family,
even if he or she was unrelated. Being a member of a household was
crucial to ensure that the newcomers were respected by everyone around
them. �The household� was an important part of every person�s identity
under Danubian protocol. Over time, as their ability to speak the
language improved and they settled into a daily routine, which household
Jason and Cecilia belonged to would be more important in the minds of
the Danubians than the fact they were foreigners.
Kim cited her own life as an example of what was expected of the two
newcomers. When she was first sentenced and placed under the custody of
Vladim Dukov, the Spokesman faced a very difficult situation about what
to do with her. Finally, since she had nowhere else to go and was under
his custody anyway, he simply decided to make her a member of his
household. At first he did not tell Kim that her arrangement with his
family was likely to be permanent, just in case it did not work out.
However, over time Kim learned that she had entered into an unspoken,
but official agreement with the Dukovs. The agreement allowed Kim full
use of anything in the house, but at the same time imposed
responsibilities very similar to those imposed on Anyia Dukov, who was
14 at the time.
Whatever objections the couple might have to the restrictions, their
situations did give Jason and Cecilia an immediate feeling of belonging.
Being members of households also kept them busy. The Havlakts expected
Jason to help with gardening and house repairs. Alexi Havalkt never
asked Jason do anything by himself, but if he was outside in the yard or
working on the house, he expected Jason to drop what he was doing and go
out with him. Cecilia, as a member of Victor Dukov�s household, had to
go shopping with Tiffany and help her carry groceries at least three
times a week. On top of the shopping, there was always the intense
cooking required for the weekly Sunday dinners for Vladik and Jason.
There was a final detail about their lives that Cecilia and Jason would
only discover much later. The Prime Minister and several of his cabinet
ministers, along with the members of �Socrates� Mistresses�, had pooled
money out of their own salaries to support them and finance their
university enrollments. As much as he wanted the country to express its
gratitude to the two young Americans who had saved his government, Dukov
felt it was inappropriate to take money out of the national budget for
what he considered a private matter. He did not want the young couple to
feel obligated to the Parliament, nor did he want any Deputies to
question why Americans were getting public money that could have been
used to help Danubians. Instead he and the people close to him made
their own arrangements to help Jason and Cecilia set up their lives in
Danube City. It was a question of honor, for both the Prime Minister and
his guests.
----------
Kim addressed another issue that had been in the back of Cecilia�s mind,
but had been afraid to bring up to anyone. She had been wondering how
she might be received in a society that was the most isolated country in
Europe and had seen very few non-Europeans. Somehow, Kim had picked up
on Cecilia�s unspoken anxiety and decided to bring it up herself.
Kim admitted that the Danubians were very closed minded about the
outside world. The country felt besieged by foreign influences, which
was why foreign music and entertainment were very much frowned upon.
There was only grudging acceptance of any foreign fashion influences,
and Kim speculated that the society never would accept any clothing such
as swimsuits that directly manifested foreign values. The Danubians were
especially hostile to any perceived threats to their traditions, such as
being told their legal system was deficient or that they needed to
change their faith. That embedded hostility explained why recently
passed laws prohibiting the proselytizing of non-Danubian religion were
very popular among the public.
�They�re totally adamant about the whole religion thing. You have these
foreign missionaries coming into the country, telling people here that
they�re going to Hell because they�re following beliefs that are 3000
years old, and yes, they get offended. Really offended. It�s not
something they�re interested in hearing, so they made it a crime to
promote any foreign religion in Upper Danubia. Even the Prime Minister,
who�s probably about as open-minded a person as you�re going to get in
this country, puts his foot down when it comes to religion. On that he�s
as intolerant as anyone else.�
So the question remained, how was it that Kimberly Lee, who was not from
the country and not even European, could find herself fully accepted by
the Danubians? The answer was that she had become one of them in her
habits, her outlook in life, and in the way she carried herself. During
her two-year sentence she had internalized Danubian values and morals.
Her friends and her lifestyle were Danubian, and she usually wore
Danubian clothing. As for her hair, it always was done up in traditional
braids.
