• An addendum to Rule 3 regarding fan-translated works of things such as Web Novels has been made. Please see here for details.
  • We've issued a clarification on our policy on AI-generated work.
  • Our mod selection process has completed. Please welcome our new moderators.
  • Due to issues with external spam filters, QQ is currently unable to send any mail to Microsoft E-mail addresses. This includes any account at live.com, hotmail.com or msn.com. Signing up to the forum with one of these addresses will result in your verification E-mail never arriving. For best results, please use a different E-mail provider for your QQ address.
  • For prospective new members, a word of warning: don't use common names like Dennis, Simon, or Kenny if you decide to create an account. Spammers have used them all before you and gotten those names flagged in the anti-spam databases. Your account registration will be rejected because of it.
  • Since it has happened MULTIPLE times now, I want to be very clear about this. You do not get to abandon an account and create a new one. You do not get to pass an account to someone else and create a new one. If you do so anyway, you will be banned for creating sockpuppets.
  • Due to the actions of particularly persistent spammers and trolls, we will be banning disposable email addresses from today onward.
  • The rules regarding NSFW links have been updated. See here for details.

A Song of Ice and Fire Cut Short by Dust (RWBY in Westeros)

Chapter 37: The Spider Trap New
Chapter 37: The Spider Trap

'One of the most defining cultural traits of Westeros, one that is shared by the entire continent despite the many regional differences, is the loathing of slavery. A sentiment so strong, even Aegon the Conqueror, born from a culture built on slavery, adopted the stance. Modern scholars occasionally wonder at this, citing the situation of the smallfolk, whose lives were often as hard as a slave's, as a cultural blind spot. Some go as far as to claim that the virulent hatred of slavery was mere hypocrisy or an excuse to distract the people from worse injustices in the Seven Kingdoms. That the Iron Islands used to practice slavery in all but name through the taking of salt wives and thralls in their raids is also counted as evidence of this, though any scholar will counter this claim by pointing out that it was ultimately exactly this disgusting practice that led to the Breaking of the Iron Shackles in the fourth century when the Church called for a holy war. Some historians speculate that the hatred for slavery is a result of cultural influence by those who fled the Valyrian slavers to Westeros, though the numbers and dates do not support that hypothesis. Others, often religious scholars, claim that the Seven themselves mandated this, and the faithful embraced it. Whatever the reason, no one can doubt that since ancient times, no crime was as detested, as dishonourable, in Westeros as slaving. Unsurprisingly, the Ruby Order shared that view, as their actions in King's Landing during the Coin Crisis show.'
  • A Treatise On The Ruby Order, by Maester Kennet Bracken

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

Varys looked at the report from his little bird. The four witches had been invited to the Great Sept of Baelor by the High Septon. Nothing too unusual - though the report stated that they hadn't known the reason for the invitation. And it had been urgent, judging by the fact that they had left soon after the message had reached them.

That was Interesting. Their influence on the Faith of the Seven had been a concern for a while - unlike most of the Court, Varys wasn't blind to the threat a mob of smallfolk whipped into a frenzy could present if one managed to aim them at the right target. Provided one could surprise said target, of course; a mob going up against any organised force, even the gold cloaks, would be slaughtered. Although they could still serve as a distraction, of course.

Not that the witches needed a mob to do their bidding - they could slaughter any force, organised or not, in the realm, no matter its size. And everyone at Court was aware of that. But control over the Faith still offered some potentially crucial advantages, especially when it came to gathering information. The Church might not have spies like his own network, but between the Septons and the more fanatical faithful, they potentially had eyes and ears literally everywhere. Naturally, they lacked the organisation and training to actually use those sources, but it was still an advantage, especially for a group of foreigners.

Of course, Varys had realised that as soon as he heard about the growing worship amongst the smallfolk and had had his agents infiltrate the Church - what better way to keep an eye on the witches than to watch their tools? It had taken a while for his agents to reach positions of trust, and he still had none close to the High Septon, but he was generally well-informed about the happenings at the Great Sept. And concerned, of course, about the influence those witches wielded there.

But they should be distracted for a while still by Lord Baelish's death. Longer once they found the fake records his little bird had planted in the oh so tragically late Master of Coin's office and they started investigating the subtly placed links to the Lannisters. With a bit of luck, that would occupy their attention long enough for Varys's other plans to come to fruition. And wouldn't Lord Baelish, were he still alive, be rabid with rage at the thought that not only had Varys arranged his death but profited from it so much?

The Faceless Men, should they accept his request, would either kill the witches or distract them further. He might even manage to use their own pet Septons against them - if they were away from King's Landing, say to deal with the Lannister troops, it would be easy to manipulate the septons in the city to move against 'traitors' and 'heretics' - they had fistfights every few days over what the witches expected from them, or so his sources claimed.

Best, of course, would be if he managed to lure those monsters far, far away from King's Landing. Perhaps he might plant some rumours about Princess Daenerys controlling a Dothraki Horde? None with any knowledge of the lands east of the coast of Essos would believe that, but the witches might believe it because it was so absurd, they might not think that anyone would invent such a far-fetched threat. And if he managed to sabotage their ship…

He nodded. He would have to ponder this, and keep carefully studying the witches and their machinations to decide what would work best. The Game of Thrones was a game that required patience and restraint. Once he received the report from the Great Sept later today, he would know more.

Until then, he was free to consider alternative options. That would…

A knock at his door interrupted his thoughts. "Lord Varys?"

He recognised the voice. One of the regent's servants. "Yes?" He walked over and opened the door.

"Lord Varys! The regent requires your presence."

That was… unexpected. "Do you know the reason for this summons?" he asked.

The servant shook his head. "No, Lord Varys."

His tone and expression belied his words, though. The man was annoyed - no, angry at Varys. He was a Northener, but even those usually cold school their features better than this. That meant the regent was annoyed or angry at Varys.

He nodded. "Have the Four Maidens returned already?"

His eyes widened a moment. "I wouldn't know, Lord Varys. I was just ordered to fetch you."

Another lie.

Varys hesitated a moment. Had his attempts on the witches' lives been exposed? He couldn't fathom how it would have been possible, but magic offered all sorts of unnatural means. Still… Could he risk abandoning his position based on such flimsy hints? Could he risk not fleeing while he still had the chance?

If the witches had turned the regent against him… He nodded. "Of course. Please wait, I have to safely store a few scrolls detailing secret matters."

"Yes, Lord Varys."

He closed the door and went to the secret door behind his desk. He didn't have much time, but he didn't need but a moment to open the door, slip through and close it behind him. Ah, if he had had more time, he could have faked his death to throw off pursuit by making it look like he had fallen to his death by taking another secret passage near the ramparts, maybe he could have asked for a detour on the way to the regent to get some fresh air…

But no - the servant was too suspicious to be easily fooled and would only need to call for guards to foil such a ploy. While Varys was not nearly as helpless in a fight as he appeared, he wasn't the kind of fighter to take on two, much less three enemies at once and get away.

He shook his head as he quickly walked through the tunnel - he didn't need a light here, but he would have to briefly stop at the alcove where he had hidden a lantern and a change of clothes before continuing down the next tunnel; it wouldn't have done to expose his escape route by using it for other means after preparing it. Not even his little birds were aware of it - none who were still alive, at least.

A few twisted turns later, he stopped. Was that the sound of footsteps? He cocked his head to the side and held his breath, but he couldn't hear anything. Nerves, he thought - even though he had been preparing for this ever since he had first seen the witches work their magic, it was still quite a shock to actually have to implement his escape plans. And a thrill, of course. To outwit four witches who were likely all much older than he was? It was no mean feat. Too bad he couldn't brag about it. Not until he reached his friend in Pentos.

He would have to change his plans, of course. Mayhap see if he could use the little princess to send the Dothraki at the realm. The barbarians would die in droves against the witches, but they could force them to split up to deal with such an invasion, and once they were separated, the Faceless Men might find a way to kill them, paving the way for the Young Griff. Perhaps he could wait until the princess was pregnant or had borne her barbarian husband a son and have her assassinated? If he could frame the Regent for such a crime, not that hard with the assassins dispatched before in King Robert's name, that should be enough to turn the Dothraki against Westeros…

He reached the alcove and felt around for the lantern and the flintstone to light it. It took a few tries to get a spark to ignite the wick, but soon the soft light illuminated…

…familiar boots and breeches. He gasped, feeling his stomach drop as his gaze travelled up, revealing the slim but deadly form of Lady Blake, staring at him with her yellow eyes.

Had she been a guard or knight, he would have snuffed out the lamp and taken his chances in the darkness. But against this unnatural witch? That wouldn't be dignified. Besides, as long as he could talk, all was not lost.

He managed a smile despite the despair filling him. "In hindsight, it was naive of me to expect that mere darkness would hide me from dark magic."

He half-expected her to cut him down with her cursed blade, but instead, she snorted.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

"As expected, he did a runner, but Blake caught him!"

Her sister sounded as proud, or more, as if she had caught Varys herself, Ruby Rose found.

Blake herself merely nodded as she held the bound and gagged Master of Whispers - now or at least very soon former Master of Whispers, Ruby corrected herself - up with one hand in the small council's chamber.

Lord Eddard and the other members of the small council (minus Varys) were staring, though. Well, except for Ser Barristan and the Grand Maester. Had they really thought they would let Varys escape? Her team had been chomping at the bit to finally get proof to get him!

"He was trying to flee through a secret passage," Blake said.

"I don't think I am prejudiced if I say that such an attempt to avoid meeting us strongly indicates his guilt. Innocent people do not attempt to flee," Lord Renly said.

That was true! Ruby started to nod, then frowned. No, it wasn't true. Innocent people tried to flee all the time if they were facing torture! "That's going to be decided at his trial," she said.

"Innocent until proven guilty and all," Yang added. "But we got proof that he was buying slaves in Essos."

"So you said," Lord Eddard said.

"Witnesses for whom the High Septon can vouch," Weiss replied. "And records they found. And we can search Varys's chambers now."

"You couldn't do that before?" Lord Renly asked.

"We lacked sufficient cause," Weiss kinda lied.

"And if he noticed the search, he would have been suspicious," Yang added. "And we didn't want to risk that he'd hurt others before escaping, as a distraction or to erase his traces."

"Ah." Lord Renly nodded. His brother nodded as well, though with a pretty satisfied expression. For Lord Stannis, at least - he wasn't scowling as much as usual.

"And we need to move quickly to ensure that his spies won't be hurt," Blake said. "He might have had contingencies to kill them if he had to flee." She dropped Varys to the ground.

Lord Eddard nodded. "You said you feared he might murder the children he brought to Westeros."

"The children he bought," Weiss corrected him. "And had mutilated so they couldn't talk."

Lord Eddard nodded with a grave expression. Lord Renly also nodded, and Lord Stannis scowled harder.

"We suspect he had killed some of them before already," Blake said. "There's a lack of grown men and women missing their tongues in Westeros, and I doubt he had sent them back to Essos when they were too old to work for him."

"Yes," Lord Renly said, with a scowl that clearly showed he was Lord Stannis's brother, "One can but wonder why Varys wanted little children as his spies - and not adult men. Wonder and worry, given what we found out about Littelfinger."

Ruby blinked. What was…? Oh! She grimaced. Ew!

Her friends glared at the man on the ground.

"I do not think that should be a grave concern, my ladies," Ser Barristan spoke up. "Varys is a eunuch, after all."

Right. Ruby nodded. At least, they didn't have to worry about that. He was still a child-abusing villain, though. And probably a child-murdering monster.

"Questioning him will be a challenge, though," Lord Renly said. "He will not break easily."

"No torture," Ruby said out of reflex. That was the rule! Even for child murderers. And even if they were good liars and might be hiding even more crimes. Well, maybe there were exceptions in such cases… No! She shook her head. Innocent until proven guilty, she reminded herself. It was always the most difficult to stick to the rules when you were sure you were right. Because you were likely to overlook or ignore things.

Lord Renly frowned at her, but slowly nodded.

"So, keep him under guard - multiples, from your households - while we secure the children?" Ruby asked.

"Yes, I think…" Lord Eddard was interrupted by a knock at the door, quickly followed by a servant - a panting servant, Ruby noted - entering. "My Lord Regent! There's a mob of smallfolk advancing on the Keep!" he blurted out.

Ruby blinked again. What?

*****​

There really was a mob marching on the gates of the Red Keep - well, they had stopped before the gates. Ruby stared at the gathered people from the top of the rampart. They were armed, though mostly with makeshift weapons - improvised weapons, to be precise, like clubs, and repurposed tools, such as hammers, pitchforks, and cleavers and large kitchen knives. But she could see spears and swords as well.

And they were shouting about 'the vile slaver'. Oh. "They must have heard about Varys," Ruby said.

"That is obvious," Weiss commented. "It seems the Sept's discretion was not as trustworthy as we were told."

"Can't beat rumours," Yang said. "School or Sept, stuff travels fast even without scrolls."

"Yes, yes," Ruby said. "But we need to deal with this before something happens." The people were keeping their distance, but they looked angry.

"Didn't they trust us to handle this?" Weiss sounded insulted. "We didn't ask for such a demonstration."

"Well… It's nice to have support?" Ruby asked.

"It is not nice or advantageous for us if the Court thinks we wanted this to happen," Weiss disagreed. "Or if the people down there think we wanted this. It doesn't take a lot for such a mob to spin out of control."

"The gold cloaks might overreact," Blake added. "Or the Court might feel threatened and decide that they want to make an example out of them."

"Not with us here, they won't," Yang said.

Weiss shook her head. "We can discuss the ramifications of this display of popular support later - we need to deal with this now."

"Right!" Ruby nodded. "Weiss, I need an air bridge!"

"You… right." Weiss moved her hands, and glyphs appeared in the air, forming stepping stones in front of them.

Stepping stones for Huntresses, at least. Ruby jumped on the closest and then kept jumping until she was standing above the first row of the crowd.

That didn't sound right. She shouldn't be standing above them. But she had to address them all, and that worked better if everyone could see them.

"Hello, everyone!" she shouted. The crowd grew silent, which was a bit… impressive. And kinda concerning. She cleared her throat. "Don't worry, we caught the slaver! And he will be tried in court!"

The crowd cheered. A lot. Mostly about 'Blessed' and 'Maidens' and the Seven.

"But!" She forced herself to smile widely. "We have a lot of things to sort out, and that will take time. So, you don't need to wait for news out here - we'll tell you more tomorrow, at the Sept."

Should she have said that without checking with the High Septon first? It was kinda rude, to just announce it like that, right?

But the crowd cheered again and then started dispersing, and that was the main thing, so Ruby counted that as a success.

Though while her friends smiled when she returned - Yang joked about Weiss better not dropping her - the small council, whose members had arrived on the rampart as well, now, looked kinda unhappy. And not just because they had probably had to run some.

They had lost their Master of Coin and Master of Whispers, discovered a huge sum of money was missing and that there was a spy network that a traitor had controlled in the city. Anyone would be unhappy in their place. But they seemed unhappy with Team RWBY.

"We need to check on the kids," Blake said. "They will know that Varys has been arrested now."

"Right!" Ruby nodded. "We'll be back," she told the others before jumping off the rampart.

They had some kids to catch. No, that sounded wrong.

They had some kids to save!

*****​

King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

Blake was very… worked up. Weiss Schnee could tell. Her friend was too tense, too impatient, as they raced through the streets and over the roofs to reach the lair of the children used as spies by Varys. Too… not focused, fixated.

Based on what Weiss knew about her past, she was likely seeing herself in those kids - children too young to know better, used for dangerous purposes by adults who manipulated them for their own gain.

Weiss could understand this, to some degree; Father had used his children for his own purposes as well, usually to improve his image and impress his acquaintances. Especially those who foolishly considered themselves his friends just because Weiss had performed a few songs at a private gathering.

