that the miscreantsâ infractions were anything but a moot point.
While Fionn Areth mustered the shaken breath to assert his abused state of innocence, Dakarâs unctuous speech intervened.
âCaptain Dhirken passed the Wheel years before you took office. Lord Magistrate, the past charge was not left outstanding. Yes, her crew wrecked the Kittiwake. But the damages were settled in full at the time, paid off by the singer responsible.â
Fionn Areth shut his eyes.
This was Shipsport, not Jaelot.
His panic still haunted with visceral force. The nightmare repeat of prisonerâs chains
could not
be happening again. Through rising nausea, he tried to protest. âBut I wasnât thââ
A kick rapped his ankle. He gasped and shoved straight, snatched the swimming impression of a vaulted ceiling above a railed dais. There, a number of corpulent, robed men sat arrayed in stern judgement against him.
âShut up, you fool!â Dakar hissed in his ear. âHandle this wrong, and weâre dog-meat.â To Shipsportâs gathered tribunal, he temporized, âThis time, to our sorrow, we havenât the coin to pay fines for disorderly conduct. We canât make amends to the Kittiwakeâs landlord, beyond our respectful apologies.â
âWell, sorryâs no recompense!â The stout table jounced as the tavernâs greybeard owner thumped an indignant fist. âIâve suffered enough of your hot air already to bore me past Daelionâs Wheel! The last time, your friend played his lyranthe for hand-outs. He sang, forbye, like a silver-tongued lark! Caroled until every last mark cleaned his pockets, and bedamned to your pleas that youâre penniless.â To the magistrate rapping his gavel, he railed, âMy tap-roomâs in shambles! My son broke his arm. I demand satisfaction. Grant the Kittiwake use of the bardâs talent for one month. The house takes his proceeds until the debtâs paid, with the extra for punitive damages.â
The town clerk waggled his pen in remonstrance. âThe accused in the dock broke the peace, donât forget! Shipsportâs coffers are due a steep fine for their act of civil disturbance. These charges must be met beforetime.â
While the magistrate stroked his suet chin, and the springâs nesting wrens cheeped in the eaves outside, Fionn Areth stirred to a sour clank of chain. âBut I donâtââ
Dakar jammed an elbow into his ribs, then spun lies with pressured invention. âThe bard has a head cold. Canât sing a note. Force him to try, his sick croaking is likely to rile your patrons past salvage. You said yourself, the Kittiwakeâs crowd likes to toss inept singers through the window. That wonât meet your fees, and my friend lies at risk of suffering a crippling injuryâ
Truth and impasse; the magistrate smothered a yawn. The victimized landlord glowered, arms folded, while the clerk licked his thumb and flattened a clean sheet of parchment. âHard labour, then? Incarceration? Public whipping? The brawling was started without provocation.â He tapped the scroll bearing the transcribed statement. âDisrupting the peace calls for a harsh sentence.â
Shipsportâs magistrate laced his prim knuckles and delivered the final verdict. âThe accused have no money. Therefore, the bard will perform until the debts to the town and the tavern are discharged.â He silenced objection with the superior glare he reserved for the low-class condemned. âNo reprieve!â
âI wonât sing for any man!â yelled Fionn Areth, a mistake: his broad grasslands vowels displayed no congestion. âNot for a penny, not for struck gold, and not ever for settling damages over a riot that I didnât start!â
The Kittiwakeâs landlord stared down his beak nose. âUpright men donât keep the company of smugglers.â
Since such