�If you really want to fit in, do your hair up like I got mine. If you
do that one simple thing, you�ll be sending a signal that you understand
this country�s values and are willing to accept them in your life. As
long as you don�t challenge the way people here think and make that
clear to everyone, they�ll accept you. They don�t care about your skin.
They care about what�s in your heart.�
Cecilia sighed. She was not thrilled about the closed nature of Danubian
society, but at the same time was relieved that she would be judged
depending on how she behaved, no so much on how she looked. She felt
somewhat reassured that she controlled the extent to which she would be
accepted.
She took a chair and sat down, allowing Kim to braid her hair. It turned
out that her friend was right about the hairstyle. When Cecilia went
back out on the street with her hair braided, she noticed far fewer
curious looks from passers-by.
----------
Cecilia heaved a sad sigh as she got off the van and let Victor Dukov
and Jason help her unload her suitcases. Jason could not follow her in.
He would be invited over for dinner Sunday afternoon. It would not be
proper for him to enter the house anytime before the first formal
dinner.
Tiffany Walker helped Cecilia get her suitcases upstairs and set up her
room. Cecilia�s room was nice, with solid furniture and plenty of room
to hang her clothes and keep her things. The room had a radio but no
television. The window overlooked a tree-lined street that led westward
to the National University, which was only about five blocks away.
Tiffany helped Cecilia unpack and put away her clothes. Cecilia noticed
Tiffany looking at her clothing with interest, as the naked young woman
asked what kind of clothing had become popular in the U.S. during the
two years she had been living in Danube City.
Tiffany then invited Cecilia over to see her own room. Tiffany had a
computer and several shelves of books. There were study materials on her
desk and pictures of herself and Vladik Dukov on her dresser. There were
also a bunch of pictures of her family members in the U.S. and of
several young women, who she explained were co-workers at the strip club
where she had been working before coming to Upper Danubia.
What struck Cecilia about her housemate�s room was the complete absence
of any clothing. The closet was empty, even of hangers. There was only a
single item Tiffany was ever permitted to wear during the summer, and
that was a pair of orange tennis shoes when she rode her bicycle. If she
wasn�t on the bicycle she had to take them off. Another thing about
Tiffany�s room that struck Cecilia was that her bed had a sheet covering
the mattress, but no covers. Tiffany explained that as a criminal she
was not supposed to cover her body, not even at night. As best she
could, she adhered to that condition of her sentence. Except during the
coldest part of the winter she slept on her bed completely uncovered.
Tiffany talked about her daily life, which actually did not seem all
that bad. She had a fairly normal relationship with Vladik, in spite of
being a criminal engaged to a police officer. She went on to explain
that he had been performing public penance when she met him. Essentially
penance gave him a social status no better than that of a criminal and
not much better than her. She comforted him during a very difficult time
in his life, while he helped her adjust to the reality of her sentence.
When he ended his penance Vladik flatly told his parents that he wanted
to become engaged to her. He proposed the previous summer and gave her
the three engagement presents that always accompanied a formal proposal.
Tiffany talked about their social life and their frequent evenings in
the Socrates Club. Cecilia was curious:
�So you�re always goin� there? Just to dance and listen to a bunch of
people talk about their lives? Doesn�t that get boring after a while?�
�No. That�s not all we do, Cecilia. Most nights we go upstairs, you
know, to the intimacy rooms. I think Vladik would go nuts if we couldn�t
go upstairs.�
�What�s upstairs?�
�The rooms, you know, for making love.�
�They actually got that?�
�Sure. I mean it�s just for members, but that�s one thing out of a bunch
of things they do to try to make our lives a bit better. You know, it�s
tough being a criminal, but in some ways I think our lives are easier
than most people here. The society doesn�t have the same expectations of
us, and we don�t have to be so stuffy in our day-to-day living. We can
hug each other, show our emotions, make love when we want�in a lot of
ways our lives are a lot more natural than average people. Kim can tell
you�she and Sergekt were a lot different when they were criminals than
they are now.�
�What about Vladik?�
�When he�s on the street, he�s a cop. When he�s in the club with me,
he�s my guest and no better than anyone else. And, that�s good for both
of us. If it weren�t for the club, we�d have a real hard time finding a
place we could spend time with each other�you know, like alone��
Cecilia�s heart jumped. She had dreaded the possibility of being forced
back into a life of celibacy, even though her emotional relationship
with Jason was stronger than ever. So there was a place where people
could go to make love�
�What do you gotta do, to be able to use those rooms?�
�You have to be a member of the club, or the registered guest of a
member. But you gotta remember the club is mostly for criminals. To be
eligible for membership you have to be collared. If you�re not collared
they�ll let you onto the main floor, but you can�t use the upstairs
rooms or the gym, not unless you�re the guest of a member who is
collared.�
�So you gotta be convicted of something, right?�
�Or performing public penance for the Temple. The club considers a
person performing penance a criminal as far as membership is concerned,
because they�re officially wearing a collar.�
Cecilia was quiet, as she contemplated that interesting piece of
information. The two Americans then heard a voice calling them from
downstairs. It was Mrs. Dukov.