But Weiss hadn't been used for dangerous tasks. She hadn't been sent to spy on people who would silence witnesses with lethal means to keep dangerous secrets. She had not been ordered to steal documents and plant falsified records in rival hands. Or poison someone's wine. Perhaps that had been the reason Father had thought she would back down when forced to fight an Arma Gigas to earn the right to attend Beacon; if he had been using her for more violent and dangerous tasks, he might not have made such a mistake.

But… Her eyes widened when Blake suddenly veered off, jumping down into a side alley instead of across it to the next roof.

"Blake?" Ruby asked a moment before she disappeared in a cloud of petals.

Weiss jumped down as well before she could consider the situation and landed next to Blake, who was holding a screaming and kicking child by their arm.

"Whoa." Yang joined them.

"They've begun to scatter already," Blake hissed.

"How… Oh." Weiss trailed off as she spotted the bag on the ground. It had fallen open, and clothes and food were visible.

"Varys must have left contingency orders in case he was captured," Blake all but growled.

"Fan out and move on to the house from all directions so we can capture the kids on the way! Let's go!" Ruby disappeared again.

"Yeah!" Yang jumped onto the roof.

Weiss looked at them disappearing in different directions as they split up, then at Blake.

"Can you keep them corralled with your glyphs?" Blake asked.

Could she? Of course! But she didn't say that out loud - she nodded instead.

"Let's stay together then!" Blake grabbed the kid around his chest and jumped.

If the child hadn't been mute, they would have surely screamed. Even so, they tried to yell as they cleared the last few buildings with a series of jumps until they reached the spies' hideout. One small kid was just leaving through the front door and froze for a moment, paling, before they tried to run.

They managed two steps before Blake grabbed them with her free hand.

Weiss was already summoning glyphs to form a holding area, though she couldn't help fearing that they were a little too late to save the majority of the children.

She pressed her lips together. Blake would be devastated.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

"More than half of the kids escaped!"

Yes, Blake wasn't happy as she paced in their quarters, Weiss noted.

"Most fled as soon as they heard about the mob targeting Varys," Blake went on. "We only caught those who were either late to return or took too much time getting out since they had no bugout bag ready. Those were mostly the youngest."

"Well… if the older kids had a bugout bag ready," Rub said, "doesn't that mean they were expecting to flee?"

"Yes, Ruby." Blake was frowning, and Weiss wasn't certain herself what their friend was angling for by stating the obvious.

"So, does that mean the missing older kids we can't find had a bugout bag ready as well and left before, uh, they could get disappeared?" Ruby smiled a bit forcedly.

Blake frowned some more. "It's possible, but it could also be that they only did that because Varys gave them orders to be ready to flee."

"Drat."

Weiss nodded. That made more sense.

"And they didn't help the youngest get ready?" Yang scowled. Of course, she would resent that, having done her best to take care of Ruby as the older sibling, Weiss knew.

"They… might have been told that those would be taken care of," Blake said, but it was obvious to Weiss that she was reaching for excuses.

"Or they were raised not to care for those weaker and younger," Weiss said.

"No!" Blake shook her head. "They lived together. I saw them cook for the younger ones. They wouldn't just… abandon them like this."

Weiss wasn't as optimistic about the loyalties of kids who had been enslaved, mutilated and then trained and used as spies - and possibly assassins, but she nodded. "Whatever the reason, they have fled. And I am not sure that the gold cloaks can find them. They might not even be able to stop them from leaving the city." Lord Renly had said so, but Weiss doubted it; the noble seemed to overestimate the competence of the men serving him in order to please her team.

"They will make it harder for the children to leave the city, at least. That will stall them for some time. But we still need to find them before they vanish," Blake said. "Who knows what orders they have and try to obey?"

"Varys does," Yang said. She bared her teeth in a fierce grin when Weiss and the others looked at her. "Maybe we need to ask him."

"Yes!" Ruby nodded. "If anyone can stop this, it's him."

But would he be willing to help? Perhaps if they could offer him a deal, though, with the crimes he had committed, even taking the Black, as they called joining the Night's Watch, might not be possible for him. Could he be trusted to keep the oath, anyway?

"Let's go and talk to him!" Ruby said.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

"We're still checking the black cells for secret passages," Lord Eddard explained when they were waiting for Varys to be brought to the small council's chamber. "So, we're keeping him under heavy guard."

Blake Belladonna nodded together with the others, but she couldn't help feeling as if she was sitting on needles; if Varys managed to escape… Maybe she should head out and escort him herself? It wasn't impossible that a handful of his kid spies might attempt to free him. Blake had shown the secret entrances to the Red Keep that she had discovered to the guards, but she couldn't be certain that she had found them all. Even months of searching were not enough to guarantee that.

Of course, children attacking trained, armed and armoured men, even from ambush, was a losing proposition. Still, it was not impossible, merely highly unlikely, that such an attempt would not only be made but succeed; even if they had contingency orders for such a case, the children would not have any up-to-date knowledge of the situation at court, they would not know the new schedules and routes, and they would have to improvise from the start.

Still…

Her attempts to calm herself down were interrupted by Varys being led inside by eight guards - Northeners, Stormlanders and gold cloaks, she noted, led by Ser Arys Oakheart of the Kingsguard.

"They would need a small army to get past them," she heard Yang whisper next to her as if she had read Blake's thoughts.

Blake glanced at her and saw her partner smile - not grin at her own comment, but smile warmly at her. She nodded in acknowledgement, feeling better for the moment. Varys wouldn't escape.

Two guards sat him on a chair and removed his gag; another precaution everyone had agreed on; if he couldn't talk, he would have a harder time trying to bribe his guards into helping him escape. Of course, it was more than a little cruel to keep him gagged unless he was eating and drinking, but the man had been the spymaster of King Robert and the Mad King before him; he had spent decades at court and would know too many secrets of too many people. Even with eight guards from three different houses and the gold cloaks guarding him.

Varys coughed a few times, for show, Blake thought.

"You must really fear what I could say to treat me like this. Should I feel lucky that you haven't ripped out my tongue already?" he asked with a wry smile.

Blake froze for a moment. He dared to make a complaint - or, worse, a joke! - about cutting people's tongues off? She glared at him, baring her teeth, almost hissing as she felt her ears flatten against her skull under her bow.

"What?" Ruby jumped up. "You cut the tongues of children! We're not like you!"

Vary's smile widened a little, but it remained more twisted than his usual, almost subservient expression. "Oh, I am certain that you aren't like me - or like anyone else present here - at all. Except, perhaps, Lady Melisandre."

"What?" Ruby blurted out.

Blake was as surprised as her friend, but not quite as vocal. What did the man mean? They weren't priestesses. Although…

"Because the Faith considers us divine messengers and Lady Melisandre has visions from her god?" Weiss echoed Blake's thought.

Varys laughed. "That is a pretty weak attempt at obfuscation, my lady. I know what you are."

"We're Huntresses," Ruby said. "We've told everyone that from the start."

Varys laughed again. "Unlike those fools who believe you, I know better. I know what price you paid for your power."

Ruby blinked and glanced at her friends in obvious confusion. Blake shared the sentiment.

"What do you mean?" Lord Renly asked.

"Magic demands sacrifice." Vary's smile twisted into a grimace as he leaned forward. "I know that better than most. I know how much even a small magic boon has cost people. How many lives have you sacrificed for your powers? Hundreds? Thousands? How much blood have you spilt to command such magic? How many people have suffered under you?"

"Are you… crazy?" Ruby stared at him.

"I know magic, witch!" Varys spat. "You may have fooled those simple minds in the Sept, and the naive at Court who cannot see past their own ambitions, but I know better! I have suffered such sacrifices myself - I know what you did!"

"Yep, he's crazy," Yang said, but Blake could tell that despite her flippant tone, her partner was shaken by the display.

"The man's mad," Lord Renly said.

"Our powers - Aura and Semblances - come from our souls," Weiss said. "That is a well-documented fact in our world. There is no sacrifice involved at all."

"Only the obligation to use your power for the good of everyone," Ruby added. "It's not magic!"

Varys chuckled in response. "Of course you would claim that - the truth would ruin your plans, won't it?"

"Our plans?" Ruby scowled at him. "We just want to go home!"

Varys shook his head. "If you merely wanted to go home, you would have left already instead of taking over the Court." He sneered at the assembled men. "Not that it took much to wrest what powers you thought you had from you, not when those witches wield such magic, but if you had had more wits than a fool, you might have offered more resistance."

"Mind your tongue or you might lose it!" Lord Stannis snapped. "This is the Lord Regent you're insulting."

"And us," Lord Renly added.

Varys scoffed. "What do I have to lose? I knew from the beginning that if I were ever caught, my life would be forfeit."

"There will be a trial," Lord Eddard said.

"A sham of a trial. The verdict is already set in stone," Varys retorted. "If there is even a trial and I won't simply be found dead in my cell - or disappear without a trace!"

"Do you expect to be saved?" Lord Renly asked, frowning.

Varys laughed in his face. "From anyone else, I would consider this a great jest. From you? Proof of how witless you are. You think you are a powerful Paramount, and yet, you are merely a tool easily manipulated by your desires and ambitions. And you cock, of course," he added with a cruel smile.

Lord Renly jumped up, hand going to the dagger at his side, but his brother held him back with a hand raised in front of him. "Have a care, Renly. He's trying to provoke you into murdering him."

"And that would break the law, wouldn't it?" Varys scoffed again. "You're no better than him. As rigid as a stone statue - and as smart. You think you would be a good king? You would ruin the realm with your blind zeal for what you call justice when it's actually naked ambition. If you were the man you think you are, you would have realised that you are not fit to be king and would have abandoned those desires. And if you were truly as dedicated to justice, you would have told your brother about your knowledge of the Queen's treason instead of going to hide on your rock in the sea when Jon Arryn was murdered. And you wouldn't have abandoned your gods for a witch!"

"Jon was murdered?" Lord Eddard gasped.

"You didn't know? Well, how could you have known when you trusted Littlefinger!" Varys laughed. "Lord Eddard, the honourable? Lord Eddard the fool! What do you think your friend Robert would say when he knew you were serving as regent for a Lannister bastard, betraying your friend's trust just because you fear those four witches? Where is your honour, my lord? Did you leave it in the North?"

Lord Eddard went rigid, and Blake could see the knuckles of his left hand go white while he gripped his sword.

"And you, Grand Maester. Sworn to serve the king, yet serving Lord Tywin! How much did it cost to sell yourself? And how much did you regret it when you realised where his pride will lead him and his? You think so highly of yourself because of your knowledge and wits, yet you tied yourself to a doomed cause out of greed!" Varys laughed again.

Ruby shook her head. "You try to make everyone look bad, but it only shows how bad you are. If you knew all these things and believed them, why didn't you say anything? If you knew Lord Jon was murdered, why didn't you tell anyone?"

"Because he's a sad old man who would rather see the entire realm burn than accept he lost," Weiss said. "You berate others for their pride and decisions, but you're no better - you're worse! And your own words prove it."

"How's that for being proud of your wits?" Yang chuckled.

Others chuckled as well, though it was obvious to Blake that they were not really amused. Varys's words had struck a chord in them.

"What do I have to lose? My verdict was already decided the moment you moved against me!"

"That was the result of your decision to buy child slaves and have their tongues cut out before you used them to spy on people here!" Blake hissed. "You brought that on yourself!" She stood and walked over to him, teeth bared.

He flinched back for a moment before sneering at her.

"What orders did you give them?" she asked. "They fled before we could gather them. Where are they?"

"As if I would betray children to you witches!" he spat.

"You risked their lives when you sent them to spy on nobles and others! Children were murdered as a result!" Blake yelled at him.

"Compared to their fates should they fall into your hands, that was a mercy!"

Blake blinked. "Did you just admit to murdering them? How many did you murder? Did you kill all of them once they grew up and were no longer useful? What did you do?" she shouted into his face.

"Blake…"

She blinked as she felt a hand on her arm and realised that she was holding up Varys by his tunic - that her fingers had ripped the fabric.

"If you kill him, we won't get any answers."

He wouldn't talk anyway. And the children deserved justice. She could just…

She let him drop on the chair and stepped back, taking a deep breath.

Yang wrapped her arm around her shoulders and pulled her into a hug.

After a moment, Lord Renly spoke up. "Speaking of answers…"

"No torture," Ruby said with a frown. "We're better than that!"

Blake wasn't sure she agreed. If they had to torture Varys to save the children he had mutilated… No, that was a slippery slope. She knew better. She had to be better.

She forced herself to slowly breathe out and relax, then step back from Yang and sit down again.

"You can torture me. I won't break. I've gone through worse." Varys smiled.

Blake wasn't sure if he was bluffing. But they wouldn't stoop to torture.

"Well, I think it has been amply demonstrated that the prisoner is uncooperative. For now," Weiss said. "Maybe we should talk to him later, when we have sifted through what records we found and what information we have."

Lord Eddard nodded. "Yes, gag him again and take him back to his cell."

"Silencing me? As if…" The rest of Varys's words were cut off when the guards jumped to push the gag into his mouth again.

Once Varys had been dragged out - somehow managing to sneer at them despite the gag - Lord Eddard sighed.

And Lord Renly spoke up: "Well, that was to be expected. Varys has been Master of Whispers for decades and would know exactly how to needle people and spread lies to manipulate them."

"Yes," Lord Stannis agreed.

Lord Eddard nodded as well, followed by the Grand Maester.

But Blake saw that Ser Barristan, who had remained silent until now, had that stony expression he usually wore when he didn't want to disagree openly but did so silently.

That didn't bode well for the future.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

"That could've gone better," Yang Xiao Long said as they returned to their quarters.

Weiss scoffed. "It could have scarcely gone worse. We didn't get any answers we wanted, and the small council was obviously rattled by his words."

Words that had had more than a bit of truth to them, at least that had been Yang's impression. Of course, she wasn't an expert at spotting lies, and Varys was good at lying, but the reactions of the men there… "And there'll be rumours spreading. About everyone," she said. She wasn't an expert on politics and nobles plotting, but she knew how the rumour mill worked.

"About us," Ruby said. "People will say we're bloodthirsty witches!"

"They were already saying that after the tournament. That's what the riot in the sept was about," Weiss pointed out.

"And our side won," Yang said with a grin.

"Still…" Ruby bit her lower lip, clearly worried.

Yang went over and gave her a one-armed hug. "Hey! Those who know us won't believe them. And you know how many people believe us - they came to the keep for us!"

"And Varys proved he cannot be trusted; why would anyone believe him when he told us himself how he knew so many important secrets yet didn't tell the King or anyone?" Weiss shook her head.

Yang grimaced. She didn't like to do it, but her friend was a bit too optimistic. "Some will believe him because they want to believe him. And others won't but claim they do to harm us. But as long as the majority believes in us, we'll be fine," she added with a smile aimed at Ruby.

"But we still don't know what orders he left for the kids," Blake said. "We searched their home, but they must have burnt all records - as they were trained to."

"Well, they can't have left the city yet," Yang said. "But once they do… how hard can it be to find mute children? A simple question will betray them."

"Not all mute children were spies for Varys," Weiss said.

Yang shrugged. "Yeah, but that should be easy to sort out."

"I think you overestimate the competence of the local law enforcement employees and underestimate their motivation to report a successful capture to the crown," Weiss replied. "We need to ensure they understand that we are not looking for just any mute children, and we cannot offer a reward, or some unscrupulous criminals might attempt to mutilate children to turn them in for a reward."

That was… "Really?" Yang stared at her. That was too… That sounded like some cheap, stupid horror movie!

