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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Richard.grimthorn
"What do you mean my tab?" asked Grimthorn as he piled food onto his own plate from a seated position. These damned floorboards were constantly moving. It made doing anything standing impossible. "From what I recall of last night, you," he eyed Brightpoint. "continued drinking long after I had left the table." A smirk lifted the corners of his mouth as he handed the serving utensils to Corwynn. "Besides, the tab wasn't for a Richard Grimthorn. So I believe Simon Sezz will end up paying the bill."

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan laughed loudly. "Well said Richard! Well said!


Except

I might have been feeling prankish in my cups and corrected the accounting a bit, since you had left table without leaving a tip.. Frankly, I'd steer clear of Holywell for a bit....."

--Richard.grimthorn
The smirk died on Grimthorn's lips. "Steer clear of Holywell. Hm. Yes. For more reasons than that one, I'm afraid." His flat tone threw a sudden damper on the merriment of the evening. The silverware clattered as Grimthorn dropped his fork onto his plate. His eyes glanced to Corwynn and he met the brother's gaze. Taking a deep breath, Grimthorn folded his hands and considered his words carefully before speaking. "As you say, my lady," he bowed his head slightly to the lady MacKenzie, "I do have information you do not. I haven't been entirely honest with you." The latter sentence was said to Brightpoint. "A shock, I'm sure." he said sarcastically. They knew as well as he did that he hadn't told them the full truth. Merely enough truth (and enough lies) to keep them from killing him.

His gaze locked on Brightpoint's. "You were not the prime suspect of the tavern murder last night... or at least, you shouldn't have been. Any crackpot constable would have been seeking me ... not you. But apparently, he had an axe to grind with you." He leaned back in his chair. His muscles tensed slightly. He prepared to defend himself, if necessary, before clarifying his confession beyond all doubt. "I murdered the man in the tavern last night."

--Brother_corwynn


"Ahhh, " said Corwynn, stabbing up a healthy chunk of roast pork, "Confession makes such a spice to a fine meal, does it not?

Well Done Richard. We must have no major unknowns if we are to navigate the already treacherous waters that surround us.


Don't you agree, Allan?"


--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"Jah's coldest Hell, man!" We are trying to lay low after being ambushed and you wander, seven sheets to drunk to a tavern and kill someone? Do you absolutely need to display for the world the possibility that your brains are where you may sit upon them?"

Allan slapped the table and he reflected it was good the wine had not showed up yet.

He sighed

"What is done is done. Why did you kill that man? Lay it on the table, we need to know what we are dealing with--i.e. will their be half an army sitting in Liverpool with a Bailiwick Special on manacles for us all?"


Destini
Destini looked on Richard with a wide-eyed glare. There was no sign of the friendship that had always been there from the moment he'd saved her life at the River Thames. "Ye'd throw Allan to the wolves to escape justice yerself?" she stated her question quietly. Her anger was tightly contained -- but only barely.

She stood to her fullest height. Her shoulders were held back in defiant fury. She felt betrayed. Not because Richard had betrayed her, but because he had betrayed Allan. Still, throughout her anger, she was able to maintain her eerily quiet manner. "Allan tells me ye have renounced the side o' evil, an' yet ye commit murder an' allow the blame to fall upon yer own comrade?!"

Her gaze looked at him as if she had never seen him before. Her right hand fingered for her crossbow, though she did not draw it ... yet. "Ye'd better have a damned good reason."
_________________
--Richard.grimthorn
The look in the lady MacKenzie's eye caused him to hesitate. He had braced himself for an angry retort from Brightpoint, but had not considered the lady's response. His gaze caught the way her hand moved for her crossbow. He recalled how adept she was with the bow and spoke quickly. "It was for your safety!" he said. Which was true ... from a certain point of view. Despite all he had done, Richard had no wish to hurt these folk. Shielding the truth was a means of protecting them.

"It was not idle drunkeness that brought about the murder." he said looking to Brightpoint. Sensing his new comrades would need more information if they were to believe him, Grimthorn obliged. "I found the man responsible for sending the Delaney boys after you." Also true. Barkley had also sent the assassins. "My silencing this man was as much to keep you out of manacles as to stop him from sending more assassins after you. If he couldn't get you outside the law, this man would have tried to confine you within the law. I've had dealings with him before. I knew what to look for." Grimthorn looked to Brightpoint. He was the man who held the decison here. If the Arch-Deacon believed him, the rest would follow his lead. "Trust me, your problems would be multiplied if I had not done as I did."

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan considered all this news for a moment before replying. "Actually, Richard, it is not that you silenced a known hostile. That happens in our business.

Doing so while drunk is risky at best and a disaster at worst--but we got past that.


It is actually the failure to quickly communicate you had to take such severe action that put every one of us at high risk."


He looked around the table and went on, "We all have to communicate critical information at first opportunity. We are sailing towards a dicey situation in Eire that can have very painful and fatal disasters awaiting a team that does not share information in a timely way.

Does everyone agree on that?"


Destini
"Aye, Allan," said Destini. But even as she spoke her agreement, her gaze remained fixed on Richard. Her hand moved from its position at her crossbow, but her muscles did not release their tension. She had trusted him. Defended him in front of Allan. But that was before he had confessed to working for the other side. How could she trust a man who had changed sides once already?

His actions at the tavern might not be what they seemed. Perhaps he had intended the constable of Holywell to arrest Allan and send him on a date with the hangman. Perhaps he had come clean only because they had escaped the constable's reach.

