The witness sits waiting as he walks in, briefcase in hand, the table lined with lawyers. He sits, puts down a tablet and pen, asks for the witness to be sworn in, and begins. The pecking order is established. The questioner is boss and all embark on the train of his thought. 'Would you recount for us the circumstances leading up to the incident.' She begins one more time to recount thoughts and impressions, superimposed on dimly recollected facts whose keen edges have long dissolved. Her preparation is as apparent as a painted door over the threshold of the truth. 'You have taken an oath', he reminds her, but the lock on the door clicks shut. Carefully, then, he makes a small incision in the web of aggregated incompatibilities, and the abscess behind exudes a purulent glow through cracks only apparent to him. Her lawyer blusters and roars, attempting to blow out the flickering flame. But the cover is cleft, and enough of the truth can be seen to tip the scale.