"Economic incentives have caused worse developments," Weiss said. "There was a scandal in Atlas a few years ago when a Hunter was revealed to deliberately attract Grimm to settlements so there would be a mission to hunt them down."

"But…" Ruby gaped. "How could he do that? How could anyone do that?"

"Greed," Weiss replied.

"Did they catch him?" Yang asked.

"They found his scroll and determined the events after he fell victim to his own success in attracting Grimm, so to speak," Weiss said.

Yang grimaced. Even if he had it brought on himself, no Huntress would make light of dying to a Grimm. Except when joking about their own death, of course. Couldn't dwell too much or too long on that.

"Whatever! We need to find the kids," Blake spoke up.

"They have survived as spies, I think they will be OK for a bit," Yang said. Her partner was a bit too worked up to be objective about this.

Blake frowned at her, so Yang's attempt to make her worry less had failed. "Yes, if they were ordered to hide or escape. But what if they had other orders? We need to ask the kids we saved."

"We mostly recovered the youngest kids," Weiss said. "Would they have gotten any orders? Would Varys have trusted them with such orders?"

"He probably wouldn't," Blake said, and Yang smiled. "But they were trained and worked as spies. They might have caught a glimpse of such orders anyway."

That sounded a bit far-fetched to Yang - the kids had to communicate in writing since none of them could speak, and, as Weiss had been vocal about, paper was expensive here. But it wasn't as if they had had anything better to do.

"Let's go talk to them, then," Ruby said. "The Septons will have treated them well, so they might be more open now."

"Can't be less open than they were," Yang commented. Those kids had been a pain to corral and gather. RWBY had been trying to help them, but they had reacted as if they were about to get murdered. Of course, if they had been told that they would be sacrificed in dark rituals if caught… Yeah, Yang would also have fought like hell in their place. It wasn't their fault, but Varys's.

*****​

The Great Sept of Baelor, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

Varys's fault or not, mutilated tongue or not, Yang didn't think this was working out. Those kids were more stubborn than Ruby when she wanted cookies as a toddler.

And speaking of her sister… "Look… we aren't witches. You were lied to by Varys. We know what he did to you - he had your tongues cut." Ruby was trying to appeal to the kids'... whatever.

Looking at how they were glaring at her and making those weird, creepy noises, not even Ruby was getting through to them.

"You were trained as spies. You should be able to spot the lies you were told merely by comparing them to the facts." Weiss was still trying as well. "Varys exclusively bought mute children as spies. That means he is responsible for your ordeal. Without buyers like him, you wouldn't have been mutilated."

More glares. The kids were not buying it.

"He manipulated you," Blake spoke up. "It's the oldest trick in the book. He picked you when you were hurting, helped you, gave you a few gifts and treats, and so you latched onto him as a saviour. But it's all a lie. He doesn't care for you."

"He has been doing this for a long time. And yet, there are only children here," Weiss went on. "What happened to those of you who grew too old?"

"We want to help you!" Ruby sounded almost desperate. "But we need you to tell us what Varys wanted. Err, write it down for us. He wants everything to burn down since he lost, and that would hurt everyone!"

Yang narrowed her eyes. One of the children had flinched at that - at the 'burn' comment.

She pushed off the wall she had been leaning against and walked up to the kid in question. "Hey!"

"And you can…" Ruby trailed off. "Yang?"

"You know something," Yang said, leaning forward, both palms on the table. "What do you know?"

The kid shook their head. They were about five - well, probably six; kids like them had to go hungry often here.

The other kids were looking at them. One, the most stubborn, shook his head and made a hissing noise.

But Yang was focused on the kid in front of her. "What did you see?" she asked. "What is Varys planning?"

The kid shook their head again, avoiding her eyes.

"Burn…" Yang gripped their chin and made them look into her eyes. "Is he planning to set something on fire?"

The kid flinched again. Right. Varys had ordered the kids to set something on fire. Or… "Is he trying to set the city on fire?"

The kid stared at her. Probably not.

"Are your friends trying to set fire to the Red Keep so they can use the chaos as a distraction to free Varys?" Blake asked.

The kid winced.

"But… we removed all the wildfire," Ruby said.

"He might have procured some himself," Weiss pointed out.

"Too dangerous to transport." Blake shook her head.

"Varys wouldn't care about that," Yang said.

"He wouldn't need wildfire. You can do arson with oil," Blake said. "If he just wants a distraction and doesn't want to risk suffocating in his cell, that would serve him even better."

That sounded logical. But Varys had been crazy.

"But they would need to sneak in through the secret passages - and those are now guarded," Blake said. The kids gasped - all of them. "If they try to force their way in…" She stood. "We need to hurry to stop them before the guards hurt or kill them!"

"Right! Let's hurry!" Ruby jumped up. "We have a keep and kids to save!"

*****​
 
Kennet might be assuming too much now because if RWBY was the typical really effective diplomatic and good group then they'd still be poisoned like everyone else that got killed. It's the simplest deduction to say that RWBY poisoned everyone else while slipping Yang a harmless dose to throw off suspicion in Kennet's scenario. That no one even imagines it as a possibility means RWBY has speech skills on par with straight up mass mind control or that the team is super human in some way.

Also Varys man you might have killed off a lot of competition but you're kinda emptying the field here. There isn't that much reasonable people that could be the source of the poison left now and you're on the list.

Kenneth will attribute such things to luck, of course! Anything to support his thesis!

Varys is desperate - he do not knew about wildfire,could not prevent King assasinations,and now must kill Baelish to cover his tracks.RWBY would cath him,if he do nothing - so he could as well go on his last rodeo with wildfire.

As far as we knew,he is beliver who could die for Blackfyre case.

He's pretty messed up in any case.

I see the faithful has finished their crusade on essos dor varys orphan children

A fact-finding mission for the Four Maidens! (The crusade has to wait a bit.)

Looks like the noose around Vary's neck is slowly tightening, huh.

He's got a good poker face, though. If we didn't have those Varys interludes, we'd have no idea just how much he's feeling the pressure.

I'd say it's unfortunate for Varys that he convinced himself RWBY are a bunch of evil human-sacrificing sorceresses and made himself their enemy, but honestly, there was probably always going to be a conflict between them thanks to his "little birds" and Blake's keen senses sniffing out their existence.

Yeah. And, of course, about him betraying the realm (and everyone else) so his pet "Targaryen" could take over.
 
Well,no matter what happen,Varys would not live long.Only problem - they still do not knew,that Blackfyres are coming with Golden Company,children could not knew his plans.
 
Varys really can't look past his own trauma. Team RWBY have consistently acted nothing like blood sacrifice witches, but he already decided that they are, so everything they do is twisted to fit that presumption.
 
Well,no matter what happen,Varys would not live long.Only problem - they still do not knew,that Blackfyres are coming with Golden Company,children could not knew his plans.

Well, that depends on what Varys's partners think about RWBY. If they share his views, then they'd think sending an army would be throwing that army away.

Varys really can't look past his own trauma. Team RWBY have consistently acted nothing like blood sacrifice witches, but he already decided that they are, so everything they do is twisted to fit that presumption.

Indeed. As others, Varys is trapped by his own biases and preconceptions.
 
Chapter 38: Juvenile Delinquents New
Chapter 38: Juvenile Delinquents

'The Coin Crisis is touted by some scholars of the era as the greatest threat to the realm in its entire existence. That is, of course, factually wrong. Not even if you counted the Succession as part of the Coin Crisis - which would be like counting the keep as part of the drawbridge - would it be true; the Dance of Dragons is but one period that easily eclipses this crisis. In addition to that, the common view of the Coin Crisis misses several crucial factors. Of course, Lord Baelish's embezzlement was of such a scale, it affected the economy of the realm. However, the money he embezzled wasn't, at least for the most part, hidden away in some cave or smuggled to Essos, as some myths that today still see people risk their lives diving into submerged caves in the Fingers searching for Littelfinger's Lost Loot claim. No, the vast majority of the money was invested in the realm itself, turning a profit for Lord Baelish, and, therefore, the realm's economy still benefited from the money - more, some accounts claim, than if it had been left in the treasury, though this remains speculation. So, while the Court was suddenly missing a lot of its treasure, the economy of the realm could absorb higher taxes to recover the missing gold without too much upheaval as a side effect.
Nevertheless, the Coin Crisis had a lasting impact on the Seven Kingdoms in that the scandal's infamy was responsible for the fast adoption of double-entry bookkeeping across all of the Seven Kingdoms', a practice that cut down on such embezzlement and formed the base for later financial reforms that allowed the Seven Kingdoms to achieve its current dominance over Essos.'

  • A Treatise On The Ruby Order, by Maester Kennet Bracken

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

It was far too dark in these tunnels. The lanterns they had didn't do much - they just allowed them to see enough to avoid walking into walls or stumbling. But the light didn't reach far - Bryant couldn't even spot the stairs behind them. All he could see were the walls to his sides and a few yards of some rough stone floor ahead and behind him. "Really, we're useless here. We can't see shit," he complained.

"We aren't useless," Harden replied. "No one will be able to sneak past us here."

"Because the tunnel is barely wide enough for us two to stand side by side," Bryant told him. He clenched his teeth, thinking about how deep underneath the Red Keep they were. So much stone and rock and dirt above them. So little space around them. No light at all. If their lanterns went out, they would be left in complete darkness. Like buried alive.

Worse, actually - back in Winterfell, he had visited the crypt there once or twice, and this post here was far worse. If anyone got lost here, who would be able to find them? Hell, who would want to search for them in the bowels of the mountain? He couldn't help shuddering. It was far too dark, far too narrow here. The air was stale as well - even with lanterns instead of torches, the air smelled stale and thin. Oh, how he missed the clean air in Winterfell! What a fool he had been to go south with Lord Eddard!

But he had been so keen on seeing the sights of the South, fool as he had been, and now he was stuck guarding a tunnel darker and deeper than a tomb, feeling as if he had been buried alive. And for nothing - who would be as foolish as to try to sneak through those tunnels, now that the Maidens had revealed them? He'd rather stand guard in the middle of Winter on the ramparts at night; at least there, you had the stars looking down on you and fresh air, even if it made your lungs feel as if you were breathing ice. "I hate it here," he muttered.

"At least the stench from the city isn't reaching down here," Harden the fool commented. "Imagine if we smelt as if we were standing guard in a cesspit?" Bryant glared at him, but his fellow guard laughed. "Cheer up, it's only for an hour or so longer until we're relieved! Soon, we'll…"

"Silence!" Bryant cut him off. "I've heard something!"

"What?" Harden did stop talking and seemed to listen. Finally!

But as the silence continued, Bryant didn't hear anything. No scraping sound that might have been a misstep. No hiss that might have been a stifled gasp. Nothing.

"Nothing," Harden said. "And who would come down here, anyway? We'd see the light of their lanterns from afar!"

"Not if they came without light. They could…"

"...sneak up on us? Through pitch black darkness?" Harden laughed again. "That's…" He jerked with a gasp, turning around himself, and Bryant caught a glimpse of something sticking out of his back.

A moment later, he felt a blow to his breast plate and stumbled back as something hit the wall next to him.

Crossbows, he thought. Someone's shooting at us.

He dropped the lantern on the ground as he ducked. Was that another bolt passing over his head?

"My back! Someone stabbed me!" Harden cried out.

Bryant grabbed him. "Move! They'll reload!" They had to get out of the lantern's light!

"AH!"

Bryant started to pull Harden with him. They had to fall back, get out of the light, hide in the…

Something hit the lantern, and he heard the sounds of something breaking.

Then it seemed that the entire tunnel lit up as flames spread from the lantern over the ground.

"Wildfire!" He froze for a moment. They were doomed! They were dead!

Harden was still screaming. "NO!!!!" He pushed away from Bryant and turned, starting to run.

Bryant reached for him, trying to grab his arm, but missed in the flickering light from the burning oil - oil, not wildfire!

And another bolt took Harden in the back. Bryant saw him freeze and fall with a hissing groan.

"Harden!" Damn! He rushed forward, reaching down, grabbing the manŝ arm to pull him up. "Harden! Come on!"

Harden didn't react. Didn't move.

"Harden!" Bryant bent down, letting go of Harden's arm to raise his head to look at him.

Then he saw the blood flowing from the man's mouth.

No! He let him drop again. He had to get away. Alert the other guards - hadn't they heard? Where were they? Harden and he hadn't been alone here!

His leg gave in, and he fell. Then saw the bolt sticking out of his calf. And felt the pain.

Another bolt missed him - he heard the sound of its passing. He had to get out of the light! "Help!" he screamed. "Help!"

With a working leg and two arms, he started to scramble away. He just had to get away before they could reload. Just had to get out of the light. Just…

A figure rushed towards him, through the fire, a blade in hand. Bryant managed to raise his sword - when had he drawn it - and thrust it forward. It wouldn't have hit anyone or anything, but the figure drew back, hissing, and tried to flank him.

Bryant lashed out with the blade again, swinging it in front and to the side of him, forcing the figure to jump back. "HELP!"

Something - a crossbow bolt! - hit the ground next to him, missing his good leg by inches.

"HELP!"

He heard terrible screaming from afar, echoing through the tunnels, and cursed under his breath. There were more such assassins in the tunnels!

The attacker with a blade tried to circle around him again, and Bryant threw his body to the side so he could force the bastard back with another swing. "HELP!" he screamed as he felt his leg tear up more - the bolt had caught on something. "Argh!"

"Help!"

The figure - smaller than a man, he realised - hissed again and darted forward. How had they managed to get past the flames? Bryant wondered, absurdly, as he lashed out to hold the bastard at bay with wild swings.

But the other would be reloading his crossbow, and Bryant was still exposed and in the light - and even if he managed to crawl away with his leg torn and bleeding, the other would get him.

He would die here, he realised. Alone and in the dark, beneath thousands of tons of rock and dirt.

A garbled sob escaped while he clenched his teeth as he lashed out again, fruitlessly. "Die, bastard!" he screamed as the figure jumped back again.

And to the side.

Bryant froze. The crossbowman! He would have reloaded! No!

In the sudden silence, he heard the sound of a bolt being shot. No!

And then something flashed in front of him, he heard a cracking sound, and a bolt clattered against the wall next to him.

And in front of him, her back to him, stood another, taller figure, the blade that had struck the crossbow bolt in mid-flight still stretched out, its sheath held in a guard position.

Even in the dim, flickering light of the oil fire, he recognised her easily.

Lady Blake. The Dark Maiden.

He was saved! He wouldn't die here! The gods had sent help!

His attacker hissed and darted forward, blade raised.

A moment later, the blade flew through the air, and the figure - a boy, Bryant realised, now that he could finally see him clearly - cradled his hand with another hiss. Lady Blake sent him to the ground with a sweep of her foot, then seemed to vanish. One moment she was there, the next she was gone.

Bryant gasped again.

And then she reappeared, carrying another figure with her. The crossbowman. The one who had killed Harden and had almost killed Bryant.

It was another boy, he saw while Lady Blake tied up both before checking Bryant's wounds.

He couldn't help it - he laughed. Even though it hurt.

But he was alive. He was safe. He wouldn't die in this damned tunnel.

He was still chuckling a bit later, when the tunnel lit up from whatever magic the Maidens used, and more people, guards and Maidens, arrived.

He would have to thank the Old Gods at the Godswood here, he felt. If they had a Godswood here - he would have to ask.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

"So, either Varys had standing orders for his spy kids to break him out should he get jailed or they decided to do this themselves," Ruby Rose said. "We captured a dozen of them, but they haven't talked." She blinked, then grimaced. "I mean, they haven't told… written anything. They refuse to cooperate." Damn! She was so bad at this! The poor children couldn't talk even if they wanted to because Varys had had their tongues cut out.

"Does it matter?" Lord Stannis asked.

