Chapter 7: Crime and Punishment
'Some of my colleagues, probably because they are used to modern Westeros, where the law, not nobility, rules supreme, fail to understand just how different life in the Seven Kingdoms was during those times. The smallfolk were, often openly and legally, but always effectively, at the mercy of the nobles ruling their fief. There was no independent judicial system; the law was applied by the nobles as they saw fit. There was almost no codified law, either, at best, there were precedents - although not every noble judging people had studied them, and even those who were aware of precedents which might apply to a case often were ruling according to their own interests or sympathies. That would have been bad enough if smallfolk were litigating against each other, being forced to curry favour with their lord (or bribe them) to have a chance at justice, but in those cases where the smallfolk had grievances against their lord, it was devastating. Their best hope of finding justice or relief when their lord harmed them was appealing to a higher authority - but, as anyone who studied this epoch knows, the odds were stacked against them even so. Many villages were too remote to travel to court - certainly not without the local lord noticing and taking steps to return them home. And many courts sided with the nobles as a rule - a fact some nobles took care to spread amongst their smallfolk to discourage such attempts in the first place. That was the state of the judicial system in Westeros when the Ruby Order appeared, and it should not surprise anyone who has studied the relevant sources and their character that they took offence to it, albeit the exact circumstances and deeds remain, vexingly, vague since judicial records as a rule were not archived in the Citadel, and every scholar of our Order knows what happened to the Royal Court's archives during the Year of the Calamity. Nevertheless, most sources agree that the Ruby Order was appalled by corporal punishment, as it was practiced back then, and advocated for mercy in most cases.'
- A Treatise On The Ruby Order, by Maester Kennet Bracken
*****
Winterfell, The North, Westeros, 298 AC
"Are you going to join us, my prince?" Robb Stark asked as he took a step back from his opponent and lowered his blade. It was the polite thing to do - he didn't really want to spar with the prince, who was spending far too much time with Lady Ruby. Well, he wouldn't mind going for a few bouts if the boy insisted. In armour, he wouldn't really be hurt, and everyone expected bruises in the training yard, right?
"Hm… I think not," Joffrey replied as he leaned against the fence separating the training area from the rest of the courtyard. Rebuilt just yesterday, it looked sturdy and new, though Robb knew it wouldn't stand up to a single blow from any of their guests. Behind the Prince, the Hound loomed. "I merely came to watch, Lord Robb," the boy went on.
"To watch?" Robb blinked. Why wouldn't the Prince want to spar? Hadn't he been trained to become a knight? The King was one of the most famous knights in the Realm.
"You spar regularly with Lady Ruby, don't you?" the Prince asked.
Next to Robb, Theon laughed. "I wouldn't call it sparring, my prince. She gives us pointers, and we pretend we can follow her advice."
Robb frowned at his friend. That wasn't how their sparring matches went. Granted, they couldn't
really spar, Ruby had to hold back too much, but they did train together. And it wasn't one-sided at all! "We
share tips," he said. "While Lady Ruby is great with her scythe, she is not as experienced with blades, and none of her team uses a longsword, so we do train together even if we don't spar."
The prince sniffed. "How many
real fights did you take part in?"
Robb clenched his teeth. He hadn't seen a real fight yet, but that wasn't his fault. Father wouldn't let him join any dangerous patrols until he was of age. The closest he got to real fighting was hunting, and that was not much of a challenge.
"I thought so." The prince shook his head. "Lady Ruby, if she needed advice, would be better served to seek it from those with actual experience." He nodded at his sworn sword. "Like the Hound. He could teach her how real men fight. It's not prancing around with blunted blades."
The giant's burn scar twisted when he grinned at Robb, making him look even uglier. And scarier, but Rob tried to ignore that by focusing on his anger.
"How many real fights have you been in, my prince?" Theon asked.
"None, of course. I don't pretend to be a knight while playing around with practice swords." The Prince smiled in such a smug way, Robb wanted to show him what a practice sword could do.
"You don't train?" Theon seemed honestly surprised.
That earned him a frown. "I do train. But I wouldn't claim that it makes me an experienced swordsman. The only way to become experienced is to fight for real." The Prince showed his white teeth in a mocking smile. "Nor would I presume to teach my betters."
"The more you sweat in training, the less you bleed in a fight," Robb shot back. That was what Ser Rodrick had told them whenever they had complained about the training, and it wasn't wrong! And… He grinned. "Lady Ruby told me that." Well, she had agreed with the sentiment, so it counted.
The Prince scowled again before straightening. "Well, she is not wrong - but I doubt she would mistake training for fighting." He shook his head. "Anyway, I've seen enough. Come, Hound, let's go!"
He left without a further word. That was… Well, it felt rude, but Robb didn't remember if princes were supposed to excuse themselves before leaving. Still… "The Prince is such a…" he swallowed the slur he had been about to utter. You didn't insult your guests. Mother had taught him that. You especially didn't insult the Crown Prince of the Realm - history lessons by Luwin had taught him that.
"I know," Theon said, glancing around for anyone who might overhear them.
Robb had checked, though - none of the guards from the royal party, most of them wearing Lannister colours, was close by.
"Insufferable, isn't he?" Theon snorted.
Robb nodded. "I bet he doesn't train at all. Just has his guard hit things for him."
Theon chuckled at that. "Too bad he's not wrong about our experience, though."
Robb glared at his friend. "He's wrong! I did show Lady Ruby a trick with a sword she hadn't seen before!"
"But did she really need it? Or was she just humouring you?" Theon shrugged. "I offered to teach her how to use a bow, but she refused. Several times."