�Deevonay �tek C�cilekt, yah�k hocht�ckt yeestesh d�k?�
Tiffany answered back.
�Doc-doc. Nam d�k id�m.�
She turned to Cecilia. �Lunchtime. Let�s head downstairs. After lunch
we�ll go out and I�ll show you around the neighborhood.�
----------
While Cecilia was getting to know Tiffany, Jason was struggling to
communicate with Alexi Havlakt and his wife. He quickly settled into his
room and joined them for lunch, then sat for a long period of time while
they showed him a bunch of pictures of their kids as they were growing
up. Of course, because of the language barrier, Jason did not have a
clue about who were the people in the pictures. Sometime in the future
he would have to see the pictures again, when he could figure out what
on earth the older couple was saying.
Seeing the pictures reminded him of something. He needed to call his
grandmother and ask how she was doing. As he thought about that, sitting
in the living room looking at a bunch of pictures of people he did not
know, the doorbell rang. Mr. Havlakt answered it and let in Cynthia and
Kimberly Lee.
The two women did not have happy expressions on their faces. Kim briefly
talked to Alexi Havlakt, whose expression suddenly changed and became
very serious. It was Cynthia who took Jason outside.
�Jason, I got a question for you. Have you�ever talked to�talked to
anyone in your family since you got here?�
�Uh, no. I�ve been kinda afraid to, you know, �cause everyone�s been
saying I�m in so much danger and I didn�t want to get anyone in
trouble.�
�You�re grandma called this morning�she called my parents, and then she
called me at Kim�s place. She�s gotta to talk to you, like�right away.�
�About my folks?�
�Yeah.�
�Are they OK?�
�No. They�re not OK. They both got shot last Monday�I mean Monday of
last week.�
�Shit�I�didn�t��
�It wasn�t because of anything you did. From what your grandma told me,
Mega-Town had nothing to do with it. What happened was that some
ex-boyfriend of your sister showed up at the house completely stoned and
just started shooting�first your mom, then your dad, then one of your
maids, and then one of her friends. What�s weird is the police think
that what he really wanted to do was kill Cassie, but it seemed she was
the only one he didn�t get. She got away, ran next door, and when the
guy followed her, your neighbor shot him.�
�And they�re all dead?�
�I�m afraid so.�
�What about Cassie?�
�She�s in the psychiatric ward at the Carterville Community Hospital
right now. I mean, she saw her friend�s head get blown off and his body
come down the stairs. She actually saw that guy get killed. And then
seeing your maid shot up in the kitchen�and with your folks dead too�and
her ex-boyfriend�she�s pretty messed up. I suppose I�d be pretty messed
up too, if I saw all that.�
Finally Jason nerved himself to call his grandmother. He expected her to
be distraught, but she seemed perfectly calm. She spent the next hour
filling in the awful details about his parents� deaths. Jason was
surprised when he found himself much more upset over Rita�s murder than
over the shooting of his own parents, and only later would understand
why. Even in death, his father had managed to destroy the life of
someone totally innocent. Mr. Schmidt�s actions had managed to take one
final person to the grave with him.
Jason�s grandmother told him another detail, which made him understand
why she did not mourn the death of her son. She had gone through his
papers and realized how he was planning to deal with his financial
problems, by cutting his ties to his family.
