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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan smiled as the porridge was served. He thought of something and went back over to his pack from which he extracted a soft leather roll. Untying the knot he rolled it out and selected a pair of spoons from it. Offering one to Destini, he mused,

"Some might say I am a bit of a scoundrel. See earlier comments about my potential for high service in the church--or lack thereof.

To answer a question directly--and doubtless amaze you, Yes. My mission to the Commanderie of St. George is very much a part of this whole thing."





Destini wrote:
Her ears perked at the deacon's words. "His .. Grace..?" said Destini, unable to quite finish the question. "Then ... ye knew. All this time? Ye knew the cardinal an' I had traded missives." She turned back to her stirring of the porridge and muttered something under her breath that may have sounded something along the lines of "scoundrel."

The porridge she'd been stirring the whole while was now done. Destini, in a sudden realization that she'd best remove their supper from the fire lest it become ruined, used her hood to shield her hands from the heated metal as she moved it safely from the fire onto the dirt floor. Casting her hood aside - which had started to steam from the evaporation of melted snow and application of sudden heat - she dug in her satchel to produce the wooden mug she often used when she came upon a clear stream in her travels. She spooned some of the porridge into her cup, left the makeshift utensil in the pot for Brightpoint, and used a nearby scrap of leftover tinder as her own eating spoon.

She stirred the porridge in her cup to cool it, and thought again of the danger that could befall her kin. She was suddenly not hungry, despite not having eaten for much of the day. A thought occurred to her. "Is yer mission to see this 'Knight Commander' in England also part o' this?" she asked Brightpoint quietly. She hoped not. Because if it was, that meant things were more dire than she'd already supposed.
Destini
She took the offered spoon with a smile of thanks for the utensil and amusement at his first sentence. But her smile fell when he confirmed her fears. "Then this does stretch beyond the shores o' Eire," she concluded. A chill that had nothing to do with the weather went down her spine.

But ... no," Destini said, as a new thought occurred to her. "I've got it backwards, haven't I? after all, ye came from England, so this threat could just as easily have originated there."

She watched the deacon carefully. "Deacon Brightpoint, from whence comes this threat? Who is behind this?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"To get to origins, I think you'll have to travel a bit farther into Europe to arrive.... That's where the rumors and then facts began to surface.. As to who? We have many leads, and a few major suspects, but the Cardinal would have to be the one to explain what conclusions have arisen, for I have been chasing the bits and pieces non-stop for months."





Destini wrote:
She took the offered spoon with a smile of thanks for the utensil and amusement at his first sentence. But her smile fell when he confirmed her fears. "Then this does stretch beyond the shores o' Eire," she concluded. A chill that had nothing to do with the weather went down her spine.

But ... no," Destini said, as a new thought occurred to her. "I've got it backwards, haven't I? after all, ye came from England, so this threat could just as easily have originated there."

She watched the deacon carefully. "Deacon Brightpoint, from whence comes this threat? Who is behind this?"
Destini
Destini nodded solemnly at Brightpoint's words and absently ate a few spoonfuls of porridge. It was surprisingly flavorful and filling. Plus, it had the added benefit of being hot, perfect for a bone-chilling winter's night and conversation that froze the blood.

Her thoughts were racing about her head. Each new piece of the puzzle made her head spin. She placed a hand to her forehead and closed her eyes a moment. "All this supposin' an' guesswork is makin' me dizzy," she said to Brightpoint with her eyes still closed. "Serves me right fer bein' a busybody. I don't even know what I'm goin' to do with any o' the information ye've given me ... save worry fer my kin, o' course. I doubt there's anythin' productive I can do. Not my place to go o'er the clan chief's head. Ye've given the information to Padraig an' he'll see to it that Zan is kept safe, as he would do fer any o' the clan ... with or without threat."