Robb frowned. Was Ruby just humouring him? And if she was, was that bad? It would mean she liked him, wouldn't it? And since according to what he had heard, and confirmed, in her homeland, people chose their spouses themselves, if she liked him, that might mean she would decide…
"Don't get your hopes up," Theon's slightly snide tone interrupted his thoughts. "The Prince has been spending his days with her - as much as he can, or so I hear."
Robb scoffed. That didn't mean anything. "She's just being polite." The Prince was royalty, and you didn't snub them by refusing their invitations.
"She'll be polite all the way to the wedding night, huh?" Theon chuckled.
Robb clenched his teeth again. His friend was so crude. "Lady Ruby would never do that!"
"Do what?"
"Marry someone out of politeness," Robb spat.
"Of course not. You marry the Crown Prince to become Queen, not out of politeness."
"Ruby doesn't want to become Queen!" Robb shook his head. "You don't know her at all."
Theon shrugged. "It's not as if she lets me get to know her."
And that was a good thing, in Robb's opinion. A very good thing. One rival was bad enough. Especially if it was the Crown Prince. But as long as there was no engagement, Robb still had a chance.
He just had to find a way to use it.
*****
Winterfell, The North, Westeros, 298 AC
"Come on, Jon! Don't hold back! You were doing so well before!"
Robb winced when he watched Lady Yang scowl at his brother. She wasn't pleased with their bout.
"I'm doing my best, my lady!" Jon certainly looked the part - covered in dust and sand, breathing heavily, sweat running down his face, he looked as if he had been fighting for hours. Probably felt like it, too.
"No, you're not! You haven't really tried to hit me for days!" Lady Yang shook her head, her hair whipping around.
"We're sparring!"
"Yes, and that means you do your best to hit me! Defend yourself!" She charged ahead, leaving an opening so wide, Bran would have noticed it.
Jon tried to dodge instead of using it and ended up on the ground. A few yards from where he had stood.
Lady Yang huffed. "Stop being stupid!"
"I'm not!" Jon protested.
"Whatever!" Lady Yang ran a hand through her hair and turned away. "Tomorrow, same time!" she called over her shoulder before leaping over the fence and walking away.
Robb sighed and walked over to Jon, who had yet to get up. "You are better than this," he told him.
Jon sighed, still on the ground. "No, I'm not."
"You did better before," Robb told him.
"I know. But that was… before." Jon sighed again and slowly stood.
Before he had found out that Lady Yang wasn't a bastard.
"If Lady Yang deigns to spar with you, the least you could do was to acquiesce to her wishes and put in an effort. Although judging by what I saw, it probably wouldn't make a difference."
Robb glanced to the side and suppressed a scowl. The Prince had been watching the bout as well, though he hadn't made any remarks until now.
When none was answering him, the boy shrugged. "Well, I guess this was the most one could expect from a bastard. Let's go, Hound!"
Robb turned back to Jon. His brother had his lips pressed together but otherwise didn't show any reaction. And yet… That was a lot for Jon. Robb frowned.
Jon looked away and muttered: "He keeps riding me about my sparring with Lady Yang as a bastard."
Robb hadn't known that. "Is that why you…?" He shrugged.
"I can't hit her! Not as a bastard!"
"She wants you to hit her. You heard her."
"Lady Catelyn would take offence." Jon shook his head.
"And Lady Yang seems to be taking offence," Robb pointed out.
"I know. But I can't." Jon sighed again and walked away.
It had to be the Prince's fault. Jon hadn't been like this before. Robb wondered if he should tell the Prince to stop needling Jon. If he told him that it would antagonise Team Ruby, the Prince might listen.
But that would help the Prince with Team Ruby. And that would harm Robb's chances of wooing Lady Ruby. Something he not only wanted but also had to do for his family.
But Jon was also family, and the Prince was a guest.
What should he do?
*****
Winterfell, The North, Westeros, 298 AC
Ruby Rose could do this. She just had to be polite, smile and make the approving noises at the right moments, and surviving this invitation to tea with the Queen (who hated RWBY) would be a piece of cake. (Yummy honey cake, to be exact - Ruby had asked in the kitchen beforehand so she wouldn't be disappointed.)
She took a deep breath and checked her dress again. No stains, and the slight tear on the side she had ripped by accident when handling her baby was barely visible - the tailors here could work miracles! If Ruby had tried that, it would have looked way worse, as her dearly missed favourite plush toy of her childhood proved.
"Stop fidgeting. You're fine."
Ruby didn't feel fine. She glanced at her partner. As expected, Weiss was frowning at her. "I just don't want to be late," she muttered.
"We're not going to be late," Weiss told her. "They don't measure the time here as precisely as we do back home. They don't have the clocks that could do it."
"And I bet you hate that!" Yang said with a grin. "Can't fault anyone for being late."
Weiss sniffed. "Rest assured, the Queen will fault us for being late anyway."
"I think she would do that even if we were knocking on her door at dawn," Yang said with a shrug. "Though that's just from seeing her at the meals and your description."
"I would say it's an accurate guess," Weiss replied. "She's worse in her rooms."
Ruby sighed. "Why can't she just leave us be?"
"Because she's the Queen, and we're hotter, younger and more powerful," Yang said. "And you probably spend more time with the King and the Prince than she does."
"They keep inviting me!" Ruby protested. "And you!"
"Have to keep an eye on my little sister." Yang grinned and rolled her shoulders.
Ruby winced - she had seen Yang rip an old shirt doing that, at home. Fortunately, this dress was tailored to her. And a bit sturdier. She sighed again. She would really be rather home than here.
"I don't think the Queen wants to spend any time with the King," Blake said. "But she resents that you spend time with the Prince."
Ruby hung her head. "And she blames me for it! I didn't do anything! It's all the Prince's fault!"