�You have to realize your father was a very sick man, Jason. I�m not
surprised by anything that�s happened. I knew it was coming. And as for
your father, I stopped grieving for him a long time ago. He�s been dead
for years.�
Jason�s grandmother went on to describe the funeral of his parents. The
only three people present were herself, Jason�s aunt on his mother�s
side, and his fat cousin. No one else attended, not even Cassie. She was
too distraught to even think straight and spent the day under sedation.
None of Mr. Schmidt�s business partners attended, nor did any of his
co-conspirators. He was dead, thus his usefulness to them had ended. In
contrast, Rita�s funeral had been attended by nearly 200 friends,
relatives, and co-workers from her maid service.
The conversation moved on to Cassie. She had calmed down enough that she
would be released from the hospital the following week. Jason�s
grandmother already had a room in her condo set up for her, since the
girl had no where else to go. It would be very hard, because Cassie was
completely withdrawn and uncommunicative.
�Grandma, do you think there�s anything I could do for her?�
�There will be, but not yet. When the time comes, when it�s safe for you
to come back and she�s ready, I�ll need you to come get her. But that�s
not going to be for a while. I�ll tell you, when it�s time.� Jason heard
his grandmother sigh over the phone. �I�ve got a very hard summer ahead
of me, dealing with what�s happened to your sister, but right now
there�s nothing you can do about it. Just be thankful you got away when
you did.�
By the tone of her voice, Jason knew his grandmother was not finished
relaying bad news. She drew a deep breath and continued:
�There�s more, Jason. Do you remember when you told me that you thought
your father put his own money into the coup and you thought he got wiped
out financially?�
�Yeah.�
�You were right. It turns out he took out several mortgages and was
nearly four million dollars in debt. Your house just got seized and the
banks are still fighting over it. They grabbed everything: the property,
the cars, even the furniture. That includes whatever you might have had
there. It�s all gone. They wouldn�t even let me on the property to get
any of Cassie�s things.�
Jason was glad about the house. Good riddance. He was more convinced
than ever that it was the house that had destroyed his family. As for
the fancy furniture, he was glad that would be gone as well. Whenever he
went back, there would be nothing to remind him of the hellish existence
his family had endured during the final year of his parents� lives.
Jason thought of something else, the neighbor he barely knew who had
saved his sister�s life with his shotgun. He was curious:
�Grandma, I know this is kinda a dumb question, but what�s gonna happen
to our neighbor? You know, the guy who saved Cassie?�
�Him? Nothing. They�re not gonna press charges. How could they? It was
self-defense. That kid was breaking into his house with a loaded gun. He
had just shot four other people and was trying to kill your sister. I
don�t think there�s a jury in Wisconsin that�d convict him. I sure as
hell wouldn�t.�
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The following Sunday Jason went over to Victor Dukov�s house for dinner
for the first time. He was dressed in his best business suit, the one he
had worn on the first day of the trial when he testified. Alongside him
stood Vladik Dukov. The two men were there to �sit at the table� of
Victor Dukov, the head of the household in which Cecilia Sanchez and
Tiffany Walker were staying. The dinner was an important occasion for
Jason, because until he had sat at Victor Dukov�s table, the society
dictated he did not have the right to visit Cecilia at the house during
the week.
Cecilia was dressed in her formal Danubian gown, while Tiffany stood
beside her completely naked. She was wearing Vladik�s engagement
jewelry, which was the only detail from her normal appearance she could
change. The dinner, with its fancy dishes and formality, came and went.
Once the dinner ended, Victor Dukov granted Jason permission to start
seeing Cecilia, something he already had been doing in the U.S. for
nearly a year. It was an absurd situation, but they were in Upper
Danubia, and protocol came before anything else.
Jason invited Cecilia to go for a walk and work off the large dinner.
They had to change out of their formal clothes because of the hot late
afternoon sun. Cecilia changed into a simple one-piece sundress that was
in fashion in the capitol, while Jason changed into a very old pair of
pants and a short sleeved shirt. They spent a long time walking along
the shaded sidewalks along the East Danube River. They passed several
river beaches full of nude swimmers and sunbathers, but neither had any
desire to go swimming, in spite of the heat. Instead they walked
quietly, as though something was compelling them to make their way
towards the Old Temple.