"It does," Weiss spoke up. "If they were merely following orders, that's certainly a show of loyalty, but if they independently decided to risk their lives in an attempt to free him, that would indicate they are significantly more loyal to him and, therefore, it's going to be much harder to break that."

Lord Stannis looked surprised. Was he going to ask about torture again? "And yet, either way, they are loyal to Varys."

"If they were brainwashed into following his orders, it will be much easier to break that programming than if they actually love him," Blake commented with a scowl.

"'Brainwashed'?" Lord Renly cocked his head to the side.

"Taught and trained to become blindly obedient tools," Blake explained.

Ruby nodded.

"In this context, at least," Weiss added.

Ruby rolled her eyes. This wasn't the time to be pedantic. "Anyway, I think we got all the oldest kids." At least, Blake didn't remember anyone currently missing who had been present in the spies' lair when she had observed it.

She frowned again. Sheesh, the eldest of those kids were just a few years younger, tops, than her! She sounded old.

Lord Stannis was still frowning, though. "And you intend to question them about further plots Varys might have been instigating?"

"Yes." Ruby nodded. "They might not know much, but they were not just his spies, but also his couriers. At least, they would know more of his friends or their contacts."

"So, it seems our cells will be quite crowded for a while," Lord Renly said.

"Not for long," Ruby said. Lord Stannis wasn't the only one who looked surprised this time.

"Only until better accommodations for the children are available," Weiss explained before Ruby had to.

"They attempted to free a prisoner!" Lord Stannis snapped.

"They attacked and murdered guardsmen," Lord Eddard added. "My own amongst them."

Ruby grimaced again. "Right. They did that. But they are still children."

"They are guilty." Lord Stannis scowled. "Whether a child or an old man, they committed crimes."

"And their victims deserve justice," Lord Renly added.

But…

"They are children manipulated by a spymaster - slaves he bought, mutilated and then trained to serve him with blind loyalty! Most of them probably never knew anything else!" Blake all but hissed.

"Are you planning to execute them?" Ruby shook her head. They weren't really planning to… The sudden silence answered her question better than any explanation. "What?" she blurted out.

"You want to kill children?" Yang sounded as sick as Ruby felt.

"They will be offered the opportunity to take the Black," Lord Eddard said. After a moment, he added: "Or join the Silent Sisters in case of the girls amongst them."

"You can't! They didn't know any better!" Ruby protested.

"They attacked the Red Keep - they killed guards. Guards posted there on the orders of the Regent." Lord Stannis glared at her. "They most certainly knew what they were doing."

"That's…" Ruby shook her head again.

"I don't think you can expect children raised like they were to question such orders. Would you punish a guard for following the orders of their liege?" Weiss asked. She sounded calm, but she was as mad as the rest of them. Ruby could tell by how her cheeks were twitching a little. They only did that when her partner was really mad. Not 'I accidentally left crumbs in your bed, which I used for a little nap cause it looked more comfy than my own' mad, but really mad.

"Yes." Lord Stannis nodded quickly.

"It depends on the orders, actually," Lord Renly said. "If they were orders a decent person wouldn't give - say, burn down a Sept or rape a woman - then following them would make the guard a criminal."

"Attacking the Red Keep and its guards and attempting to free a traitor leaves no doubt about that," Lord Stannis said.

They were really going to kill kids. Ruby stared at them. Or send them to the wall or the Silent Sister, where Cersei was. That was… "You can't do that!" she repeated herself.

Lord Stannis opened his mouth, but Lord Renly was quicker. "Are you going to fight for them, then, my lady?"

"They aren't of noble blood and do not have the right to demand a trial by combat," Lord Stannis said.

Ruby didn't know how to answer the question. And she couldn't ignore it, either. "You cannot treat children like adults!"

"And there's precedent for that," Weiss came to her help. "Even when families were punished for crimes against the crown, children were often spared."

"If they had done nothing to support the criminals," Lord Stannis objected. "Anyone who raises arms against the lawful king, no matter their age, deserves punishment."

"So you would execute a toddler for trying to kick you to defend their mother?" Blake asked. Her bow was twitching, Ruby could see that - her friend was tense like… like a drawn bowstring.

"Of course not!" Lord Renly said before his brother could - probably - nod. "But we're faced not merely with a bunch of small children, but also almost-grown boys who were able to, and did, murder guards. There's a difference between a toddler's kick or blow and a crossbow bolt between your ribs. Or a burning flask of oil splattered over you."

Ruby winced. Yeah, she wouldn't easily forget that sight. Or the screams. But… "They're still children, though!" she blurted out. "And they were manipulated by Varys." Blake was right, Varys was responsible for this, not the kids he had raised to work for him!

"He was likely the only parental figure they had, even though he was obviously manipulative and exploitative," Weiss said. "Do you expect children to betray their parents' wishes?"

"If their parents are traitors, yes," Lord Stannis said.

"And we must not forget that while they were children, they were raised and trained and worked as spies. They were roaming freely through the city, they were listening to nobles and smallfolk alike, and were privy to Varys's plans," Lord Renly added. "They had ample opportunities to realise that what they were doing was against the law."

"They were working for the realm's Master of Whispers," Blake retorted. "He had the right to use and command spies."

Ruby nodded.

"Even if we accepted that," Lord Eddard finally spoke up, "they tried to free him after he was arrested on my orders - at which point it was obvious that he was no longer acting in the interest of the realm."

"But…" Ruby bit her lower lip. What could she say against that? She wasn't good with words and stuff.

"Or they assumed he was loyal and the victim of an intrigue, wrongly accused by enemies of the realm," Weiss said.

"That doesn't make their actions legal by any means," Lord Stannis said. "They still broke the law - and murdered people - instead of trusting that the truth would be revealed at his lawful trial."

Blake scoffed at the last word, as did Yang. Ruby agreed with them - they knew how much, or how little in this case, you could trust the law here.

The Grand Maester cleared his throat. "Perhaps we should retire for the evening? We have a great number of problems to tackle and tasks to complete. Varys needs to be interrogated, the realm's finances are still in disarray, we just realised that the Master of Whispers, on whose services we relied for making decisions about the realm itself, was a traitor, and it is getting late while tempers are starting to fray. Surely, it would not do harm to revisit this at a later date?"

"I agree," Lord Eddard said. "There is a lot to consider, indeed." He sighed. "I would have never imagined how many problems plague the realm before I arrived here."

Well, that was (at least partially) his own fault, Ruby found. But they were right that discussing this further wouldn't help anyone - everyone was getting more worked up. "Alright," she said. "As long as the children are treated well."

"Well by the standards for children, not by the standards applied to suspected traitors and other criminals," Weiss added.

"Yes." Ruby nodded. Several times. No damp and dark dungeons for children!

"Of course," Lord Renly said with a smile.

Ruby narrowed her eyes at him. He sounded a bit too smooth for her. But he met her eyes without flinching, and telling him they would check would make her seem petty.

Not that they wouldn't check, of course - Blake was probably already mapping out the best path to spy on the whole thing.

But there was no need to tell the men that.

"Good," she said.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

"I've heard you've clashed with the small council over the fate of Varys's spies."

Weiss Schnee turned her head to look at Lady Olenna while the woman stepped out of the hallway. She half-expected her to comment jokingly about ambushing her, likely to see how she would react. "Your grandson must care for you a very great deal," she replied. Weiss was certain that the noblewoman didn't rely exclusively on her grandchildren to gather information about the latest developments at Court, but if she thought that Weiss assumed so, it might gain Team RWBY an advantage should the Tyrells ever decide to make a move against Weiss's friends. And, of course, Ser Loras was the most obvious source of information about the small council - everyone could see how close he and Lord Renly were. Especially those not blinded by the local bigotry towards same-sex relationships, such as Weiss and her friends.

"He is a dutiful grandchild. And unlike other boys, and those who think themselves men, he doesn't think a cock grants someone more wisdom than a woman could ever gain, no matter how long she lives."

"A very foolish stance, indeed, but, as I've come to know, not uncommon in Westeros," Weiss said. Should she mention that the Martells and the Starks did not seem to share that view? It might prick the woman's pride… No. It was better to avoid giving even a minor offence without cause. Weiss generally didn't like to be underestimated, her views dismissed on account of her age, but as a representative of what was undoubtedly the greatest military power on the continent right now, it was more advantageous to be thought naive instead.

"Unlike your homeland." Lady Olenna nodded. Currying favour? Or merely making an obvious observation?

It didn't matter right now. Weiss nodded again as she started walking, a little more slowly than before, to allow the older woman to match her pace. Not as slowly as Lady Olenna liked to walk, though - she didn't fool Weiss with the frailty she affected. "A result of one's attitude and talent, not one's sex, defining one's potential, both on and away from the battlefield," Weiss said.

"Indeed. And yet, despite such a difference, it seems that even in your world, women are still more soft-hearted than men - or so I was told." Lady Olenna chuckled. "By a man, of course."

"You are, of course, referring to our stance against treating children as adults," Weiss said. Of course, some people, Lord Renly in this case, as Lady Olenna seemed to imply, and likely Ser Loras as well, based on Weiss's experience with the knights native to this country, would blame their gender for that.

"Yes." Lady Olenna sighed. "Although it isn't your heart that's ruling your actions in this matter, is it? It's how you were brought up."

"Yes." The old woman was as perceptive as always. Likely more than she let on, Weiss reminded herself. "We do not believe in punishing children as if they were adults."

"A kind-hearted view. A little naive, though."

"In this matter, I do not mind being seen as naive," Weiss replied.

Lady Olenna smiled again. "In other areas, though, you'd mind? I see you have the kind of pride fit for someone raised with the sword in hand."

Weiss shrugged. "That depends on the circumstances. I mind it when such an attitude will cause trouble for my friends and others."

"And what when your attitude is the reason for causing such troubles?"

"You think treating children as they should be treated is a mistake?" Was that a threat?

"Oh, no!" The old woman smiled, showing a hint of teeth. "I merely disagree with your view about how children should be treated."

"Would you see manipulated children executed?" Weiss asked, narrowing her eyes.

Lady Olenna made a point of shrugging. "I've seen it happen too often already - as I grow older, it becomes harder to see the line between a child and a man grown. They all look so young and naive to me. So easily manipulated. Of course, some of them spend great efforts to appear so even well into their own old age."

Weiss snorted. "Age does not necessarily bring wisdom." She flashed a toothy smile of her own.

Lady Olenna cackled. "Those who consider themselves wise are often fools. And yet… have you considered what precedent your stance will set?"

"By not murdering children for the deeds of their elders?"

"How do you think people inclined to break the law will react if they learn that children will be exempt from punishment?"

"By considering that using children in such a manner will be punished more harshly?" Weiss shot back.

"What could be harsher than death or the Wall, now that you've banned torture?" Lady Olenna asked.

"If the threat of death or exile will not frighten someone off committing crimes, then the threat of torture won't do it either," Weiss retorted. "They would have committed the same crimes anyway."

"Some, yes. But those who would have shied away from risking their younger siblings or children for their crimes won't have any reason any more to continue that stance. And some might consider that children are less likely to betray you than men grown - at least amongst those already inclined to break the law." Lady Olenna chuckled again. "And they tend to work for less pay as well."

Weiss glared at the woman. "Do you claim that people like Varys would shy away from using children for their crimes if we let Varys's spies be executed?"

"Perhaps, perhaps not. Things might be different in your world. But there is one thing I am certain of: That in this world, children will be encouraged to commit crimes if they think they will not suffer any punishment. And that their victims, if they expect the same, will take it upon themselves to mete out such punishment." The old woman nodded,

"That's not a reason to execute them!" Weiss managed to say before the woman took her leave.

Weiss ground her teeth. Lady Olenna might not have gotten the last word, but Weiss still felt as if she had. Her last argument had been very weak as far as rebuttals went - barely more than a stubborn refusal to yield.

And she didn't like it.

*****​

"You look annoyed," Ruby commented when Weiss entered their quarters. "More annoyed than usual when some noble pestered you, I mean," she added before Weiss could claim that she was fine.

Her partner had gotten too perceptive, indeed. Although upon briefly considering the issue, Weiss found she didn't want to keep up her facade anyway. "I had another 'coincidental encounter' with Lady Olenna," she said as she sat down.

"Oh? What did the old bat want this time?" Yang asked. "And what did she say she wanted?" she added with a smirk.

"I can only guess at her true motive. Apart from a few disparaging remarks aimed at the patriarchy here, likely to appeal to the fact that we are women, she primarily talked about the children Varys had mutilated and made a case that not punishing them would provide an incentive for others to follow his example and exploit children for criminal actions as well," Weiss replied.

Blake hissed at the last part. "We can discourage that by punishing Vayrs for his crimes."

Weiss nodded. "I said that as well. But she said children would exploit that themselves if they learn they won't be punished due to their age. And that their victims would take the law into their own hands should they feel that they were being denied justice." She took a deep breath. "I fear her arguments have some merit. While vigilantism can be disincentivised by punishments - though there will always be those who will not let that stop them, either because they do not consider the punishment or because they are unable to suffer the thought that those who hurt them will not pay for it - I don't think we can dismiss the idea that children will act on their own."

"Street kids already break the law every day when they steal food," Blake said with a scowl. "And they are punished if caught."

"Not executed, though," Weiss couldn't help retorting.

"It's not the point, anyway," Blake said, pushing off the wall against which she had been leaning and starting to pace. "Those kids didn't decide to steal to survive; they were bought and mutilated, and then indoctrinated to become spies. That's not the same."

Weiss agreed with that in principle, but… "Varys is responsible for that, no doubt. But as Lord Renly said, shouldn't the older children have learned enough through their work to realise that they were breaking the law? At least when it comes to murder?"

Blake scowled at her for that, as expected. And it was a bit of a cheap shot to remind her friend that she had been indoctrinated as well, by Adam, yet decided to leave the White Fang rather than murder helpless workers. But it was true nevertheless. The kids had committed murder.

"Yeah, that's been bugging me as well," Yang said, and Weiss noted the way Blake looked at her, as if she was betrayed. Yang hadn't missed it either. "Hey - I'm not saying that they should be treated as fully responsible, but… they murdered people for Varys. Burned one of them alive."

Weiss winced at that reminder. As did her friends, including Blake.

"So…" Yang shrugged. "There should be a sort of middle ground between letting every kid go unpunished and executing them. You don't kill kids for stealing cookies, but you don't let them eat the cookies and not suffer any punishment, either."

That was a quite specific example, and Weiss raised her eyebrows at her partner, who blushed in response.

"I was a little girl!"

"You were thirteen."

"You weren't sharing!"

"Because those were a gift for me!"

"We aren't talking about cookie thieves," Weiss reminded them.

"We're talking about children who were the victims of trafficking and abuse of the worst sort, and then indoctrinated to become criminals," Blake said. "They need help, not punishment."

If Team RWBY insisted, the kids would go free - at least officially. Unofficially, the threat of their victims, or the relatives of their victims, taking revenge, was not negligible. And there was another potential problem. "Where can they get help? And how do we protect them against revenge from their victims - or against attempts by various nobles to murder them before they escape and continue their work? Or recruiting attempts?" Weiss asked. "It's quite clear that the nobles don't agree with our views."

Blake scowled again.

Weiss felt for her, but that didn't change the fact that despite their power, they couldn't be everywhere. They could not ignore the wishes of the locals.

"The Faith does, though," Ruby said.

"At least, they will if we ask," Yang added.

That was true as well. "But the court won't. The nobles have been spied on and betrayed, and won't let that go," Weiss said.

"That was Varys," Blake retorted.

"Yes, but the children worked for him," Weiss pointed out. "And if the Faith opposes the Court, the situation could escalate beyond our or anyone's control." All it would take was one bad reaction from either side, and a massacre might take place.

Ruby frowned. "So… we need to find a compromise everyone can live with? With the kids' lives at stake?"