She sighed. Once again, there was a danger to her kin and she could do nothing but watch it happen. She opened her eyes to stare into the flickering flames of their fire. "It was like this durin' the war with Springtime, ye know," she said quietly, setting her half-eaten bowl of porridge aside. She reached for her satchel and softly untied the wet strips of leather that held the top of the satchel together. The long strips of leather ties left streaks of moist leather dust suspended in glistening paths of melted snow on the palms of her hands. She continued speaking as she busied herself with drying and warming her hands in the fire's heat. "I didnae go to war with the rest o' my clan. I'm no fighter. I've no skills that way. Nay, I stayed at home until the silence an' empty streets grew too much. Then I wandered to the North an' back, applyin' my trade away from the battles that raged on fer months an' months. Nothin' I could do to help, though all my kin were in danger. Every one." Satisfied her hands were dry enough now, Destini reached her right hand into the satchel and gently pulled forth her harp.

Rough, waxed wood glinted dully in the firelight. The harp emerged into the gloom of the room in the same way a butterfly might have emerged from its cocoon. She was astonished no strings had broken in the cold elements and difficult journey they had just endured. Shedding the now unimportant satchel, the harp’s strings glistened in the firelight. She balanced it gently on her lap and began to tune the instrument as she continued her story. "My skills with a harp are o' no use when skills with sword or axe are needed instead. 'Tis as true a statement now as 'twas then. The months passed when all I could do was wait, an' listen fer news, an' hope. Then one day, they came back ... in small groups o' three or four. They were battered, beaten, scarred -- both emotionally an' physically. An' still I could do nothin' fer them but play my harp an' hope all would return to normal."

She finished tuning and shook her head at Brightpoint. "It never did though. It never does. Not really." She sighed and set her fingers to echo the same haunting melody the deacon had played earlier upon his whistle. "An' now 'tis happenin' again."

The harp's song echoed her quiet frustration.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan ate his excellent porridge and listened to Destini tell of her times of waiting. It rather struck a chord with him. He remembered how his Mother hated waiting when Da was away at the troubles. The tale also reminded him of something he had been taught.

"Master Zhan taught me a fascinating lesson that seems to apply a bit here. He took me out to the walls of the town where I was studying his ways, and pointed down at a boy herding some cattle.


'Young one,' he said--had the most annoying tendency to call me that--' see that child herding the cattle?'

'Aye!' says I.


'Well, that child is suited to his task and will always keep the cattle where they ought to be. Do you see the falcon in that tree?'

'I do!' says I.


"well that Falcon will never go hungry for it can catch a meal, and can be taught and used to hunt game birds for a wise master. It can even strike an enemy if trained...Do you see that Pigeon sitting on the sill of the Vestry window by the church?'

'Indeed! Clear as day..'

'Well that pigeon can carry words of great import if taught well and used wisely.


The child is not likely to catch game birds in flight, and likely cannot bring back from the wilds dinner to his master.


The falcon cannot be trusted to carry words of import to stop a war or launch a fleet of ships.

The pigeon would be a poor cattle herd and entirely hopeless in the attack of enemies,

Each is brilliant when set to the right task.

Let the herder watch the herd, the hunter face the kill, and the messenger carry the message.'


"Then my master Zhan walked back down the walls, and into his cottage, leaving me to ponder the wisdom shared as a cold rain began to fall.

Perhaps your frustration is well appropriate because you are not meant to watch a herd and wait. If the hunt and the fight is not your task, perhaps it lies in the finding and the listening, and the telling."






Destini wrote:
Destini nodded solemnly at Brightpoint's words and absently ate a few spoonfuls of porridge. It was surprisingly flavorful and filling. Plus, it had the added benefit of being hot, perfect for a bone-chilling winter's night and conversation that froze the blood.

Her thoughts were racing about her head. Each new piece of the puzzle made her head spin. She placed a hand to her forehead and closed her eyes a moment. "All this supposin' an' guesswork is makin' me dizzy," she said to Brightpoint with her eyes still closed. "Serves me right fer bein' a busybody. I don't even know what I'm goin' to do with any o' the information ye've given me ... save worry fer my kin, o' course. I doubt there's anythin' productive I can do. Not my place to go o'er the clan chief's head. Ye've given the information to Padraig an' he'll see to it that Zan is kept safe, as he would do fer any o' the clan ... with or without threat."

