The male Vargr in the corner nodded as he noted the third chair he had brought into the room. Zhevra detected a slight raise in the hackles of his neck ruff. The male Vargr must not have liked his name spoken in this meeting. Perhaps it was charisma that kept the psionic analyst professional and standing. The advocate shrugged and returned his patient gaze to the female who ate the pills and drank down the entire glass of water. Allain then switched on the recording device. A tiny, blue light emitting diode acknowledged that it was recording the room.
“Registered Advocate Allain Templeton with Psion Khzaeng, registered telepath interviewing the accused on 341 of 1190 Credo Downs Penal, Regina, Regina, Regency,” announced the Human to the device. “Before me is a red-brown Vargr female with a white ventral pelt, eyes green and standing about five-foot-six. For the record, I don’t think the chains were necessary despite the warnings from the Vargr cellblock guards. The female before me has the ethnicity so-called Suedzuk – also known as a Red Pelt.”
The female narrowed her eyes at Allain. She hated that last moniker. She was no Red Pelt, a term used by others to label her as a bloodthirsty, genocidal murderer, Corsair and ransacking thief. The accusations and rumors blown far out of proportion, piled up through the thousands of years of her ethnicity’s actions, but she was guilty of none of her ancestors’ brutality. Finally, she spoke, finding her voice after the much-needed glass of water. Through the headache, she said, “The Sack of Gashikan was millennia ago. I am no Red Pelt.” Her voice was raspy but getting better and she rubbed her temples in hopes of encouraging the medicine to quell the pain behind her eye.
“Ahh, she speaks finally,” Allain the advocate smiled and brightened. “Please state your name for the record.”
The man’s demeanor and aura relaxed a little. She could tell. She could also tell by his seated stance that this man could defend himself though he was unarmed. She could take him. The Psion in the corner, a psionic lapdog for all she could gather, was a different story.
The Psion, this Khzaeng, bristled a little and re-settled his robes over his shoulder. She guessed it was a reaction to reading her thoughts and revulsion to him. The action and his overall aura confirmed that her thoughts were being read. She looked to the advocate with an accusatory glare. “Are you going to mind-rape me for answers if I do not cooperate?”
The Vargr intoned a memorized oath and recited with a monotone yet honor-bound voice, “I am a Vargr, I am a Regency citizen, I am a Psion. I am a person to be trusted. I possess a gift that-, “ he was cut off by Allain.
“Yes-yes, we know about the Psion’s Oath, Khzaeng,” assured Allain Templeton. “Miss, he’s not here to ‘mind-rape’ you. You are suspected of being an un-registered user of psionics and Khzaeng has been sent to assist me in that you don’t dishonor the Regency Psions.”
“I am no Psion,” the female denied. The headache was starting to let up in the minutes that the three uncomfortably endured in each other’s presence.
Allain broke the silence again, “Your name please? Names don’t incriminate, miss. I am here to help you.” He looked at the recording device as if to make it a further request.
The female, feeling the pain in her head let off significantly, answered, “Zhevra Cannagrrh, of Pack Cannagrrh.” She rattled the chains to punctuate her name and remind the advocate that he was safe. She had somewhere to go, but the cell she was housed in had other intentions.
“Zhevra Cannagrrh,” pronounced the advocate carefully, feeling out the syllables. “Your name isn’t Gvegh or Aekhu, so you are Suedzuk, yes?” asked Allain. “But that surname is Gvegh. I speak Gvegh and Aekhu, miss.”
“Yes, I am Suedzuk. But I am no Red Pelt, Human.” Zhevra Cannagrrh meant that to stick or this interview was over. In her mind, she had always been equated as a bloodthirsty killer on sight of her red fur, a signature coloration which stood out to others to recall again and again the Sack of Gashikan. Zhevra meant to squelch that with this Allain Templeton and to hell with whatever the Aekhu in the corner felt.
Allain opened the thick folder of hardcopy paperwork. Even this late, decades after Virus spread through computer networks via starships throughout Charted Space and faded to rumors, the Regency still took no chances with anything with the processing power greater than a hand computer. The documents were piled inside the folder. Allain produced a pen, carefully from his jacket and wrote the name Zhevra on the first page. “Could you spell Cannagrrh? I don’t think you spell it the same as it sounds.”
“My hus-,” Zhevra stopped herself and amended her answer with, “The Pack Cannagrrh spells it differently to show their opening to Gvegh-Human relations by using Galanglic letters and spelling. I care not.” She then spelled out the name to him in Galanglic letters.
“So, a Suedzuk married into a Gvegh Pack.
Gvurrdon Sector? Just Coreward of the
Marches?”
Zhevra didn’t answer. By giving her name, she had just admitted to being married, given away her Pack name and telling this Human that she was proud of the name. It was perhaps an asset of charisma to Zhevra. She could not devote more attention away from the here and now.
Allain looked over his shoulder at Khzaeng with an unspoken question.
“She does not shield her mind, advocate,” said Khzaeng. “Until she emits psi-waves or evidences a talent, she is no Psion.”
To Zhevra, the action the advocate had shown was akin to asking her if she was lying. Consulting the Vargr lie detector in the corner was just as insulting as being asked directly in her world. She frowned at Allain when he looked back to her, presumably with more questions. Zhevra tried to fold her arms in front of her breasts but the manacles forbade it. Still the gesture was enough to the advocate to notice.
The advocate put down his pen, closed the folder and pushed it to a side on the table. Sitting back in his chair across the table from Zhevra, he stared at her, his face half-shadowed by the radius of the overhead light. Zhevra thought he might get up and leave her to her cell.
Maybe just as well, she thought. She could read his attitude. It was in his position and his vibe. He did not want to be here anymore than Zhevra. And Zhevra shot another go-to look at the Psion who shrugged again in his robe.
Allain Templeton shut off the recording device by leaning forward and putting his elbows on the rusty table. Zhevra noted that his bomber jacket’s zipper was broken. In addition, the advocate had no identification tag or other credentials hung on his apparel.
Tilting his head to one side, Allain spoke in a quieter voice now that the device was no longer recording, “Do you want off this rock?”
The question struck a memory in Zhevra. Her husband had asked her the very same question five years past. She glanced at the Psion watching the two at the table, passively. She nodded the same angry affirmative to Allain as she had to her future husband back then.
“Good,” said Allain, “so do a lot of other people here. If I stop asking questions, will you give me everything from the very beginning? It can only help me to help your case. You are accused of a stack of crimes since coming into the Regency and I can wager that there are more than that in the Splinters to Coreward. Since you say you are no Red Pelt, there must be a motive for your actions. You can tell me your story so I can prepare a defense. Okay?”
“Anything I say will more likely be used against me, Allain Templeton,” answered Zhevra Cannagrrh. “I have no rights here. My life is forfeit for all those other people care.”
“Then choose your last testimony wisely and truthfully,” suggested Allain. “Maybe your reasoning will have weight as well as being truthful as Khzaeng will attest. It is his duty here.” He pointed to the recording device. “May I, Ms. Cannagrrh?”
His demeanor changed again. Its sincerity unlocked Zhevra the way her husband was similarly able to get her to lower her defenses. She decided to test this Human’s integrity and nodded.