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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Richard.grimthorn
Ah, at last. The question Grimthorn had been waiting for was spoken. "I could tell you quite a lot about his grace," said Grimthorn casually as he wiped the grease from his fingers on his napkin. "But I won't."

He sat back in his chair with a subtly smug expression as he faced each of the cardinal's attaches in turn. "Come now, Brightpoint," he said as his gaze landed on the man. "You didn't really expect me to play fair, did you? If I were to tell you everything I know, what is your insensitive to keep me alive in the Irish game?" His eyes shifted to Corwynn when he quoted the brother's words. "When it comes to detailed information about the Red Duke, I will speak only to your cardinal."

He paused a moment before handing them a morsel of information so they would know he did indeed have knowledge worth bartering for. "I will tell you this: that few who see his face ever see it again. Even when my assignments were brought by courier, it was never the same boy twice. His Grace does not deal well with bad news. He didn't obtain the title The Red Duke because he wears red clothing. No, no. Nothing so innocent. Which is precisely why I have no intention of ever crossing his path again." He forked a piece of meat into his mouth and finished the morsel before moving on.

"In any case," he said, turning the conversation away from the Red Duke. Speaking of him was akin to bad luck and invariably shortened one's lifespan. "It's not the Red Duke you should be worried about, at present. It's The Finisher." Grimthorn looked to Brightpoint. "The ghoulish girl was in Holywell as recently as last night. The tart may seem innocent enough, but trust me, she's not to be underestimated. She's as quick and loose with her daggers as she is with her affections."

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan was frustrated but not surprised. Grimthorn's strength was also his weakness. He was a game player and a barterer. A Negotiator. Had he played himself into a corner? Easy enough to find out.

"If there is one thing I do not need and will not tolerate, Grimthorn, it is distractions during a mission. You can play your games of information barter to a point, but if the game becomes more of a distraction than it is worth, the game ends.

We do not, as of now, know if you can be trusted. You have proven you are holding back, and so it is also possible you are holding back pertinent, critical information of a more-time sensitive nature.

We *do* know you are holding back information that could have fatal bearing on our overall mission."


Allan looked at Destini and Corwynn

"What say you, Destini and Corwynn? Is this game too risky a distraction or irrelevant? Shall we take Grimthorn to Eire as an ally and member of the team, or decide he is holding back too much and let him barter with the fish? Sending him off in Liverpool is no longer an option..."

Allan awaited the thoughts of his companions

Destini
Destini didn't want Grimthorn coming with them. She didn't trust him. However, she also didn't want another death on her conscience. "Let him live, Allan," she said icily. She hated it, but she could see Richard's point of view. She could understand the probable reasons why he was doing what he was doing. "There isnae any point in killin' him fer wantin' to live. We all o' us want to live. As much as I hate to say it, Richard here is doin' so the only way he knows how."

She took a drink of wine, sealing her words. Even knowing what she knew, she had now willingly drank with the man. Courtesy and chivalry sealed her fate with Richard this eve. She couldn't harm him after drinking with him ... no matter how much she wanted to.

"May Jah show ye a better way than coersion an' barter to get ye the salvation ye so richly require."
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--Brother_corwynn


"If she whom you have most offended accepts you, then so shall I, Richard.

But please understand. You really need to pick one of two courses, this very minute, my friend.

I am happy to teach you, to speak to the Cardinal of your worth as a future attache, to offer assistance patience and guidance.

But I will not have a spy in our midst, or an unconvinced convert to our cause.

Please pledge to our cause and be one of us, or flee for the ships rail at once and dive overboard--taking your chances with survival.

I hope you choose the former, I really do.

I await your answer."


Corwynn waited attentively.

--Richard.grimthorn
"Do you honestly think for one miniscule moment that I can go back to being in the service of the Red Duke?" Grimthorn asked Corwynn incredulously. He shook his head, answering his own question. "No, I didn't think you could be that daft." He poured a little more wine into his glass and continued. "Even if I wanted to return to his Grace's service ... which I don't by the way, though no one has seemed fit to ask me that ... I'd be dead before I'd uttered the words I apologize. I don't want to be dragged into your mission of hopeful idiocy. But if that's what it takes to bring down my former employer ..." Grimthorn sighed before he committed himself to the sentence, "... so be it."

--Brother_corwynn


"Actually.... you make good points Richard, but you did not actually answer my question..."

--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn sighed. "Really? I thought I'd been abundantly clear. I cannot go back to work for his grace and you will not allow me to leave you peacefully, so since I don't want to die, there is but one option left to me. I am, through both my decision and yours, your ally." He watched the attaches a moment before adding, "In any case, if you've already decided you're just going to kill me anyway, have done with it and move on. I tire of this game."

