Like no one would ever know that Mademba had begged me three times to finish him, that I had remained deaf to his three supplications, that I had been inhuman by obeying dutyâs voice. But I was now free to listen no longer, to no longer obey the voices that command us not to be human when we must.
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Three times he asked me to finish him off, three times I refused. This was before, before I allowed myself to think anything I want. If I had been then what Iâve become today, I would have killed him the first time he asked, his head turned toward me, his left hand in my right.
Godâs truth, if Iâd already become then what I am now, I would have slaughtered him like a sacrificial sheep, out of friendship. But I thought of my old father, of my mother, of the inner voice that commands us all, and I couldnât cut the barbed wire of his suffering. I was not humane with Mademba, my more-than-brother, my childhood friend. I let duty make my choice. I offered him only mistaken thoughts, thoughts commanded by duty, thoughts condoned by a respect for human law, and I was not human.
I let you plead with me for reasons that were corrupt, because of thoughts that arrived fully formed, too well dressed to be honest.
I know, I understand that I should not have pushed him with my words to demonstrate a kind of courage I knew he already possessed. I know, I understand that it was because Mademba envied me and loved me at the same time that he went out first, as soon as Captain Armand blew the attack whistle on the day of his death. It was to show me that you donât need beautiful teeth, you donât need beautiful shoulders and a broad torso and very, very strong arms and thighs to be truly brave. So in the end I think it wasnât just my words that killed Mademba. It wasnât just my words about the Diopsâ totem, as hurtful as those grains of metal that fell on us from the sky of war, that killed him. I know, I understand that all of my beauty and all of my strength also killed Mademba, my more-than-brother, who loved me and envied me at the same time. It was the beauty and strength of my body that killed him, it was the way all the women looked at me, at the middle of my body, that killed him. It was the way their eyes caressed my shoulders, my chest, my arms, and my legs, the way they lingered on my well-aligned teeth and my proud, hooked nose that killed him.
Fary was very, very moving. Her voice was soft, like the lapping of the river against fishermenâs canoes on quiet mornings. Faryâs smile was the dawn, her ass round as dunes in the Lompoul desert. Fary had eyes that were both doe and lioness. At times an earth-shattering tornado, at others an ocean of tranquility. Godâs truth, I would have lost Madembaâs friendship to win Faryâs love. Luckily, Fary chose me over Mademba. Luckily, my morethan-brother deferred to me. It was because Fary chose me in front of everyone that Mademba stepped aside.
I am relentless. I feel a new power, the power of telling the truth. I can be consistent; he cannot. Through questions, my story unfolds up to and including their attempts to ask me to plead guilty. No, no, they were simply asking me to tell the truth. The court is so silent that one can hear a pin drop. When I finish, there is applause, which is met with a stern rebuke from the court.