1. No Rule of Law, but the king won't like it if the Count goes off and kills one of his knights; if he doesn't do anything about this flagrant breech of law, he loses face. And the king has a bigger army than the Count.
Vaguely-remembered knights are a dime a dozen.
Knights aren't soldiers, they're nobles who happen to be useful in war.
Killing a noble is a
serious offense.
Flagrant breech? So the whole country watches the 11 o'clock news each night? The disappearance of a small-time knight gets passed by word-of-mouth, if it interests enough people in other regions. I was not aware that we had made a name for ourselves kingdom-wide. The question here is not royal. It does not cause the king to lose face, because no one cares about us outside of our immediate neighbor.
Except...you know...we're more well-known than a random knight, because of our unique history and unique governing strategies and new minerals. And, you know, our friends would make a stink, because they already suspect the Count of plotting to murder us.
This is local, and it's about local power relationships and manpower... not laws. The Duke can't move just because a favorite of his niece went missing. Kings didn't do that for their own favorites being outright killed! You march on an established noble family for something weak as a recently elevated peasant disappearing, and every other established noble will become uneasy. Most of these noble families have had their lands for centuries and you need to get rid of this idea that the Count will be "demoted" by "rule of law" or something. It'll go to another family member if he's stripped of his title, since no other noble family wants the hereditary status-quo being disturbed. Unless the king is extremely strong-willed and personally enraged. The king probably isn't, and definitely won't be.
Let me explain a few things...
1. Leaders who let people violate their laws without so much as taking action look weak.
2. Leaders who look weak tend to lose their ability to affect the world, not to mention their honor.
3. Kings don't like either of those, and therefore will probably act once the king is informed by, say, the uncle of our fiancee about our death and the various reasons to suspect the Count.
4. Killing a noble is a pretty serious offense. Killing us wouldn't be as bad as killing, say, the Duke or King, but it would be pretty bad, even without Marna.
5. Losing his power is something the Count doesn't want, and it's probably one of the lesser punishments that would be administered.
6. The Count doesn't have
anything to gain by killing us so blatantly.
2. Putting that aside, why don't you work your way back to the actual question for which I brought up police officers?
You ask me, "how do police officers do it?" Okay. If they live where you probably do, they probably ring the doorbell, and get the reply "Hello, officer, is there something I can help you with?" Then they politely ask you to go in for questioning. You realize that fighting them yourself is impossible, and that your neighbors believe strongly in rule of law and won't help you.
Down in Oakland, CA, maybe the police don't go at all. Maybe they go and get nowhere with people that don't respect their authority. Maybe they get shot at by thugs that just don't like cops.
And that's in a country with otherwise strong notions of law, and police that haven't upset the local strongman. Now, since I've been so kind, in return answer me this: how do police do it in Somalia?
Okay, first off, you didn't answer the actual question. I asked how police officers
transport criminals, not how they
capture them.
Second off, the "nice" thing about the middle ages is that random people are much less likely to have lethal weapons.
Third off, we're not worried about random citizens attacking us;
you're worried about the Count attacking us. Sure, his forces could probably overwhelm ours...but could they defeat the entire rest of the kingdom? No. So if it comes down to the people who support us (who now have the law on our side) against those who support the Count (just his closest friends and such), the odds are
very much in our favor.
Yeah, just a note. If the count could afford to dissappear us before, he can afford to dissappear us and a piece of paper now.
If the count could afford to disappear us and a piece of paper, not to mention the men we're bringing with us to help restrain the prisoner and whatnot, why wouldn't he have disappeared us before?
The count's spymaster being brought in and talking will make quite more the event than even our dying.
Perhaps, but the spy talking
and revealing
everything (including his dealings with the Count) are lower than the chance of the king reacting to the death of a noble.
Our writ, that great bastion of the law though it may well be, also happens to show that we have enough dirt on the wool merchant to concern the Duke, which means there's every reason to suspect the dirt is enough to make him confess everything and sell out the Count in exchange for his life, which means the repercussions of our murder somewhere en route to the Duke are a much more distant worry than numerous dirty dealings coming to light that are far less ambiguous in ultimate consequences than a missing boy-toy of the Duke's niece.
Actually, it just means the merchant broke
a law. For all that anyone not fairly familiar with the case knows, it could just be that the merchant forgot to pay taxes.
Again, reference to Gaveston. Feudalism directly implies weak central authority. A fig for your "obstruction of law" and he wouldn't be the first lord to not give a damn about his superiors. I think you'd be moderately amused to read about the writs and summonses that the Percy family ignored in their feuds with the Nevilles.
That "weak central authority" has access to a
much larger army than the Count...