But why tell them at all?

Destini's eyes moved to Brother Corwynn who seemed completely at ease with the situation. Coersion, mayhap. Brother Corwynn had figured it out. Yes, that made sense. But did that lessen the offense of the deed? The murder? Destini thought not. And suppose he did want Allan dead. For herself, she would lock and bar the cabin door tonight, and pray to Jah that Corwynn slept armed.

"In the spirit o' tellin' all we know, Brother Corwyn ... Richard ... ye should both know whilst in the market, Peck, one o' the cardinal's pigeons, returned from Eire where I'd sent him to my kin. The bird bore dire news."

She paused long enough to gather herself for reiterating, once again, the death of her kin. "High King Zanditin o' Eire is dead o' the very poison we set out to stop."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"Four bloody months of my life spent taking them the antidotes and they.did.not.use.it....." Allan growled.

At that moment the cabin boy was back with two very large bottles of wine and six glasses. "Yer wine sirrah and madam"

The young fellow flourished a bow and departed as quickly as he had arrived, closing the door behind him.

--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn wished he could fail to notice the tension in the lady MacKenzie. Nevertheless, he tried valiently to ignore it and poured one of the bottles of wine into four glasses for each of his compatriots. He drained half of his own before speaking. "My condolences, lady. A pity, to be sure. To be expected though, I think, based on the culture of Ireland. The Red Duke was counting on the culture to work to his whims, you know. Those who live in Ireland seem to have a bone to pick with any who seek to change them. Many of them emmigrated to Ireland to escape the so called English oppression. Great stupid morons, if you ask me. But probably why, I think, their king died, rather than accept help from an Englishman." He raised his glass in salute to Brightpoint. "Cheers."

Destini
Destini's hand lifted a knife from the dinner table. She was around the table with two strides before she knew what she was doing. The knife was at Richard's throat before she thought to pull back the strength of her arm. To Richard's benefit, however, she did pull back in time.

"First o' all," she hissed at him. "Allan is Welsh nay English." She allowed a little more of the pressure she'd withheld to surge through the hand that held the knife. The blade came dangerously close to cutting through the layer of skin at Richard's throat.

"Secondly, 'tisnae their king, 'tis mine. Zan was my kin -- an' friend to me long before he was king." Her eyes met his. Fury at his insolence to her kin, king, and culture burned through her veins. Grief at Zan's passing manifested into anger at Richard.

Richard had placed Allan at risk and now he was mocking her kin. Indeed, he had known her kin would die. Her hand longed to end his life here and now.

She didn't.

Instead, she pulled back and thrust the knife onto the wooden table. The blade punctured the surface. The utensil stood upright. The knife vibrated in front of Richard and it's silver blade haphazardly reflected the lamplight as Destini moved away without taking her eyes off Richard.
_________________
--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn watched the lady MacKenzie with something akin to the danger and awe he'd first had when she'd leveled her crossbow on him those long weeks ago in a damp traveler's shelter. His blood rang in his ears, free to travel unthreatened through his veins once more, as she took the knife away from his throat and he was safe ... for the moment, at least. The blade's ominous quivering in the lamplight was enough to draw the lady MacKenzie's point home. Grimthorn was safe ... for the moment only. "As I said," began Grimthorn rubbing his neck. He swallowed, glad that he still had the muscles available to make such a simple motion. "A pity. My condolences for your loss."

--Brother_corwynn


No one would have seen him rise from the table, nor remove the knife from the table in gentle, unyielding pressure. And yet all this happened in the blink of an eye.

"What Lady Destini is saying, apprentice Grimthorn, is that you would do well not to assume everyone has as little skin in the Irish game as you do. And also ill done would be assuming that passions are not high about it."


To Destini he said, with an imploring tone, "Forgive him, milady, he has not yet completed his journey to relevance. I accept responsibility for his gaffe and will endeavor to help him correct it."

To Allan he said, "Arch-Deacon, you command this mission. I recommend to you that we make best speed to Eire, even in light of this news, and find what has befallen your brother, find Lady Pagan, find and capture d'Argent, and put an end to the plot there. Let the Red Duke rot in Scotland for all we care as long as he has no sway in Eire or England."

"I would also like to commend Richard for freely admitting his crimes to you and for taking ownership of failing to communicate properly.

Can we move on, then?"

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan listened to Corwynn and as often was the case calmed down.

"You always were the peacemaker and voice of reason when blood ran hot, Corwynn.

That all makes a lot of sense.

I think we need to establish some simple code words to let the other know we have urgent news.

If you have urgent business, tell me you have just received word from Brother Jerome, and I will know you need a moment."


Allan paused, "I think I need to share more with you all about d'Argent, some things not even Corwynn knows.

d'Argent came to the Hospital of St. Thomas where (then) Brother Elias and I were learning about herbology, poisons, and antidotes, herbal medicines and the like.

He had been sent by (then) Father Faheud who agreed to help an old friend out by providing training for his third son.

d'Argent was smooth, but stand-offish. Brilliant, but sharp. He could ignore pain and discomfort and possessed no perceivable compassion. He does not enjoy causing harm, but is perfectly happy to do so at need.

When it became clear he was using the training to increase his arsenal of deadly skills, Faheud sent him away.


I have never seen such dead eyes. He would slit a throat just to make a room feel less crowded.

I am certain he is the purveyor of the trinary poisons being used in England and Scotland. He works for someone called The Red Duke.


Richard... Can you tell us more about this Red Duke?"


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