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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

Destini
Brightpoint's reference to her as a 'friend' caught her attention. She barely knew the man, but somehow they'd forged a friendship in that short span of time. She smiled at the deacon and settled herself on one of the barrels. She pulled her knees up to her chest and wrapped her cloak about her to keep her warm in the February air. "Turns out, Deacon Brightpoint, we've a while to spare. Go on."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan commented blandly as they sat, “Poisons are nothing new. We have recorded stories of their use in ancient Greece, Rome, Egypt, the far orient…Apothecaries today carry many elixirs and extracts that can be applied as medicine in some ways, and as deadly poison in others.”



The deacon’s face was more-intense as he went on. “The bane of leaders in the church and of the kingdoms is the problem of the countless ways lives may be shortened or ended with the unseen poison in food, drink, clothing, candles, and what not.”



“One can never be too careful, especially when some very harmless things can combine into deadly peril. This ancient Chinese would combine as many as 5 ingredients in order to slyly eliminate a target. There were ancient charm coins that explained in pictures how to combine things



The charms like this one pointed the educated man towards specific plants, minerals, and animals..



Allan shook his head as he spoke.

“Sometimes the poisons would be all combined into one elixir to add to food or drink, to put on a sword or knife or arrows keen edges… but sometimes it is delivered over time, as separate ingredients.




We have been hearing rumors of a trinary, or three part poison delivered in several ways. Painted into barrels used to age whiskey is one ingredient that half the English-speaking world may have already been exposed to.

Another is melted into candle-wax, to impact people close to the altars at high mass—such as clergy and nobility…


We are unsure of the third element, and have thus gone for the antidote option as protection. The Asphiras flower from deep in China, along the Great Wall’s length seems to defeat one or more of the poison ingredients. An elixir of this is the antidotes now prepared at the Hospital of St. Thomas.


Allan held up a tiny clear vial, capped with silver and filled with a radiant blue liquid. These will save so many lives until we stop the poisoners…


“Who would think that this tiny thing could save a King or a Cardinal?”
Destini
Destini watched the deacon intently as he told his tale. Her eyebrows arched in surprise as he told of the two known ingredients. "Barrels o' whiskey?" Her breath caught in her throat as she thought of the connotations of that. "Brightpoint," she said carefully, "There was whiskey at Oddman's and Airiana's weddin'. Ye an' I both drank there. An' e'en if those particular barrels werenae poisoned, drinkin' is a way o' life in Eire ...."

She considered the second of the two known ingredients and added, "Perhaps the church's nigh absence in Eire will be the savin' grace o' my king. If the second part o' the poison is in church candles, 'tis likely willnae reach many in my country."

The vial sparkled like a gemstone in the shimmering sunlight. Destini peered up at it in wonder. "How did ye discover that this Asphiras flower was the true antidote fer this poison?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint



Allan nodded, "one would think Eire safe, no? Sadly, beeswax is used in many types of candles for many purposes, be they of Jah's work, the druidic faith, or to light a table for Duke or Duchess or King. Or at a wedding table and or...I dunno...glade..I suspect that element is well and truly used throughout the realms of England, Scotland, and Ireland." Allan paused for a moment, considering before moving on, "They *can* light candles in Scotland, yes?"



As to the antidote, Master Zhan sent a collection of Asphiras plants to the Cardinal and instructions for the maintaining of them and how to use them. he has had them cultivated now for years at the Histpital of St. Thomas.

While investigating the illness of Sir Falcie Norton, the Cardinal himself was stricken ill and the elixir produced at the hispital rid him of the dire symptoms in a day.



Destini wrote:
Destini watched the deacon intently as he told his tale. Her eyebrows arched in surprise as he told of the two known ingredients. "Barrels o' whiskey?" Her breath caught in her throat as she thought of the connotations of that. "Brightpoint," she said carefully, "There was whiskey at Oddman's and Airiana's weddin'. Ye an' I both drank there. An' e'en if those particular barrels werenae poisoned, drinkin' is a way o' life in Eire ...."

She considered the second of the two known ingredients and added, "Perhaps the church's nigh absence in Eire will be the savin' grace o' my king. If the second part o' the poison is in church candles, 'tis likely willnae reach many in my country."

The vial sparkled like a gemstone in the shimmering sunlight. Destini peered up at it in wonder. "How did ye discover that this Asphiras flower was the true antidote fer this poison?"
Destini
The deacon's point about the candles made perfect sense, though she didn't like that it meant her kin were still in danger.

The story was becoming more extraordinary with each new fact she learned. "The cardinal himself was stricken?" she gasped.

It suddenly struck her as strange to her that a cardinal would perform the investigation in person. Surely, such a high ranking churchmen would have important things to attend to. Not that such an investigation into illness and death wasn't important. But as Cardinal Primate, Faheud would have duties to attend to throughout the English-speaking world. Where would he find the time to also perform the investigation? She looked up to Brightpoint with a narrowed gaze as if she might see the truth of his tale by peering at him in a certain way. "Tell me, deacon, was it the cardinal who performed the investigation? Or one o' his attaches?" She gazed deeply at Brightpoint, wondering. "Who is this Sir Falcie Norton?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Deacon Allan grinned at the inference in 'or one o his attaches?'

"well, m'dear, the head of the Hospital of St. Thomas is one of the Cardinal's most long standing associates, the very Reverend Mother Mary Persephone. When she told the Cardinal to come quickly for dire news, you can bet he took to horse, tearing across two counties to get there.

And he was indeed stricken, but as I said, the antidote saved him straight away.

