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= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"well, " began Allan in a very mild, businesslike tone..., "I could take you on a walking tour of the high-lights and low-lights of my last visit here."

He took a long draught of his ale.

"Richard might enjoy the tour as well.."

Destini
"Since ye said yer last visit to Holywell included the murder o' yer partners, I'd suggest we avoid the shillin' tour at all costs," said Destini in a wry tone.

"As fer Richard, where is he? I thought ye both headed fer tavern row together." She peered toward the tavern's window to see if she could pick him out of the early evening dinner crowd that milled outside. The shadows were lengthening in the street as the sun began to set. "We should probably gain lodgin' fer ourselves as well as our horses," said Destini as she realized the day was waning.
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--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"Richard went into one tavern and I the other. I was fairly businesslike, but I suspect that soldierly wiles will have led him to the card tables. If he does not turn up shortly, I suggest I wander in and encourage him to move along."

Allan finished his ale.

"I am more than happy to skip the tour...some memories do not need to be dredged up all that often..."

--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn exited the tavern to see the sun had shifted towards evening. The fact that Brightpoint had not yet come looking for him meant he was not yet suspected. That was excellent. He turned toward the Town Hall Tavern and entered. Brightpoint and the lady MacKenzie were seated at the bar. Grimthorn made his way to them. "No luck, I'm afraid. They did not tell me of any ships headed to Ireland." he reported to them truthfully. Of course, the reason they hadn't told him was because he hadn't asked, but the attaches didn't need to know that minute detail.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan looked up, annoyed.

"It took you almost three hours to learn nothing? Did you at least win at cards?

You know, Desti, there are a pair of slots on the ferry to Egremont I can snag if nothing else turns up at the docks here. We could continue on and send Richard back with word to Count Faheud."


Allan looked at the sparse number of folks in the tavern.

"This town does not seem particularly lively. Did the plague hit since I was last about, I wonder.

We will doubtless need to secure accommodations for at least the night I expect. Should not be too difficult with the fabulous activity afoot round here."


--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn's mouth fell open. "What makes you think I was playing at cards?!" He added an indignant tone to his voice as if he was offended by the merest hint of accusation. "I was trying to get information. Honestly! I'm not some dolt from Derby who cannot keep his eye on the mission. Playing at cards indeed." He muttered the last as he motioned to the bartender to bring him an ale ... preferably something very dark. He hoped Brightpoint wouldn't send him away. Not when he was so close to completing his mission.

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan slapped his hand lightly on the table, and stood up. "Right then, so why are there green fuzzy bits from the Ramponeau table ground into your sleeves?"

Allan pointed at the spots on Richard's sleeves.

"Takes about an hour to grind fuzz into wool like that."

Allan sat back down and said, "So how is Derby this time of year?"

--Richard.grimthorn
He'd been caught. Damn!

"Very well, then," said Grimthorn. He had to respect Brightpoint's skill at his work. "I was playing at cards. And I did win, but no amount worth speaking of." He accepted his ale from the bartender and tossed a coin onto the table in payment. It was the same coin that had been all that was in the pot when Barkley had folded and asked the other gentlemen to give them the room. "It was all in the name of ingratiating myself with the tavern owner so as to gain information." He took a long sip. "Not that he gave me any information that was useful to us."

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"What an amazing surprise." answered Brightpoint dryly as he turned away from Grimthorn, largely dismissing him.

"So, Desti. Are you up for learning a few crossbow tricks?"


Destini
To hide her amusement at Grimthorn's expense, she had paid most of her attention to her beverage. When Allan suggested further training, she drained the last of her glass. "Aye," she agreed to Allan's suggestion. If she could become better at the weapon form that she now carried, she would not have to rely on his protection as much. The highwayman would not have been an issue.

She glanced out the window. "I s'pose we have time before the darkness falls overmuch. Howe'er, we'll have to be certain to find an area outside o' town where the constable willnae mind us practicin'. Perhaps the lake we passed on our way in to town?" she suggested.
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--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan nodded enthusiastically. "Perfect idea! I can set some lures and catch some dinner while we train. Daylight is wasting, shall we be off?


