The knight who'd been holding him looked at Stitch as if he'd gone completely round the bend. He just shook his head, though, and pulled Stitch's hands behind his back. "They'll be seen to," he murmured, and drew a braided leather cord from somewhere, then deftly twisted it around Stitch's wrists and secured it with a knot. The position did nothing to help the pain in his arm - fueled it, in fact, for the muscles screamed in protest.
By this time, another wing of Knights had made their way onto the scene, and it was turning into a rather big ordeal - three people were huddled around the beaten kid while another saw to his wounds, and another four stood in a semi-circle around Stitch.
A few moments later, the knight who'd been sent off reappeared with another man in tow, one who glowed in Stitch's faltering Auristics with the sharp, steady light of a man whose words would go unquestioned. "Who's in charge here?" he called out, cutting through the babble of conversation and instantly causing the other knights to unconsciously straighten their posture.
"Sergeant Nickolas Breicht, ser," the other man answered immediately, stepping forward. A moment later they separated themselves from the rest and began a quiet conversation, likely just Nikolas catching the other man up on what had happened.
Silence descended on the group, broken only by the murmuring of the two ranking knights and the occasional hiss and pop of the dying fire that had begun this tragedy. It ended as the Knight turned to stare at Stitch, and finally pointed a finger at him. "Get him out of here," he ordered crisply, "now."
The men snapped to do his bidding, two of them taking Stitch's arms to lead him as two more too position ahead and behind him. The order came none too soon - for as they began making their way out of one side of the alley, there was a commotion at the other end, a woman's enraged voice rising above the rest, until the Stewart cut through the crowd and went to meet her.
"Where is the body of the filth that attacked my son?"
"There is no body, Dera, calm yourself--"
"No body? He yet lives? Since when do we stay our hand upon those who seek to harm us? Bring him to me and I will flay the skin from his bones!"
"He's sent to the Council, as he should be. It is a misunderstanding of some kind, and they are best equipped to make a decision about it. Take a breath, and see to your family instead of revenge."
"The Council?! Of all the ignorant..."
The voices faded as the knights dragged Stitch further away, and disappeared entirely as they crossed the threshold into the cool hallways of Stormhold Citadel.
* * *
Stitch passed a long night in The Tank, surrounded mostly by drunks sleeping off a tavern brawl. He was given no food, though there was clean water available should he find himself thirsty, and for the most part he was left to his own devices.
Just after the sun rose to lighten the windows beyond the bars of the holding cell, one of the knights called his name. The doors were opened and the restraints placed on his wrists once more, then he was led through a doorway and up a set of stairs, entering finally into the Council Chamber.
The councilors sat beside each other at a table placed on a raised dais, and directly in front of them was a wooden railing as if to separate them from whoever might approach to petition their case. The knight brought Stitch to stand just behind the railing, front and center before the Council.
To one side, a small section was cordoned off with several chairs. There sat the dark Stewart Knight who'd been screaming for his blood the previous day, mother to Stitch's victim. Her children were lined up beside her: the boy he'd beaten, whose face was bruised and swollen and dotted with several lines of stitching to repair the damage, and his sister sat to Dera's left, both wearing simple tunics bearing the emblem of the Windoak as evidence of their place within the Knighthood. To her right sat the youngest boy, who clutched at his mother's arm and stared wide-eyed at Stitch.
Grace gave a nod, and one of the court officers read out the charges against him - assault on the Knighthood, attempted murder, and public menace. The younger boy, Mealachapat, gave his witness testimony first. The older boy had to lean heavily on the railing as he stepped up to speak, and his words were slurred by the swollen and split lip, but he gave an accounting of what they'd been doing and the madness that ensued.
Ser Nikolas was not present to give his testimony, but it was read aloud by one of the officers. When that was concluded, the Councilors turned their attention to the accused man.
The two men looked down at him with little sympathy, and the younger one did nothing to hide his outrage at what he'd heard. The woman seated between them, however, looked more thoughtful, and a mere glance from her stilled whatever words they may have spoken.
"Stitch," she said softly, and there was something - something about his name on her tongue that tripped something inside of him, broke through the despair and showed him a moment of hope. "There has been much said today of what took place. I would hear your story," she said with an encouraging nod. |