"She blames all of us for it." Weiss shook her head. "Though I don't know what she hates more - that the Prince wants to spend time with you or that he doesn't obey her. I am leaning towards the latter."
Who cared? They just had to survive this without starting a fight. Or a feud. Whatever! Ruby scoffed. They could do this. All they had to do was not to react and the Queen would be left fuming. But… that never worked with bullies. They escalated. Or went after others who couldn't fight back. And the Queen was the biggest bully Ruby had met so far. So… "Are you sure we can't, like, scare her diplomatically?" she asked Weiss.
"Don't even think about it! Threatening the royal family would be a crime!" Weiss snapped.
"I don't mean threaten-threaten," Ruby explained. "Just… kinda make her see what we can do, you know? Subtle, I mean. Just so she realises that she shouldn't push us. The King and the Prince are always impressed when we tell them about what we do as Huntresses back home."
"I am sure that the Queen is aware of what we can do - well, what we have revealed to the locals," Weiss said.
"I actually am not sure about that," Blake spoke up. "She has never watched us train or spar."
"But the others - the King and the Prince - must have told them!" Yang said. "You were listening to them have a row about about."
"I did," Blake said. "But she seemed to ignore that when it was brought up. She kept berating the King and the Prince for 'carousing' with us."
"Great. The queen of the kingdom is an idiot!" Yang sighed.
Ruby blinked. "Well… isn't that a good thing? I mean, if she hates us…"
"She does. Trust me," Weiss said in a flat voice.
"...since she hates us, isn't it better if she's stupid than smart?" Ruby would prefer a dumb instead of a smart enemy. Dumb bullies were easier to deal with.
Weiss shook her head. "No. If she's dumb, then she might actually try to harm us instead of just sniping at us."
Sniping? Ruby tensed, then sighed. Oh, that kind of sniping. Not the real kind. "Yeah, I get that, but… if she hates us and is smart, couldn't she manage to hurt us? Instead of just trying?"
Weiss frowned as if Ruby had said something wrong but she couldn't argue against it. "In any case, it's hypothetical. The queen is not smart. Trust me on that."
"We do. You're our expert on spoilt princesses," Yang told her with a grin.
Weiss pouted, and Ruby stifled a giggle. Her partner huffed, then turned to the door. "Let's go, or we will be late!"
"But you said they don't measure time that precisely!"
"And I bet she'll complain we're late anyway!"
Ruby smiled as she followed her friends out of their room. They would be OK. It was just an afternoon tea invitation. She had seen that stuff in shows. How bad could it be?
*****
"How nice of you to finally grace us with your presence, Lady Ruby."
Apparently, the answer was 'very bad'. Ruby had to force herself to keep smiling at the Queen's tone. "Well, we already were meeting with the King when you invited us the first time, and we had to wait for another invitation, right, Your Grace?" Oops! She felt Weiss's fingers pinch her in her back, and Lady Catelyn was tense, so Ruby probably had made a gaffe. "And we came as soon as you invited us again." That was true.
But the Queen was still glaring at her, and Ruby wanted to fidget while she stood there feeling uncomfortable. Did they have to wait to sit down, or were they waiting for her to sit down? Or for the Queen? Or Lady Catelyn? Those were the Queen's quarters, but Lady Catelyn was the Lady of Winterfell, and the Queen had invited them, so they were guests… Gah, this was confusing! She had learnt this just the evening before - Weiss had made sure of it.
"Won't you sit down?" the Queen asked, gesturing towards the seats lined up around a low table. Just like a tea party! Ruby sat down after the Queen - wouldn't want to take her seat by mistake - and eyed the tea and cake. Oh, plenty of honey for both! It wasn't as good as chocolate, but it was sweet and even healthy. She would…
…check with Blake if it was poisoned, Ruby reminded herself. They had gone over that as well. She glanced at her friend. Blake looked cool and collected - this wouldn't be fazing her, of course, she was a ninja catgirl - and hadn't said anything or given them the signal, so the tea and cake should be safe. Ruby's Aura hadn't given her a hint either, but Ruby knew she couldn't trust that; her Aura never warned her when she was about to get into trouble at Beacon. It hadn't even warned her when she had been about to be robbed by Torchwick's gang!
But this was safe, and so Ruby beamed when the Queen's attendant - Weiss had said she wasn't a maid - started serving them cake and sweet tea. "Four spoonfuls, please! Large ones!" she said when it was her turn.
The woman didn't even blink like others had and simply poured the honey into Ruby's cup. Perfect!
She sighed with satisfaction after the first sip. She was feeling better already.
"Don't you have sweet tea back home, Lady Ruby?" the Queen asked.
"Oh, we do, yes!" Ruby replied. "But we also have soda, milkshakes, hot chocolate, syrup… we have lots of sweet drinks we can't get here." Oh, how she missed chocolate cookies! But she was supposed to be polite, and that meant complimenting their host. "Though this is great sweet tea. I wonder how it would taste cold."
The Queen blinked. "Cold tea?"
"Yes. Iced!" Ruby smiled. "It's great in the summer if you want to cool down." And it was an easy way to get your sugar fix if your parent or teacher didn't permit you to bring snacks.
"We rarely have to cool down during summer," Lady Catelyn said.
"It's a Patch thing," Yang cut in. "We drink iced tea in the summer on our home island. Weiss, of course, can drink iced anything all year long."
Weiss's smile was past polite and into 'I am annoyed at you'; Ruby could tell. "It's an acquired taste."
Yang grinned.
"Anyway," Ruby went on. "The tea is good."
"Thank you," Lady Catelyn said.
And the cake was even better. If only the Queen were not so bitchy.
"So, my brother told me that in your home, the children pick their spouses."
"Uh, no. You need to be an adult to marry," Ruby told her.
