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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

Destini
Destini swallowed. This man was the law. This man had the power of an entire county behind him. He could put them in jail if he found the right evidence. She was not so naive to think that there wasn't evidence out there in the woods for him to find. Allan, Richard, and she had just killed five men. If there was ever a moment for a performer's skill, this was the time.

She kept the anxiety from her expression as she watched Allan face down the Constable of Holywell. This might not go well for them if Allan chose to take offense at the constable's words. "My lord, I've believe ye've made a mistake."
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--Constable_wainwright
He looked to the man and woman at Brightpoint's table. Unknowns. To be investigated later. A job for the under-constable. Not for him. Unless things got dicey, that is. Brightpoint was his business. Brightpoint had caused too much a ruckus the last time he was in town to be dismissed with entirety. This new man and woman, however, until proven otherwise, could be dismissed for the moment. "Good Day to you both." Being constable, however, he could not resist peering at Brightpoint's companions with his keen eye. "You both know the deacon, then. Well enough for him to tell stories to you. I may have questions for you later. That is, if this situation turns out how I guess it will."

He turned his attention back to Brightpoint. Yes, the man stood taller than him. But he was used to that. Didn't let it bother him. Never really had. He eyed the man's cold smile with an icy stare of his own. "So you're inferring that I cannot look after my own business? You're wrong, Deacon Brightpoint. Per usual. This murder occurred late last night. Perhaps after midnight. Early this morning, even. Yet, undoubtedly before the sun rose. I'll check with the gate guards ... or the tavern owner, perhaps. I think you arrived sometime earlier than late last night. Now, did you not?"

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Brightpoint sat down, his posture showing mirth, disbelief, and ridicule of the moronic.

"Well, first, That is Arch-Deacon to you, Chief of Security to the Head of the Church and Speaker of Parliament.

My authority out-ranks your every breath.


As evidence will show to any competent investigator, I have been in this tavern since well before dark yesterday, and only after sunrise ventured out."


Allan waved a dismissive hand," I suggest you find another way to cover your inability to control events in your town, or I will be forced to call martial law under this document."

Brightpoint displayed, but did not let go of, the letter of Marque.

"Tell me what it shall be, constable. You catch the real criminals, or I lock you up and do it myself....as usual..."


Brightpoint was finished with local idiots.

Destini
Destini stood and placed herself at Allan's side, facing the constable. She rested a gentle hand on Allan's shoulder. He was being far more harsh with this man of the law than she thought he should be. Did that parchment truly give Allan the ability to remove the constable from his duties? She wasn't comfortable with that. Her hand on Allan's shoulder was as much to steady him as it was to steady herself for her own words to the constable.

"My partner speaks perhaps too harshly, my lord," she said respectfully to the constable. Her hand grasped Allan's shoulder firmly now, wordlessly willing him to understand that she was still on his side despite her opening argument. "We donae wish any ill to ye or yer town. We donae have any desire to take yer duties from ye. Our only goal is to reach Eire as quickly as Jah will allow it. As soon as there is passage thence, we will be gone from here an' out o' yer way."

She released her hand from Allan's shoulder and continued evenly. "That said, yer suspicions o' Allan are unfounded. I can vouch fer my partner's whereabouts. He has been with me. We havenae been separated fer more than an hour since our arrival in Holywell. I swear it to ye."
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--Constable_wainwright
Wainwright's teeth ground together in irritation at Brightpoint's gall. The line of his jaw was more defined with the bridled tension behind the lines of his face. He nearly took the man in for impeding his investigation. Indeed, his right hand went so far as to grasp the hilt of his sword. The view of the seal on the letter of marque stayed his hand.

The woman spoke. Her words were reasonable. Her respectful tone was a direct counterpart to Brightpoint's insolence. So she was Brightpoint's partner. She said Brightpoint had been with her since they had arrived. "Indeed. Is that so?" asked Wainwright of the woman. He stepped closer to her. Her account of events garnered her his inquisitive scrutiny. "If you are arch-deacon Brightpoint's partner, tell me this: wouldnt a good partner offer an alibi if needed?" Wainwright closed the distance on the small trio enough to peer at the woman closely. "If your testimony is true, I shall have to consider it. But If.It.Is.Not ...." He allowed the threat to hang in the air between them a moment.

He turned to lean on their table and gaze in Brightpoint's humorless eyes. There was nothing he, as constable, could do here, at present. Brightpoint knew that, was counting on that. "If I find so much as one piece of evidence leading to you or your party, I will get a warrant for your arrest and it will be I who locks you away. That little paper of yours will do you no good."

Wainwright straightened to his fullest height of five foot eight inches, turned as a soldier would about-face, and left. He had a story to corroborate. What could the gate-guards tell him of Brightpoint's comings and goings? He wondered.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Brightpoint looked at the departing back.

He looked over as his partner who had certainly had some merit in tempering his harshness, and had a lot at stake here. He was not especially delighted at getting called out by his team in front of a known hostile, but that was irrelevant.

He looked over at Corwynn with a 'We are certainly buggered now' look in his eyes.

"That went well," stated Holywell's (apparent) number one enemy.

--Brother_corwynn


"Went, well?!" exclaimed Corwynn. "You have just been basically accused of some unknown murder by the local constable. And why was it necessary to throw your weight around?"

Corwynn did not entirely feel this way, but he wanted to be 100% convinced.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


After subduing an angry response, Allan calmed himself and explained things.

"It went as well as I could possibly expect. At face value I was entirely too harsh on the facts of him only wandering in and rousting me out a bit."

