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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Richard.grimthorn
"Joined the choir invisible, do you think, then" said Grimthorn with an overly appraising look at the raven. "Yes, perhaps so." he agreed.

"He had this encaptured in his talons though," said Grimthorn, flicking Brightpoint's deacon medallion on the table with a flourishing gesture brought on by, perhaps, a bit too much dark ale. It swirled upon the wood surface of the table in a circling motion that yielded a slightly grating sound to the ears.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan whistled and took a deep drink before setting the ale down and reaching for the medallion.

"Well that bird did look familiar and now I know why.

Elias had a raven attack me and it tore a deacon's medallion off my cloak. Look, right there on the back 'Manus fidei' or Hand of the Faith.

That bird had this?"

Allan's eyes narrowed at the possibilities


--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn nodded slowly as he took another sip of his ale. "Yes, it did." He leaned closer over the table to speak in a lower tone to Brightpoint, as if worried someone might overhear. "I'd watch yourself if I were you. I'll certainly be keeping more of a weather eye on your safety now. Someone clearly knows you're here, or worse, knows your road. This," he pointed to the medallion, "was probably meant as a warning to you. Are you certain you want to go to Ireland? Maybe it would be better to turn back in favor of a safer road." Leaning back in his chair, Grimthorn drank his ale steadily while carefully watching Brightpoint.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"As it happens, His Grace rarely delegates to me tasks that are...safe. Care should be taken for certain, and take care I shall.

It takes, as luck would have it, more than the return of a lost trinket to scare me off.."


Allan considered the medallion a moment.

"Well done Richard on killing that damned bird though! Well done indeed. Keep this as a prize for your efforts."

He tossed the medallion back over to Grimthorn's side of the table.

Destini
Destini opened her eyes suddenly and swung her legs over the side of her bed to sit up. She rubbed her face with the palms of her hands. The darkness of her own dreamless sleep was far too oppressive. At her insistent urging, Allan had been kind enough to leave a candle burning. The flicker of the flame about the wooden hostel room comforted her somewhat. But the quiet of the room was too much. She needed noise, activity, people, anything to make her feel alive.

She pulled her green dress from her satchel, shook out the wrinkles, and pulled it over her head. As her satchel had been on the pack horse, it had not gotten soaked in the River Thames when she'd fallen in. It was far too nice a garment for this backwood inn, but it was the only dry clothing she had. Cinching the dress at her waist with her belt, Destini left the hostel room to find Allan and Richard.

She found them in the inn's tavern, sitting across from one another at a table beside an open window. She paused on the stairs and took a moment of silent admiration to watch the two men who had saved her life.

She made her way to their table with a gentle smile. "Evenin', Gentlemen," she greeted them softly. It was then that she noticed the black raven nailed to the table with a thin dagger. It was so out of place that she simply hadn't noticed it at first. "Why is there a dead raven on the table?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan looked up at Destini, down at the impaled bird, and up at Destini again.

"It's resting," He answered and too a sip of ale.

--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn hid an amused grin, but not the twinkle in his dark eyes. He nodded in agreement with Brightpoint as he, too, looked from the impaled raven to the lady MacKenzie. "Indeed. It's pining for the fiords." He joined Brightpoint in his sip of ale.

Destini
Even in her distracted mental state, it was difficult to miss the gleeful look in Richard's eyes. It seemed Allan was better at hiding his emotions than Richard was. She hid a grin of her own under a performer's mask of irritaion.

A dead raven was, after all, a dead raven.

She raised an eyebrow at her two favorite men in the world. "Pinin' fer the fiords? 'Tisnae pinin'! 'Tis dead!"

She waved the waiter over. If she was going to have this rediculous of a conversation, she needed a water glass of scotch.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan gasped, "It's not dead... its molting..."

He failed to stifle a grin.

It's all tuckered out after a long and burdensome journey that had a lot at stake..."

