Ninus had a good warning the knights were coming. They weren't exactly quiet through the woods, nor stealthy, and Jack pulled his head up quickly from a patch of coltsfoot he'd been browsing. He had his ears up and forward, watching the knights cautiously. He'd quite had enough of adventure for one week, and though he was loathe to run off into the woods alone he would if the knights made sudden movements.
The poisoner gave them a baleful glance. "Disrespectful asses trodding on the graves of the dead. Dumb and deaf donkeys crashing through the brush expecting bear and wolf to bend knee." he mumbled, half an eye on his cooking fire and the other on the readied crossbows. Had they come to shoot an unarmed man, still within the limits of his exile, out in the woods? Ninus didn't doubt it. If they were willing to execute over thirty men without giving them a chance to say anything, nor defend their actions, nor given a fair trial....they would shoot an unarmed man in the back.
Their arrogance truly knew no bounds.
Ninus went to Jack and patted his neck, pulling him gently by the mane toward better grazing over near the stream. He knew the horse was nervous, and the last thing he needed was to lose Jack. He couldn't flee so readily; not with his parents' things here, Cricet still injured, and the knights so willing to come and plunder.
"A graveyard you've come to, to torture the souls not yet rested hours in their graves. Hast thou such low honor, to come and kick a wounded man in the side? To laugh while he weeps over those who showed nothing but kindness to him? I doubt not that thy hand would sprout a quarrel in my back, unarmed and unwilling to fight." Ninus snarled at the ground, low under his breath.
Truly, the last thing Ninus wanted was more death. But he would not quail under the knights simply because they threatened him. He was more of a man than that. He tied Jack's rope halter to a tree branch and headed back to the heart of the camp properly. He should have known they would come to torture him.
He broke down the healer's tent first. He had no need for so many tents, but they would fetch a small price. He rolled it up carefully and broke the sticks that kept it up, throwing them into the cooking fire. There were four tents in all. Three smaller tents, and his mother's larger one. Many of the bandits had optioned to sleep in bedrolls on the ground or up in the trees. Ninus had practiced it himself, and would do so again when night fell. He set aside the healer's tent and looked at the supplies the man had left. Not much. A small roll of linen bandages, a small packet of wild dry mint to help stomachaches, and a small jar of river moss poultice. The last of these could help with wounds; Churchkey had found the benefit of such a moss when seeing deer rub wounds against moss-covered rocks in the small streams.
Ninus settled these into a pile near the cooking fire, and headed to his father's tent. Somewhat bare; Churchkey had enjoyed spending long hours out in the woods, or guarding a recent caravan overturn. Ninus' family had only been savage upon necessity, for casualties and wounds were something to be avoided with no proper healer about. Ninus found a book, some silly bit of fluff he'd probably picked off of a caravan. Churchkey, while a smart man, had been learning to read better. It must have been something easy on the eyes for him to practice on.
He set the book aside as well as two changes of his father's clothes. Though it hurt him to think of it, he would have to sell them. They did him little good.
He took stock of his father's tent. He had an extra bedroll to sell, a book, and two changes of clothing. This he also brought next to the fire and looked at the ragged tent. No one would buy such a mockery of canvas, patched up with spare cloaks and bad stitching. He burned it.
Ninus had noticed Wade had come. To see him, perhaps, or to see what he could steal? He didn't know the man that well. He had known Brother had saved Wade's life, and the man had said and done nothing when Ninus and his family were arrested. An unpaid life debt Wade would now never be able to repay. He looked and saw the position Wade was in, forehead to the ground. To Ninus, it was a gesture of agony he had been in only an hour ago. "Let him come; thou willst not understand the pain of a life debt that cannot be repaid." Ninus called to Ser Wade across the camp. "I would speak to him of such things...his heart is not the only one that bleeds in this glen."
Ninus approached Brother's tent. He still had the man's giant sword, laying on a saddlepad where he had taken Jack's tack off. He could barely move it, and considered burying it where it lay. But perhaps, there was something for Wade from Brother that would help soothe the man's heart. Ah, he spied it. Brother's tent was as bare as Churchkey's, but he did have something precious. He picked up the small charm dedicated to Myri...a pair of giant claws Brother always claimed came from a giant tiger from across the sea. Of all the highwaymen, Brother had been the most religious.
He had felt his strength and courage in battle came from Myri herself, and that it meant he was bound to follow her. Apparently, most of the men and women who followed the savage goddess were human beasts. Merciless and brave. Brother had been enthusiastic about learning of his goddess' savage children. The poisoner remembered he would have to set up a small sacrifice of the salt pork and perhaps Brother's blade in honor to her.
Ninus came out of the tent, holding the necklace of claws, simple clay beads and hemp. He waited quietly for Wade to come to him, if come to him he chose. He was as still as a deer, though Jack was eyeing the other horses and men that smelt of steel suspiciously.