The Queen glared again - she really couldn't stand being wrong, could she? "And do you have a potential husband in mind?"
What? Ruby stared at her. "I'm fifteen! I'm not gonna marry anyone!"
"You're still a child? You haven't flowered?"
Ruby blinked. What was… Oh! She grimaced. "That's not…" How could she ask Ruby that? "That's not important. I'm fifteen," she repeated herself.
"We are considered to be of age when we're eight-and-ten," Weiss explained.
"So, you're all children?" the Queen smirked.
Ruby smiled. "Yes, exactly." Far too young to marry.
The Queen didn't seem happy to hear that, though. At least, her smile was as thin as before. Ruby started to think that the Queen was never happy. "My son is two-and-ten. Still a child. Not yet of age."
"Yes." Ruby nodded. The Prince was definitely a kid.
The Queen glared at her again - Ruby just couldn't please the woman.
*****
Weiss Schnee was both relieved and vexed when they finally left the Queen's chambers. Relieved that Ruby and Yang hadn't lost their tempers. Vexed that the Queen had continued their snide remarks. At least, Ruby had managed to, albeit probably inadvertently, annoy the odious woman. Seeing the Queen become frustrated by Ruby's honest answers to her barbed questions had been quite satisfying for all that it was also dangerous.
But they had managed to get through the visit without blades being drawn - figuratively, of course; they hadn't brought their weapons - or anyone being poisoned, so she counted this as a victory. A small victory, and one that would not further their goal of returning home, but it felt satisfying anyway. And slightly guilty - like eating a cookie before dinner.
Hm. Maybe I'm listening a bit too much to Ruby if I'm starting to use such comparisons, she thought with a grin.
But as soon as she opened the door to their room, any lingering satisfaction vanished at once. One wall was splattered with paint, and several items were not where they had been when they had left.
"My paint trap went off! It worked!" Ruby was awfully cheerful, given their circumstances.
"We have been robbed!" Weiss told her through clenched teeth.
"Yes - but my trap worked!" Ruby nodded.
"And it shouldn't be hard to find the thief now," Yang added.
"Unless they already fled the castle, Blake said. "Let's see what they took." She went and climbed the wall first, to safely check their weapon cache above the rafters.
"Oh, no! My baby!" Ruby was on the rafter in an instant, trailing red petals. If there had been a trap up there… "Ah, here you are, safe and sound!" she cooed a moment later.
The thief probably couldn't have carried your weapon, Weiss thought.
"Our weapons are safe," Blake said. "Though there are cutting marks on the chainlinks holding them there."
"So they found our cache?" Ruby asked.
Weiss suppressed a sigh. "A thief would look on top of the rafters." It was a pretty obvious spot, after all. "We put them there anyway because it would make it harder to take them." For anyone without Aura and a Huntress's strength.
"Did they take anything?" Yang asked.
They quickly checked their belongings.
"They took my scroll!" Ruby exclaimed.
"And mine," Yang added.
"You left them in the room?" Weiss blinked.
"We have to save power," Yang said.
"And I didn't want to be tempted to use it in case the invitation turned out to be boring," Ruby added with an embarrassed smile. "That would have been rude."
Weiss sighed. "Anything else?"
"Doesn't look like it," Yang said.
"They probably took the most obviously advanced piece of gear we have," Blake said. "The weapons were the first target, then they went for the scrolls."
"They knew about the scrolls, then!" Ruby gasped.
"We used them to prove our claims," Weiss reminded her. "I don't think a thief could miss hearing about them."
"Oh, right." Ruby nodded. "But without Lightning Dust, they can't recharge the scrolls. And without our codes, they can't even unlock them if they still have a charge left. Which they should have, actually."
That didn't matter. They had been robbed, and the thief had to be brought to justice. No one stole from Weiss or her friends! "Let's inform Lord Eddard," she said through clenched teeth.
"After we recover our weapons. I am not leaving my baby alone again!" Ruby looked fierce, Weiss noted.
And she was correct. They had been lucky that the thief hadn't had the tools to deal with chains. "Yes." She nodded. After this, Lady Catelyn would hopefully accept that they couldn't leave their weapons unguarded.
*****
Outside Winterfell, The North, Westeros, 298 AC
"The dogs have found the trail of the thief, my lord!"
The kennelmaster sounded excited. Not nearly as excited as the dogs sounded - they were barking loudly. And it affected the wolves with the party - Ghost and Grey Wind looked every which way eager to help, undoubtedly, despite their young age. They were just too adorable. Although… Weiss glanced at Blake. Her cynophobic friend was holding up well, though Weiss could tell that she would rather be elsewhere. But not even dogs could keep her from pursuing the thief.
"Very well, Farlen, set them on the chase," Lord Stark commended.
"Yes, my lord."
"A boar would have given us a bigger challenge," the King commented. He had insisted on coming along, as had the Prince when he'd heard that Robb was with them as well. And that meant Ser Barristan and Ser Jaime had also joined them. All that for one thief.
The dogs charged into the underbrush ahead of them - the thief had made it out of the castle before the alarm had been raised, but the guards had remembered him easily thanks to his face being covered in paint and had pointed the hunting party to the woods in which he had vanished.
And the two puppies followed the dogs despite Robb and Jon's cries to stop. Well, they should be safe with so many dogs around. Still, they best gave chase as well. Weiss looked at Ruby. She was their leader.
"Let's go!" Ruby said. "Err, I mean, with your permission, Lord Eddard."
"Of course, my lady."
Ruby didn't wait a second longer and vanished in a cloud of petals. Weiss sped up as well, with Yang and Blake at her side, leaving the rest of the hunting party, both those on foot and those mounted, behind them. Really, they just should have gone by themselves, maybe with the kennelmaster. Or with the two boys, their puppies probably could track the thief as well as the dogs, and Weiss would keep them safe.
