Afficher le menu
Information and comments (0)
<<   <   1, 2, 3, ..., 34, 35, 36, ..., 74, 75, 76   >   >>

= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Mary_persephone
Mary entered the ward, searching for Alberic, spying him at once. Sister Margaret was currently not at the Reverend Mother's heels only because Mary had sent the young nun to fetch hot tea. Mary could make two assumptions without ever laying eyes on the archcanon. When at last finding haven after traveling in a downpour like this, Alberic would want tea. And because he was traveling in this weather, this was no idle visit.

"Alberic!" she greeted him warmly. "My goodness you're soaked!" she exclaimed. Seeing Margaret with the tea tray, Mary beckoned her over."And probably cold too, guessing by the way you're huddled around that fire. Good thing I know you well enough to send for tea the moment I'm told you've arrived." Sister Margaret set the tray down on a table near the fire and left when Mary dismissed her.

Mary poured a cup of tea for Alberic then one for herself. Sitting in one of the several chairs about the fireplace, she got right to the point, as she always did with Alberic. "I take it this is not a social call ..."

_________________
--Canon_alberic


Alberic smiled, even as he dripped on Mary's pristine floor. He always felt bad about making messes someone like Jovita would have to clean up. Of course it would never again be Jovita, would it? He sighed at the sad remembrance

"Always a delight to see you Mary, though as always you are correct. This is not a social visit. I am here to catch up with young Brightpoint and Miss Destini. Are they still here?"


--Mary_persephone
"I'm sorry, Alberic, but, no," said Mary, sitting forward in her chair when she saw the subtlest of sighs cross her old friend's countanence. She knew what he was thinking. She'd thought it many times herself. Dear Sister Jovita had died not a month ago. No, she had not died, she'd been murdered. Jovita's absence was still felt throughout the entirety of the hospital. Alberic's last visit had been ... colorful ... due to Jovita's antics. Now, here the archcanon stood again ... but Jovita would never again serve him tea.

Mary found that she missed the young nun.

The Reverend Mother shook off the memory, and with it the feeling. She continued to answer Alberic's question. "They set on the road from here not two hours ago." Her brow furrowed, confused. "I thought they just left His Grace's presence, why were you sent after them?" Mary asked her old friend.

________________
--Canon_alberic


Alberic heaved a very heavy sigh. "I feared as much. Nothing about this day has gone as planned. The Count realized he had not given them his letter of Marque and sent me to catch them up. I fear they will have need of it more than once ere they return."

Alberic looked around the warm hall and sipped at his tea.

"I am getting too old for this my friend. But I cannot let His Grace down. I'll just finish this cup and be off I suppose. They are headed for Bristol and I wish to catch them before they take ship... I do not fancy a trip to Eire just now..."

--Mary_persephone
"Let me send one of the guards. His Grace has placed an entire battalion here. Surely one of them can ride to find Young Brightpoint and Destini."

She blushed at the possible implications of her words. "Not that I'm agreeing with you when you say you're too old for this, mind." The Reverend Mother nodded once resolutely to her old friend and took a sip of tea.

_______________
--Canon_alberic


"Indeed?" inquired Alberic. "I should say not. Besides, the platoon of twenty guards His Grace placed here have rather a different mission if I recall....mmmm?"

"Mary, I am certainly not excited about this mission, but it must be done. And that said, I should probably be off. Why turn two hours into four?"

Alberic drained his tea with a happy sigh and embraced his dearest friend in the world.

--Mary_persephone
Mary held her dear friend close a moment, then let him go as he turned away. She raised her hand in a gesture of farewell that he didn't see on his way out the door. He was too focused on his mission, she supposed.

After he was gone, she realized she was smiling. Alberic was always left satisfyingly grounded feeling in his wake, as if the world had somehow righted itself -- even if all he had done was had a spot of tea in her company. She looked to the heavens and wished him Jah-speed.

______________
--Richard.grimthorn
The Silent Watcher moved his lips as if he were speaking in a low voice to the sleeping dolt in the hospital bed before him. He had listened instead. Conversation twixt the elderly was always easily overheard. This was moreso true in the large space of the hospital ward. The Watcher heard everything. The canon was headed after the attaches, after all. And he carried a letter of marque to deliver to them? ...Excellent. So ... to Bristol, then?

But no ... that letter of marque could yet prove useful ....

The geriatric canon left the room. The Watcher waited, observing as the wrinkled nun gathered the tray of tea and teacups. She would likely remove that to the kitchens. The Watcher let her go.

He said some inane phrase of farewell to his "uncle" and stood, heading for the exit. Perhaps the elderly served some purpose after all ....

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


After several hours of riding through a downpour, Allan noticed the rain beginning to slacken. In a few minutes it stopped altogether and it was like a shroud was lifted from around his ears. He looked over an saw Destini focusing on the road in the gathering gloom.

