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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Brightpoint looked over the railing at a familiar--if unloved voice. That idiot Wainwright.

Allan waved at him with a smile, though his eyes said what he murmured, "You incompetent git, I shall have your job for the unlawful town you keep...."

He turned away from the railing after having caught his enemy's eye.

--Brother_corwynn


"You do keep the most interesting friends about the lands, Arch-Deacon." commented Corwynn as he rubbed the corner of his eye with the tip of a middle finger.

"Come! Student! Let us settle into our quarters and then begin some fitness training...."


Brother Corwynn bustled his new mentoree in the direction of below-decks as ship's crew set the sails to full and clambered about the rigging...



--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn muttered a series of curses under his breath. He lifted his pack onto his shoulders and stormed after Corwynn. Student? Hardly. Was this how the 'good-guys' treated their lackey's? He almost preferred being one of the 'bad-guys'. At least he lived in relative comfort ... even if always under the threat of possibly being killed. Grimthorn paused his cursing to think about that. Corwynn knew he'd killed Barkley but hadn't said anything to Brightpoint or the lady MacKenzie. Nor had he indulged in any revenge for besmirching the 'good-guy' code. Perhaps this 'good-guy' thing had merit after all.

... then again ... there was that horrid fitness thing that Corwynn seemed so eager to begin.

Destini
A part of her wanted to laugh at Corwynn and Richard, but the news of Zan's death weighed heavily on her still. In less than a day, she had been informed that two of her dear friends were dead and a third had been tortured and mutilated.

"First Alberic now Zan," she murmered as she looked across the deck of the Serenity to the NorthWest. "The best o' us are dead or dyin', Allan. While the rest o' us are left behind." She was speaking aloud, but she didn't really expect Allan to answer.

She went to the railing and looked out across the open Irish Channel to the unending horizon. From here, she couldn't see the shores of the Emerald Isle, but she knew it was there. Beyond that endless horizon lied her homeland. The place where her kin were being successively murdered. From here, she could do nothing to stop it. Her jaw clenched in determination and barely-bridled anger. "How, in Jah's most holy name, did it come to this?"
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--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan nodded at the logic of despair and its matching tone in Destini's voice.

"Well, it is all down to that damned freedom of choice thing. Jah grants us that and we must either use it for good or for ill.

I believe our task is to save whom may be saved and at the very very least, avenge the fallen."


Allan looked at the fading port and wondered if he'd see England again...

Destini
"Seems there are more who use their will fer ill than good." she said. Despair riddled her tone. "I think our visit to Eire will be more one o' vengance than o' rescue if things continue as they are." It was a morbid thought, but she couldn't say she was overstating the situation. When had they last had something go exactly the way they'd wanted?

She looked to Allan and watched his gaze wander backward to his own homeland. What must he be feeling now? She reached for his hand with her own and interlaced her fingers with his. Her gaze searched his face for signs of what he was feeling. As a performer, she had a sense of how to read a person. It was one of her traits that made her a perfect attache to the Cardinal. She read tavern audiences all the time. She knew whether they wanted a fast song to dance to or if they needed a slow ballad to refill their tankards and enjoy a quiet chat. But Allan was different than the average farmer and craftsman that entered the taverns. There were times, like now, that she couldn't read him at all. Right now, she had no idea what was going through her partner's head. It worried her, but it did not invite inquiry.

She bottled her worry, her anger, and her despair in favor of planning for upcoming events. Vengence for Zan's death focused her thoughts. "Brother Corwynn stated this ship will go to Liverpool first, an' then to Eire. Will Richard an' Brother Corwynn disembark in Liverpool where the constable cannae reach them? Or do ye think they will come to Eire with us?"
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--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Brightpoint looked down into the water a moment and then up at Destini.

"You cannot think of it that way. The numbers who work for ill by will or ignorance are irrelevant. It is the skill, knowledge, and determination of those who oppose them that matters more.


To be fair," he continue before the glint he thought he spied in Destini's eyes could ignite, " it is not pleasant to face such an array. We will not do so alone. I have decided that Richard and Corwynn need to travel with us."

He grinned

"It would not be the first time I jimmied a door shut in the night to keep a sailor where he needed to be...but that is another tale..."

Destini
She swallowed the despair as best she could. Allan was right. Determination and skill were required here, not emotion. Knowledge they didn't already have could be acquired once they landed in Eire and were able to assess the situation. She was glad Richard and Corwynn would be with them. "We arenae soldiers. We are attaches," she said softly. "I agree that we will need Richard an' Brother Corwynn. I fear we will need all the help we can get."