They quickly caught up to the dogs - Blake, unsurprisingly veering off 'to watch our flanks' - and slowed down so they wouldn't overtake them. The thief had been on foot, so if they didn't have a mount stashed nearby, they wouldn't have gone far through the dense forest. Not when they couldn't jump from branch to branch like a Huntress could.
As Weiss had predicted, it didn't take long for the excited barking of the dogs to change - and for a desperate cry to be heard. They had found the thief!
She grinned as she jumped over a fallen tree trunk - if only she could use her glyphs! - and dashed ahead. Time to end this farce!
When she reached the fugitive miscreant, Ruby, of course, was already there. Her friend was glaring at the man, who was on the ground, surrounded by the dogs and two wolf puppies, holding his ankle and whimpering. And his face and upper body was covered in paint. Definitely the thief.
"Please… my lady… I didn't want… please let me go! Oh, it hurts!"
"I didn't hit you that hard! I just tripped you!" Ruby told him.
"And even if we let you go, it doesn't look like you could go on that ankle," Yang added, showing her teeth while she retrieved the stolen scrolls.
Blake, of course, was still guarding their flank.
"Please! I didn't want to… mercy!"
"There will be no mercy!" Ruby spat. "Thieves must be punished! I won't let another one escape on my watch so they can wreck a city afterwards!"
Right, Torchwick's escapes - and escapades - were still a sore point for her friend, Weiss reminded herself. Although she doubted that this wretched man would be able to wreck a highway even if he managed to steal a Paladin.
"I didn't want to steal from you! Please!"
"You shouldn't have broken into our room then! Or tried to steal my baby!"
"What? Baby?" The man looked confused. "Whoever took your child, I didn't do it!"
Weiss sighed. "She means her weapon."
"Oh."
"You tried to steal her!" Ruby spat. "That, I cannot forgive!"
The man started to cry and didn't stop even when the rest of the party caught up. All in all, it was a pathetic display.
*****
Winterfell, The North, Westeros, 298 AC
"It is clear that you were the thief who broke into our guest's chamber to rob them - the stolen items were found on you, and you were marked by the paint left in their room," Lord Eddard, seated on his throne in the Great Hall, declared.
Justice is swift in Westeros, Weiss thought. It had barely been a day after the theft, and they were already holding the trial. Of course, it was a clear-cut case, as Lord Eddard had stated, though the lack of a public defender was still obvious.
"Mercy, my lord!"
One night in the castle's dungeons hadn't done the thief any good, Weiss could tell. He was pale and shivering, and his ankle had swollen so much, they probably had to cut off his boot to treat it. Not that it looked as if they had done much - the bandage wrapped around his foot looked stained, and for all their faults, at least the people of this world were aware of how you had to keep bandages clean. Of course, the man wasn't bleeding, so it might not matter much.
Lord Eddard ignored the man's pleas. "Before I pronounce the sentence, I wish to know if you had accomplices."
Weiss leaned forward. They hadn't found any traces of another thief, and it was certainly possible that the man had acted alone, driven by greed. But not quite too rarely, such thefts were, at least back home, inside jobs, as the police called it. Thieves acting with someone familiar with the target. Weiss wanted to know if there was another thief hiding in the castle.
The man glanced towards the King and Queen as if he was about to beg them for mercy despite the scowl on the King's face and the deadly glare of the Queen. Neither had taken the revelation that one of their servants had stooped as low as to steal from Team RWBY well. The man must have realised that and shook his head. "No, my lord. I acted by myself. I… I thought I could sell the magic devices for gold in King's Landing."
Weiss wasn't quite sure that she believed him. But what motive would he have to protect an accomplice? Criminals, in her admittedly limited experience, rarely showed any loyalty to anyone, and his best chance at clemency and getting a reduced punishment would be to rat out other criminals.
Lord Eddard sighed. "In that case, I pronounce you guilty of theft. In light of the severity of your crime, your hand will be cut off."
Weiss gasped. Cutting off a hand? For theft?
Her friends were shocked as well. Ruby gaped at the thief - and then at Lord Eddard.
The thief was crying.
"You may also choose to join the Night's Watch instead," Lord Eddard went on.
The man kept crying - Weiss wasn't sure if he had heard Lord Eddard.
"He's a cripple who can't walk any more; what use would the Night's watch have for him?" the Prince asked.
"The Night's Watch takes everyone who wishes to join, my prince," Benjen replied. "Even the lame and crippled."
"Crippled? I only broke his ankle!" Ruby blurted out.
Everyone stared at her, Weiss realised.
"It was a complicated break, my lady," Maester Luwin said, wincing slightly. "As such wounds usually are. I did what I could, but it won't heal well."
"Oh." Ruby sat back. "I didn't…" she trailed off, slowly shaking her head.
They couldn't heal a broken ankle? But… Weiss pressed her lips together. Of course, they couldn't heal a compound fracture! They didn't have either modern medicine or Aura!
"I'll take the Black!" the thief blurted out.
"Very well." Lord Eddard nodded at Benjen. "You can take him with you when you return to the Wall."
"I didn't… I wouldn't have hit him if I had known," Ruby said. "I'm sorry."
"We should have realised that," Weiss said before she could help herself, then winced and cursed herself when Ruby flinched and looked even more miserable.
*****
Winterfell, The North, Westeros, 298 AC
When morning broke, and she woke up, Blake Belladonna considered staying in bed a little bit longer. Unlike her friends, she could see perfectly well with moonlight or even just starlight - well, well enough to read and write easily - so the lack of decent artificial lighting didn't restrict her nightly activities as much. On the other hand, as much as she liked napping in a warm bed, her friends needed her. The revelations following the trial of the thief had left them, if not shaken, then burdened.