Richard, please see that the horses have been properly taken care of in the stables"


Allan offered Destini a hand up.

--Richard.grimthorn
Grimthorn watched Brightpoint help the lady MacKenzie to her feet and escort her out of the Town Hall Tavern with naught but a dismissive glance back at him. "Chivalrous, Brightpoint," muttered Grimthorn under his breath after the attaches had already left. It bothered him that he was left to tend the horses while Brightpoint got to spend time with the lady MacKenzie. Still, it made it easier for Barkley's assassins to carry out their work. "Chivalry will do you no good."

He glanced about at the tavern's patrons and recognized one group of three. It seemed that after the three gentlemen from Barkley's poker table had been dismissed, they'd made their way to the Town Hall Tavern. Excellent. That would suit his purposes perfectly. Grimthorn got up and took his ale with him. He leaned over one of them and hissed. "If I am right and you were not in that back room simply to play cards, you will get a message to Barkley." He leaned over the table and placed his hand on the wood surface to watch as the look in the man's eye said something akin to 'I'm listening'. "The attaches are at the lake. That is all you need to say to Barkley." He removed his hand and revealed a coin was left on the table in its wake. Smirking, Grimthorn returned to his seat back at the bar. He would finish his ale then tend to the horses. He'd even secure lodgings here for them all. Better to do exactly as Brightpoint had directed and appear completely innocent should things go awry.

Destini
The sun was setting when the lake could be seen through the trees. The evening was serene and the wind was nigh non-existant. The lake was as smooth as a plane of glass. The trees surrounding the lake reflected across the face of the water perfectly. The setting sun created a ribbon of light across the silver surface. She was pleased that even after the incident at the River Thames she could still find beauty in a body of water.

"'Tis lovely," she remarked to Allan, nodding to the lake. "Imleach is a forest town. Yet, somehow, I always find lake towns inescapably beautiful." She chuckled as another thought occurred to her. "Still I find myself with an apartment in Hastings, another wood town."

She looked to Allan. The light of the golden hour set his blonde-brown hair alight like the halos of the angels she believed in. "What o' yerself, Allan. What was yer home like in Wales?"
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--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"Wales...well...Mostly mountains, an abundance of consonantal drift, and nary a vowel to be seen or heard for weeks." Allan grinned, half joking.

"Myrriachgnh was a mining town, where we pulled many a cart of iron and stone from the earth and sold it to traveling traders. In the spring and fall it was lovely enough, but summer was too hot and the winter unspeakable.


An there was that whole problem with bandits."

Allan walked silently for a moment, enjoying the peaceful dusk. As they arrived at a somewhat open clearing by the shore, he stopped.

"This would do brilliantly. First and foremost, I'd like to show you how to rig your crossbow for easy draw.

Note how mine lies at a slight--and damned convenient--angle, while your's is up and down? At an angle I can get to it with either hand, while diving for cover, or at the gallop on horseback.


Let's adjust your tether to get the angle before we try speed draw and shoot."

Destini
She allowed him to adjust her crossbow at her waist, watching with interest as he moved it. "Aye," she said, "I can see how the angle o' the bow 'twould help ye draw." She held her breathing still as he toyed with the tether on her belt, not wanting to jar him from his task. As a singer, she could direct her breath. Stomach breathing, in this instance, would move her belt and disrupt his adjustments, but she could breathe from her chest without moving her diaphram more than necessary.

His nearness was distracting. As he worked with the tether, she wanted to run her fingers through his hair has she had done when he was ill from the poison. She stopped herself, keeping her gaze fixed on his work instead, biting her bottom lip to focus her mind on the subtle pain and what he was trying to teach her.

"Ye can draw an' fire with either hand?" she asked him, trying harder than ever to return her mind to their task. "I have only e'er fired with my right."
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