Please enjoy this short story, and feel free to comment, Enjoy :)
FOR BEAUTY
BY
REGINA M. JOSEPH
“Missing,” the Magistrate
pronounced loudly, followed by a mumbled, “That’s one less.” He tossed his long
braid over his shoulder to hide his discomfort. Carefully nestling his stylus
between two pudgy fingers, he let his hand sweep down to affix a check beside
the name of the missing Outlander.
“I've eliminated her from the
rolls.”
“We need more workers,” the
factory foreman protested, not daring to glance up to the podium.
“You
have plenty.”
Grumbling, the
gray-bearded foreman folded his hands in his blousy sleeves and floated into
the shadows.
“We’re done for the day,” the
Magistrate intoned. Arising on his transport pillow, he floated from the
adjudication room to his private sanctuary. He smiled. Gentle music filled the
air. The shutters of the holographic window lay open to a garden overflowing
with delicate flowers of every color. Resting on the imagined window ledge, the
magistrate drank in the delicate perfume. Releasing a long sigh, he thought, This is how it used to be and how it will be again.
His attendant, dressed in the
drab homespun of an Outlander, offered a cup of wine. He bowed from the waist.
“Difficult day, my lord?”
Detecting surliness in his voice,
the Magistrate accepted the cup and studied his face. His attendant was usually
pleasant, one could even say competent. He’d shared many a debate with the man,
agreeing on nothing. For an Outlander, he was intelligent and arguably worth
saving. Nevertheless, an edict had to be applied evenly. Only one wistful
glance at the beauty beyond the window was sufficient to ratify his course.
Swirling the wine in his cup, he noticed a defiant glance.
“You
know what’s being done, don’t you?”
The
attendant stiffened. “We are given provisions for a journey and told that a
perfect settlement for Outlanders has been readied. Its décor is plain and
utilitarian as our traditions mandate. But the directions to this nirvana are
faulty, or false, and Outlanders are unfamiliar with the terrain outside the
City walls—as you well know. In truth, the path goes through the sinking land.
We go to certain death. Officially, we are missing,
as if we deviated from the directions.” The
Magistrate winced. “We’re not responsible for the lost ones.”
The
Magisterium’s unanimous edict had been rendered after an intense, but brief,
debate. The Magistrate had his moral doubts, but the situation had deteriorated
to where reprehensible acts were the only available course. It was kill or be
killed. The City’s natives had revolted because the Outlander influence had,
they said, ruined their culture. Their society used to be filled with colorful
gardens of magnificent beauty, and people wore colorful garments. Music was
played everywhere. Now, the beautiful life remained only in hiding. Over time,
the Outlanders’ population had reached a tipping point within the City’s walls,
and they’d bullied and used their demonstrations to eradicate all that the
natives considered beautiful. It was as if a revolution had occurred,
stealthily and silently, without anyone even knowing there was a war
afoot. “Not lost. Purged.”
“So,” the Magistrate
probed, “is the so-called purge―I admit nothing―common belief among your kind?”
The Magisterium had designed the cleansing for secrecy and for avoiding
distasteful handson bloodshed, thinking that the Outlander bodies would sink
into the bogs without a trace. Nature was responsible. But knowledge meant
resistance. His stomach knotted. I must
warn the Magisterium.
“We
all know.”
The
Magistrate’s mind raced. We must
accelerate the purge. They outnumber us.
The attendant fumed, “You brought
us here.”
The Magistrate narrowed his eyes,
annoyed that his guilt was so apparent. “We made short term offers for work that
we ourselves could no longer perform. We needed labor and we were willing to
afford Outlanders excellent hospitality in return. Your forebears accepted—the
offers were the mistake of the old regime. The bargain was made for expediency,
and we miscalculated how much you’d breed, as well as how little we would.
Before the violence began, we ignored the imbalance and your growing resistance
to our authority. We sought to placate you by leaving you alone. Outlanders
migrated into ever more neighborhoods, using their numbers for intimidation.
Who could have foreseen that you’d ban our wonderful gardens? We’re losing our
identity. Since you don’t appreciate our culture, we must be rid of you. But
you wouldn’t accept our incentives to leave. Violence could still be
avoided.”
“We've
nowhere to go. We’re generations away from our homeland.”
“After extensions of our bargain,
we assumed that you’d appreciate our beauty and become one with us. How can
anyone not appreciate beauty? It’s
unthinkable.”
The
attendant taunted, “You have no right to design your life. Your inability to
walk is punishment. Without us, you’ve lost the ability to survive.”
The Magistrate snapped, “You’re
fanatical. In coming here to work, Outlanders knew we were the flower people.
From the start you must have had a grand design. This is our homeland and
beauty defines us. We will take it
back.”
The attendant chuckled. “You’re
the fanatical ones. We are returning this land to its pristine
state.”
“To barrenness? You want us to change? We built the City a
millennium ago.”
The
attendant stared coldly. “It’s only fair. You owe us.”
“No
we don’t. We had a bargain.”
“You
didn’t know the real bargain.”
“We never imagined
that nature would create creatures that couldn't appreciate its beauty.” The
irritated Magistrate caused his pillow to rise in hasty escape, but the
attendant punctured it with a curl of his lip.
“We
are unstoppable.”
“What exactly is your world view?” We should have seen this coming, but we didn't think their rebellion was an existential threat. It spread further than
we knew.
“It is whatever I say it is.”
Producing a serrated knife from within the folds of his gown, he jabbed the fleshy
Magistrate in the stomach.
Collapsing,
the Magistrate lamented his City of flowers. We acted too late. For beauty!