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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


The words of the brief funeral service having drifted out across the misted lake, and the bubbles from the sinking assassins dispersing, Allan turned to his compatriots.

"Let's get back to town. I need to clean up, I need some food, and I need a drink. "



He started walking away from the lake edge along the trail.

Stopping he turned and added, "And not necessarily in that order."

He continued a few steps and turned again, "I think a back route into Holywell is best, just to be sure there is not another surprise party awaiting."

With that he headed towards town and did not stop.

--Richard.grimthorn
The town was quiet save for the late-night drinkers about tavern row. Grimthorn placed a hand on Brightpoint's shoulder to stop him before he could make the final turn toward the Town Hall Tavern. "If you value your life, you'll not return to the inn near the town hall. There are other inns in town. I suggest we take our patronage to one of them instead."

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan nodded grimly, "I had wondered what motivated you to come out to the lake. When we get settled you can tell me what happened and we'll sort out if a pre-emptive strike is required."

Looking at Destini and then back to Richard he continued, "I do not take attempts to kill my team lightly. Sometimes you have to be...stern."

Allan glided seamlessly through some brush and beckoned them to join him. It was a trail leading into the back of town behind a couple taverns.

"The tavern I visited earlier was nice enough and the keeper is reliable. Let's go there."


--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn smiled, pleased he would not have to warn Brightpoint away from Barkley's usual tavern as well. As soon as this little matter was cleared up, he wanted to have a word with the little gambling weasel. For that word to take place, he needed Brightpoint and the lady MacKenzie to keep their distance from Barkley. Aloud, he said, " Yes, a wise decision. Plus it keeps me from the card tables. Milady?" He stepped aside to allow the lady MacKenzie to enter first then followed her within. "Would you do the favor of securing lodgings?" he asked, hoping she would.

Destini
Destini reluctantly agreed and left Allan's side to make her way to the innkeeper. She was grateful for the inn's wan light. Though she had washed her bloodied hands in the lake water, splashes of red-brown still clung to her cuffs. She hoped he wouldn't notice, or would think it merely mud.

He didn't seem to care about the splotches on her cuffs, only that she paid him for the last two rooms he had available and the space to stable their horses. "Three glasses o' yer strongest at that table as soon as can be," she told the barkeeper when she had finished the lodging arrangements. Allan was right. Drinking was definitely in order this night.

She turned and made her way back to Allan and Richard. "The last two rooms available are booked under the name Simon Sezz. That'll be ye, Richard." She handed him his key. It seemed only fair that he should get the alias after sending her to do the work of leasing the room.

She held up the final key and handed it to Allan. "We'll have to share the other room, Allan. I hope ye willnae mind."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"Brilliant," Allan exclaimed, "I had been worried we'd end up at multiple inns. This one has excellent drinks and a fine cooked-to-order menu. What say we make those drinks disappear, order up dinner, and take turns cleaning up while the cooks work magic?"

Allan headed over towards the table, stopping to comment, "Oh Richard--or was that Simon, mm never-mind--I'll need a full briefing on what happened here that led you out in suspicion of the attack. We can discuss that while Destini has her turn at the cleaning up."

Destini
She did not like being shut out, but she was nearly too tired to care as much as she normally would. The arrival into Holywell, the not-quite-finding a ship headed to Ireland, the hours of training in the woods with Allan, the attack, her killing a man, hiding the dead assassins in the lake, and now Richard said they could not go to their originally arranged lodgings because someone there would kill them but wouldn't tell her more than that.

It had been a very bad day.

She downed her drink quickly to take the edge off the day. The too-fast arrival of that familiar buzzing sensation in her cheekbones reminded her of how little she'd eaten that day. She ordered supper and stood. "Have yer talk," she said with a pointed glance at Richard. The pointed glance shifted to Allan in a subtle warning of ye'd better be tellin' me all 'bout this later.

"I'll clean up first. I could use a little fresh air anyway." She turned and left the table.
_________________
--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn watched the lady leave with a somewhat heavy heart. She couldn't know how much he was simply trying to protect her. Nor could she know how much of a personal risk he was taking for her safety. "She might not forgive me for not telling her myself, but what I have to say will be best if she hears it from you." He paused to swivel his gaze back to Brightpoint. "Or not at all."

