Notes to Readers:
Thanks for the reviews! Very helpful, quite motivating.
Aemilea Rose, yes, I was thinking of that nursery rhyme when I named the
character and titled the chapter.
Bookworm, you have a list? O my!
Hai, you can bet that not just her mother, but her father and all the rest know
as well, and will be keeping an eye on her (for her own good, of course). Poor
Goldi.
Xena, isn't it funny how children don't worry so much about status, unless they're
looking for something to tease other children about...?
FantasyFan, I got your review over on StoriesofArda! Thank you so much for your
faithful and thought-provoking reviews. As a matter of fact, the "Guess Who"
game comes from my childhood. As I wrote you over at SoA, one person sneaks up
behind another, covers the other's eyes, and says in the silliest voice
possible, 'Guess who!'. Then the silly guesses start...
O, and by the way, I am now posting new chapters simultaneously to ffnet and www.storiesofarda.com. So if ffnet has a bad day, hopefully
you can still get your update of the continuing saga... I'm also told that
StoriesofArda has author alerts, though I have not yet discovered how they
work. I count myself blessed to have figured out how to post chapters there!
One thing at a time.
Look for the next chapter to "FirstBorn", in case you are following
that story, and if ffnet agrees, on the morrow. Once "FirstBorn" finishes
(there are only two chapters left, y'know), chapters of "Shire" may well begin
to appear. It all depends on what the Muse does (or doesn't) on that story.
Comments are always welcome. Have some tea and a cream scone fresh from the
oven...
***
5. To See Justice Done
It was nearly teatime when a tap sounded at the study door. Hildibold Took
stuck his head in, gesturing to the steward. 'I'll be right back,' Reginard
said, rising from his desk.
'See if you can find out what's for tea,' Pippin said. 'I'm ravenous.'
'Want me to get you something now?' Regi asked.
'No, it can wait,' Pippin said. 'Don't want to drop crumbs over the papers on
my desk, after all.' Regi nodded and left the study. He returned within a few
moments, face sober.
'There's another case to be judged, it seems,' he said.
Looking at the steward's face, Pippin became all business. 'Show them in,' he
said.
A number of hobbits were ushered into the study, where Regi and Hilly found
seats for those who wished them. The last to enter were a grim-faced Shirriff
escorting a young hobbit whose wrists were bound together. The prisoner kept
his head down, not looking at anyone.
The Thain swept the room with his gaze, noting shock, sorrow, fear.
'Why is he bound?' he asked quietly.
'He killed his brother,' the Shirriff answered. The hobbit mum gasped and put
her handkerchief to her face, and the three hobbit lasses in the group began to
sob, while two younger lads stood stiff and solemn beside their father, though
their red and swollen eyes betrayed them.
'Let us hear the facts of the case,' Pippin said.
At the prompting of the Shirriff, the father began: the two brothers had argued
violently that morning early, nearly coming to blows as a matter of fact.
They'd had to be forcibly separated by their father, and he had put them on
water rations for the day to help cool their tempers and give them cause for
thought. Mid-morning, he'd sent them out to hunt for that evening's meal,
figuring that working together would help to restore the bond between them.
The Shirriff took up the tale. He'd been walking the woods when he heard a
terrible cry; running to investigate, he'd come upon the accused, sitting,
holding his stricken brother in his arms. The protruding shaft matched those in
his quiver. Despite all the Shirriff could do, the wounded lad died shortly
afterwards. The two carried him home, where the Shirriff began to ask questions.
When told of the argument, he'd bound the tween and escorted him and his family
to the Thain.
Under the Thain's quiet questioning, the other family members confirmed the
account of the argument, and that the accused tween had not spoken a word to anyone
since the Shirriff found him.
Finally, the Thain addressed the tween. 'Hilbert,' he said. 'You know what the
charges are.'
The lad did not raise his head. 'Look at the Thain when he addresses you!' the
Shirriff rapped out, and when there was no response, he put out his hand and
raised the youth's chin for him. The tween stared straight ahead, dry-eyed,
face bleached white with shock.
The Thain continued. 'You know that by rights, if you willfully did this thing,
you shall be bound, blindfolded, and carried over the Bounds of the Shire,
outcast, a brand on your cheek to warn hobbits that every hand is to be raised
against you.'