She sighed. Once again, there was a danger to her kin and she could do nothing but watch it happen. She opened her eyes to stare into the flickering flames of their fire. "It was like this durin' the war with Springtime, ye know," she said quietly, setting her half-eaten bowl of porridge aside. She reached for her satchel and softly untied the wet strips of leather that held the top of the satchel together. The long strips of leather ties left streaks of moist leather dust suspended in glistening paths of melted snow on the palms of her hands. She continued speaking as she busied herself with drying and warming her hands in the fire's heat. "I didnae go to war with the rest o' my clan. I'm no fighter. I've no skills that way. Nay, I stayed at home until the silence an' empty streets grew too much. Then I wandered to the North an' back, applyin' my trade away from the battles that raged on fer months an' months. Nothin' I could do to help, though all my kin were in danger. Every one." Satisfied her hands were dry enough now, Destini reached her right hand into the satchel and gently pulled forth her harp.

Rough, waxed wood glinted dully in the firelight. The harp emerged into the gloom of the room in the same way a butterfly might have emerged from its cocoon. She was astonished no strings had broken in the cold elements and difficult journey they had just endured. Shedding the now unimportant satchel, the harp’s strings glistened in the firelight. She balanced it gently on her lap and began to tune the instrument as she continued her story. "My skills with a harp are o' no use when skills with sword or axe are needed instead. 'Tis as true a statement now as 'twas then. The months passed when all I could do was wait, an' listen fer news, an' hope. Then one day, they came back ... in small groups o' three or four. They were battered, beaten, scarred -- both emotionally an' physically. An' still I could do nothin' fer them but play my harp an' hope all would return to normal."

She finished tuning and shook her head at Brightpoint. "It never did though. It never does. Not really." She sighed and set her fingers to echo the same haunting melody the deacon had played earlier upon his whistle. "An' now 'tis happenin' again."

The harp's song echoed her quiet frustration.
Destini
Destini gazed at the pigeon that had climbed out of Brightpoint's cowl some time ago. The little bird had been rather quiet since the storm had set in and was remarkably well-behaved.

Was he saying what she thought he was saying? Still, she doubted her skills were equal to the task he was proposing. Then again, skills could be taught. Although, it would most assuredly mean giving up the life of a traveling minstrel that she'd always loved ... wouldn't it?

She looked back at the pigeon and decided not to immediately address what appeared to be Brightpoint's intended conversation.

"Deacon Brightpoint," she said with a pleasant twinkle in her eye. Her harp's melody picked up a tone of levity. "Are ye comparin' me to the pigeon?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Deacon Allan failed to mask the grin that flashed by before he looked off into the distance considering the query.

"Oh, I dunno.... how are you at flying a message across a hundred miles of cold sea and delivering it in the dead of night?"




Destini
Destini laughed at his retort. "Cannae say I've tried to fly an' carry messages any more than yer pigeon there has tried to play the harp.

"But still, now, let's be fair, ye had to teach the pigeon to do that, now didn't ye? It surely didnae jump out o' its egg with the ability to blindly carry messages 'cross the sea."

_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan laughed, "To be fair, the Cardinal had the pigeons trained by a master of the craft. You can be trained to do most anything if you put your mind to it.

To be honest, I have listened to many an important tavern conversation whilst sitting in the corner and playing a melody or three..."






Destini wrote:
Destini laughed at his retort. "Cannae say I've tried to fly an' carry messages any more than yer pigeon there has tried to play the harp.

"But still, now, let's be fair, ye had to teach the pigeon to do that, now didn't ye? It surely didnae jump out o' its egg with the ability to blindly carry messages 'cross the sea."
Destini
She had been expecting another jest. When it didn't come, the smile faded slowly from Destini's face. Her hands ceased their movement upon the harp strings and the tune halted sharply without reaching tonic. Her eyes were wide when she looked at him cautiously.

"Ye're serious, aren't ye?" she asked him, stunned. "Oh, aye, this matter o' life an' death has me worried fer my kin. But ... are ye seriously suggestin' I take up yer line o' work?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"Well," answered Allan Evenly, "You seem less than content to wait in silent towns while others succeed or fail. Some are well armed with swords and bows. Others make their impact with keen wit.

I have simply pointed out that you need not be content with waiting for tomorrow to happen to you.

There is a degree of satisfaction in finding a way to happen to the morrow instead..."


