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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"JAH! Dammit! Grimthorn, Destini is losing it help her!"

Allan was screaming out curses and commands and knew Grimthorn would hear him. He thundered into the flooded river to help get Destini and her mount to safety.

What the hell happened to quiet rides across the country with only homicidal maniacs to worry about?

Destini
The current dragged her down. She was a fine swimmer, but the current here was simply too strong. She fought with her cloak clasp, trying to free herself, managing eventually to cast aside the heavy fabric. Still, the current pulled at her like the claws of the Nameless One, pulling her down to Hell. Above the water, another lightning flash illuminated the surface. There was no resulting thunderclap, no sound. Just the rush of water in her ears and the burn of her lungs. The air beyond that silver, shimmering curtain was out of her reach. As a singer, she’d been taught how to breathe, how to maximize the air she took in, but she hadn’t taken in enough air when she’d gone under the water. She only had so much air she could use. She was rapidly running out of time.

Heat at the corner of her eyes told her she was crying, her tears instantly merging with the River Thames, becoming more drops of water to drown her. Would she never know what had happened to Zanditin, her king, or Pagan, her friend? Were they dead? Would she see them in the world beyond? If not, Allan would continue the mission, save them if he could. But Allan would also blame himself for her death. Allan … Zan … Pagan … No, she had to live! For them! Panicked, she reached for the surface, fighting the current that continued to pull at her. Allan! she thought as the blackness closed in around the edges of her vision. Her lungs felt like they would explode. Her singer’s skill was failing her. Her body instinctively urged her to pull in air … but there was no air beyond her lips … only a watery death. The blackness closed in. No, No, No! The sound of water in her ears began to fade.

Jah, please! She was baptized! She was a believer! Would He take her so suddenly when she had so much left to do? JAH!

She lost consciousness … her body’s natural breathing took over … water surged into her lungs.
_________________
--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn, near deaf from the closeness of the lightening bolts, turned at Brightpoint's frenzied shouts. The girl's mount was there, but where was the girl? A dark form beneath the surface caught his attention. He was the closer of the two. He had the capability to save her.

He could let her die ... but what a waste. Plus, Brightpoint didn't fully trust him yet. He wouldn't last two seconds beyond her death if he didn't at least try to save her. He dismounted and went for the dark form.

Reaching in to the water, the first thing he pulled out was her unfastened cloak. Wise, girl, to lose the extra fabric, but it had distracted him from his true goal. Bubbles in the surface of the water caught his attention. A dark form hovered beneath the surface there. Grimthorn handed the girl's wet cloak to Brightpoint and removed his own cloak, belt, and pouch. "If you would but hold these," he said meaningfully to Brightpoint. Taking a deep breath, Grimthorn dove beneath the surface of the water.

His weight was greater than the girl's and enough to combat the undertow of the river, though he did feel it's pull. Opening his eyes beneath the water, he found his mark and wrapped an arm around her waist to pull her to shore. Gasping, he broke the surface and took in a grateful gulp of air. Now, to get the lady to shore.

Once upon the muddy shore, he checked for signs of life. She wasn't breathing. There was no tell-tale beating of her heart. "There is no breath! No pulse!" he reported to Brightpoint above the din of the storm. He sighed. She was gone. He sat back on his heels a moment. Well damn! Now, there was one less thing he could hold against Brightpoint. Grimthorn looked up to Faheud's attache. "We were not in time," he reported to Brightpoint as he stood, blocking his progress to the lady MacKenzie. "There is nothing you can do. She is gone."

He placed his hand upon Brightpoint's chest to stop his advance to the girl. "I am sorry," he said. A part of him was surprised to realize that he actually meant the apology.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"OUT OF THE WAY!" cried Brightpoint as he bodily threw Grimthorn aside, the look of startled dismay on Richard's face barely registering with Allan.

He saw Destini on the bank and realized she was not breathing.

Time for the resuscitation technique.

Allan began a rhythmic pressing upon the areas of the heart, and pushed breaths of air into the girl's mouth every third pump towards the heart.