The hobbit mum gasped again, dissolving into hopeless sobbing while her
daughters surrounded her with helpless hugs. The hobbit dad's hands tightened
on the shoulders of his two younger sons.
'What have you to say?' Thain Peregrin asked. 'It is your right, before I
pronounce your doom, to speak your piece.'
The tween stared straight ahead and made no answer.
The Thain took a deep breath, but before he could speak, Ferdibrand said,
'Wait.'
'What is it, Ferdibrand?' the Thain asked quietly. The chancellor rose from his
chair, walked towards the centre of the room. Knowing his infirmity, the
Shirriff quietly said, 'Here,' as he approached.
'Where is the lad?' Ferdi asked, stopping before the Shirriff.
'Right here,' the Shirriff answered, taking the outstretched arm and placing
Ferdi's hand on the tween's shoulder.
'Ah,' Ferdi said softly. 'There you are, Bert. Tell us, now, lad, tell us your
story. You see, I cannot read it in your face, I have to hear it in your own
words.'
The tween blinked, his unfocused stare changed as he looked into the
chancellor's face. Ferdi was looking just past him, but when the lad took a
shuddering breath, the unseeing eyes turned towards his face.
'That's the lad,' Ferdi said encouragingly. 'Tell me what happened. I'm a
hunter myself, you know.'
'You're a hunter?' the tween whispered incredulously.
Ferdi smiled. 'Ah, well, not for some years now, they won't let me near a bow
these days, for some reason.'
This made the tween gulp back a sob, though he was obviously not grieving for
Ferdibrand's loss.
'Tell me, lad,' Ferdi said again. 'You went out to the woods with your brother,
and...'
'He went into cover to try to flush some birds,' Hilbert said slowly. 'Suddenly
a great pheasant flew up, and he cried to shoot, and I...' He broke off and
lifted his bound hands to his face.
'You shot your brother,' Ferdi said matter-of-factly.
'No! No, I shot the bird, but the shaft wasn't true, it...' The lad could not
continue for the sobs that shook him. The dry eyes finally yielded their tears
as shock and horror turned to grief.
'Let me see the shaft,' Ferdi said, holding out a hand. From his own quiver,
the Shirriff withdrew a cloth-wrapped arrow, the head cut off when he worked to
draw it from the wound. He placed it in Ferdi's hand. Releasing his hold on the
tween's shoulder, Ferdi unwrapped the deadly shaft, running his fingers
carefully along its length.
'It is badly fletched,' he said. 'See here,' and the Shirriff bent to look.
'So it is,' he agreed. 'I didn't notice that when I drew it out, I was thinking
more of trying to save the lad, and then when I heard of the argument he'd had
with his brother, I didn't think...'
Ferdi nodded. 'Cut him loose,' he said, and turning his head towards the
Thain's desk, he added, 'with your permission, of course, Sir.'
'Of course,' Pippin said. The Shirriff hurried to comply.
Ferdi carefully replaced the shaft in its cloth shroud, and walked back towards
his desk, one hand outstretched, steps sure, for he knew the study well. When
he encountered the desk, he made his way to his chair and sat down again. 'I
have no further questions,' he said into the silence that had fallen.
'Very well,' the Thain said. 'Hilbert of Tookbank, it seems you have been
punished sufficiently for your temper. I am sure that if it were possible,
you'd take back every word you flung at your brother this morning.'
'I would,' sobbed the tween. 'O if only I could.'
'You cannot bring your brother back, but you can seek to live your life in a
way that will honour his memory, and ease your parents' loss,' the Thain
continued. To the Shirriff, he said, 'I see no further need for your services,
Nod. I thank you for bringing this matter to my attention.'
'Aye,' the Shirriff said heavily. 'I was only doing my duty.' Turning to the
tween, he said, 'I hope you'll check your arrows before you go out shooting in
the future.' Clapping his hat with feather in the band back onto his head, he
bowed to the Thain, and left the room.
The hobbit dad bowed as well, stammering his thanks. He'd lost only one son
this day, where he'd expected to lose two. Putting his arm about the tween's
shoulders, he led his family from the study.
'Thank you, Ferdi,' Pippin said. 'You saved me from a grave error, just now.'
He drew a shaky breath and ran his hand over his head. 'Regi, if you would
please convey my regrets to Diamond for missing tea...' He rose from his chair
and added, 'I think I'll take myself off for a ride.'