Allan grinned with a pained expression as that bit settled in.

"Turns out, though, that on my last two trips through here I have been ambushed, lost team members, faced anything from 5-3 to 20-3 odds, and never had backup from the town constable when the fighting was over.

He lets cut-throats and contract assassins lurk in his town and accuses the surviving victims of foul play. He is either a typical local constable and wants peace and quiet--thus smacking whomever he perceives to be why the noise happens, without regards to the rights and wrongs.

The other option is that he is well paid to appear that way. I believe the former not the latter. If he can pin the tail on the Brightpoint, he will feel like it is a job well done and case closed.

I explained more about the who and why of my being here and let him know if he wants to build a frame and see how I fit as the picture, he'd better have more than guesswork.


At any rate, he will know we came to town and when, he will learn Destini and I went outside and were joined by a third, and he will know the third was not you Corwynn. I do not like Wainwright, but I respect his detecting skills.

I f he decides to take the easy route and pin it all on me, I will go along quietly and you three can get safely away to Eire."


This was going to be another very long day...

Destini
"No, Allan," said Destini firmly, shaking her head as she returned to her seat. "E'en if the constable's choice is to take the easy road, I willnae leave ye behind to rot in some prison or be killed fer a crime ye didnae commit."

But there was the matter of the crimes they did commit. An uneasiness settled about her stomach as she thought of last night's ambush presented by the Delaney Boys. She was as much in the constable's sights as her partner ... at least, she should be if the constable were doing his job and not trying to pin every murder on Allan. The thought occurred to her that Allan was right. She could get away with murder if she left Allan behind to take the fall for her. Inwardly, she recoiled at the thought. How could she even consider the thought? Allan was her partner, her friend, her ... more? Would she -- could she -- really throw him to the wolves in order to escape justice herself? A sickened expression crossed her face. "I donae like bein' on this side o' the law." she admitted to her compatriots.
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--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"No crime was committed by this company by the lake. Self Defense is just that.

Allan looked at Destini intently before going on

"Lives were taken, to be true, but they themselves put that on the butcher's bill when they ambushed us without a word or a cause."

He turned his tone to the barest edge of stern command

"Hear me though. Nothing will keep you from Eire and the mission therein--be it a lazy constable, or my sudden need to learn knitting in the county jail."

Faheud


Cardinal Faheud, Count of Sussex, and now suddenly an Earl of a new territory, was writing letters and logistical instructions when there came a tapping at his study window.

He looked up and realized it was a familiar pigeon trying to get in,

"Peck! What has brought you here?"


The Cardinal opened the window and let it into the study, trading treat for letter.

It read:




"Dearest Desti,

I don't know how to put it gently, so I put it blunt. Zan's dead. He didn't take the antedote. I'm sorry, I don't know what else to say. I still live but not because of lack of effort! There has been numerous attempts on me life, I've been poisoned, beaten, tortured and mangled. It's a miracle that I still live. A man called Viscomte d'Argent is behind it all. Him and one Callaghan. They run their operation from the Luvafair - ye remember that empty joint, don't ye? Well, it's not empty anymore. They run some kind of operation from here - selling weapons to the NNGO and other criminal groups and finance it all through slave trade. Nasty business. Tomorrow I'm going to raid that place and rest assured d'Argent will die slowly fer all he's done. If he's still there. I'm sorry I still don't have any better news fer ye. I hope this letter finds ye alive and well.

May Jah and all the other gods up there help us all. Me thoughts and prayers are with ye.

Pagan"


Faheud needed this out to the intended recipient as soon as possible. He took out quill and pen and set down these words:



"Allan. Get the attached letter to Destini yesterday. I pray you are all well and in one place.

A report back on status would not go amiss.

SE Faheud
"



He attached the pair of letters to Peck and whispered, "Find Allan" before sending it on his way.
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Faheud, King of England



Thanks to Destini MacKenzie for the new banner!
--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn's weary footsteps descended the wooden stairs. His heavy boots and rough morning made his gait seem even more lumbering than usual. His companions were seated at a table nearest the stairs. Well, Brightpoint and the lady MacKenzie could be considered his companions. That ruffian Corwynn was there as well, but could hardly be called a companion. They were speaking in low tones about something serious. He might have wondered what it was if he hadn't still been feeling mildly hung over. Instead, he plopped himself down in the extra chair at the table. "I trust you're all having yourselves a better morning than I," he grumbled at them.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


As it turned out, Allan was pleased to see someone having a worse day than he was heading for.

"In a word, Richard, NO. We were just pulling odds on whether safe transportation would arrive before an arrest warrant."


--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn allowed one eyebrow to raise slightly at the word warrant. Barkley or the Delaney boys? Or something else entirely? "Well unless you," he looked to the lady MacKenzie, "completely failed to weigh the Delaney boys down, we're fine." He leaned back in his chair and took a deep breath in an effort to return some of the clear-headedness he'd had before drinking last night. "You did weigh them down, didn't you?" he asked.

Destini
"Of course I did," said Destini in a hushed tone that carried with it a note of irritation. She frowned, then, and looked to Allan, suddenly uncertain. "At least, I think I weighed them down enough."

She chewed on her bottom lip. "Allan, if we did nothin' wrong, why did we nae go to the constable an' tell him we were attacked? There'd be none o' this suspicion on us now if we'd come clean to begin with." Why hadn't she thought of this before? Why had it taken until now to think about telling someone in authority that they were attacked? Too frightened, maybe. Too overcome by events. Now, of course, it was too late. They'd hidden the bodies. But had they hidden them well enough?
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