"Live damn you!"
he cried, continuing his work even as Grimthorn huddled at a safe distance, the welt from Allan's backhand beginning to rise on his cheek.

Suddenly Jah's blessing came forth as Destini gasped and coughed out a gout of half the river before taking several deep breaths...

"Thank you Jah,"
whispered Allan.

And the Archdeacon meant it.

Destini
Coughing, sputtering, darkness turned to light. Cold and wet, she shivered. Her wet and muddied hair was plastered to her head. She gasped for air. Cool, refreshing air. Someone was near her. Who? She blinked the river water out of her eyes and focused her gaze on the figure.

"Allan," she said, surprised at how weak her own voice was. A bout of coughing took her. She collapsed upon the sand while water expelled from her lungs onto the muddy shore. Her muscles shook as she pushed herself into a sitting position. She tried to say something to Allan but started coughing again. She held her head between her knees a moment until the coughing had subsided. She looked to Allan and saw an expression of relief that she had never seen upon the man before. "Why are ye lookin' at me like that?" A brief cough or two forestalled any further questions. She looked to Richard then met Allan's gaze again. "What happened?" she asked him before another bout of coughing took her.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"You tried to drink the river, so to speak. Grimthorn pulled you out and I managed to....get your attention... Are you all right now? "

Allan was babbling to a degree, but he was so happy she was awake and talking to him he hardly heard the nonsense coming out of his mouth.

"Come...let's get to safer ground and we'll make sure you are well..."


Brightpoint helped her up to her feet and moved one of her hands to her horse to steady her and failed to let go of the other..

Destini
Getting to her feet was far more difficult than she would have anticipated. Her vision swam as she came to stand upon her feet and Allan steadied her. She took as deep a breath of air as she could without beginning another couging fit. Having Allan beside her to support most of her weight turned out to be important as he led her away from the River Thames.

They passed a rather stunned-looking Richard as they went. She remembered the lightning, remembered the rush of water above her head, being unable to breathe, her lungs burning ... then ... nothing. "Richard pulled me out?" she asked Allan, as if asking if he were certain. Of course, he was. Allan never seemed to say anything without being absolutely certain of its truth. First she'd not trusted Richard, and now he'd saved her life? She grasped Allan's lingering hand for dear life as a bout of coughing forestalled her second question. What did Allan mean when he'd said he'd got her attention?
_________________
--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn had never seen anything like it.

When a person wasn't breathing and had no pulse, they were dead. He hadn't been trying to forestall Brightpoint's saving the girl. He just honestly hadn't thought it possible. He marvelled at what he'd just seen, rubbing the welt upon his cheek where the deacon had backhanded him out of the way. Apparently, he'd deserved it.

Grimthorn picked up his belt and pouch and wrapped it about his waist as he watched Brightpoint help the girl away from the river. From his pouch, he fished out Brightpoint's deacon's medallion that the raven had brought him a month ago. He fingered it.

This Jah that Brightpoint believed in must be powerful indeed to afford His followers with such control over life and death! Could the Nameless One do that? Was he on the wrong side? Or was the Red Duke keeping these truths from those in his employ?

He tucked away the token and followed behind Brightpoint and the lady MacKenzie, leading their horses away from the river and to safety.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


As Allan wrapped an extra cloak around Destini he looked over at Grimthorn.

"Richard, that was exceptionally well done. I will ensure the Count learns of your valor this day. I am not easily impressed, and yet is has happened here. Well done indeed.

Let's get away from the river and get at least temporary shelter for everyone to dry out."


Brightpoint led them all down the road, his bad opinion of Grimthorn almost as shaken as his confidence that the mission would go without crises every day.

--Richard.grimthorn
Several thoughts went through Grimthorn's mind at once. He addressed the one that was the most danger to him first. "No need to contact Count Faheud on my account, my lord. It is my duty as a soldier to serve where serve I might. This incident was no exception." The very last thing he needed was to be found out as a spy in league with the Count Faheud's enemy because Brightpoint did something daft like try to get him a commendation or something for an act he probably shouldn't have even done.