"We'll be at the travel shelter in about an hour or so. Hopefully there is dry wood inside as a fire would be very helpful.

How are you doing? Do you need a rest before we push on to the shelter?"


Destini
Destini shook her head adamantly. Rainwater scattered from her soaked hood. "Nay, Allan. I donae wish to stop!" Her sharp tone echoed off the moist ground, returning to her own ears harshly. She immediately recognized the unfairness of raising her voice to Allan and closed her eyes to calm herself ... at least outwardly. Within, her emotions were still in turmoil.

She opened her eyes, but refused to look at Allan. Her gaze remained resolutely fixed on their road northward to Bristol, and beyond to Eire. "Nay," she repeated, her voice lower now, more controlled. Still, a slight edge remained that even her skills and vocal training failed to soften. She was simply too anxious. "Let us keep movin'. An' if we can skip the shelter an' continue onward, I wouldnae mind in the least. The faster we get to Eire, the more lives we might save."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan her some of his own arguments of days gone by in her words. "That is a fair point. Although His Grace once chided me that a swift arrival dead of exhaustion is more fraught with peril than a slow-arrival well-rested. Somewhere in between the extremes lies wisdom."

He was glad he had kept the whip-snap of impatience out of his voice. That was a new trick in the inventory he was glad to have.

"Now if Your King has been poisoned, as the letter says, he has either been given the antidote and lives, or hasn't and will not be there to greet us when we arrive.

What do you think is going on over there? Do we need a larger force of operatives?
"

Destini
She met his gaze, peeking out from her dark, rain-soaked hood. There was wisdom in his words, stemming from experience, no doubt. But these weren't his kin in danger. It wasn't his kingdom. It was hers. Could he truly understand how she felt? "We can sleep on the boat durin' the crossin' to Eire an' be just as well rested," Destini pointed out.

"As fer what I think is happenin' in Eire, I think my kin are dead or dyin', Allan. That's what I think is happenin'. Firstly I received news o' Zanditin, my kin, my king, my friend - an' just before we left Hastings, I learn my kin an' best friend Pagan is also stricken. Whether they live or nay, I cannae say. Since I left, my only word from Eire has been through Pagan. An' if she dies, there'll be no more information until we get to Eire an' stumble into whate're trap this Viscompte d'Argent has set. An' that's assumin' His Grace is right an' d'Argent is in Eire at all." She sighed heavily, her breath condensing into steam in the cold, spring air. Their task seemed insurmountable.

She stopped speaking suddenly. For a moment, the only sound was the muffled clop of their horses' hooves upon the muddy road. Her own despairing rambling had inadvertently laid out a very valid point. "Allan, what if that is the reason Pagan was targeted? To prevent information from crossin' the channel?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan conceded, "Aye, we can sleep on the boat...3 days out of a three week journey.

Were you planning to stay awake, alert for ten days at a drop then?"


Allan stopped nearly as suddenly as Destini had.

"Stopping information flow! Aye, that is it I am sure. isolation and fear is what the attacks are about. The last thing they want is free information crossing between the targeted countries.

If we limit the suspects to groups who would benefit from fear and isolation and chaos in the English-speaking world, you probably have a fair chance at being right.

One other thing bothers me. Why is there no word of problems in Scotland?"



Destini
She smiled at Allan's gentle way of pointing out how silly it was to try to push through all the way to Eire without rest. "Yer a hard man to bargain with - especially when I'm wrong. I give in. I willnae fight ye if ye wish to stop at the shelter fer the eve."

She thought on the flow of information at their disposal. Allan was right. There had been no word from Scotland. None at all. Why not? True, the border twixt England and Scotland was a volitile one, but for no information to cross at all was highly suspicious, indeed. "Ye only have a connection to Eire because o' Pagan an' myself." Destini pointed out. She did not say that if Pagan were dead, that connection was lost. She grimaced slightly at the thought before burying it and moving on. "An' I am only here because ye made the trip to deliver antidote vials to Eire. Who of Count Faheud's attaches was sent to deliver the elixir to Scotland? Has there been aught word from him?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan grimaced at the incisive question. Shaking his head ha replied, "For three hundred days, nothing heard from Scotland via any of our agents or the attache sent up, Brother William. I do not know what His Grace plans with regard to that, but it is a problem. And no disrespect to the tremendous value of information from yourself and your friend Pagan, we had agents there a'fore I went over last year."

They rode on in silence a span...

"I wonder though, "
Brightpoint mused out loud, "When we will get enough information to actually go after the culprits. I am tire of treasure hunts and would like to get to the justice part of the show...."

See the RP information <<   <   1, 2, 3, ..., 34, 35, 36, ..., 74, 75, 76   >   >>
Copyright © JDWorks, Corbeaunoir & Elissa Ka | Update notes | Support us | 2008 - 2024
Special thanks to our amazing translators : Dunpeal (EN, PT), Eriti (IT), Azureus (FI)