Besides, Yang was likely to accidentally kick her when she woke up, as had happened before, so the odds of Blake being able to enjoy her nap for a decent length of time were low, anyway.
So, Blake yawned and slipped out of bed, stretching a bit - not like a cat at all, despite Ruby's claims - and quickly used the water bowl next to their bed to wash her face.
The others might complain about the lack of a proper bathroom - if they wanted to bathe, they needed to call servants to prepare a tub - but Blake was used to roughing it in the field. The White Fang's hidden camps in the wilderness rarely had decent facilities - sometimes, they had no facilities at all. Compared to that, or even to an extended field mission for Huntresses, this was still quite nice.
And if Blake kept telling herself that, she would start to believe it. No hunting mission would have gone on for as long as their trip in this world had; a Huntress would either succeed or die long before that.
Sighing, she slipped into her clothes - her combat outfit, not the dress her host had have made for her. With thieves breaking into their room, and having earned, although not through any fault of their own but for merely existing, the enmity of the Queen of the realm, Blake would not leave Gambol Shroud behind for the foreseeable future. And she wouldn't carry her weapon around in a basket or in her hands, which meant she would be wearing an outfit that could accommodate the sheath, which her dress didn't. She tested if she could draw it as easily as she should, which she could, then gave the weapon a quick check.
A yawning noise behind her alerted Blake to the fact that her partner had woken up. "Good morning, Yang," she said without turning away from her weapon.
"How did you know it was me?" Yang asked. "Recognised my Yawng?"
Blake groaned. Yang was a great partner, a great Huntress, and the best friend she could imagine, smart and kind, but her puns barely deserved the name. Though that kind of fault made her even more appealing - she wasn't some perfect Huntress, and not as cool as she could appear at first glance. Which was actually cooler.
Yang got out, complained about the cold floor, as usual, then about the cold water, and finally the state of her hair - which was still great in Blake's opinion - before she started to dress herself. That meant Blake could open the shutters and let the sunlight in. Along with a brief wave of cold air until she closed the windows again, which served nicely to wake up both Ruby and Weiss.
A few minutes later, everyone was awake and up, dressed and armed - Ruby had slept with Crescent Rose again, Blake had noted; their leader had taken the attempted theft badly in more ways than one - and ready to tackle another day in Westeros.
"So…" Ruby, seated on her bed with Crescent Rose, folded up and laid across her lap, sighed. "I forgot to ask yesterday, what with the whole trial and thing, but… does anyone know anything about medicine?"
"Yes," Blake said. Ruby's eyes lit up, but Blake went on: "Just first aid. I can't treat compound fractures."
"You need a surgeon for that," Weiss said, pressing her lips together in a frown.
"And we're Huntresses, not surgeons," Yang stated the obvious.
Ruby sighed again and hunched over. "I didn't know… I didn't think. I should have known."
"It's not your fault. You didn't make the guy break into our room," Weiss told her.
"And he tried to steal your baby," Yang added with a weak grin.
"He's still unable to walk," Ruby said. "And will live in pain for the rest of his life."
"Well, I think he could get a sort of brace that lets him walk by taking the weight off his foot," Yang said. "Shouldn't be too hard to build even here - Mikken should have all the stuff for it."
"But he'd still be in pain if his broken bones heal up wrong," Ruby said.
"They can amputate his foot in that case," Weiss said. "And replace it with a proper prosthetic - or what passes for one here," she added with another frown.
"They wanted to cut off his hand!" Ruby shook her head. "And now they will cut off his foot? How barbaric can you be!"
"They have different laws and traditions," Weiss pointed out, but her defence of their hosts sounded half-heartedly to Blake.
"Yeah, 'different' as in 'fucked-up'," Yang said. "But it's good that we found out. Imagine if we brought in someone who was hungry and stole some food."
Ruby grimaced and hunched over even more, and Weiss looked at Yang. "Are you implying that we should ignore thieves in the future?"
"Do you want to see a guy lose a hand just for stealing?" Yang asked, raising her eyebrows.
Weiss blushed a little. "No, but… ignoring criminals seems wrong. And what if we ignore a thief, and he turns out to be a murderer?"
That was a good point, Blake had to admit. A number of White Fang's more radical members had been petty criminals before joining the organisation.
"Well, we can still stop a criminal and scare them straight; we just don't need to involve the cops." Yang shrugged and grinned. "I bet we can scare anyone straight."
"I don't think the Starks would like that," Weiss said. "It would infringe on their authority."
"Only if they find out."
Weiss huffed at that, but Blake agreed with her partner.
"Yes." Apparently, so did Ruby. "No more delivering thieves to… 'justice'. One maiming is enough." She shook her head. "And we need to train harder so we can hold back better. People aren't just more fragile here, without Aura and Semblances, but they can't fix them as easily as we can back home. Unless…" she trailed off and bit her lower lip.
Weiss frowned at her. "You aren't seriously considering activating the Aura of the man who tried to rob us of our weapons, are you?"
"It would fix him…" Ruby said in a low voice.
"He's a thief!" Weiss hissed. "Would you want to grant such power to a criminal? What do you think he'll do with it? Only we could stop him if he decided to abuse the power!"
"Right…" Ruby winced.
"Further, it would also show everyone that we can grant our powers to someone else," Weiss went on. "Everyone will want to have their Aura activated. And if we refuse after doing so for a thief, they'll be very offended."
"I know…" Ruby whined.
"And they might arrange for 'accidents' to force us to activate someone's Aura to heal them," Blake pointed out. Some of the nobles here would do so, at least. Even to their children. Especially to their children.
