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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"You have no idea.....One never knows when one will encounter a soul in desperate need of a good dirking....

Allan lifted his mug, "To our safe crossing!"




Destini wrote:
She joined the deacon at the table, pulling a chair out to sit beside him. It was only moments before the innkeeper brought over their drinks. He lingered a moment to cast an unshielded glare at Brightpoint then turned and left without a word.

"Lovely fellow," said Destini with gentle sarcasm after he'd gone. She sipped her ale, which actually wasn't the worst she'd ever had. "But then, I'm sure ye're accustomed to all manner o' folk in yer line o' work."
Destini
Destini raised her glass to echo the toast. "Safe crossin's, Aye. We've crossed the seas well enough ..." Her voice trailed off as she recalled Elias. A shiver ran down her spine when she remembered he was still out there somewhere. She looked to the door as if he might appear there just because she'd thought of him. When he didn't appear, she shook her head and turned back to the conversation. "well, mostly well enough. I, too, hope we'll have safety crossin' the land."

"E'en so ..."
she continued, sipping more of her ale to stall her while she gathered her thoughts. "I cannae help but be constantly surprised to hear a deacon o' the church say the things I've heard ye say. 'A good dirkin'? Is there any such thing?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"Well you have *met* Elias. If ever there was a candidate for a good dirking...

Do you know what a deacon says when required to use deadly force?"




Destini wrote:
Destini raised her glass to echo the toast. "Safe crossin's, Aye. We've crossed the seas well enough ..." Her voice trailed off as she recalled Elias. A shiver ran down her spine when she remembered he was still out there somewhere. She looked to the door as if he might appear there just because she'd thought of him. When he didn't appear, she shook her head and turned back to the conversation. "well, mostly well enough. I, too, hope we'll have safety crossin' the land."

"E'en so ..."
she continued, sipping more of her ale to stall her while she gathered her thoughts. "I cannae help but be constantly surprised to hear a deacon o' the church say the things I've heard ye say. 'A good dirkin'? Is there any such thing?"
Destini
She had never seen the deacon use deadly force but, looking at him now, she believed he would if he had to. "I shudder to ask." she said in response to his question.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


The first thing is to consider that you are still around to say it...

But what you say is...."Bless me Father for I have sinned..."


Destini
Perhaps she was supposed to laugh, perhaps she wasn't. But the response was so very not what she was expecting that she she burst out laughing whether she was supposed to or no. Two of the patrons in the tavern turned to look at them. She took a drink and tried to get herself under control. "Aye," she said, wiping away the tears of laughter. "Aye, I suppose that's so."

Deciding not to make more of a scene than they already had, Destini finished her ale and stood, gathering her satchel and staff. She clutched the key to their room in her hand. The direction of the rooms was clearly marked by a sign beside the stairs. "We've an early start tomorrow, I trust. So, I'll adjourn fer the eve. Unless ye're followin' me directly to the room, I'll leave the door unbarred fer ye." She turned toward the stairs, then, leaving the deacon to his drink and decision. She wasn't his keeper. He could stay up if he chose.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan watched Destini head up the stairs a moment and then drained his mug and set it down with a hearty "Right Then."

Passing the innkeep who stood with eyebrow raised, Allan explained in strict confidence, "Unremitting Worldiness." and headed up the stairs.

Destini
The room was small, but could easily accommodate two. There was a single window covered in oiled cloth to keep out the worst of the winter's cold. It did better than no cloth at all, but still the room was a bit cold. "No colder than outside," she said to her self with a satisfied nod as she looked about at the room. "Not much warmer either. But certainly not colder." It would do. She set her satchel and staff against the wall and her cloak and hood near it.

She looked at the smallish bed. Despite its meager size, the mattress was made of clean, fresh straw. While it was no feather bed, it was beyond better than a simple bedroll. She smiled and dug her own bedroll out, deciding to give Allan the bed. He'd been on the road far longer than she had. Allan would appreciate it.

She paused ... Allan? When had she started thinking of him as his first name? The danger on the ship, maybe. She shook her head. It was inappropriate. She was a minstrel. Little better than a servant. As deacon, he was classed well above her. She rolled her bedroll out. As a member of a higher class, the deacon would have the bed. That was that. She continued to ready for sleep.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan came into the smallish room and noted that the bed was unoccupied and Destini was kipped up in a bed-roll on the floor.

"Excellent choice, dear,"
Allan remarked as he set up his own bedroll on the opposite side of the room, "One never can tell what bedbugs might lurk in a tavern's straw. Of course I would never find out in this case as no gentleman takes the bed whilst a lady takes the floor....pleasant dreams!"

He blew out the remaining lantern and smiled at the darkness

Destini
The morning sunlight through the oiled cloth woke Destini some hours later. She emerged from her bedroll stiff from being curled up in a ball all night. The evening had been far colder than she had anticipated and she had curled up as tight as possible to maximise the use of her own body heat. While she'd slept fairly well, the morning stretching took several minutes to work out the kinks and crimps that such a night of sleeping in cold inevitably caused.

At least Brightpoint would have been fine in the bed. She looked to the bed and saw it unoccupied. She was confused only as long as it took her to spot the deacon in his own bedroll across the room. She sighed in frustration, but smiled all the same. "Ye're a scoundrel an' a gentleman, deacon," she whispered to him, uncertain if she should wake him.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Hearing the mutter drifting lazily across the room, Allan smiled to himself and said loud enough to hear, "You're welcome, dear..."


Destini
They broke their fast quickly and packed quicker in an effort to get out onto the road all the faster. For Destini's part, the haste was more about avoiding a second encounter with the innkeeper than for a specific want to be away from the warm inn and out onto the road.

She pulled her cloak about her tighter. The night's rest in the cold room had left a chill in her bones that she had not been able to dispell with breakfast beside the inn's fire. But now that she was out on the open road, she realized the clear day was far more frigid than yesterday's travel under cloud and fog. She looked back at the city walls of Keswick and noted the lack of tradesmen she would have expected to see in a city of its size. "'Tis an odd town, Keswick," she noted as she turned back to walk the road beside Brightpoint. "I'd expect more fer its size. It feels .... somehow, well, empty."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"The King is re-locating folk from some towns to others, not just as a barrier to plague, but to create strong cities. In the end, some places feel very very empty. I expect that is why the locals in Keswick were a tad short...

Destini
"As short in tempers as they were short in hands, aye," said Destini, nodding in understanding. "That makes sense."

The wind brutally tore across the land. Sure, she had experienced winds before. These gusts were nothing new. Still, the icy grip of this wind seemed something tangible, something almost alive. It was as if the wind itself wished to rip through her cloak and snap her bones in sunders. As a weaver, she knew her cloak was secure enough, but the fibers of the fabric simply weren't close enough together to stop the gusts from reaching her skin. She shortened her stride in order to take more steps, hoping the action of moving more would keep her warmer. It worked only marginally better than before. "I cannae say I've e're experienced winds like these," she said to Brightpoint. "The cold is as a knife to the soul."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan stood, facing into the wind, enjoying the cooling sensation. He had felt way too warm at the Inn and was appreciating the reverse.

"These cutting winds score across the plains of the lowlands in ways that are not possible in the churned hills of Eire. When the wind can run without hindrance for sixty miles at a go it can achieve some fairly impressive speed.

That said, I am liking the cooler air. Bit hot and stuffy in that tavern room last night."


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