Weiss nodded. She looked at her friends. Ruby was biting her lower lip, visibly ill at ease with that. Blake hadn't stopped scowling, and Yang was grimacing.

But none of them disagreed with her take on the problem.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

Peering around a corner in the bowels of the rock beneath the Red Keep, Blake Belladonna had to admit that while Varys, likely because of his delusions about her team's supposed magical power and their origin, had been mostly ineffectual as far as any actions he had taken against them were concerned, he had nevertheless managed to succeed, albeit unntentionally in her estimate, in making life harder for Team RWBY.

The revelation of how Varys's spies had been using the network of secret passages inside the Red Keep to spy on others had resulted in every noble being far more conscious about this kind of threat, which in turn meant that Blake couldn't as easily spy on anyone any more, either.

The fact that Lord Tywin had posted guards in the tunnels beneath the part of the keep where he was staying showed that clearly. Of course, it was also obvious that the red cloaks she could see huddled around the dim lanterns ahead of her were not meant to actually stop an assassin but to raise the alarm should they be attacked. And, Blake was certain, to deter attempts to spy on him unseen - such as she was planning to do. And, annoying despite being expected, given Lord Tywin's known temper and intolerance for incompetence among his underlings, the guards had been posted at all entrances to the tunnels and shafts leading to his quarters. Even Blake wouldn't be able to sneak past them without being detected - not without a lot of luck, at least, and she wouldn't count on being lucky.

And yet, as her chosen spot, from where she could watch the guards while they couldn't spot her in the darkness, demonstrated, since no one here except for her team knew about her nature, they had not taken her Faunus senses into account. She might not be able to sneak past those guards, but she could listen in to conversations from a distance none of them would expect.

Of course, she would still need to sneak closer to Lord Tywin's quarters, and unlike others, the guards he had watching the walls and roofs nearby had never relaxed after that particular habit of hers had become widely known at the trial of Cersei and Ser Jaime, so the most obvious alternate route was blocked as well - not that it would have been suitable to use during the day, anyway.

But there were still alternatives. She would have to climb through a chimney or two, and use passages too narrow for anyone but a child or someone as flexible as herself, but Lord Tywin wasn't beyond her reach yet. However, she would have to adjust her timing, of course.

And she wouldn't be able to spy on him, as she had planned, in hindsight, too optimistically, before the meeting with the small council and Lord Tywin later today.

Which meant she could use it to distract herself from… Not brooding; her sometimes too meddling partner's partner's claims to the contrary, she didn't brood, and certainly not like Jon!

…from growing frustrated about the issue with the children Varys had exploited and abused. To think they should be punished for never having known better! It was not the same as her own situation in the White Fang. She had been able to use her scroll, talk to people - in and outside the White Fang - and she had grown up with a loving family and an education that prized critical thinking. If she had taken so long to realise that what the White Fang was doing was wrong, despite all her advantages, how could she expect a couple of children who had never known anything but what their owner had taught them? Who couldn't even talk with each other, much less people not in Varys's employ?

And now they should pay for what wasn't their fault? She clenched her teeth at the thought as she made her way back to her team's quarters to get ready for the meeting.

*****​

"So."

If it hadn't been Lord Eddard, Blake would have expected him to follow with a statement or a question. But the man was both, if not quite laconic, so, at least, fond of using fewer words when those would suffice, and from those present - the small council and Lord Tywin, whose presence was owed to both his relation to Prince Tommen and his financial stake in the kingdom - he knew Team RWBY the longest and arguably the best. Including how their leader acted.

"Well…" Ruby bit her lower lip as she took a deep breath before blurting out: "We need to decide what to do with the captured children - those mutilated by Varys and exploited as spies!"

"You mean you will decide," Blake heard Lord Renly mutter under his breath - too softly for anyone else to overhear.

"The law is clear about this," Lord Stannis grumbled.

"The law has a lot of leeway," Weiss corrected him at once. "There are a lot of factors to consider that influence how to handle this. I think the similarities between the situation in which the children find themselves and the one a lord would be in if their liege calls on them to fight a rival, even if that means breaking the King's peace in the process, should be considered."

"Those who break the King's peace are usually sent to the wall," Lord Renly said.

"Really? Even the low-ranking nobles?" Weiss tilted her head to the side. "As I was told when I asked about such cases, it's usually the leaders that get punished in such a manner, or more harshly, and those beneath them were usually let off."

"That depends on their involvement," Lord Eddard said.

"And we're talking about smallfolk children, not nobles sworn to their liege," Lord Renly added, sounding slightly annoyed.

"The principle remains the same. While we concede that those children who assaulted the Keep and killed guards should not get off without punishment…" Weiss glanced at Blake as she spoke, and Blake pressed her lips together. She didn't agree with that. "...sending children to the wall, especially children who were mutilated, seems excessive."

"They burned a guard to death and murdered more!" Lord Stannis snapped.

"They attacked the Court! They were planning to set fire to the Keep to free the traitor - endangering everyone here!" Lord Tywin snapped. "We need to make an example out of them so no one else will dare to even think of doing the same!"

"They're children!" Ruby snapped back, and Blake bit her lower lip so she wouldn't add a few choice insults aimed at Lord Tywin.

"Age aside, I think letting murderers escape justice will set an example for others that we would rather also avoid," Lord Renly said. "Surely we can find a solution that doesn't, ah, set the wrong example in either direction?"

He would have spoken with Lady Olenna. Probably at length, Blake knew. Just as she knew where this was headed. A foul compromise that left no one satisfied. Of course, as her father had once commented, no compromise left anyone completely satisfied; if one did, it was no compromise but the result of one side winning the negotiations.

But this wasn't about trade rights, zoning laws or fishing limits. This was about the lives of mutilated and abused children who had never known freedom. And knowing that the oldest would be sent to the wall just so the court would accept sending the rest to the Faith so they could be raised properly galled. Once they found the rest, of course - many of the kids were still missing; only the youngest and the oldest, those too young to get away in time, and those old enough to assault the Red Keep, had been captured so far.

And that Lord Tywin was apparently feeling even worse while the negotiations continued was not much of a consolation. She still felt as if she were betraying those children. If her team really wanted, they could force the issue… But Blake knew as well as Weiss that such an act would have even worse consequences than this, for everyone, including her team and likely the children in question. If the law - or what passed for it in this world - was revealed to be a facade without any power to restrain the powerful, naked force would decide every conflict.

And not even her team could afford that. Not with so many lives hanging in the balance. And, of course, Team RWBY still needed help from the people here to find a way home. Help that would likely vanish, or become attached to demands they didn't want to or couldn't afford to meet, if everything broke down.

She knew all that and still hissed under her breath as things started to settle. Not even Yang patting her thigh under the table in silent but welcome support helped much.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

Blake heard Bran and his beast's footsteps before he turned around the corner in the yard, and she briefly thought about quickly leaving her spot. She wasn't in the mood to talk much, not after abandoning the children Varys had exploited to the tender mercies of the local justice. But she reconsidered. Bran had nothing to do with that, and it would be wrong to blame him for it. And it would be immature as well.

"Lady Blake?"

"Lord Bran." She nodded at him with a smile, then narrowed her eyes at the beast walking at his side. Hunter met her eyes, its large tongue hanging out of its mouth, teeth gleaming in a veiled threat, and barked once.

She didn't jerk and kept staring until Hunter finally looked away and started sniffing the ground.

"So… I've heard you were unhappy about the small council," Bran, ignoring his beast's antics as usual, said.

She didn't ask where he had heard it. Likely Lord Eddard making an idle comment in his son's earshot. Probably without realising it. "Yes." She nodded.

"Why?"

She suppressed a sigh. Hunter barking at a large crow eyeing them from the roof of the stable nearby gave her a few more moments to consider her answer. "I don't think children should be held responsible if they are just obeying their parents because they don't know better."

"Ah." He frowned. "But those children were obeying Varys, not their parents."

"For all that matters, he was their parent. He raised them into who they are now," she explained.

He frowned, apparently thinking about that. "Wouldn't that make Father Theon's father?"

"In some manner, yes," she replied with a nod. The comparison was quite apt, actually.

"I'm not sure Mother would like that," Bran said.

Once more, she reminded herself that Bran might be a small boy, but he was quite smart. Sometimes, at least. She shrugged. "I don't think Theon would like it, either." Nobles here were very proud of their lineage, after all. And Theon was the heir to the Iron Isles. She didn't think he would want to abandon that for being Lord Eddard's fourth or fifth son, depending on how you counted Jon. He certainly didn't show any such humility.

Bran laughed. "No, he wouldn't!" Then he cocked his head to the side, briefly glanced at the beast that was chasing the crow - well, following on the ground while it flew from roof to roof - and asked: "So, how did you manage to find Varys in the secret tunnels? Jory said no one could navigate those mazes without a dozen lanterns."

How to answer that without giving away her Faunus eyesight? "I already knew where he was going," she said. "I just waited until he reached his stash."

"Oh!" He stared at her. "You were already investigating him?"

"We were investigating the children we had seen spying on us," she replied. "It's why we asked the Faith to investigate their origin."

He beamed at her. "Can you show me how you did this? Lady Blake? Like you taught me climbing? I want to be able to hunt like you!"

She blinked. She couldn't show him how to see like a Faunus. And she wasn't a good tracker, at least in the wilderness. But perhaps she could teach him how to investigate people. That would be a useful skill for him - and, she couldn't help thinking, for the realm as well. Someone had to do a better job in the future about uncovering plots and threats.

So she nodded. "I can give it a try."

"Thank you! Lady Blake!" He went to hug her, and she almost jumped when his beast barked again, far too close - how had it gotten so close without her noticing?

*****​

Street of Looms, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

"...and you will love Mistress Ally's! She's the best tailor in King's Landing. If anyone has the skills to clothe you, Lady Ruby, it's her!" Lady Margaery gushed as they approached the shop in question.

Yang Xiao Long fought the urge to shake her head at the whole display. She still didn't know how Lady Margaery had managed to hear that they were looking for a tailor to get a new outfit for Ruby - or to resize her current one, if the locals could handle that - though she suspected Ruby had been complaining a bit too publicly about her clothes getting too 'tight to fight'. In any case, the noblewoman had approached Ruby earlier today and apparently not only persuaded her to visit this particular tailor but to let her tag along.

Lady Olenna probably was behind that, in Yang's opinion. Or Lady Margaery was trying to mend fences - Blake was still carrying a grudge about the spy compromise.

Of course, Lady Margaery wasn't the only tag-along. Lady Sansa and, to everyone's but Yang's surprise, Lady Arya, had joined them as well, though that was likely just luck on their part.

Yang grinned at the fact that the others didn't know why Arya was tagging along. To her, it was obvious that the little firecracker was hoping she could get an outfit like Ruby's made. A combat outfit.

At least Blake had an excuse for missing that obvious plan. Two excuses, actually. Lady and Nymeria, who shadowed the two girls. Yang's partner was still a bit unnerved by the two furballs, even though they were completely harmless - at least to her. Hell, Zwei was more of a danger, technically, since he had his Aura awakened.

But Ruby and Weiss? Well, Ruby was still being talked at by Lady Margaery and probably couldn't pay attention to anything else, but Weiss really should have seen through Arya's sudden interest in dresses.

"Well, it looks nice," Ruby said when they reached the shop.

"Of course!" Lady Margaery nodded several times.

It looked like every shop in the street to Yang. Maybe a bit spiffier than most - but that was probably just the fresher paint coat.

They entered the shop, leaving the guards who had come with them outside. It did have a few dresses on display - no, Yang corrected herself. Those were working pieces. Of course, in this world, all dresses were tailor-made. They didn't have normed sizes and mass-produced clothes, so there wouldn't be racks of dresses to try. And no chance to tease a little sister by offering dress after dress to try on.

"Mistress Ally!" Lady Margaery called out.

"Lady Margaery! How…" The middle-aged woman stepping into the room from the back gasped as she saw the rest, and Yang flashed a smile at her. "My ladies! The Four Maidens! In my shop!"

It looked like she was about to kneel down, at least Yang had the impression, but Ruby quickly stepped forward, trailing a few petals. "Hello! I need a new combat dress - or my old one altered, whatever works best!"

"And I suggested you, since you're the best tailor in King's Landing, Mistress Ally," Lady Margaery added with a sweet smile.

The woman looked like she was even more overwhelmed now. "Me? Working on Lady Ruby's dress?"

"Yes!" Ruby nodded emphatically. "It has grown a bit tight lately - well, I have grown a bit, so it has become tight. Too tight to fight."

While Ruby turned around in front of the still gaping woman, showing her outfit's 'problem zones', Weiss grumbled something under her breath that had Blake grin, so Yang made a mental note to ask her partner with the best ears in the world later what she had heard.

"And these are Lady Sansa and Lady Arya. Of House Stark." Lady Margaery was perfectly polite, but Yang wondered if mentioning them now, when the tailor was already struggling with keeping her composure, as Weiss would call it, was helping any.

"So… what do you think? Can you, ah, 'loosen' this some?" Ruby asked.

Yang had to bite her lip to keep from making a joke about Ruby loosening up.

"If not," Weiss, smooth as always in such situations, cut in, "a dress in the same style, preferably as durable as you can make it, would be acceptable as well."

"Ah…" Ally nodded several times and finally started calming down as she focused on Ruby's outfit. "Well… maybe if this seam could be moved… but the stitching is so fine! I don't think any mortal could replicate that!"

"Oh, I also need new underwear," Ruby added. "Err, undergarments, you know."

Weiss grumbled something probably amusing again, Yang noted.

Not as amusing as Mistress Ally's reaction (and Lady Magaery and Lady Sansa's reaction) when Ruby showed her what kind of 'undergarments' she wanted. "That's… I don't know, I mean…"

"I want the same!" Arya blurted out.

"Arya! Certainly not! It's…" Lady Sansa trailed off with a gasp.

"If it's good enough for the Four Blessed Maidens, it's good enough for anyone! Surely the Seven wouldn't have you dressed in indecent clothes, right?" Arya beamed at Yang and her friends, and Yang smiled right back, showing her teeth. The girl had guts.

"Err…" Lady Sansa looked at Lady Margaery. Who looked at Mistress Ally. Who was averting her eyes and… was she praying?

Yang narrowed her eyes and stepped a bit closer to Blake. "What's she saying?" she asked in a whisper. If the poor woman was praying, then they had to dial down the antics. And probably send half the group outside before she had a breakdown.

"She's mumbling about cloth and prices," Blake whispered back.

"Ah!" Yang grinned again. That was fine. And, hey, if they managed to get a bra and panties fad going so the girls here didn't have to wear whatever they were currently wearing - at least the noblewomen; Yang didn't know what the smallfolk wore under their dresses - then that was something she could get behind.

"Everyone should be allowed to wear what they want," she said. "Back home, we had to fight a war over that, you know."

"A war, my lady?" Mistress Ally asked, gaping again.

"It wasn't just over clothes. But they were part of the reason, yes," Weiss said.

Lady Sansa looked a bit too surprised for someone who should have remembered that. Lady Margaery as well - she might not have been told that story herself, Yang couldn't recall if it had come up in talks with her, but she surely would have been told by others, right?

Arya, however, had remembered that. At least if you went by the triumphant smile she wore.

*****​

Street of Steel, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

"Hello!" Yang yelled out as she landed in a crouch on the ground inside Master Mott's yard, close to the smithy's entrance.

"Lady Yang. We have a door." And there was the old smith.

She grinned at him. He might be grumpy, but he certainly didn't kneel to her. "And you have a wall, which I just used."

"Lady Yang!" Gendry appeared next to his master.

"Lady Yang."

Oh? Jon was here as well? "Hi, Gendry. Hi, Jon." She nodded at both. "I thought I'd check up on how things are going with you."