Her thoughts returned to Zan. With the thoughts, the emotions also returned. She glared her anger into the water beside the ship. She almost believed if she stared at it long enough, it might start to boil. "Allan," she began hesitantly, uncertain how exactly to phrase her question. The edges of her voice were harsh and she tried to soften it with whatever vocal skill she could muster. "How do ye maintain yer focus? I've watched ye put aside yer emotions to do what the mission required. Ye did it when ye were poisoned. Somehow, ye continued on e'en despite the odds. How do ye do that?"
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--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"The mind, it turns out, is much like those spyglasses we see ship's captains use. You can focus it well on a specific place and go straight to it. Or you can pull back and see a broad picture--in less detail--with many different bits clamoring for attention and action."

Allan pointed to the crows nest above them

"Ignoring something you do not have time or energy to deal with is like focusing on that crows nest above all else until the rest fade to the background. With willpower, that focus becomes like the spyglass and brings you in much closer and blocks other images more completely."


Allan rubbed at that spot on his shoulder where Elias had struck

"I had to completely ignore this wound in order to continue, so I had to grab onto something intensely important which would draw all focus an energy away from the wound and the creeping poison.

In that particular case it was getting you safely to Sussex."


Allan heard the sounds of good-natured bickering at the other rail and grinned, "Some are better at focus than others..."

--Richard.grimthorn
"What do you mean I'm rationed to one pint a day?" complained Grimthorn to Corwynn. Grimthorn was feeling a little seasick already. Ale helped to dull the feeling, but his tolerance was such that one pint would not completely quell the uneasiness in his stomach. "What kind of horrid treatment is this?! You mean we paid to be catered to so poorly?!" He grasped the railing as a larger wave rocked the boat. His stomach lurched at the sudden movement. No, this trip would not go well at all. "I swear I'm getting off this damned piece of flotsam as soon as we make port in Liverpool!"

--Brother_corwynn


"Richard."

It was a touch of steel beneath the tone of geniality, perhaps. Or maybe it was the lack of a quip. At any rate the discussion was suddenly shrouded as though heavy wool had just surrounded them both.

Corwynn continued.

"This is not a pleasure voyage or a holiday cruise. We are not Royalty to be feted with virginal serving wenches and dainty drinks and treacle tart at a whim. This is different."

Corwynn's unusually stern presence backed people away instinctively.

"This is serious. This is about saving lives. Including yours."

Corwynn let his tone drop to a whisper just within hearing as he ended, "Do you think for one moment that you will evade both the law (I presume the chap in Holywell knows how to send a warrant to Liverpool) and the people to whom you tendered a recent resignation?"

Corwynn let the stern cloak fall away.

"We'll stay on board, help complete this mission, and then see how the Cardinal can make excellent, well-paid use of a highly astute businessman with a slight flaw in his character. Shall we?"

--Richard.grimthorn
"My resignation from the service of the Red Duke is one of the reasons I do not want to go to the front line in your little war." hissed Grimthorn in return. "The matter with the law makes things admittedly more complicated, but based on the constable's manner as we left the port, I have to assume I am not his primary suspect." The ship lurched again and Grimthorn swallowed to maintain his composure. Once the feeling of being ill passed and he'd steadied himself, he watched Corwynn a moment before continuing. "I still have information on my former co-workers that I have not yet given you. If I do indeed have no choice but to come with you to the front line, you'd best ensure that I remain alive to give what information I have to your cardinal, then, mm?"

--Brother_corwynn


"That is a fair expectation, and one I am happy to report a good history of succeeding at. Unlike some people in the Service of His Grace, I tend to come home with all people and equipment I started with."

Corwynn smiled and handed Richard a flask from a cloak pocket. It was silver and sloshed happily with near a pint of whiskey in it.

"Settle your spirits with that and lets talk about what we can do to harness your acuity of observation into making you and all of us more....durable...."


--Richard.grimthorn
There were times when being a good business man came in handy. It seemed this was one of those times. Grimthorn, who had been expecting a harsh rebuttle to his comment, was delightfully pleased to accept the flask and drain a mouthful of spirits from it to settle his own. He handed the flask back to Corwynn with an appreciative nod. "I think we may be able to work together, brother." He grinned.

Destini
Destini thought about what Allan had said about focusing on the important in order to block out that which she could do nothing about. Currently, the one thing she eventually had to do something about was the very thing she was too far away to do. D'Argent. Pagan's letter stated she was preparing a raid in order to bring D'Argent to justice. Would she be successful?

A part of Destini hoped that Pagan hadn't been successful. Of course, she wanted her best friend to be alive. But she also wanted a word with D'Argent herself, wanted to make him pay for what he'd done to her kin. Vengence was not out of the question, no matter what Allan had said. "Allan, what do we know o' this D'Argent? How cunnin' is he? What do ye think his motivation is fer attackin' my kin? How can we defeat him?" She wanted a profile of this man. "The more we know o' him, the better we can eventually defeat him."

If Pagan had not been successful -- and if she was still alive -- she should know that a small company of folk were headed her way. Together, they might turn the tide against D'Argent and his men. Suddenly, Destini had another question. "An' where is Peck?"
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