Dow blinked, forced the girl from his mind. This was a return to dangerous ground. He must give nothing more away. âI wanted to look at it, that's all. Nobody told me anything. I don't know what I hoped to see.'
âYou were not searching for the compass?'
âI don't even know what that is,' Dow mumbled, hating having to admit his ignorance for all that it was the truth. He had seen a white disk and a metal needle, no more. Was this what they called a compass?
The girl (he could not stop watching her) had moved to Vincente's left shoulder. âDon't believe him, captain. It was the compass he came for, whether he knows its name or not. See how he steals glances at it even now.' She turned to study Dow directly and her eyes were cold amid the false blush of her face. âMy guess is that he dreams childishly of running away to sea, and thinks the compass some magical device that will show him how.'
Dow could only stare in injured astonishment. Who was she? What was her place here? Her mutilation caused her no evident embarrassment; her manner was completely assured, as if â even as a girl â she had every right to speak among the officers. And the officers themselves appeared content to let her. Dow was certain suddenly of one thing â whatever else the girl might be, she was not Vincente's daughter, nor the wife or child of any of these men.
âPossibly,' replied the captain. âBut many a New Island lad must dream the same dream, and yet none have dared an outrage such as this in all my years of coming here â our severity is too well known. The sea must call to him fiercely. And yet why would that be, if he was born to the highlands?'
âPerhaps he's more than he seems,' said the girl, her eyes taunting now. âPerhaps he is the dreaded Honous Tombs reborn.'
Dow would have gaped in horror, but the captain was laughing, and the officers too, and the girl had glanced away, smiling. The Ship Kings were mocking him, that was all. They were ridiculing him by means of a ludicrous comparison to the greatest New Islander they knew. The terrible girl had not guessed his secret. Dow expelled a shaken breath and felt his heart jag in his chest, before beginning to beat normally again.
A marine had come up to the high deck and was now bent to the captain's ear, making a report. âVery well,' Vincente said in answer, âlet them up.' He inclined his head formally to Dow. âIt seems there are some, after all, who have an interest in you. We are called upon by two men of Stromner.'
Dow turned, almost beyond surprise by now, and beheld none other than Boiler Swan climbing up to the high deck. The innkeeper dwarfed the marines who flanked him, but was hunched over as if trying to shrink himself small. He ignored Dow and bowed to the assembled officers, his meaty hands clasped humbly to his chest. And behind Boiler, climbing up with a reluctant scowl, came the last person Dow would ever have expected â Nathaniel Shear.
âYour Excellency,' said Boiler, bowing again as he addressed the captain. âWe thank you for graciously allowing us to speak aboard your vessel. My name is Boiler Swan and I am the innkeeper of Stromner. With me is Nathaniel Shear, a fisherman of my village. He is the guardian of this boy here.'
Vincente studied Nathaniel a moment, but the old man remained bent and silent, and so the captain returned his gaze to Boiler. âYou are aware of the prisoner's crimes, and the seriousness of them?'
âYes, Excellency, word reached us.'
âBut you would offer some excuse for him, I assume?'
âNo, Excellency. Not an excuse. But we submit that it would be an injustice to hold the boy prisoner, or to punish him for the deed.'
âAn injustice? How so? He was caught in the act, trespassing upon this very deck. The lashes he receives will be well earned.'
Boiler ducked his head at the mention of lashes, but then raised it to meet the captain's gaze square on. âIt would be an injustice, Excellency, because the fault is not the boy's. He was only doing what he was ordered to do.'
âOrdered? By whom?'
Boiler looked to Nathaniel.
The old man had been gazing stubbornly at the deck, as if to ignore everyone and everything. But now, as all eyes turned to him, he raised his head at last and squinted at the captain. âOrdered by me.'
Dow opened his mouth to protest, but a sharp stare from Boiler stopped him; fury burned in the innkeeper's eyes. Vincente meanwhile was glancing from Nathaniel to Boiler to Dow and back to Nathaniel again.
âWhat is it you claim, old man?' he asked. âYou
sent
this boy to steal aboard my ship and to interfere with the binnacle here?'
Nathaniel glared back sourly. âAye.'