"They're going," Mott grumbled.

"We've been working on the bicycle. Well, a 'redesign', as you called it, my lady," Gendry said.

Right. Because Ruby was a great engineer and weapons designer, but she wasn't that great about designing stuff you could create with the tools here. Yang nodded. "And how is that going?"

Gendry grimaced. "Well…"

"The chain isn't working," Jon said.

Gendry frowned at him. "It's almost working."

"It ripped up my boots when I tested it." Jon frowned right back.

"The scratch in the leather is barely visible!" Gendry protested.

"If I hadn't been wearing my riding boots, my skin would have been ripped off, my lady," Jon said, turning to her.

So, Jon was helping Gendry? Yang hadn't known that. Then again, with the whole mess with Littlefinger and Varys, she hadn't been able to check with everyone. Some days, she had barely managed to get enough training time to stay sharp.

"I just need to make the chain links more precise and match the sprockets better," Gendry said.

"And stop wasting so much steel on this toy!" Mott added.

"It's not a toy - it's a tool that could alter the world," Gendry protested. "The Septon said so as well - called it a blessing from the Smith."

Mott grumbled something Yang didn't quite catch.

Gendry, though, frowned. "My work is honouring the Smith. I will finish this!" He turned to smile at Yang. "Although it would be a great help if you could give me a few more pointers, my lady. You're the only one who has seen such a bicycle before, after all."

Yang and her friends, actually, which Gendry knew. But he also had learned to put on a bit of flattery, she supposed. Not that that was a bad thing. Jon could do with some of that; he was, like his uncle, far too often far too honest. And moody. Like now - he was frowning again at Gendry.

Well, she had come to check up on things, and she could help. "Well… have you thought about building a bike without a chain, first?"

Gendry blinked. "What do you mean, my lady?"

"The earliest bikes didn't have chains - they had the pedals fixed straight to the wheels," she explained. Well, the bikes for toddlers did. Although, speaking of toddlers... "And the very first versions didn't have pedals at all - you used your feet on the ground to push." Ruby's first tricycle had been like that. Best not to mention that she was talking about children's bikes, though - Mott was already calling the bike a toy, and she didn't think either Gendry nor Jon's pride would take that well. "Let me show you what I mean," she said as she entered the smithy proper.

A bit of tinkering would do her good as well. She could worry about Varys, and how her partner was taking the whole mess, later.

*****​
 
Olenna may not give a damn about small folk or children outside of her family and allies but she raises a good point here. The legality of child treatment gets tricky when it comes to punishment. In an ideal world every kid would be some kind of Disney child that learns to be a good person with relatively minor escapades that harm no one, reality is different and giving kids a complete pass would get abused real fast. You'd just get more Vary's that try to be even more behind the scenes and get gangs of kids that commit crimes without fear.
 
Thanks for great chapter.And when it is true that early bikes were pushed by foots,even now i sometimes see some small children using such things.
And,Olenna have a point.If they do not punish child murderers,everybody in Westeros would start using them.
 
Chapter 39: Growing Roots New
Chapter 39: Growing Roots

'As much as any scholar of the epoch has to acknowledge the lasting effects the Ruby Order, despite their relatively short time in Westeros, has had on the society and history of the Seven Kingdoms, there is - as I have mentioned before - a tendency to attribute far too many historical developments to them. While they have influenced the Faith in significant ways, most notably in influencing the High Septon of the time to start his famous reforms, as proven by his own accounts, there is no evidence that they were responsible for the judiciary reforms of Westeros and a lot of evidence against that claim. First, those changes began much, much later - decades, even according to the most generous interpretations of what was such a reform - than their visit. Second, while the members of the Ruby Order were demonstratively much kinder when it came to punishments than their contemporaries, they were by no means what a modern reader would call 'progressive'. The idea that they were aware of modern concepts of criminology can only be called preposterous. The society of their time lacked everything that could have served as a base to develop such concepts. Just because they were kind and merciful does not mean they were proponents of reforming criminals rather than punishing them, as evidenced by their documented involvement in numerous trials.'
  • A Treatise On The Ruby Order, by Maester Kennet Bracken

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

Terese stared at the bars in front of the window of her cell. They were thick and sturdy. She had checked for rust and weaknesses and had found none. They were also solidly set in the stones of the wall, not merely set in mortar that maybe could be scraped off with a metal tool. Not that she had a metal tool, anyway. And her fingernails couldn't do anything to the mortar - she had tried.

The hinges of the cell door were on the hallway side, so she couldn't do anything about those either. And the door was made of thick oak planks, held together with iron bars. The window in the door was too small to wriggle through, even for her, and barred anyway.

And there was no secret passage leading out of this cell - she had known that, yet searched anyway. Fruitlessly.

She was truly trapped. And an utter failure.

That hurt the most. More than her fingertips. More than the bruises on her ribs and arms. Lord Varys counted on them, depended on them to save him, and Terese had failed. Had failed him.

That all her fellow little birds had failed as well - she knew that from overhearing the witches and guards tallying them up while she had been beaten and tied up in the tunnels - made it even worse.

They hadn't been able to save Lord Varys. And they had been his last hope. No one else would help him. Everyone was in the thrall of the witches - the stupid smallfolk, the foolish nobles, even the childish king. Not that he could do anything, anyway - he was too little to know or do anything.

All of them hated Varys. The smallfolk had come to kill him, as if he had done anything wrong. The nobles wanted to kill him so they could hide their plots and crimes. And the witches wanted him gone because he was the only one who knew what they were.

Lord Varys and his birds.

She sniffled and felt her eyes grow wet. Again. She wiped them with her sleeve - the one that hadn't been torn away by the witches. He couldn't die! He was all Terese and the others had! He saved them from the evil slavers who had prepared them for sacrifices. Who had cut out their tongues for their evil rituals. He cared for them. Taught them how to read or write. Gave them a home. A life. A mission.

No one else had done that. No one else had done anything for them. Those who didn't ignore them like they ignored slaves back in Essos looked down on them. Cursed at them, chased them away, out of sight. Called them rats and thieves and scum. Or tried to catch them, for their wicked, warped designs.

Not Lord Varys. He cared. He was one of them - a slave child, mutilated for magic. They had not cut out his tongue, though - they had cut his manhood. And that was worse than losing your tongue. Terese knew that from the others. The boys. Without a tongue, you couldn't talk. But you could write. And listen. And the birds understood each other, anyway. They knew each other.

As Lord Varys knew them. He had been one of them, and he had managed to escape, and then he had started saving them. As many as he could.

He was so kind. Made sure they had enough food. Arranged a home for them - a house where they were safe. Where no one could abuse them. Where it was just them. His little birds. No one else.

She sniffled again and realised her cheeks had grown wet. She missed him. She missed his kind voice. His kind smile. His praise when she had done well. The sweets he gave them as a reward.

She swallowed. She would never get a sweet again. She would never see Lord Varys again. She would never see her family again. Because she had failed her most important mission. Hadn't been good enough. Not strong enough. Not quick enough. Not skilled enough. Not good enough to save Lord Varys.

She pressed her face into the crook of her elbow and cried. The witches had won. They would kill Lord Varys, sacrifice him for their evil magic. And they would do the same to Terese and her friends. They would be gone. Killed for magic. Because they had failed.

Because… She tensed. Steps. People were coming. For a moment, she held her breath. Was today the day they would be killed? Sacrificed? But wouldn't that happen in the dark of the night? The witches couldn't act openly, could they? She couldn't see much of the sky outside, but it was pretty bright, so… close to noon? Was it time for the food already?

She sniffed the air, but there was no way she'd smell porridge that far. Much less hard bread and cheese, or whatever they fed them today. But she heard the doors open - the guards were here. And she heard the clatter of the wooden bowls. Food, then.

The door to her own cell opened, and a guard in chainmail entered. He was wearing a tabard with the sigil of House Baratheon - Lord Stannis's branch, she noted out of reflex. He sneered at her and put down the bowl containing bread and some cheese, then pushed it towards her with so much force, a piece of bread fell out. He kicked that towards her as well.

She got up, and he tensed. It felt good to see that. But the chain that tied her ankle to the wall behind her wasn't long enough to let her reach him. Not even if she threw herself forward - she had measured the distance when she had been alone.

She grabbed the bowl and the bread from the floor and quickly started to eat before the guard could take it away.

"Should let you starve, you filthy murderer," the guard spat. "The Four Maidens are too kind. Far too kind."

She shuddered. The witches were evil. Monsters that had bathed in the blood of countless children to toughen their skins and stay young. Lord Varys had told them so, and he knew all about magic.

Chewing, she looked at him. Maybe he would lose his temper and step too close? If she could get his dagger… If she cut his tendons, she might take him hostage.

He took a step closer, but not close enough and crouched down. "You burned my brother. He was in so much pain… I wanted to give him the Stranger's mercy. Kill my kin just so he wouldn't suffer anymore. The Maester tried to save him, but it only made him suffer longer, even with the milk of the poppy. The stench of his flesh… And you did that! You killed him!"

She hissed at him. His stupid brother had been guarding Lord Varys! She'd burn the entire city if it would save Lord Varys!

He made a weird noise, like a scoff and a sob mixed together. "My brother. Burnt to death by a filthy rat serving a traitor!" He wiped his eyes with his hand and glared at her.

Terese hissed again, wishing she could talk. Lord Varys was her family! He was the only one she had! And they had taken him from her! Of course, she would fight for him!

"And yet the Maidens spared you." He shook his head. "They are too kind for this world."

She glared at him, baring her teeth. They weren't kind! They were monsters! Evil witches who would kill Lord Varys for their power!

"Trying to curse me?" He laughed. "You need a tongue for that."

She threw the empty bowl at him. It was too light to hurt him - they had learned their lesson after the first time - and bounced off the arm he had raised to shield his face.

He sneered again as he grabbed it and got up. "I hope you suffer as my brother did!" he said when he left the cell.

She clenched her teeth and tried not to cry again. She was already suffering for her failure. Her and all the others.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

Terese heard steps again - many steps. The guards never came alone to the cells so that they could assist each other should Terese or one of the others manage to get to one of them. But she knew how the guards sounded, and this sound was different. Somehow.

She scuttled as much towards the cell door as her chain allowed and heard the door to the stairs open.

"...and we've treated them as you said, my lady. But we, ah, had to chain them to the walls after one of them attacked a guard during feeding time."

"You chained them to the wall."

Terese froze. That voice… cold, tense… she had heard it before.

"They're dangerous murderers, my lady." That was the guard whose brother had burned. He sounded as if he were afraid, now. And he should be. "They've killed my brother, my lady! Burned him alive!"

"You have my condolences. We were too late to save him."

"It wasn't your fault, my lady. It was theirs."

"It was Varys's fault. He ordered them to do it."

"But they did the deed, my lady."

"They didn't know any better. We know that from the others."

'We'? Terese held her breath as she realised where she had heard the voice before. Lady Blake, the silent witch. The stalker.

She couldn't help it - she rushed back, to the wall, and pressed herself against it. The witches were coming for her. Today, she would die. As much as she hated it, and knew this was the just punishment for her failures, she still couldn't help hoping that they would pick someone else.

Then her door opened, and she cried.

Footsteps came closer. Soft, but deliberate. The witch wanted her to hear it.

She pressed her eyes shut and lowered her head, holding her breath. She couldn't face this.

"Hey." A whisper. Again, deceptively soft.

Terese swallowed.

"Don't be afraid. I know what happened to you."

Of course, she knew! She had done this to Terese and the others. She and the rest of the witches! She had arrested Lord Varys!

"I know what Varys did to you."

He had done nothing to them! She found herself staring, hissing at the witch before she realised what she had done and froze again, caught staring at those yellow eyes.

"I want to help you."

She shook her head. Lies! The witches wanted to kill them. Them and Lord Varys!

The witch reached out and touched her shoulder.

Terese's entire body froze. Would she snap her neck? Cave her head in? Rip out her heart?

"We know what happened to you. But we don't know you. There was a boy. He went missing a few days after the attempt to poison my friends at the smithy."

What was she talking about? Terese hadn't done anything about that.

"He was killed - murdered - in the Red Keep. And his tongue was missing. Did you know him? I've brought chalk and a slate. If you would write down his name, so we can bury him properly?"

Bren. It must be Bren. He vanished around that time - caught by the witches! Killed by them. Like Terese would be killed.

Terese shook her head. She wouldn't give the witch any information about anyone!

"Varys murdered him because he knew too much."

No! Terese shook her head. The witch was lying. She had had Bren murdered!

She shook her head again, squeezing her eyes shut. She would die here, but she wouldn't fall for the witch's lies.

"I want to help you."

She was lying. Witches didn't care about anything but their power. Lord Varys had told Terese that.

"I know what Varys did to you. He raised you to obey him without question. But he lied to you from the beginning. You were manipulated. You and all your friends."

Terese felt her heart skip a beat. None of the others in those cells had been taken away - she would have heard that. This monster must have taken the youngest, those who hadn't been able to get away!

Those she and the rest had left behind. But they couldn't have protected them and saved Lord Varys at the same time.

But now the witch was coming for her. And she was helpless.

She did her best to curl into herself, to look away, to try to shut out the witch's voice.

And hoped that when death would come, it would be quick.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

Ruby Rose had to admit that, in hindsight, interrogating someone who couldn't talk hadn't been a good idea.

"Did Varys give you contingency orders? I mean, did you have orders on what you should do if he were arrested?" Weiss asked again.

The girl - they didn't know her name - shook her head. She had done that since they had started asking her questions, no matter what Ruby had tried. And she had tried a lot.

"So, did you decide on your own to attempt to free him?" Weiss went on. She was clearly frustrated; Ruby knew the signs well enough to tell. Not that that was hard at this point.

The girl shook her head again.

"What were you planning to do then when you tried to storm the Red Keep?" Weiss leaned forward, both palms on the table between them and the girl. Like in a police show, Ruby thought.

The girl shook her head once again and tried to lean away from Weiss. Since she was tied to the chair - it had been the only way to keep her sitting there and stop her from trying to escape, attack Ruby and Weiss, or try to run into the wall to hurt herself - she didn't get much of a distance.

Weiss leaned further in, almost leaning on the table. "What were you planning to do?" She nodded at the piece of chalk they had brought. "Write it on the table."

Ruby made a mental note to reimburse the castle servant who had given them the slate to write on; it had broken bouncing off her forehead when the girl had thrown it at her. In hindsight, maybe they should have expected that after hearing about the reason for he wooden bowls the prisoners got. And the lack of cutlery.

The girl kept shaking her head and crying. Ruby wanted to wince. It felt wrong to scare the girl so much. The girl who had burned a man to death, she remembered - the brother of one of the guards, Kev, who had brought them here. That was horrible. But… she was still a little kid. Not even old enough to enter Signal, Ruby would guess. Or maybe old enough - kids were smaller here than back home, at least smallfolk children.

"We know you can write," Weiss said. "All of you were taught how to write. You can answer my questions in writing."

The girl was shaking her head so hard, Ruby saw a tear flying to the side. This couldn't go on!

She stepped up and put a hand on her partner's shoulder. "Weiss… let off a bit."

Weiss narrowed her eyes at her, then at the girl, whose whole body was now shaking, then stepped back with a frown.

Ruby smiled as reassuringly as she could at the girl. "Hey!"

The girl looked away.

Well, that was to be expected. Ruby wouldn't let that discourage her. "We don't mean you any harm. We're here to help you."

The girl stiffened, and Ruby thought she heard a hiss. Not… well, not like Blake, when she was abruptly woken up from a nap with a whistle, but more like a gasp.

"Really," she went on. "We know what you were going through. We want to help you."

The girl hunched over, leaning away from her as she had from Weiss.

