The god Horkos [Oath] comes immediately for those who lie.

Chambry (The Depositary and The God Horkos)
Note: The Chambry collection is published in Greek. AI was used to translate the Greek to this text:
A man who had received a deposit from a friend was plotting to defraud him. When his friend summoned him to take an oath, he became afraid and went out into the countryside. Coming to the gates, he saw a certain lame man going out and asked who he was and where he was going. The other replied that he was Oath, and that he was on his way to punish the wicked. Then the man asked again how often he was accustomed to visit the cities. He replied, “Every forty years, sometimes every thirty.” Without any further hesitation, the man swore the next day that he had not received the deposit. Falling afoul of Oath and being dragged by him to a precipice, he complained that Oath had told him he came only every thirty years, and yet had not granted him even one day’s reprieve. But Oath replied, “Know well that whenever someone intends to wrong me, I am accustomed to arrive even the same day.”
The tale shows that divine punishment against the wicked is unpredictable.

How do you think an AI might simplify this fable? Here is one answer, and the illustration above was made from this simplification:
The Man Who Trusted Time to Hide His Lies
Once a man thought he could cheat his friend by lying under oath. He believed that Justice came slowly and would take decades to arrive. But the very moment he spoke his false words, Oath seized him, showing that punishment does not wait when deceit is deliberate.
Moral
Do not trust the delay of justice; it often arrives when least expected.
Perry. #239