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan grinned at the rapid exchange.

"Right then. I am sufficiently convinced. Corwynn, it should not be a surprise to you that offering them man join up or die is going to land poorly. If you are expecting Richard to be a cheerful, respectful soldier, you have not been watching closely.

Richard, a message, when delivered with a cloak of belittling arrogance is doomed to land with diminished value and be taken in the most hostile way.

Perhaps a few steps off the extremes here might improve morale and team-work all around."


Allan took a drink from a flask.

"So tell us more of this Finisher...."

--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn raised his glass in toast and thanks to Brightpoint, glad that at least Brightpoint was on his side. When he mentioned The Finisher, however, the smile left Grimthorn's face. "She is chaos embodied," began Grimthorn setting down his glass on the table. "I suppose the Red Duke must find her chaos engendered to be worth the service rendered. If she is here, then she was called to assist with his grace's plans. When she wishes to be the center of attention - which is often - she paints herself in the methods of an Oriental courtesan. I can't even say it's false advertising. Except, of course, that she's a born and bred English woman." He leaned over across the dinner table and dropped his voice slightly as if The Finisher herself was outside listening to his every word. "Still, there must be something about her that endears her to the Red Duke. In all my dealings with his grace, I have never known him to suffer fools idly."

--Brother_corwynn


Corwynn's face danced between horror and amusement.

"Oh. Dear. Well. I believe I ran into a very English, very painted, oriental courtesan in Holywell. Odd turns of flirtation and daggerment.

I hope we have seen the last of her. One ocean channel between us is hardly enough I think. It took me a while in the tavern to realize that broken doll girl was actually hitting on me..."


Corwynn had a hefty drink from his ever-ready supply of flasks.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan yawned, "Well enough that is. If we spot her on board this ship or in Eire I want to know. That said, I think it is about bed time for this Arch-Deacon.

Sleep well, gents."


Brightpoint rose to see his companions off.

Destini
Destini agreed readily. "Aye, I couldnae agree more." She finished her glass and stood. "Cooler heads an' calmer tempers may be easier after we finish with this day o' bein' murder suspects. Ne'ermind if 'twas well deserved or not," The last she said to Grimthorn. She wasn't sure how she felt of having him on their team. A night of rest might clear her mind.

"We will be in Liverpool by dawn an' from thence to Eire. Goodnight, Brother." she curtseyed with a mild smile to Corwynn then turned to Richard. "Richard," she said as a means of farewell to him. She busied herself with cleaning up the dinner dishes.
_________________
--Brother_corwynn


Corwynn stood with a grin etched on his face

"That's our cue to be off, Richard. You are shriven and well set as a member of the team. Let us get some shut-eye and see what the morrow brings. Rest well Allan...Destini.."


Brother Corwynn led the way out of the cabin without a backward glance...


--Richard.grimthorn
Whereas Corwynn had not glance backward at all as he left the cabin, Grimthorn, however, did. Despite that Corwynn had just said he was an accepted member of the team, it didn't quite feel that way to Grimthorn. Changing sides was turning out to be harder than he thought. At least he had kept the information he had about the Red Duke to himself. He disagreed with Brightpoint. Some information had to remain in his possession alone until he was back in England. It would ensure his safety. "Until the morrow," he said with a bow and followed Corwynn back to their cabin.

Destini
As soon Brother Corwynn and Richard had crossed the threshold into the outter hallway and shut the door behind them, Destini turned to Allan. "I stick to my assessment back in the Holywell Inn. I donae trust Richard."

She piled the dishes in a neat stack on one side of the table and left them for the cabin boy to clean up whenever he would appear next. It was busy-work, and idle busy-work at that. The cabin boy would have cleaned it up regardless if she had stacked the dishes or not. Still, it was something for her hands to do ... if only for a moment. She sighed, suddenly horribly weary herself, and set her weight onto the edge of the cabin's bed. "What do we do now?," she asked Allan. "Aye, we're 'board a ship to Eire, but what then? An' -- assumin' Anto's pirates donae doom us to a watery grave -- how do we spend the crossin'? How do we prepare fer makin' landfall if we donae e'en know what will be waitin' fer us 'cross the Eire Channel?" She was sorely worried for Pagan and the rest of her kin. More than that, she was angry and still mourning both Alberic and Zan. It was as if the emptiness of the void they left behind did battle with the weight of what she feared was currently happening in Eire. Her own helplessness amplified it all. The only thing she could do was sit and wait.

"I cannae say I e'en know who to trust anymore, Allan." Her voice was a dismal, even tone. "When loyalties change like fireflies flickerin' in the evenin' summer's heat ... when the best o' us die before their time an' leave the rest o' us behind ... what, in Jah's most sacred Name, can we do?"
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