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Subject: Forgive me.. really! Date: Sun Oct 25 2020 12:20 pm
From: August Abolins To: ILink.IL_CHIT-CHAT

Previous one had the same problem.  Here's the last attempt, I promise:

======================
Paris, November, 1585.

"Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned. It has been nine years
since my last confession."

From beyond the latticework screen came a sharp inhal-
ation through teeth, barely audible. For a long time, it seemed
as if he would not speak. You could almost hear the echo
bouncing through his skull: nine years?

"And what has happened to keep you so far from God's
grace, my son?"

That slight nasal quality to his voice, it coloured everyrCo
thing he said with an unfortunate sneer, even on the rare
occasions where none-was intended.

"Ah, Father rCo Where to begin? I was caught reading
forbidden books in the privy by my prior, I abandoned the
Dominican , order without permission to avoid the
Inquisition, for Which offence I was-excommunicated by
the last Pope; I have Written and published books ques-
tioning the authority of the Holy Scr1ptures and the Church
Fathers, I have publicly attacked Aristotle and defended
the cosmology of Copernicus, I have been accused of heresy
and necromancyrCo" a swift pause to draw breath rCo "I have
frequently sworn oaths and taken the Lord's name in vain,
I have envied my friends, lain with women, and brought
about the death of more than one person rCo though, in my
defence, those cases were complicated."

"Anything else?" Openly sarcastic now.

"Oh rCo- yes. 1 have also borne false witness. Too many times
to count." Including this confession.

A prickly silence unfolded. Inside the confessional, nothing
but the familiar scent of old wood and incense, and the slow
dance of dust motes, disturbed only by our breathing, his
and mine, visible in the November chill. A distant door
slammed, the sound ringing down the vaulted stone of the
nave.

"Will you give me penance?"

He made an impatient noise. "Penance? You could endow
a cathedral and walk to Santiago on your knees for the rest
of your natural life, it would barely scratch the surface.

BesidesrCo" the wooden bench creaked as he shifted his weight
rCo- "haven't you forgotten something, my son?"
"I may have left out some of the detail," I conceded.
"Otherwise we'd be here till Judgement Day."

"I meant, I have not yet heard you say, 'For these and all
 the sins of my past life, I ask pardon of God.' Because, in
your heart, you are not really contrite, are you? You are, it
seems to me, quite proud of this catalogue of iniquity."

"Should we add the sin of pride, then, while I am here?
Save me coming back?"

  A further silence stretched taut across the minutes. His
face was pressed close to the grille; I knew he was looking
straight at me.
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