They passed their former hotel and the outer watchtower of the Old City
Wall on their way to the Plaza of the Ancients. They passed the entrance
to the Temple and decided to stop at the caf� where Kim�s husband had
worked years before when he was a criminal. By pure chance they ran into
Cynthia Lee, along with her sister Kimberly and her brother-in-law
Sergekt. All three were dressed in black prayer robes.
Pure chance�or was it?
It turned out that Cynthia had decided to pursue her plan to perform
public penance. She was very nervous, because her intention was to
perform penance for at least the duration of the entire summer. She
added that she probably would perform penance much longer than that,
perhaps through the end of September of the following year.
�I�m kinda nervous, because once I start, I�ll have to keep my collar on
until the Ancients give me a sign I can take it off. I have no idea when
that�s gonna be, but I�m gonna have to wait for a sign.�
�What kind of sign?�
�I don�t know. That�s what�s so scary about what I�m about to do. I�m
gonna be surrendering control over my future to the Ancients, and I
don�t know when they�ll give it back to me.�
The thought of public penance stuck in the minds of both Jason and
Cecilia. Neither was aware the other had secret thoughts on the matter,
but that was about to change.
It was Jason who asked the first question.
�You know, I�m�kinda curious. Do you think�maybe I could�could talk to
one of the Priests about penance? I got some questions�and I�with my
dad�and my family�and the whole coup thing�I don�t know how to handle
all this. I�m curious�just kinda got some questions��
�Sure, they�ll talk to you. If you want, I can translate.�
Cecilia looked at Jason and drew a deep breath.
�I�m gonna want talk to one of those Priests too.�
Kim and Cynthia looked at each other with bewildered expressions. It
could not be a coincidence that Jason and Cecilia would just happen to
show up in front of the Temple of the Ancients a few minutes before
Cynthia was about to be collared. Their two friends had been brought to
them as part of their Path in Life. It was obvious they were destined to
go into the Temple, and in some way or another come out changed before
the night was over.
It was Kim who took charge of the group.
�Cecilia, I want you to come with me. Jason, you�re going with Cynthia.
Start thinking about your questions, and we�ll translate for you.�
Kim turned to her husband, and in Danubian asked him to go into the
Temple and find the Priest who had converted Cynthia. He would need to
explain that there were two foreigners who were seeking counseling. As
Sergekt entered the Temple, Kim turned back to Jason and Cecilia.
�There�s something I gotta tell you about the Temple before you go in.
Whoever you talk to is going to try to see into your soul and figure out
what you need. If they think your soul is damaged, they�re gonna tell
you what they think you should do about it. You don�t have to be a
convert for them to talk to you, but you are going to have to take
whatever they say seriously.�
Jason and Cecilia nodded. Sergekt came back out and summoned the others
with a loud whistle.
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Kim led Cecilia to a Priestess who had a particularly severe demeanor.
It turned out she was the Priestess who had given the rough sermon at
that nudist conference in Indiana back in February. Kim knelt, touched
her head to the floor and then stood up. The Priestess saluted her and
she saluted back. Kim began speaking to her in Danubian, but the
Priestess stopped her.
�I speak to young woman in English. Maybe my English no good, but I
listen her word and look at her eye. She talk, I listen.� She turned to
Cecilia and asked her a question that surprised her:
�Why you come to Danube City? Why you here in Duchy?�
�I��cause of the trial��cause I had to testify��
�No�that no reason�you say me why you here. Say me real truth, why you
here.�
�I�I �spose I came here �cause of my boyfriend, Jason. I�didn�t want him
to have to be by himself, you know�alone�dealin� with��
�No�that no reason. Truth is YOU no want to be alone. You no want to
live without Jason. Jason come, you come. Because you need Jason, no?�
�I�I �spose that�s true. I didn�t wanna live without him.�
�So you love Jason?�
�A lot. A lot more than he knows��
�Now we find truth. You need Jason. You love Jason. You come to Duchy to
be with Jason. That why you here.�
�Yes, ma�am. That�s why I�m here.�
�Good. Now you say truth. So say me about Jason. Say me truth about
Jason.�
Cecilia spent a very long time talking about her strange relationship
with her boyfriend, and in doing so revealed much about her own life and
personality quirks. It turned out the Priestess was an excellent judge
of character. Somehow she knew that Cecilia would find it very difficult
to talk about herself, but would find it much easier to talk about
Jason. The Priestess looked hard into Cecilia�s eyes and interrupted her
whenever she became vague or evasive with a severe: �You no say me
truth. Say me real truth.�
It was only after the Priestess had a good feel for Cecilia�s
personality that she began asking direct questions about her own life.
