Theemile wrote:Jonathan_S wrote:Um - what?
When was Honor ever asked about the incident? When would she have had the chance to lie?
With no accusation countering Young's story about falling down the stairs, totally unrelated to Honor, they'd have no reason to ask her to confirm he'd fallen down the stairs. After all he wasn't claiming she'd been there.
Yes, the school authorities strongly suspected what happened. They were almost pleading with her to accuse Young. But for that very reason they'd have been extremely careful not to put her in a position where she'd have to choose between lying or accusing him.
Commodore Heartly (?) had her in his office with Young, and asked Honor her side of the story -and repeatedly asked her if this was the truth, and Honor refused to Pipe up. (Heartly knew the truth, because Henke to him about what happened (or what she thought happened), and Heartly detested Young.) This is when Heartly had Young apologize to her (about the slander), and punished Young.
Heartly later recounted it to either Webster or Hamish, who told us about it PoV, while discussing it between them in OBS.
Technically, Honor also lied about the incident and the School leadership knew it, but neither side of people actually present was willing to tell the truth.
I don't see anything in the text saying Honor was asked for her side of the story about an assault.
This seems to be the relivant text from the book
On Basilisk Station wrote:Commandant Hartley would have, she thought. She'd realized that years ago, and hated herself for not telling him at the time. Looking back, she could recognize his hints, his all but overt pleas for her to tell him everything. If he hadn't suspected, he would hardly have required Young to apologize after she'd reduced him to a bloody pulp.
Hinting that she should say something is NOT the same ask asking for her side of the story of the shower assault.
And even when Mike later talks about it there's no claim that Honor was asked to tell her side of the assault story
Short Victorious War wrote:"All right," Henke said after a moment, "let me tell you what I think happened. I think the bastard tried to rape you, and you kicked his balls up between his ears. Yes?"
"I-" Honor stopped and took a sip of cocoa, then sighed. "More or less," she said at last.
"Well, for God's sake, why didn't you say so at the time?! Lord knows I tried to get it out of you, and I'm sure Commandant Hartley did, too!"
"You're right." Honor's soprano was uncharacteristically soft, almost inaudible, as she stared down into her mug. "I didn't realize it at the time, but he must have known. Or guessed. But I was just-" She broke off and inhaled deeply. "I felt so dirty, Mike. Like he'd soiled me somehow, just by touching me. I was . . . ashamed. Besides, he was an earl's son, and I wasn't even pretty. Who would have believed me?"
"I would have," Henke said quietly, "and so would Hartley. So would anyone who knew both of you and heard both sides of the story."
[...]
"Yes," she said softly. "I would have believed you. As a matter of fact, that was pretty much what I thought had happened at the time. That's why I went to Hartley."
"You went to Hartley?!" Honor's eyes widened, and Henke shrugged uncomfortably.
"I was worried about you-and I was fairly sure you weren't going to come forward with the truth. So, yeah, I told him what I thought happened."
Honor stared at her, and her memory replayed the agonizing scene in the commandant's office, the way he'd almost begged her to tell him what had really happened, and she wished-again-that she had.
First "trying to get it out of you" is Mike's supposition; and "almost begged" like the previous "hinted" sounds to me like Hartley was trying to encourage Honor to share -- but also that he was doing so in a way to avoid putting her in a position she might feel the need to break the honor code by lying.
A possible example of such careful phrasing would be asking Honor "Is there anything else about your interactions with Cadet Young you would like to share?" -- that leaves her free to say no without consequence.
(Whereas if she was asked about all relevant interactions with him, or if she had reason to disbelieve Young's story, or questions along those lines -- well, all of those would put her in a position of refusing to answer or lying if she wanted to avoid accusing him)