Afficher le menu
Information and comments (0)
<<   1, 2, 3, ..., 74, 75, 76   >   >>

Info:
Unfortunately no additional information has been added for this RP.

= (CRP) A Changing of the Guard

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint
The single walker made his way steadily down the wooded trail, sounds of revelry fading behind him. It would be a long, quiet walk to the Port Town--lots of time really to reflect on conversations both pleasant and strange in the wedding glade...

--A_carrier_pigeon
Fluttering wings in the moonlight, familiar scent on the breeze. Wary of Falcons and owlish nasties.

Ahhh...friend...message.....TREAT!

--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan decided he was pretty much as far as he was going to walk without something to eat. In the brilliant moonlight he found a spot by the road and laid out his cloak, with some cheese, bread, a smallish flask of whiskey and...

A Carrier Pigeon?!?!

"Get off that, you git!" growled Allan, muttering curses to his luck. Not often the Cardinal sent one of the night finders out after him. Must be important then. Sigh.

Not more important than bread and cheese most like...and definitely not more important than his flask.

"Out of the way, Out of the way,"
scolded Allan as he removed the parchment and chucked some bread at the annoying bird who waited with the patience of any brainless fowl expecting a reply message and a second treat.

Peace returned to the clearing by the moonlit road as Deacon Allan ate his meal and pretended that ignoring a pigeon was a useful vocation.

At least the disturbances to dinner were over

Destini
The evening had turned colder than the day, as winter evenings were wont to do in the second month of the year. Destini’s traveling cloak with its hood up kept her mostly warm, but she pulled it closer about her anyway. Her walking staff kept even time with her footsteps through the powdery snow.

A fluttering sound on the road before her drew her attention and she paused, placing both hands on her staff. Her eyes opened wide into the darkness, scanning the trees and road ahead for movement. Oddman had taught her a few necessary defensive moves she hoped she would never need. But theives and highwaymen had been known to pray upon hapless travelers. Flutter flutter. There it was again! She listened closer. Was it the fluttering of fabric or ... ?

...wings....

She saw the pigeon now as it swooped back around overhead intent upon a destination no more than a quarter mile up the road where it landed. She had never before seen a pigeon fly at night. She made her way towards it, moving softer now, more carefully. The powdery snow concealed her footsteps perfectly.

A male figure grumbled at the landed pigeon in the moonlit clearing just ahead. She peered closer and found, with a grin, she recognized him. It was Deacon Brightpoint whom she had just met at Oddman's and Airiana's wedding. She stood just outside the moonlight's reach as she spoke, "Deacon Brightpoint, are ye perchance followin' me?" Her voice was laced with undertones of ill-concealed laughter and, as she stepped into the clearing, her grey eyes sparkled in amusement as well as in the moonlight.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


"Wrong again, I see...."

Allan stood up, shaking a few crumbs loose--to the delight of the pesky pigeon which immediately was as underfoot as a toddler in Madam Marcela's Honeycake Parlour. His eyes twinkled with mirth in the moonlight as he replied.

"Yes, Fair Lady...I must confess I am indeed following you. I see you spotted my clever ruse in leaving the wedding before you did...It is well known my most effective tracking efforts involve running ahead a few miles and snacking with a pigeon...."


Destini
"Well-known in England or Wales perhaps," said Destini, moving closer so they were not shouting across the clearing at one another, "but here in Eire ye're trackin' efforts are all new and thus likely to succeed with far more readiness."

She looked down at the pigeon at the deacon's feet. "Friend o' yers?" she asked.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan laughed appreciatively...."Well, he is also in service to the Cardinal and often seems to out-rank me, at least when it is time for treats.

Annoying Pigeon? Please meet the lovely and talented Destini MacKenzie..."





Destini wrote:
"Well-known in England or Wales perhaps," said Destini, moving closer so they were not shouting across the clearing at one another, "but here in Eire ye're trackin' efforts are all new and thus likely to succeed with far more readiness."

She looked down at the pigeon at the deacon's feet. "Friend o' yers?" she asked.
--A_carrier_pigeon
boring....CRUMBS!....boring.....pretty!......boring......wait!


TREAT?!?!?

Pigeon samples treat-giver's boot as a show of encouragement.

Destini
Destini laughed at the bird as it pecked at the deacon's shoe hopefully. The pigeon? In service to a cardinal? It was then that she saw the leather cord tied around the pigeon's ankle. Suddenly, what the deacon had said made all the more sense.

"'Tis a carrier pigeon!" she cried in surprise. She'd heard of them, but had never seen one before. "Ye communicate with ... a cardinal ... through carrier pigeons." It was not a question, though she supposed it could be interpreted as such. She was sounding aloud the facts as she interpreted them. Her hesitation around the title of cardinal was due to her uncertainty that the cardinal of which this deacon spoke in such a casual fashion was the same one with whom she was familiar. "This would be the Cardinal Faheud, I s'pose?" This was a question, though she stated it firmly as if she knew it was fact and watched the deacon carefully for his reaction.
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Deacon Allan nodded at Destini's half question, half statement.

"Aye, His grace Faheud, born of Imleach, orphaned and fostered to a weaver in Lewes England, Deacon, priest, Bishop, Archbishop, and now Cardinal and Primate of the English-speaking Church. At the heart he remains the inquisitive Irishman who cannot stand injustice and/or foul play.

Have you met him, then?




Destini wrote:
Destini laughed at the bird as it pecked at the deacon's shoe hopefully. The pigeon? In service to a cardinal? It was then that she saw the leather cord tied around the pigeon's ankle. Suddenly, what the deacon had said made all the more sense.