Sir Falcie Norton was a General, former English Earl Marshal, and Knight Commander of the Order of St. George. Much of the prowess at strategy and arms that led England to defeat Anto at Carlisle was due to Sir Falcie.

Small wonder that powers wanting England a bit less agile and effective in matters of war might target him, eh?"
Destini
As a poet and minstrel, the change in tenses was not lost on Destini. "Was?" she said past a knot in her throat. "This Sir Falcie is dead then. So, there have been fatalities." she concluded. She stared at the deck of the Venus and followed the woodgrain below her feet with her eyes. She had known this was no idle quest, that this was life and death. But now she knew that at least one death had already occurred at the hands of those who preferred chaos to order. It placed things into a new, more urgent perspective.

"If the cardinal took ill with this same poison, how is it that ye donae yet know the third piece o' this trinary poison? Surely, if ye looked at everythin' His Grace came into contact with, ye'd find the third ingredient."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan sighed. "When you have met the Cardinal, you will come to appreciate how much territory he covers, and just how hopeless using him as a key to the third ingredient is...

Would that I could examine his larder and turn out the guilty...but no..."


Destini
That was a fair answer, and Destini nodded to indicate she understood. The Cardinal Faheud was not just any cardinal. He was the cardinal of the entire English-speaking church. The same reasons that made it seem strange for the cardinal to do his own investigating likely also made narrowing the poison's final ingredient impossible. Even Brightpoint had said that His Grace had 'ridden across two counties' when the Reverend Mother had called. Such travel would inevitably make for a very large haystack in which to find a very small needle.

But what of the late Sir Falcie?

"How did ye come across the first two ingredients, then?" Destini wondered, then added just as quickly, "Perhaps ye matched the Cardinal's an' Sir Falcie's - Jah rest him - activities?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"Excellent question. I remember how the Cardinal sighed when I asked it myself. It seems one of his late attache's stole the information from Anto Capone's lady friend during a frolic. Anto found out and dispatched him later, but not before Captain Wilkins sent a pigeon."




Destini wrote:
That was a fair answer, and Destini nodded to indicate she understood. The Cardinal Faheud was not just any cardinal. He was the cardinal of the entire English-speaking church. The same reasons that made it seem strange for the cardinal to do his own investigating likely also made narrowing the poison's final ingredient impossible. Even Brightpoint had said that His Grace had 'ridden across two counties' when the Reverend Mother had called. Such travel would inevitably make for a very large haystack in which to find a very small needle.

But what of the late Sir Falcie?

"How did ye come across the first two ingredients, then?" Destini wondered, then added just as quickly, "Perhaps ye matched the Cardinal's an' Sir Falcie's - Jah rest him - activities?"
Destini
Destini stiffened and looked directly at Brightpoint with eyes wide. She kicked her feet off the barrel to dangle down towards the deck she'd been staring at. "Deacon Brightpoint!" she said, alarmed. "Are ye sayin' 'tis Anto behind this?" She wasn't sure she believed it, and her expression showed it.

What was more, in the past several minutes he had told her the threat she'd joined him to stop had already been carried out ... at least in part or in practice if not in whole. "Ye've told me now o' two men's deaths an' the cardinal's attempted assassination. Oh, I knew 'twas dangerous when I agreed to join ye. But this?"

Agitated, she hopped off the barrel and walked away from Brightpoint. She turned back to him, trying to keep her voice down lest the sailors overhear. When she spoke, her voice was a harsh whisper. "Just how dangerous is this mission o' yers, Deacon Brightpoint?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan's face took on a stony expression.

"Dangeerous enough that good men have died

Dangerous enough that more will die unless this is stopped.

I did not say Anto is behind it--although for him to be a tool in the cause would not astonish me, but the whole is rather a bit more organized and evil than his lack of attention span could muster.

This is not a pastime or a pleasant thing. It is far from safe. But it is a chance to make one amazing difference in the world..."


Destini
Destini narrowed her eyes at Brightpoint. "I didnae think 'twas a pasttime, Deacon," she said evenly. "Ye've offered me a chance to save my kin, an' I've accepted. Ye'll recall that amongst my beliefs is that when I say I'll do somethin' or commit myself to a cause, I'll see it through. I didnae join ye on yer mission lightly."

Turning away from him, she leaned on the railing to look out at the endless horizon. "I only wish ye an' the news ye carry had made it to Eire before any had died." The edge was gone from her voice.

She didn't look over at Brightpoint as she added, "Life is far too important."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan almost whispered "Of all the afflictions that plague this world, perhaps the most irksome is mankind's tendency to not believe a threat is real until there is suddenly an abundant supply of bodies about the place....."


Destini wrote:
Destini narrowed her eyes at Brightpoint. "I didnae think 'twas a pasttime, Deacon," she said evenly. "Ye've offered me a chance to save my kin, an' I've accepted. Ye'll recall that amongst my beliefs is that when I say I'll do somethin' or commit myself to a cause, I'll see it through. I didnae join ye on yer mission lightly."

Turning away from him, she leaned on the railing to look out at the endless horizon. "I only wish ye an' the news ye carry had made it to Eire before any had died." The edge was gone from her voice.

She didn't look over at Brightpoint as she added, "Life is far too important."
Destini
The chill of truth went down Destini's spine when Brightpoint spoke. "Aye," she agreed. "I s'pose that's so."

The riptide below them churned in the wake of the boat's progress to England. Destini watched it for a moment before a thought occurred to her. "Brightpoint," she said almost absently.

She turned to the deacon, leaning on the rail with her right arm. Her expression was a mask of deep thought as she continued, "Given what ye've just said, an' that no one has yet died in Eire ... how did my clan take the news o' this threat?"
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