âAnd why did you instruct him so?'
âI'd heard tell of this device,' the old man said, every word unwilling, âand thought to learn how it might work.'
âHeard tell? From whom?'
âMy father. He served in the fleet during the war. He told me tales of such things when I was young, and I told the same tales to this boy here, when he came into my keeping. But of the instrument itself I remained ignorant, in truth, and so last night I commanded the boy to come here and see what he might learn. I could not come myself. I am too old for such adventuring.' Nathaniel finally looked at Dow, his expression as bitter and disapproving as ever. âHe did not want to come. But I am his elder and guardian, and he obeyed me.'
Dow strove to hide his stupefaction. Where had such a fantastic tale come from, and what had possessed Nathaniel to tell it? Why would he be protecting someone he despised, and at such peril to himself?
The captain had turned to Dow. âIs this true, prisoner?'
What was Dow to say? How could he possibly agree to such a lie? Boiler's eyes were still on him, the warning in them bright and vehement, the command clear, but it didn't matter. Dow couldn't do it.
âNo,' he insisted, âI decided on my own toâ'
Boiler cut him off. âExcellency! Dow here is a fine boy, and no doubt would gladly suffer the lash to prevent his much-loved guardian from shame. But he's telling an untruth, and it would not be honourable to accept it.'
Vincente smiled thinly. âYou would lecture me about honour? Beware, New Islander.'
Nathaniel straightened, weary of all such debate. âSir, I see that there are many men on this fine ship of yours, and no doubt they must obey your every command. But if those commands be foolish and bring your fine ship to ruin, then you alone would bear the blame. Even if, to hide your foolishness, your crew later claimed the fault was theirs. It is always the captain who must answer. Such is the nature of command â and I'd have thought that even you Ship Kings would know it.' Vincente was regarding the old man in solemn amazement, but Nathaniel only gave a proud bow of his head. âI too am master of a boat, sir â even if it has a crew of only one.'
Diego of the Diamond had been standing by through all this. Now he was unable to contain himself. âSir,' he protested to Vincente, âdismiss this old fool. You cannot consider what he proposes. The prisoner must be punished. For his assault upon my own person, if for nothing else.'
âHold, Lieutenant.' Vincente's order was mild but irrefutable. Drumming his fingers on his knee, he pondered Nathaniel a moment longer, before turning to the girl at his side. âYour thoughts, Nell?'
âThere are lies of all kinds here,' she said, shrugging. âWhatever his tale, the old fisherman clearly bears no love for the boy. And the boy, I think, is now more loath to
escape
the lash than to receive it.'
The captain nodded and sat forward. âYou, innkeeper. You're the chief man of your village, I take it. Tell me then, who is this boy? He is from the highlands, we've learned, and only came to you as an orphan, and yet it seems that he fancies himself a sailor, and seeks for knowledge forbidden to him. And more, why is he so important that you and this old man will come here and lie for him, even at the expense of the skin on your own backs?'
Boiler mustered himself and stood upright. âExcellency, this boy is of no special importance, and he is certainly no sailor. He came to us in need of a guardian, and so we took him in, but in truth he's not much fit for our way of life. He's ill at ease in a fishing boat, being weak of stomach even in calm waters and dull at reading the winds. But he's a decent enough lad for all that, and we don't think it right that he should suffer when it was someone else that led him here.'
âThat's not true!' Dow objected, stung as much by the insult to his sailing ability as he was by the other lies.
âSilence,' commanded the captain. And Dow could see that a new look had come into Vincente's eyes, a certain indifference, a fading away of any real interest in the matter. It was the same suddenly with the girl, who was looking off to one side as if the affair was settled. Even the other officers â with the exception of Diego â were shifting their feet restlessly where they stood.
It dawned on him then â the change had come the moment that Boiler had named Dow a poor sailor. At that, the Ship Kings' interest in him had snuffed out; if he could not sail, then his identity was of no consequence to them anymore. Even his crimes hardly mattered. He bored them now.