Deacon Allan took out his silver flask and held it up in offering






Destini wrote:
She had been expecting another jest. When it didn't come, the smile faded slowly from Destini's face. Her hands ceased their movement upon the harp strings and the tune halted sharply without reaching tonic. Her eyes were wide when she looked at him cautiously.

"Ye're serious, aren't ye?" she asked him, stunned. "Oh, aye, this matter o' life an' death has me worried fer my kin. But ... are ye seriously suggestin' I take up yer line o' work?"
Destini
"How is it ye know me so well, so soon, when I know ye not at all?" She peered at him for a long while, considering him. "But then, I s'pose a man in yer line o' work was trained to do that ... to pick up on others without givin' away yerself," she said, answering her own question.

She set down her harp and took up his flask with a nod of thanks. This had been a night of conversation requiring stronger fare than porridge."Ye're right, o' course." She took a sip and handed the flask back to him. "I'm one fer the road. Have been, an' always will. I amnae one to sit idly by."

She took up her forgotten cup of still-warm porridge and ate the final spoonfuls while deep in thought. Setting her cup aside, she said, If ye're tellin' me -- e'en in the face o' threats like this -- one o' my meager quality can help to save my kin," Her stormy, grey eyes fixed his gaze with a firm, determined glint in the firelight. "Then I'm tellin' ye, I'm listenin'."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan nodded at Destini..

"The threat we are both interested in stopping comes from unknown parties, but the tools for the attack are coming through Holland and England it would seem.

With warnings and antidotes delivered here, there is not much else to be done in Ireland. We have information to gather in England and hopefully be able to help stop the entire thing before it gets moving.

Eyes and ears in taverns and towns can spot things the King's men or the Cardinal cannot. That is where attache's or operatives come in.

You are welcome to join me en route to England and the next phase of the Cardinal's instructions. I hope his other attache's have dug up a more clear picture by the time we get there.

With luck there will be ships in Port Lairge to take us to England straight away.

Are you up for the trip?"

Allan too a sip from his flask and put it away again.

Destini
Destini nodded slowly. His reasoning was sound. Though, it would mean leaving her homeland and her kin, she had always gone her own way. "To England, then," she agreed softly. She moved to pull her bedroll from her satchel and put her harp away while she was at it. "I s'pose we'd best rest while we can," she said. "It appears we've a long journey before us."

Destini removed her cloak for the first time and hung it on a protruding nail beside the fire to dry. She hung her wet hood on top of it and laid her leather shoes beside the hearth. As undressed as she was going to be in the cold weather with a relative stranger, she pulled down the top layer of her bedroll.

The wind kicked up again and battered against the abandoned way-house. The fire shivered in a draft of air that snuck through an unseen hole in the weathered wooden walls. "One thing I amnae goin' to miss is the Irish weather, that's fer certain," she said, though it was a lie. Eire was her home. She knew she'd miss everything about it -- most especially her clan. She laid back and tried to calm her racing thoughts and fears ... doubting she'd be successful at all.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint



"Rest is surely called for, " Allan agreed, "And I too will completely fail to miss the weather. I wish it would consider missing us.

I should tell you though, that in England, as the great sage Lord Moore once said unless otherwise specified, conditions may be considered damp.




Destini wrote:
Destini nodded slowly. His reasoning was sound. Though, it would mean leaving her homeland and her kin, she had always gone her own way. "To England, then," she agreed softly. She moved to pull her bedroll from her satchel and put her harp away while she was at it. "I s'pose we'd best rest while we can," she said. "It appears we've a long journey before us."

Destini removed her cloak for the first time and hung it on a protruding nail beside the fire to dry. She hung her wet hood on top of it and laid her leather shoes beside the hearth. As undressed as she was going to be in the cold weather with a relative stranger, she pulled down the top layer of her bedroll.

The wind kicked up again and battered against the abandoned way-house. The fire shivered in a draft of air that snuck through an unseen hole in the weathered wooden walls. "One thing I amnae goin' to miss is the Irish weather, that's fer certain," she said, though it was a lie. Eire was her home. She knew she'd miss everything about it -- most especially her clan. She laid back and tried to calm her racing thoughts and fears ... doubting she'd be successful at all.
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