Nyrius

Iraise my hand and the guards close in — not aggressively, just presence, bodies moving to the crowd's edge with the quiet authority of men who don't need to draw weapons to be understood.

The noise drops by half.

"I need your attention." I pitch my voice to carry without shouting — a trick of thirty years commanding men in open fields. "Not for long. Listen first, then decide what you think."

The square settles into an uneasy quiet. People don't leave, which means they want to hear it.

"No retribution will come down on Oxwood from the dark elf courts.

" I say it plainly, looking across the gathered faces rather than at Malrec.

"The oversight council is already aware of criminal activity in this region.

That activity originates with one man, and these villagers are not implicated in it.

" I let that land. "You have my word, and my authority backs it. "

Some of the tension breaks visibly. A woman near the front uncrosses her arms. Aldric, who has been standing at the crowd's edge since the beginning, stops edging toward the lane.

"Now." I turn to face them fully. "I want you to think about the timing of this arrest."

I walk them through it — not slowly, not with unnecessary explanation, but with the clean logic of a case that holds its own weight.

Velis's network swept the same week his investigation into Malrec's accounts became too visible to ignore.

The arrest filed two days before the sweep.

The witnesses, all employed in Malrec's own administrative office, their names and wages recorded in ledgers now sitting in the oversight council's hands.

"Edria of Oxwood forged blades to keep her family fed," I say.

"She sold to a smuggler because the legal income from this forge — income she earned repairing every plow, gate fitting, and horseshoe in this village — was not enough to cover her brother's medicine and her father's forge costs after years of inflated taxes.

" I make a point to stare at individual people in the crowd.

"How many of you have sat across a tax collector's table and wondered where your levy actually goes? "

Nobody answers. Nobody needs to.

"Cyran." I turn.

He steps forward and holds up the ledger — open to the relevant pages, the column of payment dates running down the left margin in Malrec's own hand.

"Shipping records," I say. "Weapons shipments moving through this region's western routes, each one preceded by a payment to accounts maintained under the magistrate's name.

He cleared the roads ahead of every significant smuggling run.

He managed the supply. He collected from both sides of a conflict he was feeding.

" I look back to the platform. "And when I began tracing those accounts, he arrested the most convenient person available and called her a rebel. "

The crowd goes still for one long moment.

Then it breaks — but differently this time.

"He took the grain levy money—"

"My husband paid triple tax last autumn and couldn't get an accounting—"

"Malrec's men seized our cart on the south road, said it was contraband—"

The anger turns, rotating like a weather vane in a changed wind, and now it's pointed at the platform. Someone throws something — I don't see what, but it hits the evidence table and the crowd surges toward the steps.

Malrec backs up. His composure has finally cracked, and what's underneath it is genuine fear.

I'm watching the crowd's edge when I hear the horses.

Eight riders, coming fast from the Denvara road. Thalen at the front, two court officials beside him, four nobles I recognize from the emergency council session behind them. They ride into the square with the presence of authority arriving to restore order, and the crowd splits to let them through.

Thalen dismounts and walks straight to the platform steps without looking at me.

"This proceeding is suspended pending court review," he announces to the square.

He turns, and now he looks at me. "Lord Nyrius's involvement in this matter has been deemed compromised.

Evidence presented by a party with demonstrable personal interest in the outcome cannot be accepted without independent verification. "

"The evidence was filed with the oversight council this morning," I say. "Independent of these proceedings."

"Through your own rider." He faces the crowd now, working them the way he works every room — slowly, confidently, building toward his point.

"This lord has acknowledged a personal relationship with the accused.

He has acknowledged she carries his child.

" He spreads his hands. "Ask yourselves whether a man in that position can be trusted to present evidence impartially.

Ask whether the truth he's offering you serves justice — or serves him. "

The crowd shifts again, uncertain, the anger losing its direction.

I cross the square.

I walk past Cyran, past the platform steps, and stop beside Edria. She looks up at me, chains on her wrists, her face steady despite everything. I put my arm around her shoulders.

The square goes very quiet.

"Yes," I say, loudly enough for every corner of it to hear. "I love her. She is carrying my child. I intend to claim both of them, and I will not pretend otherwise to make anyone more comfortable." I glare at Thalen. "That is true. All of it."

A murmur runs through the crowd.

"It is also true," I continue, "that before Edria's arrest, before any of this — I reduced trade tariffs across six border settlements based on falsified ledger records I found in Oxwood's own town hall.

" I reach into my coat and pull out a second document.

"I filed formal labor reforms covering twenty-three villages in this territory.

The documentation is with the regional council.

The dates are recorded. None of it involves Edria, none of it was filed after her arrest, and all of it demonstrates a pattern of governance that predates my personal attachment to anyone in this village. "

I hold the document up.

"If Lord Thalen would like to argue that I fabricated evidence implicating a corrupt magistrate for personal gain, he is welcome to explain why I also spent time reforming the tax structure that kept this village poor.

" I watch the crowd again — the farmers, the merchants, the people who know exactly what the last decade of Oxwood's finances have felt like.

"Ask yourselves which version of events makes sense. "

The arguing starts again, louder than before.

Thalen's composure doesn't break, but his eyes are cold when they land on me, and I know this isn't over.

I keep my arm around Edria and don't move.

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