He leaned back in his chair and took a long sip of his drink before continuing. "To answer the question of how I knew of the attack, you must first understand where I come from. No, no, Brightpoint, I know you did not entirely believe that whole bit about my being a man-at-arms in Faheud's service sent to bear you that letter of marque. Don't deny it. You're far too intelligent to play dumb with me, you know." His eyebrows arched and he added, "My respect for you is part of what's brought me to this decision. Sappy, perhaps, but there you are."

Grimthorn fished about in his belt pouch until he found the item he was looking for. When he brought his hand back to the table, it grasped a wrinkled piece of parchment. It was the missive from d'Argent the raven had brought before he'd killed it. But Brightpoint didn't need to know that part. "I received this from an old ... associate. I joined your party to carry out my mission, to find out how much you knew, and to stop the lady MacKenzie from reaching Ireland." He laid the parchment on the table and pushed it over to Brightpoint with his first and second fingers.

He waited and watched Brightpoint for his reaction. After all, if Brightpoint decided to kill him now before he'd finished, Grimthorn would be saved the trouble of graveling in this most undignified manner.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan downed his glass and sat silently, looking at Grimthorn for a moment longer than could possibly have been comfortable.

"Aye. I have long thought there was a piece of the story that would explain why the rest of it does not add up.

Let's take it at face value for a moment. There are a couple of questions that linger, dancing in the air between us and the decision of what I will do
.

Who is behind wanting these orders carried out? What is their motivation?


How did you come by a letter of marque signed and sealed by Count Faheud?! He is extremely careful about whom he might entrust such power..."


Allan awaited answers with a shin readiness for motion of thought or body in any direction required just below the calm exterior he presented."

--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn shifted uncomfortably under Brightpoint's gaze, waiting for a killing strike that did not come ... yet. There was still time to make a mistake and incur the attache's wrath. Grimthorn drained his glass and shook his head quickly. "I'll answer your last question first, simply because the first and second question are a little more difficult to explain." What he said was true. But it was also true that he'd spent the walk to save the attaches by the lake side thinking of how he would explain away this little problem. He had this answer prepared. "It was given to me by a man, an annoying little fellow who sometimes helps out those who work for my former employer. The imbecile said he'd gotten it from the saddlebags of an elderly rider heading Northward. My guess is the Cardinal sent him to catch up to you. I know what you're thinking, Brightpoint, but no, I did not ask who the rider was. Understand, when one is in that role, one learns not to ask too many questions."

"As for my former employer," He glanced about the room to ensure neither The Finisher nor any other of Holywell's underground were close enough to overhear what he had to say next. This information more than anything else would get him killed. Grimthorn leaned close and motioned Brightpoint to do the same. When he spoke, it was in a whisper only. "I know him by one name only: The Red Duke." Having spoken the name, he pulled a respectful distance away from the attache who might kill him the moment he had the answers to all his questions. Grimthorn held his empty glass up to the barkeeper. If he was going to die, he was going to do it with calmer nerves than this. "What his motivation is, I've never heard. My role in his enterprise was little more than contractor to large business firm. That's all it was: good business." He smiled a brief toothy grin.

Grimthorn picked at an errant sliver of wood in the table and tried to pull it free. "You were right when you said I dressed as a noble-born. I am." He looked out of the top of his eyes at Brightpoint's unnervingly steady gaze. "Oh, yes, it's true. But nothing holding title or wealth." He returned to pulling at the sliver of wood that just wouldn't break free. "No, second-sons rarely get anything. All that went to my moronic brother. Business was all I had. Still is, really." He met Brightpoint's gaze earnestly and leaned across the table again. "So believe me when I tell you that I am giving up a great deal to give you this information and save your and the lady MacKenzie's lives."

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"The Red Duke.... I have heard that somewhere before. Tell me about the person who sent you the letter..." began Brightpoint as he wondered if he should trust any of this man's information.

"It is laudable to save our lives and much appreciated. Yet. That brings up a fairly important matter as well," continued the arch-deacon, "if you were employed by scurrilous sorts who are very dangerous to sever ties with. If these folk seem to be just as happy to murder as to persuade... If you had a lot of profit to lose by switching sides...


Why are you doing it?"