"Can you write down your name so we know how to address you?" Ruby asked. "It's a bit weird to talk to you without knowing your name." Even if they had been doing this for what felt like a long time now. Maybe she would open up now?

The girl shook her head again, and Ruby could see that she was clenching her teeth. So, no, she wouldn't.

"Please," Ruby said. "We won't harm you - I promise you. I'll give you my word."

The girl still refused to look at her. And she still looked terribly scared. Of Ruby.

She didn't like that. She shouldn't be scaring anyone, much less children. Did she think that Ruby and her friends were witches? Like Varys had claimed? "We aren't witches," Ruby said. "We didn't 'sacrifice' anyone for our powers. If he told you that, he lied."

The girl shook her head, and she was crying again.

"This isn't working," Weiss commented behind Ruby. "It seems clear that she wholeheartedly believes what lies Varys has spread."

"But…" Ruby trailed off. Who would believe such… such stupid lies? Her team had never done anything to make people think they were witches who sacrificed people! "Why would anyone believe his lies? All we have done is help people!" she asked Weiss.

The girl behind her hissed again, but when Ruby turned to look at her, she whimpered and flinched, and Ruby winced.

This wasn't working. "Let's… talk to another child," she said. They couldn't all be that scared, could they?

*****​

"So, not even your good cop/bad cop routine worked?"

Ruby frowned at Yang's question. "What do you mean?" she asked while she did some checks on Crescent Rose.

"Yes, what do you mean by that, 'good cop/bad cop routine'?" Weiss asked, though in that sharp tone of hers that showed she was annoyed. Or insulted. "I'll have you know that we were perfectly professional."

"Good cop/bad cop is a professional method to interrogate suspects," Blake said, looking up from the book she had borrowed (or 'borrowed', Ruby hadn't asked and wasn't going to ask if she had asked first) from the royal library. Apparently, it was a relatively new book, so Blake could read it without problems, but it wasn't about magic, so that didn't help them get home. Though it helped Blake feel better after her failure to connect to the kids, so that was another reason Ruby wasn't going to ask about the book's origin. Or what it was about - she had learned that lesson back in Beacon. "We were taught about it in the White Fang so we wouldn't fall for it in case we were ever arrested."

Yang grinned and pointed at her partner. "Yeah! And Ruby and Weiss make the perfect good cop/bad cop duo."

"Excuse me! Why would I be the bad cop?" Weiss protested.

Ruby wasn't going to answer that either. Instead, she shook her head. "That doesn't matter. What matters is that the kids didn't talk to us - well, didn't write to us. Or answer with a nod. Like when you talked to them, they just kept shaking their heads or ignored us. And they were shaking with fear, too."

"All of them?" Blake frowned, putting her book down.

"Yes." Ruby nodded. "We tried everything, and nothing worked."

"It seems Varys's indoctrination was very thorough," Weiss added.

Blake nodded. "If every child of the thirteen we've captured in the tunnels refused to talk, then that's true. Although neither of you is a trained interrogator, so that relativises the results somewhat."

She was right, Ruby knew. Even Weiss couldn't claim to be a trained interrogator. She grumbled some, though. Still… "We can't just give up on them, though." They had to do something! They couldn't just abandon the kids! And they couldn't help the kids if the kids didn't believe them.

"There's Varys to be interrogated," Weiss pointed out.

Yes. If they could get Varys to confess how he had manipulated the kids, maybe that would convince the children…

"If he survives until the interrogation," Blake said. "He knows too much about the nobles here."

Ruby stared at her. "He's guarded by at least six guards, taken from three different noble houses." They had insisted on that so that even if one guard - or one noble - turned traitor, they couldn't free or kill Varys."

"And it is very likely that all of them have a vested interest in silencing Varys," Blake replied.

"They also have a vested interest in finding out what he knows," Weiss objected.

"Yes," Blake said. "But do you think Varys will actually talk about his plots? Instead of sowing as much chaos and strife by revealing as many secrets of the noble families at Court as he can."

Ruby winced. Varys seemed the type to do that - he had already tried to do it. "So… you think everyone will work together to kill him?"

Blake shrugged. "It's possible, but I think it's likelier that someone finds a way around the guards and kills him in his cell."

"You seem remarkably blasée about this possibility," Weiss commented.

Blake nodded in return but didn't say anything.

Ruby winced again.

"He's not a big loss," Yang said instead. "He took those kids, had them maimed, then raised them as his spies - and probably killed them off when they knew too much or grew too old to believe his lies."

"We don't know if he killed the children when they grew up," Ruby said. They couldn't just assume this. "And if he dies, we might never know."

"You think he'll tell us anything?" Yang snorted. "He claims we're bloodthirsty witches who will kill the children."

"We don't know if he actually believes that or if it's just something he told the children to make them fear us and obey him," Weiss said.

"He won't tell us the truth - not unless he thinks the truth will hurt us most," Blake said with a scowl. "Not even if it would help the children. Especially not if it would help the children to realise how he abused them."

"That doesn't mean we should let him get murdered," Ruby said.

"He'll be executed anyway," Yang said. "For slavery."

"And treason," Weiss added. "And since he's not a noble, he can't ask for a trial by combat."

Right. Ruby nodded. He wasn't a lord, even if people - smallfolk mostly - called him that.

"If he would get a trial by combat. I'd fight him or his champion," Blake said.

Right. Ruby should have expected that as well. Still… "It's not right to let him get murdered in his cell."

"We would have to guard him around the clock," Blake retorted. "That would mean we couldn't do much else. And that would put others in danger."

"We could call for more guards," Weiss suggested. "That would reduce the chance that an assassin can get to him."

"They'll probably use poison anyway. We'd have to eat everything he does, so we won't risk someone else as a food taster who cannot survive a poison," Blake said.

That sounded… Ruby bit her lower lip. It would be selfish, terribly selfish, to let someone get murdered because you didn't want to spend your day guarding them and tasting their food, wouldn't it?

"Ruby, we can't sacrifice our lives for Varys." Yang seemed to have read her mind again.

"I most certainly won't abandon everything else we need to do here to keep this kingdom from collapsing just to keep this manipulative slaver alive until his execution," Weiss said.

Blake nodded in obvious agreement. And Ruby could see Yang shaking her head at her.

She sighed. It wasn't right. But doing all that for Varys wouldn't be right either. "I hate this," she said.

"We all do," Yang replied. "But what else can we do?"

Ruby had no answer to that. It was so frustrating! They couldn't help the children - except for keeping them from being executed. They couldn't get Varys to confess what he had been doing. They couldn't even keep him from getting murdered. They could ask for more help from the nobles or the faith, but as Blake had said, if someone used poison, they would put a foodtaster at risk by asking for them. And no number of guards would stop the still unknown assassin who had murdered the King and poisoned Yang.

She blinked. "Do you think Varys was behind the poisonings?"

The others frowned.

"I wouldn't put it past him," Blake said.

"He is an obvious suspect, though I wonder what his motive would have been. For the murder of the King - we know the assassin wanted to murder you and Yang at Mott's smithy," Weiss said.

Ruby sighed again. If Varys was behind those murders, he might take the knowledge into his grave.

"Even if he claims to be the culprit, we couldn't trust him - he might be trying to get us and the Court to lower our guard so the real assassin has an easier time with their next target," Blake said.

Right. Ruby really missed school. Compared to trying to make sense of the plotting here at court, even Professor Oobleck's lessons were easy to understand.

"And we still need to address the other urgent problem that we need to deal with related to the kids," Weiss said.

Right. They had talked about that already, but they hadn't told the others yet. Well, Blake probably had realised that already. Ruby sighed again. "They're too dangerous."

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

"...so, while it was decided that the boys who attacked the Keep will be sent to the Night's Watch and the girls who were with them will join the Silent Sisters, you have developed more concerns about this." Lord Eddard frowned as he summed up the situation.

He wasn't the only one, Weiss Schnee saw. Lord Renly was frowning as well, and Lord Stannis was scowling, but he was doing that so often, it was almost normal. She had expected that, anyway. "Yes, my lord regent," she said. "You are undoubtedly aware that the children were thoroughly indoctrinated by Varys."

"Yes. You have explained that at length," Lord Eddard replied.

"However, we have talked to - or at - them all, and we think that currently, they might be a flight risk," Weiss went on.

"If they desert the Watch, they will be put to death," Lord Stannis growled. "You cannot demand an exception for them in that case."

"The Night's Watch cannot afford deserters," Lord Eddard agreed. "It relies on this."

Weiss was aware of that. "We've met the Night's Watch, my lord regent," she said with a slightly toothy smile. Indeed, she wouldn't really trust every member of the Watch with anything. "However, those children were also trained as spies - trained so expertly, they spied on most members of the Court without being exposed, and almost overcame the guards you posted in the secret passages despite their age."

"They're as dangerous as grown men, in other words," Lord Renly commented.

The insinuation was clear - they should be treated and tried as adults - but Weiss nodded anyway. "Indeed. And they will likely use every opportunity to escape, and might hurt or kill people while doing so."

"The Watch has handled worse," Lord Eddard said.

"A lot of their numbers are made up of thieves, rapists and murderers," Lord Renly added.

"And of traitors to the realm," Lord Stannis said.

"Good, honest people still volunteer for the Watch," Lord Eddard said with unusual sharpness. "Such as my brother, Benjen Stark. And the Lord Commander."

"Of course, my lord regent," Lord Renly was quick to reply. "I was merely talking about those taken from prisons and jails in the South."

It was a weak apology, but better than Stannis's non-existent one, in Weiss's opinion. But they were straying from the topic. "Are you certain that the Watch can handle those children? And that the Silent Sisters are up to this challenge as well?" She knew the locals were prone to underestimating girls - even though some of those girls had killed grown men.

"Yes," Lord Eddard said.

Weiss didn't think so, but she was certain the Council's minds were made up. So she nodded. "I will talk to the High Septon, though, about reaching out to the children. They need care so they can realise how they were lied to and abused." And some tips on how to deal with dangerous children.

Still, Weiss wouldn't bet that this would go well. The boys at the Wall might not be familiar with the environment and geography, and might be easily caught if they deserted, but if they managed to escape on the way to the wall, in more familiar regions, or if they were smart enough to play the long game, as Blake called it, and waited until they knew how to survive in the North… She could only hope that this wouldn't end up hurting someone else. Or, a small, nasty voice in the back of her mind added, someone she cared about.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

It felt good to ambush someone instead of being ambushed by someone. Well, figuratively, not literally, Weiss thought as she moved in on her target, who was just entering the Great Hall. "Lady Melisandre. Good morning."

"Lady Weiss." If the priestess was surprised, she didn't show it. Then again, most people at court were able to hide their reactions and emotions very well. And of those who seemed to lack the ability, half were probably exaggerating or straight faking it to be underestimated. "How may I help you?"

"I was wondering about magic - specifically, magic used in Essos and the East," Weiss said. She had asked Archmaester Marwyn about this, and he had confirmed that some magic used sacrifices, but she wanted a second opinion. The Archmaester was still convinced that their Aura and Semblances were magic as well, after all.

"Oh? Have you a reason that your way home might be found there?" the woman asked, raising her eyebrows.

"No, unfortunately, our search for a place similar to the ruins in our world has not yet borne fruit," Weiss explained. They might have to move to Old Town to search the library of the Order there, if the royal library turned out to contain nothing of use. "But a recent event made me wonder about how magic is practised there."

"You are talking about the accusations Varys levelled against you, I presume."

"Yes." Weiss had expected the priestess to be aware of that - the rumours had spread throughout the Keep and city, according to Blake, and had been distorted significantly in the process, as had the rumours about the things Varys had said to the small council. "I was aware that some magic required sacrifices - the legends we heard in the North spoke about such magic being done in the Godswoods of old. But it seemed Varys had some personal experience with such acts, not merely knowledge of some tales."

"No doubt he had a personal encounter with a sorcerer or witch," Melisandre said. "Many of the more powerful arts require a sacrifice. Although we shouldn't talk about such matters where people might overhear us and draw the wrong conclusions in their ignorance."

Weiss nodded. "Shall we talk in the yard, then?" No one except for Blake would be able to come close enough to overhear them there without Weiss noticing.

"Yes."

Outside, the weather was overcast but not rainy. "Autumn is coming," Lady Melisandre commented.

Weiss nodded. It was growing a bit colder - at least, according to her friends. For someone born and raised in Atlas, it was still quite warm. Not that the seasons in this world made much sense. Years-long summers and winters? Her astronomy tutor would probably have fits if they knew about this. But that wasn't why she had sought out the woman. "So," she said once they had walked to the middle of the yard, well away from prying ears, "powerful magic requires a sacrifice?"

"In general, yes. Magic demands a price. The more powerful, the more expensive. The Valyrians were infamous for the mass sacrifices of slaves that some of their rituals demanded. Though back in those days, magic was generally more powerful, and far more could be done back then without killing or maiming someone than today."

The smile on her face could almost be called nostalgic, Weiss thought. Was she lamenting the fact that she hadn't been born in the past? "So, Varys was correct?"

"About the magic he knew, yes. But your magic is different. I am quite knowledgeable about the art, and yet, I do not know a way to achieve the powers you possess."

"It's not magic but Aura and Semblances," Weiss corrected her. "It's our souls made manifest. Augmented by Dust in some cases," she added for correctness's sake.

"And achieved without any sacrifice."

"Unless you count many, many hours spent training," Weiss replied. "Those who do not spend the effort, those who do not dedicate their lives to this, will never use such power." That was a bit of hyperbole - you could achieve such power, and more, and then spend the rest of your life in a drunken stupor. But you had to make the effort to gain it. "We have legends of magic, but those were fairy tales. We have found no proof that they were ever real, and I don't recall any such sacrifices, either."

"You sound like you do not fully believe that. Not any more."

Weiss snorted. The woman was even more perceptive than she had anticipated. "Yes. Something transported us to this world, and I do not think that was a Semblance. And we know that magic is real here. So… it might have existed once in our world as well."

"And might have waned, like in this world, until only legends thought tall tales remained. Many in Westeros did not believe in magic, either. At least amongst those who fancied themselves educated," Lady Melisandre said. "They have, since your arrival, been forced to correct their assumptions."

Weiss nodded. That hadn't been her or her friends' fault. They hadn't wanted to come here. So, Varys's lies were based on facts. And yet… "You know a lot about magic. More than anyone we have met so far." Even more than the Archmaester. Which was why she was talking to her in the first place. "And you wield magic as well."

Lady Melisandre nodded.

Weiss didn't ask if she had used sacrifices herself. She was pretty certain she knew the answer now, and it matched the Archmaester's suspicions.

Just as Lady Melisandre seemed to be about to say something else, she suddenly turned, and a crow who had been picking at worms or spilt seeds - Weiss didn't care about either - cawed and then flew away.

"Maybe we should have sought the privacy of a chamber in the Keep," Lady Melisandre said.

Weiss narrowed her eyes. She knew crows were very smart birds, almost as smart as ravens, which were used as mail carriers here, but to be used as spies? Was the priestess trying to pull her leg? Or make her paranoid about birds? Should she ask straight away? Or look into it herself with her friends?

She was still wondering about that when they parted ways again.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

Blake Belladonna gripped the wooden post next to her tightly as she watched the children be loaded onto wagons - shackled and pushed into cages - on the other side of the yard, next to the entrance to the dungeons. A man in the black leathers of the Night's Watch, apparently, one of their recruiters, was watching. He was used to transporting dangerous prisoners, or so she had been told, and this wasn't supposed to be out of the ordinary for him. Just another trip transporting prisoners to the Wall, where they would serve until death claimed them.