Ruby and Weiss both winced at that.
"We don't even know if it will work," Weiss said. "Aura can be activated through stress without any outside influence. Wouldn't that have happened at least a few times here?"
"It's a very stressful life for many, yep," Yang agreed. "But just because it doesn't happen naturally doesn't mean it can't happen artificially, right?"
"We don't know that," Weiss said. "And the only way to find out risks empowering someone. Can we trust anyone here not to abuse such power? Or to hand it to someone else who will abuse it?"
"No…" Ruby sighed.
"But what will we do if, say, one of our friends has an accident, and only Aura can save them?" Yang asked.
Everyone winced at that, including Yang. Weiss shook her head. "We can cross that bridge when we reach it. Let's not experiment with Aura. Those people already know too much for us to be comfortable."
"Sorry…" Ruby said.
"It wasn't your fault," Yang told her. "We kind of underestimated them."
"Yes. Just because they don't know about modern technology, Aura or Dust doesn't mean they're stupid," Weiss said.
Blake nodded. "Some of them are smarter than we are."
Weiss scowled at that but didn't contradict her.
"Let's go to breakfast," Ruby said. "I need some honey bread to feel better."
On the way to the great hall, they saw the Captain of the guards with half a dozen guards standing near a tower - the entrance to the dungeons, Blake realised. And they seemed upset.
"That doesn't look good," Yang commented. "Do you think the prisoner broke out?"
That would make him a deserter to be executed, Blake thought. Probably, at least. But… She cocked her head, focusing on the men's voices.
"...and as I said, when I entered with his bread, I found him dead in his cell."
Blake's eyes widened. The thief was dead? How?
"And you saw no wound?"
"None, Captain. But I found an empty wineskin near him."
"Someone has smuggled some wine into his cells?" Judging by Captain Cassel's expression, he suspected the same as Blake did.
Poison.
*****
Winterfell, The North, Westeros, 298 AC
"I apologise for the delay, Lady Blake, but I had to help with the investigation into the prisoner's death." Luwin sounded honestly apologetic.
"I fully understand that this took priority, Maester Luwin." Blake couldn't and wouldn't fault him for that - his research had confirmed that the thief had been poisoned with a wineskin smuggled into his cell, presumably through the window; the wineskin, even if nearly full, would have fit through the gaps between the bars, as a quick test had shown. Unfortunately, they had found no clue who might have been behind the murder - and behind the theft, of course. Blake was sure that the thief had been killed to prevent him from naming whoever had hired him for the task. It was even more unfortunate that the range of suspects included almost every noble in the castle.
Luwin sighed. "Unfortunately, I have further bad news. I have read through all the books in the library that were likely to contain the sort of information you seek, but after weeks of diligent searching, I remain as empty-handed as I was at the start."
Blake couldn't help frowning at hearing that. It wasn't his fault either, but she had really hoped that they would find information about a way home here - or, at least, information that might lead to such a way home. "I'm sorry to hear that." Really sorry.
Luwin nodded. "If it's any consolidation, despite Lord Stark's care for his library, it pales in comparison to the collection in the Citadel. Or the royal archives in the capital. The former dynasty included many members who were either scholars in their own right or talented dilettantes and bibliophiles, and so the royal archives contain a vast collection of tomes that may yet grant you the information you seek, my lady."
Ah. This wasn't the first time Luwin had mentioned the seat of his order, but to hear that the royal library might also have books not found in Winterkeep was new. Not that it should be a surprise - they didn't have easy ways to make copies of books here, yet many ways to lose one, so the older a book was, the rarer it would be. "Thank you. We will have to think about our next step, then."
Very carefully. There was a murderer around, after all.
*****
Winterfell, The North, Westeros, 298 AC
"...and now we repeat that a lot until the metal's grown harder." Yang Xiao Long grinned as she worked the improvised machine. Cold-working steel wasn't exactly taught at the workshop in Beacon, but she had done some extra-credit work at Signal once.
Mikken stared. "That's… No one but you could bend steel like that, my lady. I don't think you have to fear anyone duplicating your secret."
"It's not my secret," Yang corrected him. "And you can make a machine to bend the steel - just need enough pressure."
"Pressure?"
"Uh…" Hydraulic presses were not a thing here. Yang grimaced. "Well, with a really hard and heavy press, I guess." She had always used the machines at the shops she had access to - it wasn't as if she needed to mass-produce parts. "I guess you could also use heat-treating."
"Heat-treating? We can do that, my lady."
"Yeah, but your oven probably won't reach the heat needed for this steel," Yang said, holding out another piece that might end up part of a tool if this worked out. Even if she couldn't harden the thing and hit the right tolerances - she needed special tools to machine it - it should work to some degree, but wouldn't last long.
"What kind of steel is it?"
"Chromium-vanadium steel," Yang explained. "Chromium makes it resistant to rust."
"Resistant to rust?" Mikken looked even more eager. This tool-crafting session was turning into a little lesson, it seemed.
Yang snorted. If her teachers could see her now…
"My lady?"
"Nothing, just a stray thought. It doesn't rust as easily, and it holds the edge longer."
"Like Valyrian steel?"
"Probably not as much," Yang said. She hadn't examined Ice, Lord Eddard's ancestral blade, Ruby had been a bit too eager when she heard about it, and they had decided not to push it to avoid offending their host, but from what she had heard, those blades were way tougher than any steel on Remnant - unless reinforced with Aura, of course. "But it holds up well if you're in the wilderness."
"And what is Chromium?"
"Uh…" How to describe that? Yang just bought the stuff. She knew the quantities you needed for certain steel, but she wasn't a miner or a geologist. "If you refine it, it kinda looks like this…" she started to explain.