Allan waited to see if Grimthorn was going to reveal a believable underlying motivation, or whether he'd have to be stern with him after all.

--Richard.grimthorn
He had no intention of hiding the truth for either d'Argent or The Finisher. Let them deal with Brightpoint on their own. Better yet, let them deal with a well informed Brightpoint. Grimthorn would not protect them. He scoffed. "Ah, yes, now we come to the crux of the matter: my co-workers."

"The letter comes from a man named d'Argent, a French nobleman, currently in that backwater hole called Ireland. He's as subtle as a bolt of lightning and about as dangerous. As quick and decisive as he is cruel, not a man to be trifled with. Still, despite his laudable traits, I'm a little surprised you haven't taken him out already. D'Argent has no use for pretence or stealth and, as such, is easily found. Plus, he hires the absolute worst employees. The idiot Elias was one of his. Moron. You'll undoubtedly be somewhat pleased to know Elias did not survive his final conversation with me."
Grimthorn's grin at Brightpoint was one of cruel delight.

"I did get a look at your handiwork on Elias, by the way. Nicely done! Speaks of a man without mercy. I was truly impressed. I almost wish I'd been there to see the single-minded dolt get the injury he so richly deserved." He raised his glass in toast to his hopeful ally and took a long drink from it.

Setting the glass down, he sighed. "And then there's the reason I came looking for you earlier. I suspected some manner of ill-conceived attack this evening when I saw her." This topic of conversation required further fortification and Grimthorn took it from his glass before continuing. "One of my former associates is staying at the inn near the town hall. She's a real piece of work, that one. Paints herself in the most ghoulish ways. Looks like a pale, sad, clown doll." Grimthorn shuddered out of disturbed disgust. "Can you imagine such an unfortunate creature associating her name to my reputation?! I cannot abide being part of an organization that would outsource work to that tasteless, trumped-up, tacky, traumatized, trashy, little tart!" Grimthorn took a deep breath, and a deep gulp of his ale, to calm himself.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan's eyebrows narrowly missed a free trip down the back of his head.

"Elias you say?! YOU did that? Well done! BARKEEP another bottle of scotch over here." Allan drained his glass and waited for Blaike to set down a fresh bottle and a brace of glasses. Allan poured up a double, neat, for each of them and one for Destini.

"She can catch up when she gets here. Slainte Mahath!"


Allan and Grimthorn both raised, saluted, clinked, and drained their glasses.

"So. I can certainly understand why a businessman would not want to side up with that lot. I have heard of the doll girl. She is a rather scary one. I have always expected to need to deprive the world of her presence eventually."


Allan refilled their glasses and another one for Destini.

"To the elimination of Idiots!"


Glasses drained swiftly and clomped back down to the table. Conversation resumed.

"I have also heard of d'Argent. He is a piece of work we will have to sort out as he is behind a lot of the direct poisonings that are assassinating royalty and nobility across England and Ireland.


This Red Duke. Where is he from?"


Allan drained his glass and refilled it and Richard's once again. He filled a third for Destini, who had some serious drinking to do when she arrived.

--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn, who had been drinking an ale or two more than Brightpoint this eve, was feeling a bit tipsy. "Aaaaaah, the Red Duke," said Richard---Grimthorn--- as he drained his glass alongside Allan--- Brightpoint. "Now There ish a mastermind." He reached for the bottle and poured Allan---Brightpoint--- another glass alongside his own ... and there was the other glass to fill for the lady MacKenzie -- damn, he was losing track ... "You'll find that maniacal maniac in Glashgow. Shomehow, he sheems to find a comraderie amogsht the Sshcottish." For some strange reason, Grimthorn started to giggle.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"That makes a lot of sense," Brightpoint mused, "We wondered why no word was drifting down out of Scotland about murders and assassinations. The Red Duke....I wonder if he is the font of all these festivities or another hired hand."

He looked around the common room of the Tavern and noticed a familiar shock of sable hair moving through the crowd near the door leading to the stairs.

"Ahh there comes Destini our way. She has a lot of drinking to catch up on."

As he spoke, Allan smelled roast boar and various other aromas coming up from behind him in the direction of the kitchens.

"I daresay dinner approaches as well. Excellent timing."


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