Children. The oldest was barely fourteen, a small fifteen at most - they had no way to know their real age, so it was just guesswork - the youngest was twelve or thirteen. They hadn't gotten a trial, just a sentence handed down by the regent, Lord Eddard. A life sentence seen as merciful. No one had cared about their lives except for Team RWBY. All that mattered for the people ruling Westeros was that they had committed a crime. If they knew what Blake had done…

She clenched her teeth, remembering other cages holding people, including children - Faunus held like animals in some working camps. She had helped free those, and now she was watching as a group of children was treated the same - shipped off to work until the end of their lives. And in a frozen wasteland like Solitas, even.

A cracking sound and the feeling of wood crumbling in her hand made her blink. Oh. She had crushed the wooden pole without realising it. She scowled as she let the upper part of the pole drop to the ground and shook the wooden splinters off her hand.

"Whoa! Don't bring the castle down, partner."

She turned to glare at Yang. "This is wrong."

"I know. So do Ruby and Weiss." Yang didn't shrug but calmly met Blake's eyes. "But no one knows what would be right."

Blake clenched her teeth again. Yang was right about that. They couldn't just let the children go - they were fanatically loyal to Varys. As long as Varys was kept in the dungeons, they would make another attempt to free him, and who could say what kind of plan a group of abused children trained as spies would come up with? And if - when - Varys was executed or killed? Blake had some idea how people who lost everything they lived for tended to react. More than one member of the White Fang had lashed out violently, without care whether or not those they killed were guilty or innocent, as long as other people suffered.

But sending the kids to the wall - and the Silent Sisters for the three girls amongst the group - wasn't right either. "They need help, not punishment," she said. Help Blake had failed to give to them.

"And who can help them?" Yang asked. She still didn't shrug. "The Wall seems actually the best thing they have here to turn criminals into upstanding citizens," she added with a snort - her partner knew as well as Blake herself how little that meant.

"So they turn from child spies into child soldiers." Blake didn't bother to hide the bitterness in her voice. It was a bit hypocritical - technically, she had been a child soldier herself. But that had been her decision. Mostly. None of those kids had volunteered for this.

"Better than assassins with a grudge against the kingdom," Yang said.

"You mean terrorists." Blake narrowed her eyes.

This time, Yang shrugged with a weak smile, and Blake huffed.

"I know it's not the same," she said.

"But it's too close anyway, right?" Yang reached out to pat her shoulder.

Blake let her. That would be answer enough. She turned to look at the wagons again, just as the last kid was pushed into the cage. Usually, a single member of the Night's Watch would handle such a transport, but Lord Eddard was sending a few guards from his House with them. People who wanted to return home to their families. That might help keep the kids from escaping and being hunted down as deserters.

The threat of execution wouldn't be enough; Blake knew better than most how little harsh punishment did to scare people into following the law, especially when they had nothing to lose and felt the law was unjust. It generally just made them more determined and desperate, and more violent, and…

Her thoughts were interrupted when Yang's hand slipped from her shoulder to her waist and pulled Blake into her side into a one-armed hug.

"Hey!" Blake protested. But she didn't push her partner away. She could use a hug.

*****​

The Great Sept of Baelor, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

"Yes, Lady Blake, we have instructed the Silent Sisters to take care of the girls. They will be treated well," the High Septon said. "And watched as well - we have passed on your concerns about their, ah, disposition."

Blake nodded. That, at least, was something. Not much - the order of the Silent Sisters lived an ascetic life and, as far as she could tell, didn't take part in the society of Westeros except for handling their dead. But at least, having taken vows of silence themselves, they should know how to work with mute children. "As long as they are kept away from the former queen." She didn't know whether the children would try to kill or free Cersei, but nothing good would come of that.

The High Septon winced. "Ah, yes. Cersei is not adjusting well to her new station in life."

Blake heard Yang, next to her, stifle a snort under her breath. Everyone who knew Cersei had expected that. "Is she under guard?"

The High Septon nodded. "It's not usually done - the Sisters are used to taking care of, ah, recalcitrant new members, but Cersei is a special case."

"And you have to worry about someone trying to take her away or kill her," Yang said.

"It's not the first time the order has had to deal with such a situation."

That was good. "And can they deal with the children's needs?" Blake asked. "They have been traumatised and indoctrinated."

"Many of the Sisters have suffered from tragedies and violence before joining," the High Septon said with a deep nod. "The children will be taken care of to the best of the Order's ability, my word on it."

That was probably the best she could expect. It wasn't enough, not nearly enough, but this wasn't home - this was Westeros. The locals knew not much about psychology. Though they must have a lot of experience with traumatised people, given the violence so common to their lives. Not unlike some of the stubborn villagers in Grimm-infested areas who clung to their homes through multiple deaths of neighbours and families.

"And the younger children?"

"They will be taken in by Septas and Septons with experience caring for orphans," the High Septon said. "Their unique circumstances have been explained to them, and as soon as we have set up homes for them, they can be moved in."

Blake wasn't sure if splitting up the kids was the best way to care for them - it was effectively removing them from what was their family - but if they were kept together, odds were they would end up a gang, united against everyone else. Again, not a good solution, but she didn't know a better one. "Did you hear about mute adults?" she asked.

The High Septon slowly shook his head. "No. We have sent ravens and put out the word, but, so far, none of the Faithful have sent word about such people. We've sent people to Essos, but news from there will take even longer to get back to us, I am afraid."

And since the people who had discovered the slavers behind the mutilated children had not found many mute adults, the odds that the child spies who had grown up were sent back to Essos weren't good, either. Varys might have sent them to another city so they wouldn't discover his slave trading partners, but Blake didn't think Varys would take the risk that his former 'little birds' might discover the truth behind their fates.

No, he most likely had them killed before they became a problem.

She nodded. "Thank you, High Septon."

"We are merely doing the Seven's bidding, my ladies," he replied with another deep bow of his head. "You deserve our thanks for having exposed all this so we could help."

Blake felt her cheeks flush a little. She hadn't done nearly enough, in her opinion.

"We do our best," Yang said with a wide smile.

"Indeed. I've heard about your work with young Gendry as well," the man went on. "He is visiting the Sept regularly to pray to the Smith in particular, and thank him for your help." He chuckled. "After hearing about the marvels he is working on, I have noticed many of the city's smiths visiting more frequently as well, hoping for a similar blessing from the Smith."

"Well, it's not as if we're trying to keep our knowledge hidden," Yang said. "I'm sure it will spread soon enough."

Blake held her tongue at that. She was quite certain that Master Mott would love to keep whatever knowledge he gained from Team RWBY as a trade secret. But Gendry probably didn't share that view - or was too naive to keep his secrets when other smiths approached him in the Sept.

Well, if more advanced techniques and ideas spread, it could only help this kingdom. The realm certainly needed all the help it could get.

*****​

The Red Keep, King's Landing, Crownlands, Westeros, 298 AC

Yang Xiao Long looked out for crows as she entered the Kingsguard's training yard. Of course, as every day, there were half a dozen of them hanging around. They were smart birds, as smart as the crows back home. They knew that there would be some crumbs and morsels left over when the people training took their breaks and someone dropped a piece of food from slightly numbed fingers. Or was just a bit too tired to pay enough attention. Any of them could be a spy - if Melisandre was right and wasn't just trying to prank Weiss. Or was paranoid about birds or something.

She waved at them anyway. "Hey! Pay attention, will you? We're gonna put on a good show!"

As expected, none of the birds reacted to her. Others did, though.

"Did you talk to the crows, my lady?" Brienne asked.

"Yep!" Yang grinned. "They're smart birds."

"I see, my lady." Brienne smiled, but Yang could see she was just humouring her. Well, Yang was used to that - at least, unlike Yang's friends, Brienne didn't wince and complain when one of Yang's jokes might be a bit less than perfectly timed.

"Anyway!" Yang rolled her neck and stretched a bit. Damn, after all that mess with those kids and the politics and compromise stuff, she really needed to punch something. Repeatedly. And drag Blake into it as well - her partner needed that even more, Yang was sure. "How are you doing?"

"Quite well, my lady."

That was about as informative as Jon's 'I'm doing fine, my lady'. Yang raised her eyebrows at her. Brienne could do better than that!

Blushing a little, Brienne winced before smiling a little ruefully. "Well, we - I mean, Jon and I, were thinking about… Well, we talked to one of the Lannister squires, Lancel. The eldest son of Kevan Lannister, the oldest of Lord Tywin's younger brothers."

Yang nodded. She didn't really care for all that stuff, but it was important here. And Lancel was important. Not as important as Lord Tyrion, but pretty important. If anything happened to Lord Tyrion, he would probably be the next heir after his father. Unless Lord Tywin married some much younger wife and tried to get another heir or something - he wouldn't be the first noble here like that.

"And, well…" Brienne suddenly perked up and waved. "Jon! Come over!"

Ah. Yang grinned. So that was it. "Good morning, Jon."

"Good morning, my lady." He bowed, and Yang rolled her eyes with another snort.

"We were just talking about you," she said.

He blinked, obviously surprised, at that. "You were?"

"Brienne was about to tell me what you two came up with."

"My lady!" He actually frowned at Brienne before turning back to Yang. "It was just idle talk. We haven't decided on anything - not that we would make a decision, anyway. That is your prerogative, of course, my lady."

"Hm?" Yang looked at Brienne.

"I actually didn't tell Lady Yang yet about what we were talking about with Lancel," Brienne said, frowning back at Jon.

"Oh." He blushed. "I'm sorry, I thought…"

Yang shook her head. "As amusing as this is, out with it: What were you cooking up?"

"Cooking up?" Jon looked confused for a moment. "Ah, we were talking about, well… You are very important nobles, yet you lack a, well, a retinue." He glanced at Brienne again.

"You have no guards or men-at-arms, no sworn swords or knights," Brienne explained.

Yang wondered where they were going with this. Were they actually asking what she thought they were asking? Well, time to find out. "And you would like to change this, uh?" She smiled.

Both were blushing this time. "Well… We know you don't need protection in battle, or anywhere else, my lady," Jon said. "But you said yourself, you can't be everywhere at the same time. And you also said I have the markings of a decent swordsman." He hesitated a moment. "And, it might not be my place to say so, but you could use more people loyal to you above anyone else. Everyone else at court has their own retinue."

Brienne nodded. "I would swear myself to your service, my lady, if you'll have me. To Team Ruby, that is."

"So would I, my lady," Jon added.

Oh. That was a bit more than the 'we could help you if you need help with guarding someone' that Yang had been expecting.

"And Lancel would as well, in a heartbeat," Jon went on. "He said you - Team Ruby - saved his life during the Night of Flying Water. He is a Lannister, but we talked to him at length, and he would swear an oath."

"And there are more who would serve you, my lady," Brienne added. "If you'll let us."

"Gendry would help as well, though he'd need weapons training. He is very strong, though, and he knows how to wield a hammer very well, so…" Jon trailed off.

What could she say to this? She couldn't tell them no; Jon would be crushed and brood forever, and Brienne wouldn't do much better. And both were friends. Well, the answer was actually obvious, wasn't it?

Yang nodded. "I'll talk to Ruby about it. But I'd love to have you around." She spotted her sister and the others arriving and added: "After the training session, of course. That's not something to be discussed in the training yard where every crow can listen in."

The two chuckled at her joke, but one of the crows gave her the evil eye - well, it was probably eyeing Yang's snacks, which were safely stored in a sturdy basket with a wooden lid. No crow could get at them; they had tested that. There wouldn't be a repeat of the Great Cookies Tragedy.

She cracked her knuckles. "Now, let's get some training done." A few rounds with Ser Barristan, for starters. He still had some tricks to teach them, and his parries and counters, especially the wrestling moves he knew, were incredibly useful. And she would see if she could badger Weiss into using her glyphs to speed up a few arrows again to train dodging and deflecting them. Yang was getting better at that, but she could always improve some more.

Sure, her Semblance allowed her to tank hits and grow stronger in the process, but nothing was better to crush someone like, say, Cardin Winchester than winning a fight without being hit at all.

And that would make the surprise even better when they managed to hit you and only succeeded in making you hit back harder!

Yang grinned as she called out to Ser Barristan and stepped into the ring.

*****​
 
Olenna may not give a damn about small folk or children outside of her family and allies but she raises a good point here. The legality of child treatment gets tricky when it comes to punishment. In an ideal world every kid would be some kind of Disney child that learns to be a good person with relatively minor escapades that harm no one, reality is different and giving kids a complete pass would get abused real fast. You'd just get more Vary's that try to be even more behind the scenes and get gangs of kids that commit crimes without fear.

On the other hand, they don't really have any organisation that would raise children right so they won't continue to commit crimes. The Watch is more like a life sentence for that.

Utter gold! I love it!

:)

Thanks for great chapter.And when it is true that early bikes were pushed by foots,even now i sometimes see some small children using such things.
And,Olenna have a point.If they do not punish child murderers,everybody in Westeros would start using them.

Yeah, I just saw one of those while hiking this week.
 
Just as Lady Melisandre seemed to be about to say something else, she suddenly turned, and a crow who had been picking at worms or spilt seeds - Weiss didn't care about either - cawed and then flew away.
Greenbeak Counter.

He's like Coil or the Simurgh or Contessa in Worm. If ya don't know who did it, it's probs one of their plots.

Same way that if an author EVER mentions a raven that is not used in the context of sending messages, it's probably greenbeak being a filthy voyeur again.

Yeah, I just saw one of those while hiking this week.
... You... Saw a child murderer this week while hiking? Wild😆

The two chuckled at her joke, but one of the crows gave her the evil eye
Well. I ain't even gonna be surprised; they're not even hiding. Why would they?🤷🏽‍♂️

It's why Greenbeak is so successful; unless you stay indoors forever, and even then unless you stay away from trees and windows near them, there's always a chance he's gonna drop by like an unwanted uncle.
 
Last edited:
On the other hand, they don't really have any organisation that would raise children right so they won't continue to commit crimes. The Watch is more like a life sentence for that.



:)



Yeah, I just saw one of those while hiking this week.
Agree.Real Catholic Church had orders which cared for abadonned children,but Faith is parody of it,so they do not have anything.
Just like Westeros is parody of real Europe with real nobles.
Feudalism last 1000 years,becouse people actually seriously treated their vows,not seek how to backstab everybody when they sleep.

That aside - i love future Maester comments about hpw RWBY could not behave like they really behave.As if i hear some real historian !

About Varys - i knew,that they do not like tortures,but since they pushed for sending boys and girls to Watch/Silent sisters instead of killing them, they must kill him slowly.

He would not tell anything,but they must show that cryminals responsible for attack on Crown are punished harshly.

P.S About tortures - i read,that there are some kind of wasps and spiders which venom do not kill people, but made them cry and even wish for death.If such animals exist in Westeros,they could use them ,and prisoners would be not crippled.
 
It's why Greenbeak is so successful; unless you stay indoors forever, and even then unless you stay away from trees and windows near them, there's always a chance he's gonna drop by like an unwanted uncle.

Raven and Qrow will have to be careful back in Remnant.

Agree.Real Catholic Church had orders which cared for abadonned children,but Faith is parody of it,so they do not have anything.
Just like Westeros is parody of real Europe with real nobles.
Feudalism last 1000 years,becouse people actually seriously treated their vows,not seek how to backstab everybody when they sleep.
[/quot€]

Yeah, Martins mixed Medieval Age and Renaissance in the worst ways.

That aside - i love future Maester comments about hpw RWBY could not behave like they really behave.As if i hear some real historian !

About Varys - i knew,that they do not like tortures,but since they pushed for sending boys and girls to Watch/Silent sisters instead of killing them, they must kill him slowly.

He would not tell anything,but they must show that cryminals responsible for attack on Crown are punished harshly.

They won't condone torture. Not that the odds of Varys surviving to stand trial are high to begin with.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ATP

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top