Sunday, January 05, 2014

Criminality

Two months earlier, the makeshift prison near a trading post in the colony had been stormed by a team of seven native men. Women and children, of three villages' worth of wives and children of indentured native labourers, had been interred in the prison as hostages. The five guards on duty that night had had their necks twisted as the inmates were stolen into the night. The local army garrison was called in and within two hours the barges that transported the fugitives were ambushed. In the kerfuffle, five of the conspirators, including the ringleader, were apprehended. The next day, they would be shot.

At the colonial capital, the warden watched the ringleader. The ringleader knew his sentence and that it would be before any trial, but seemed indifferent to his fate. The warden threw him a smirk, unfurled the day's papers that he had tucked away under his arm, and read the headlines out to him.

"From the opinion columns: Jungle prison raid not justifiable by law," he read. "Any threat to the harmony of the society in the Colony must be swiftly and severely dealt with." Thousands of miles away, respectable townspeople read the same columns and nodded to each other in agreement, finding it easy enough to accept an image of unscrupulous, thieving natives before getting on to their daily business.

"This is criminality, pure and simple," interjected the ringleader. "did they remember to put that sentence into it?"

"This is criminality, pure and simple," opined the director of the rubber trading company at the other end of the world, after hearing news of the audacious prison break and pressured to give his comment to the reporters. "It must be punished to serve as a warning to the others, and reasonable policies instituted to prevent its relapse." His audience murmured approvingly, happy that someone is out to speak the truth.

The warden's eyes met the ringleader's, and they laughed. "Yes, they did," replied the warden, as the rubber baron's comments were printed on the adjoining page of the warden's papers. Later in the night, the warden offered to join the ringleader in his last meal. They toasted every criminal: every murderer, insurgent and malingerer that walked under the sun, and proceeded to drown themselves in generous helpings of liquor and sarcasm.