Sleep didn’t co that night.
Leon’s cell felt smaller after returning from court. Stone walls pressed closer. The single torch cast dancing shadows that made carved runes seem alive. His body ached from hours in restraints but his mind raced faster than his pulse.
The folded paper crinkled between his fingers. He’d read the ssage fifty tis. Defend yourself well and the outco will favour you as I have always wanted to et you.
Soone believed in him. Soone with courthouse access. Soone willing to risk everything.
But who?
Lady Thelyra’s knowing smirk haunted his thoughts. Aristocrats played gas within gas. Hidden agendas wrapped in silk and smiles. Her vote could swing either way.
Elim Voth’s ancient eyes showed curiosity instead of judgnt. Celestial Path rarely involved themselves in politics. But the old man watched Leon like a revelation unfolding. Ancient wisdom recognizing sothing unprecedented.
Saria Dullin’s cryptic comnts hinted at professional respect. The boy showed creativity. Adaptation mattered more than tradition in Tempest Veil philosophy. Survival instincts that most hunters lacked.
Leon paced three steps left. Three steps right. The cell allowed nothing more. Each step echoed against stone that had contained dangerous individuals for centuries.
The ssage could be bait. Enemies offered false hope before delivering killing blows. Political maneuvering wrapped in encouragent.
But what purpose would deception serve? Leon already faced execution. The jury held overwhelming opposition. No elaborate trap was needed.
Soone genuinely wanted to help. Took significant risk to reach him. Professional reputation ant nothing compared to preventing injustice.
Leon tucked the paper against his chest. A reminder that allies existed even in darkness.
No system interface. No zombie servants. Just words and truth against centuries of tradition. The Association’s power rested on predictable progression. Leon shattered their comfortable assumptions about control.
He rehearsed argunts in whispered voices. Tobias attacked civilians.
No, The Association failed its duty. Justice demanded action when law failed.
Simple truths carried more weight than elaborate speeches. The jury wanted clarity. Reason they could defend to their constituents.
So jurors valued strength above everything else. Combat prowess earned respect regardless of rank classifications. Leon proved himself against impossible odds.
Others responded to logical argunts. Systematic failures required correction. Leon exposed problems the Association preferred to ignore.
Dawn light filtered through cell windows. Guards approached with chanical precision. Today would determine everything.
The containnt vehicle carried him through awakening streets. Citizens lined the route despite early hour. So cheered his na. Others demanded blood.
The courthouse buzzed with energy that made stone walls vibrate. Spectators packed every seat. Standing room filled beyond capacity. Recording crystals focused on entrance doors.
Leon walked past familiar faces. Reporters. Guild representatives. Citizens whose lives were shaped by hunter politics. Today’s verdict would reshape everything.
Twelve jurors occupied their elevated platform. Sa expressions as yesterday. Professional masks hiding personal calculations. Each vote carried weight that could crush or elevate him.
Leon studied their faces for signs of his mysterious ally. Lady Thelyra maintained her enigmatic smirk. Elim Voth’s glowing eyes showed patient interest. Saria Dullin tapped her staff with idle energy.
No obvious tells. Aristocratic training concealed emotions behind practiced expressions.
Chairman Ethella rose from his position behind the jury. Midnight robes flowed around his tall fra. Authority radiated from every gesture.
"The defendant will present his defense."
Leon stepped forward. Manna-dampening cuffs pulsed against his wrists. No power except truth and conviction. The courtroom held its breath.
"When a man’s ho is burned..." His voice carried clearly without amplification. "When his family is hunted like animals... when the very ones sworn to protect beco executioners in golden robes... what would you have him do?"
Silence fell like a hamr blow. Every face turned toward him. Spectators leaned forward. Jurors shifted in their seats.
Leon’s eyes swept across each jury mber. Searching for reactions. Micro-expressions that might reveal his supporter.
Director Voskar’s scarred hands gripped his armrests tighter. Military discipline warred with recognition of justified action.
Archivist Solde adjusted his glasses. Intellectual curiosity about unprecedented situations. Books couldn’t predict real-world complexity.
Vice-Chairman Eltyos straightened in his seat. Old soldier recognizing another warrior’s necessity. Combat experience understood hard choices.
Lord DeNire’s disgust deepened. Aristocratic privilege rejected challenges to established order. Personal politics trumped justice.
Lady Thelyra’s smirk widened almost imperceptibly. Hidden amusent at proceedings that entertained rather than concerned her.
Bran Dekker calculated odds behind his eyes. Iron-fang benefits mattered more than moral considerations. Everything had a price.
Vaela Murne’s expression hardened further. Sanctuary philosophy rejected necromancy on fundantal levels. Death magic violated natural order.
Callen Etros’s fury burned brighter. Family honor demanded vengeance regardless of circumstances. Blood called for blood.
Thorne Quen appeared more attentive despite his bored posture. Black-fang pragmatism evaluated survival instincts over emotional reactions.
Saria Dullin’s staff crackled with subtle energy. Professional appreciation for unconventional problem-solving thods.
Kohr Raiven watched with warrior’s respect. Combat effectiveness spoke louder than rank classifications. Proven ability earned recognition.
Elim Voth’s ancient eyes glowed faintly brighter. Spiritual wisdom recognizing sothing beyond mortal understanding.
One of them sent the ssage. One of them risked everything to encourage his defense.
"Tobias Virell held S-rank status," Leon continued. His voice grew stronger with each word. "But rank doesn’t justify tyranny. Power without responsibility becos oppression."
Murmurs rippled through the courtroom . Truth cut through political rhetoric like a blade through silk.
"The Association swore to protect civilians. Instead, it sheltered those who preyed on the defenseless. My mother lay broken because your system failed its most basic duty."
Direct accusations hit like physical blows. Several jurors shifted uncomfortably. Institutional failures exposed to public scrutiny.
"I didn’t break the system. I revealed the rot underneath. Corruption protected by badges and ceremonies. Brutality hidden behind guild politics."
The courtroom erupted in voices. So shouted agreent. Others demanded silence. Political factions clashed over fundantal questions.
Leon stood quietly amid the chaos. His cuffs pulsed with steady rhythm. His words had found their mark.
"That’s all."
No elaborate legal argunts. No emotional manipulation. Truth stood on its own rit without embellishnt.
Chairman Ethella raised his hands. "Silence!"
The courtroom gradually quieted. Tension stretched like a bowstring ready to snap.
"The jury will now deliberate." Ethella’s voice carried finality that ended argunts. "Verdict requires simple majority. The defendant’s fate rests in your hands."
Twelve jurors filed toward their deliberation chamber. Each step echoed with weight of decision. Leon’s life hung on seven votes from personal agendas, political pressures, and individual conscience.
The courthouse held its breath as justice balanced on a knife’s edge.
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