I wish I had written this up in advance, she thought while Mikken was repeating her words to remember them.
Then she blinked.
She really should write that up - Team RWBY could probably trade that for access to other libraries if their owners were being unhelpful.
*****
On the way back from the smithy - Ember Celica was working perfectly as it should - Yang spotted Jon brooding in a corner of the yard. Well, he was sharpening his sword, but Yang could tell that his mind wasn't on it, so he was brooding. The boy didn't do much else these days.
She slowed down a little as she pondered if she should make a detour or not. Well, she had finished a little earlier than she thought - probably; without a scroll, it was hard to tell the time. To think she had laughed at Uncle Qrow for having an antique mechanical wristwatch. He would be so smug if he knew. Anyway, she could spare a little time pulling Jon out of whatever hole he was trying to dig with his mind.
"Yo!" she called out when she closed in - he hadn't even noticed her approach. He'd so fail situational awareness tests at Beacon.
He jerked and jumped to his feet. "Lady Yang!" he bowed.
She rolled her eyes. "No bowing when I'm wearing my combat clothes, remember?"
"But… You're always wearing them nowadays, my lady," he protested.
"So?" She cocked her head to the side and grinned. "And we still wear dresses to dinner. Which you should know if you hadn't been avoiding us."
"Ah…" He grimaced.
She sighed loudly. "Still hung up on the whole bastard thing?"
He pressed his lips together and tensed up.
Oops. "I mean people thinking I'm a bastard," she clarified. She didn't want to make light of his bastard thing. It was stupid, but it was a real problem for him.
"Ah." He blushed.
She quickly shook her head. "You already apologised. Twice. And it wasn't your fault at all."
"Still, my lady…" He glanced around.
"Nu-uh." She wagged her finger at him. "No bullshit about me talking to you not being proper or what."
"But…"
"Are you really trying to tell me who I can and can't talk to?" She frowned at him, and he blushed.
"Ah… no, my lady."
"Good. So, what got you down this time? You usually aren't
that gloomy." He pouted at her for a moment, and she grinned back at him. Jon could brood through a pep talk from Ruby, so you had to be a bit harsh to get him to react.
"I was just… letting my thoughts wander, my lady." He shrugged.
She rolled her eyes again. Even Jaune would have seen through his act. "And where did your thoughts wander to? The Gloom&Doom Emporium?"
"What?" he stared at her.
She sighed. Her best quips were useless if people didn't have the context. "What got you so down this time?"
"Nothing, my lady." She kept staring at him, and he relented. "I was… wondering about my future."
"Oh." That wasn't something she could help him with. Maybe she should have let him brood in peace.
But he already went on without looking at her. "In the past, I wanted to join the Night's Watch. It's an honourable calling even for a bastard."
"It's also a very cold calling," she said. He frowned some more, and she suppressed a wince. Right, no making light of this serious discussion.
"But… I thought about, well, other choices. I am good with a sword - this is no empty boast, as you know - so I could become a guard, but people don't tend to trust bastards."
"Wouldn't becoming a guard be like joining the Night's Watch, just with less ice and snow?"
He frowned at her before nodding. "Maybe it is the same, in a way. Just, I wouldn't…" He blushed a little. "I wouldn't have to abandon my family. But it's hard to make a life as a bastard here."
Yang nodded. "Yeah, you people are really stupid about that." He gasped, and she scoffed. "I'm calling it like I see it. Judging someone for being born? That's stupid."
He looked at her like Ruby did when she was little and got told she couldn't have another cookie. "That may be so, but that's how it is, my lady."
Well, he was right about that. But he was still being stupid. "Well, from what we saw, the Night's Watch isn't exactly easy street either. But Benjen probably told you that already."
Jon frowned again. Or he had never really stopped. "He said I should consider that carefully."
"That's uncle-speak for 'No, don't do that'." She grinned. "Trust me, I know."
"But… what else can I do? I'm a bastard, and people don't take bastards into service. I don't want to live on my father's charity - I want to earn my place!" he blurted out.
Yang could understand the feeling. But she couldn't really help him - that sort of problem didn't happen in Vale. Wait. It kinda did - for Faunus. Oh.
Maybe she should tell him to talk to Blake about this? But what could Blake tell him? As far as they knew, there wasn't some bastard community here he could get support from. "Aren't there any people who don't think bastards are untrustworthy and would hire you?"
He shook his head. "Not in Westeros. Maybe in Essos, if I became a sellsword, but… Fighting for coin isn't very honourable."
That sounded a bit picky, but judging by what Uncle Qrow had told them about mercenaries, he probably wasn't wrong. "Well, I'd take you if I had a castle, but I don't."
He stared at her for a moment with a surprised expression before nodding gloomily. "You don't need retainers. And you can't afford them as our guests."
Yang winced. Seen from that angle, they were in a similar position.
*****
When Yang entered their room a bit later, she was feeling like brooding herself. That talk had gone completely wrong. Not only had she failed to cheer up Jon, but she had managed to make herself feel down as well. Way to go, girl! she told herself as she greeted the others.
"Yang! We've got news!" Ruby told her. "Important news!"
Oh? "Good news, I hope," Yang said. But judging by the looks of the others, it was mixed news at best.
"The King has invited us to return with him to King's landing," Weiss said.
"And the Starks are coming along," Ruby went on. "The King is making Lord Eddard his right hand."
"It's called the Hand of the King," Weiss corrected her.
"I knew that."
"That's good, I think," Yang said. "It was the Citadel or King's Landing for more libraries, right?"
"Yes," Blake said. "But it also means we'll be travelling with the most likely suspects behind the attempted theft of our weapons. And behind the murder of the thief."
Right.
*****