Why had he pulled the girl out? It certainly wasn't to aid Brightpoint. No, things might have gone much better for him if the girl had died. First off, Grimthorm himself wouldn't be soaking wet and chilled to his bones. Brightpoint would have been distracted from his mission and given Grimthorn an opportunity he did not, at present, have ....

But then ... the girl did die, now didn't she? Yes, there was a quandry worth asking about. "Besides, my lord," said Grimthorn, as if continuing his earlier thought. "It wasn't I who truly saved her. The lady MacKenzie was dead when I pulled her from the water." He dared to place a hand on Brightpoint's shoulder to stop him from walking onward and ignoring his question. Grimthorn searched his enemy's eyes for the answer he so desperately wanted. "How did you save her?"

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"Not needing both our hands are we?" commented Brightpoint in a friendly voice with the barest hint of 'getoffmeorpullbackastump' hiding beneath the cordial velvet.

"I was taught by an oriental Shin Master on a number of practical skills. The Shin requires one be able to save life if one learning to take it. And that extends to restoring it to a person who has stopped breathing from a drowning."


Allan looked off for a moment as facts danced just beyond conscious though in a cloud of something not quite yet falling into place.

"It is my duty to ensure the performance of anyone assigned to my command is duly noted for better or for ill."


Allan looked off through the misted flat-lands near the river and spotted what he was looking for.

"There. There is a road running past that forest-line that leads in to Margate. Let's go that way and seek shelter."


He spurred his horse across the vale towards the tree line.

Destini
Destini had paused her own mount while the men spoke to one another in low tones. Low, yes, but not so low that she did not hear them. She was still shaking. Though, she had attributed the tremors in her hands to be due to the cold and wet, now, she wasn't so sure.

She had been dead? She noted Allan hadn't denied it in his explanation to Richard. Closing her eyes, she recalled those moments: the water above her head, the glassy barrier of the surface of the water as viewed from beneath ... then ... darkness ... nothing ...

... not even the passage of time ...

... nothing at all ...

... until Allan had pulled her back ....

The thought frightened her.

She pushed the fear aside as Allan spurred his horse ahead toward a small village. Glancing at Richard, she nodded to him in sincere thanks, surprised at the admiration she had for the man now that he had saved her life. "I thank ye," she said to him. Truth rang in her tone.

She turned her horse to follow Allan into the village.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Turning back to Destini, Allan could just not control the urge to say...

"You know, Destini...some there are that would consider coming back from the dead your first miracle towards living Saint hood..."


He rode on.

--Brother_corwynn


Brother Corwynn went over the notes he had taken regarding what happened to Elias in Hastings jail. Guards slain, cell unlocked...No sign of a struggle, single stab wound into the brain with an oddly shaped wound reminiscent of a polish stiletto or a throwing knife.

He decided he needed to talk to His Grace before proceeding with the investigation here, and realized he better have a look at the Count's horse as his master would want to know the steed was well.

There was no one in the section of stalls where he had left the horse and his mount as well. Corwynn walked up to the Count's horse, making sure not to startle the large Andelusian.

"Easy lad, it's all right. I am just going to make sure you are unharmed."

The horse nickered, accepted a slice of apple from Corwynn and tolerated the close contact of an examination. The adept attache immediately saw an odd contusion on the horse's left hind leg. Someone had struck just above the joint with a hard object or a weighted wire. Nothing natural left that type of injury without the abrasions a stick or rock would inflict.

"So then... Alberic was in fact waylaid by someone that knew what they were doing and had planned it. Not the type of work a random highway thug would put together... This makes two expertly planned and crafted murders in as many days. Four if we count the guards."


Corwynn needed to speak to the sister examining Alberic. Depending on the killing wounds, there might well be a serial murderer loose in the county. A murderer very likely to have headed on to pursue Allan Brightpoint and Miss MacKenzie.

First things first though...Update the Count.

Faheud


Count Faheud was sipping some tea in Mary's study when young Corwynn wandered in again. He looked a bit more agitated than before. Lovely.

Report, Attache," commanded Faheud, not wanting to waste either of their time.

_________________
Faheud, King of England



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