Vincente rose to his feet. âThis is my judgement,' he announced. âIt shall be the boy's guardian, Nathaniel Shear, who is held to account. The sentence of seventy-five lashes stands for him, reduced by twenty-five lashes, for the old man struck no blow against my officer. Fifty lashes it shall be, to be delivered forthwith. Old man, do you have any appeal or objection?'
âNone,' said Nathaniel.
Dow, in his outrage, hardly knew what was worse â to be punished, or to be thought not worth punishing; nor to whom he should direct his protest â Nathaniel or Vincente. In any case, he was beaten by Diego.
âSir,' the lieutenant cried in indignation, â
I
object, most strenuously. Is the blow this boy inflicted upon me to go unpunished?'
âUnpunished?' Vincente considered. âNo. I command that the boy watch every lash as it's administered. For often it's worse to watch the suffering of others, than to suffer yourself.' He turned to Dow's guards. âFree him. Then take the old man to the mainmast.'
Dow's hands were loosed. The two marines took hold of Nathaniel and led him away down the stairs. But any cry Dow might have given to stop the madness was stilled when Boiler laid a heavy hand on his shoulder.
âNot a sound,' the innkeeper muttered. âYou've caused enough damage already with your idiocy. Don't make it worse now.'
âBut why hasâ?'
âShut up, I say!'
Dow obeyed, just as Diego stalked by, giving him a murderous glance. All the officers were gathering at the railing of the high deck, overlooking the main deck below. A marine appeared and ushered Boiler and Dow to the same spot, so that they too would be forced to watch.
Already Nathaniel had been stripped of his shirt, and was being bound by his arms to the mast. The old man's body looked appallingly thin and vulnerable. The bones of his shoulders and spine protruded clearly through his skin, and he was shivering, either from the cold or from the anticipation of pain.
Then the marines stepped back to clear a space, and another man stepped forward, shirtless too, but young and wiry, his back corded with muscle. In bold readiness he brandished the tool of his trade, a whip that was split along its length into many barb-tipped thongs.
Dow could have closed his eyes, despite Vincente's order, but he refused to allow himself any such consolation. He would watch every moment. And all too soon it began. An officer called out, the flogger swung his arm, and the first lash whistled through the air to rip into Nathaniel's back. Blood and skin flew immediately, but Dow stared unblinking, his jaw bitten tight.
Again the whip whistled and struck, and then again and again as an officer counted aloud, and still Dow did not look away, even when Nathaniel could restrain himself no more and cried out in his agony. On it went, an eternity of torn flesh and spattered blood, and Dow could only will that the old man would fall mercifully insensible, and so be silent. But no silence came.
And then at last the count was complete. The flogger, puffing and sweating despite the chill, stepped back, and Nathaniel was taken down. Even then he remained conscious, writhing in pain and groaning as rough hands brushed at his wounds. Unable to stand, he sank to his knees on the bloody deck.
Boiler pushed back from the rail. âCome on,' he said to Dow, through teeth clenched hard, âwe have to get him home.'
âStay a moment there, innkeeper.' It was the captain, coming up to them as his officers dispersed about the deck. In height, Vincente did not reach even to Boiler's shoulder, but as he frowned up at the innkeeper his expression was as authoritative and unapologetic as ever. âIt gives me no pleasure to injure an old man, but you seemed determined to have it thus, and to spare this boy with your fabrications. But whatever the truth may be, I trust that word will spread among your people that no good can come of trespassing upon our ships.'
âAye,' said Boiler tightly. âIt will.'
Vincente stared a moment longer, as if dissatisfied. But then he only shook his head. âTake your friend, and give him the care he needs. It's important that his wounds be cleaned with alcohol.' He strode off.
But before Dow and Boiler could go, Diego appeared at Dow's side. âBe warned, New Islander. I know you now for a coward, to allow another to take the lashes you earned. A coward and a criminal.' Dow bridled, and Diego grinned in response. âI'm glad I didn't give you the beating you deserved last night. I would not want to soil my hands with the likes of you.'
Dow might have exploded then, but once more Boiler clasped his shoulder. âIf you'll
excuse
us, Excellency,' the innkeeper growled, and even though Boiler made no threatening move, Diego stiffened and stepped back, and Boiler was free to steer Dow safely away.