She knew that Cecilia�s soul was severely damaged, a detail about the
young American that became more evident as she began confessing some of
her inner thoughts. The Priestess began closing in on the events of
Cecilia�s life when she was 15. She drew out of her the stories about
her brother Raul and his relationship with her boyfriend Vicente, their
criminal activity and drug use, and lastly, the story about the
abortion.
Cecilia was terrified at having confessed such a thing to a religious
person, but the Priestess was not interested in judging Cecilia for her
past. Judging was the duty of the Creator, not the Clergy. It was the
Creator to whom Cecilia would have to show her mirror, not the
Priestess. Instead what the woman wanted was to get Cecilia to put into
own words the deep-seated fears she had about losing control over her
life, and her insecurity over the fact that was precisely what had
happened in her relationship with Jason.
�So now we find out truth. You scared.�
�Yes, I�m scared.�
�Now I scare you more. I ask you, and you say me truth. You think
about��
The Priestess turned to Kim and quietly asked her a question in Danubian.
Kim answered:
�Slov n�k anglal�s, �custody�.�
The Priestess responded �doc-doc� and turned back to Cecilia.
�You think about custody for Jason? Maybe use custody tell him so he no
tell you?�
Cecilia�s heart stopped. That Priestess knew. Somehow she had figured
out one of her most secret fantasies, the one she had about collaring
Jason.
�I�I�yes, ma�am. I�thought about�usin� the Church��cause I had this
fantasy��
Cecilia explained how she found out about the concept of custody from
her correspondence with Apprentice Lee and how she had thought about
using it to control Jason. Kim gave her a very offended look, obviously
displeased over what her friend had been thinking. The Priestess did not
seem any angrier however, because from the beginning she had suspected
Cecilia had harbored a fantasy that was offensive to the Church. The
frightened young woman would have to atone for her fantasy, but that was
why the Creator had brought her to the Temple.
�Now I know truth. Now I know why you scared.�
�Yes ma�am.�
�You want fight scared? Make right with Creator?�
Cecilia nodded.
�You do what I say?�
Again Cecilia nodded. That was not good enough for the Priestess. She
stared coldly into Cecilia�s eyes and repeated the question:
�You do what I say?�
�Yes�I�ll do what you say.�
�You give me hands.�
Reluctantly Cecilia stuck out her hands and the Priestess grabbed them.
The woman then closed her eyes and stood very still for several minutes.
When she opened her eyes, she let go. One final time she asked the
question:
�You do what I say?�
�Yes.�
The Priestess then reached up and put her hands around Cecilia�s throat.
She was terrified, thinking that the Priestess was about to choke her,
but what she was doing was measuring her neck. She wrote down a
measurement on a small piece of paper and handed it to a Temple
Attendant. Then she grabbed Cecilia�s hand and took her to an outside
patio that overlooked the Sacred Grounds. Cecilia found herself facing a
small stone platform. Off to one side there was a stone pit enclosing a
fire burning from coals.
�You no move.�
The Priestess produced a pair of very sharp scissors and cut the
shoulder straps of Cecilia�s dress. She gasped as the cloth fell off her
body and bunched up at her feet. Before she had time to react, two more
quick snips cut the waistband of her thong. Within a second, Cecilia was
completely naked except for her shoes. Her heart pounded as the
Priestess moved in front of her.
�You put cloth in fire.�
Struggling to catch her breath, Cecilia did as she was told. She stepped
out of her ruined dress, picked it up, and reluctantly tossed it into
the fire pit. There was a brief flash as the cotton caught on fire, but
quickly the flames died back down. The Priestess grabbed Cecilia�s
shoulders and pushed her into a kneeling position.