--Richard.grimthorn
"A lot at stake, yes. Well, it seems to have gotten the point. Don't you agree, milady?" Grimthorn was smiling openly now. Trading witisms with a worthy foe had a certain degree of fun to it. He brought his ale to his lips with his right hand and with his left felt his pocket for the message the raven had brought him right before its timely demise. He had yet to read its contents. Brightpoint had interrupted him too soon. He had to find a free moment to get away ....

Destini
Destini took a sip from her large glass of scotch the moment the waiter brought it over. She pulled up a seat to join Richard and Allan at their table and raised a menu. "I take it that - bein' the kindly gentlemen ye both are an' would ne'er let a lady sit at a table with carrion - that ye're both delicately tellin' me that I should avoid the appetizers here?" Peering around the menu at her traveling companions she added, "Or is that what passes fer the chef's special?"
_________________
--Richard.grimthorn
Aha! This was his chance!

Grimthorn finished his ale and took the speared bird in his hands as he stood. "Ah! Right you are, milady! I shall have it from your sight at once!" With that, he turned and comically parade marched from the tavern to the outside with the speared bird over his shoulder. Perhaps there might be a problem with drinking ale with the enemy. Still, it didn't hurt anything to make the girl laugh ....

Once outside, however, Grimthorn dropped his comical display with the remains of the dead bird. He returned his dagger to his belt and glanced about to ensure no one was near enough to him to know or care what he was doing. It seemed not. Grimthorn pulled out the parchment the raven had been carrying. What did d'Argent want now?! How dare he almost destroy his cover with Faheud's attaches! This had better be worth it!

--Viscomte_dargent wrote:
"I will solve the leak here. You will solve the leak there. Do not let MacKenzie get to Ireland. You can kill Brightpoint if you like, but that is secondary...."

d'Argent


Grimthorn fumed. Hadn't he just saved the girl? All this time he had been under the understanding that Brightpoint was the primary target. After all, it was Brightpoint that the fool Faheud had trusted to distribute that blasted antidote to the kings ... not that it had helped much. But now d'Argent has said the lady MacKenzie is the primary target? Leak? What leak?

It occurred to him. They had known for months that information had been passing between Ireland and England. D'Argent had discovered how ... and what was more ... whom. Damn. Grimthorn realized he was going to have to rethink his strategy.


(ooc: letter from d'Argent posted with permission)

Faheud


At the Hospital of St. Thomas, Count Faheud climbed onto his horse and prepared to head back to Hastings.

The report from Brother Corwynn had been hard to hear and very unsettling. There were killers on the loose, targeting his people, and he could not do more than send Corwynn out.

Happily, it turned out that sending Corwynn somewhere with orders to solve a problem was invariable an effective measure.

Time to go though, he was needed back at Council

_________________
Faheud, King of England



Thanks to Destini MacKenzie for the new banner!
--Brother_corwynn


Corwynn wondered if possibly Jah might consider closing the clouds up a bit and letting the roads dry out. Not that Corwynn was complaining, saints forbid.

But still... did riding wet make you a better servant of Heaven than riding in a vaguely dry state? He thought not.

And where the hell was Brightpoint? He had a habit of appearing and disappearing without regard to the best most could do.

On to Holywell, he guessed, and there was no sign in Margate.

Sigh.

It started raining even harder. Damn.

"I really wasn't complaining, Lord Jah, lovely water...really...Perhaps you might save some for...say...Spain?"


He rode on.



Destini
Miles to the North, Destini led the party Northward. They had decided on a strategy to take turns leading so that their duties offered a change up on the long ride. Eyes focusing on something new increased the possibility that they would spot something untoward. Richard brought up the rear, watching their tail for anyone unwelcome while Allan rested his eyes a moment in the middle having just hours ago finished leading them.

As Destini was in front, she was the first one to come to the crossroads at the old town of Chester. She pulled the reigns of Estrella de Fuego gently and brought their progress to a halt. "Well, Gentlemen," she called to her party. "What do ye think? There are two ports within a days ride. As ye're both native to England an' I amnae, ye'll know better which is more likely to have a ship to Eire. Liverpool? she extended an arm to the North. "Or Holywell?" she gestured to the West.
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