�Hold out hands�
Cecilia stuck out her hands. The Priestess held a metal collar in front
of Cecilia�s face, and then laid it in her hands. By that time she was
shaking badly from fright. The Priestess moved behind Cecilia and placed
her hands on her shoulders. She prayed out loud in archaic Danubian
while the trembling American continued to kneel and hold her collar.
Oddly enough, when the Priestess finished, Cecilia�s nerves had calmed
down considerably. She now was ready to accept the collar.
The Priestess took the collar from Cecilia�s hands and placed it around
her neck. She inserted a key and locked it. Now it was official. Cecilia
Sanchez, just three weeks after arriving in Danube City, had begun
performing public penance.
----------
A short while later the Priestess released Kim and Cecilia after
reciting a final series of prayers and handing her a sheet of paper
explaining the proper protocol for a person performing public penance.
Among other restrictions, she no longer could salute a public official.
She would have to kneel whenever a public official greeted her and wait
to be given permission to stand up.
Even before she left the Temple grounds, Cecilia felt very exposed and
vulnerable. It wasn�t just the thought of having to remain completely
naked into the foreseeable future, but she also was experiencing a much
deeper feeling of her soul having been stripped bare for the whole world
to see.
Everything Cecilia had been to that point was gone, burned up in that
fire along with her dress. She suddenly felt very free, very liberated
as the warm late spring breeze gently reminded her of her exposure to
the word. Yes, let them see me. I�m starting over. I�m leaving my
psychological baggage behind and I�m starting over.
Cynthia and Jason were waiting for them in the Plaza as they left the
Temple grounds. Both were naked and wearing collars. Cecilia rushed into
Jason�s arms and hugged him, excited at the thought that they would be
performing public penance together. It felt good to be outside like
this, to feel the warmth of his body and the springtime air on her bare
skin�this really felt good.
----------
Cecilia and Jason returned home not really knowing how their host
families would react to seeing them naked and with collars around their
necks. They were surprised that there was not much reaction at all.
There was absolutely nothing dishonorable about public penance, as long
as the person performing it understood and respected the proper
protocol.
The Danubians in Jason�s life actually approved of his decision to wear
a Temple collar. It seemed a logical thing for him to do; given the fact
his father had committed so many evil acts in his life and now was dead.
The Danubians interpreted Jason�s penance as a public effort to redeem
the honor of his family. Without knowing it at first, Jason was
performing a ritual that any young Danubian under similar circumstances
would be expected to perform.
The fact that Cecilia was performing penance alongside Jason also made
sense to the Danubian way of thinking. She was Jason�s partner, so it
was quite appropriate that if he were to publicly humble himself, she
should as well.
The naked young couple would become a familiar sight around Danube City
over the summer as they went about their business and struggled to learn
enough Danubian to enter the university as regular students in the fall.
Sometimes people asked one or the other how long they planned to stay
collared, but they always provided the most accepted answer: that they
really weren�t sure. At some point one or both of them would receive a
sign to turn in their collars and resume normal lives, but they neither
knew nor really cared when that would be. It was up to the Ancients to
make that decision for them.
----------
There was one pleasant irony in the lives of Jason and Cecilia that
resulted from their decision to wear collars. They applied for
membership in the Socrates Club and were accepted as full members by the
management. Within a very short time Jason and Cecilia had established
their social group at the Club. Normally they sat with Tiffany Walker
and Vladik Dukov, along with Cynthia Lee and a young Danubian who also
was performing public penance. As the summer progressed Cynthia�s
relationship with him became more serious as he visited Sergekt and
Kim�s house and sat at their table.
Their membership in the Club also meant the intimacy rooms were open to
them, along with the renewed chance to enjoy each other�s bodies. The
nightly visit to the intimacy room became a welcome part of the routine
of Jason and Cecilia. The time they spent together continued to be a
very important part of their lives: whether it was massages, or Jason�s
tongue gently caressing Cecilia�s clitoris, or Cecilia waving her bottom
in the air to tempt her boyfriend. No matter what else happened during
their day, the time they could spend together always awaited them. Those
precious moments were crucial for helping them get through their first
summer in Danube City.
The
Freshman - Chapter 35
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