"'Tis a carrier pigeon!" she cried in surprise. She'd heard of them, but had never seen one before. "Ye communicate with ... a cardinal ... through carrier pigeons." It was not a question, though she supposed it could be interpreted as such. She was sounding aloud the facts as she interpreted them. Her hesitation around the title of cardinal was due to her uncertainty that the cardinal of which this deacon spoke in such a casual fashion was the same one with whom she was familiar. "This would be the Cardinal Faheud, I s'pose?" This was a question, though she stated it firmly as if she knew it was fact and watched the deacon carefully for his reaction.
Destini
The Cardinal's story, as told by Deacon Brightpoint, was extraordinary and Destini allowed him to see that she was impressed. That Cardinal Faheud was an Irisher by nationality and Imleacher by birth had been unknown to her. It surprised her now to hear it.

Deacon_Allan_Brightpoint wrote:
Have you met him, then?


"Met Him? Nay, I cannae say that I have." She smirked at her own words, realizing she was probably confusing the deacon. She explained further, "As spokesperson fer the previous county council, I had hoped to spend my term ensuring the Cardinal Faheud was welcomed when He arrived an' that His trip was a success. I communicated with Him frequently regardin' the arrangements...." She paused to look down at the bird still at Brightpoint's feet. "Though, not with carrier pigeons."

Smiling back up at the deacon, she continued, "Before I was even midway through my term, I received a final missive from The Cardinal wherein His Grace conveyed His regrets an' explained that His ship to Eire had been forced to turn back to England or face Anto's pirate ships. Fer my meager part in attemptin' to help, His Grace sent me this."

She shrugged her satchel from her shoulders and knelt on the snow, placing her wooden staff on the ground at her side and the satchel before her. Tucked carefully along the side was a long, thin box. She lifted it and stood. Opening it, she revealed a golden staff in four pieces that, when assembled, would stand six foot high It was ornamented at the top like a shepherd's crook. "'Tis a thing too fine fer one o' my quality," she said, looking at it reverently in the moonlight. "'Specially as I wasnae able to help complete His Grace's mission ... try though I did." She mumbled the last, shaking her head and grimacing slightly at her failure. She closed the box and returned it to her satchel, being careful not to desturb her harp within.

Standing again, she lifted her worn, wooden staff to lean upon. "I've told ye mine, Deacon Brightpoint. Ye tell me yers." She fixed him with an open gaze. "How did ye come into the service o' Cardinal Faheud?"
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Allan looked off into the near distance as he listened to Destini’s tale. It was interesting how Cardinal Faheud managed to touch people in such far places. The Deacon jarred himself from the reverie and smiled at Destini as he answered her question.

“Well, miss, there is certainly a long tale you have requested. I have to go back to my beginnings to tell you how my path really crossed—and stayed crossed—with the Cardinal’s own. I was born in Cardiff January 18, 1429. My world changed when my parents died in a house-fire in 1442 while I was bringing sheep down to winter pasture. I came down that valley and saw the plume of smoke that meant my world had just ended. It is funny how plumes of smoke so often means someone’s world has changed.

I had to live somewhere I suppose, and a distant relative fostered me to a sheep merchant in February 1429, and I traveled with that merchant to Sussex in spring of 1430. I was born to ad a proper welsh name, but it was changed to Allan because no one could pronounce a word with 27 characters and no vowels. Who knew?

While we were at a wool faire in Sussex, I hired on to assist a young sheep farmer in Lewes who had taken on responsibilities as a parish Deacon in 1431. Deacon Faheud was his name…a young, feisty, intuitive man who was already growing into a leader.

Later Father Faheud sent me to Holland to train in martial arts with the Shin Master Fengbao Zhan in an attempt to bring more order to my…how did he put it.. ’unfettered and worldly mind.’


I returned To England and Sussex in 1439 as an expert in hand to hand combat and many other disciplines, but remained a feisty, worldly soul. I stayed in the service of Father Faheud and was invested as a Deacon and attaché to the Church in Lewes. For the next several years I began to accompany Father Faheud on journeys around England, Scotland, and Europe. And learned a great deal about diplomacy, statesmanship, and how the Church impacted for good or bad when it did or did not function well.


My trips for the Church became more lengthy and frequent as Father Faheud was promoted through the ranks to Bishop, Archbishop, and Cardinal. Then this last fall I was sent deep into Europe to investigate rumors of a rather vile trade in new poisons and antidotes wending their way from the orient into Europe.

One thing followed another and I found myself jousting with pirates for the largest piece of flotsam in the Irish sea and swam to shore on this mission.

So did I bore you to death with all that? I hope not, as the road is long and much more agreeable with someone to share tales with. I hope the Abbey in Port Lairge will be able to arrange a ship to England for me.

Where are your trails going to take you? What do you seek? Who do you serve?


Destini
How could he think that his tale bored her? She had listened intently as he spoke. Her gaze left his face only when he mentioned his parents. Plumes of smoke, indeed. Visions of her own family came to her mind and she closed her eyes against the bitter memories. Mercifully, he moved on with his tale without asking of her own family. Her eyes returned to watch him as he told his story.

And what a story it was! She found herself wondering what his real name was and marvelling at his travels all the way to and from the orient. From combat training to learning of poisons, this was a man prepared for anything.

Her ears perked when he mentioned that he was in Ireland on a mission. Not that she hadn't already guessed that, but to hear him verify her thoughts immediately brought more questions to her mind. What sort of mission was it? Was he here to carry out the Cardinal Faheud's original mission to assist the church of Ireland? That made no sense. Why would he then have spoken to Padraig at the wedding in the weald only to turn around and head straight back to England? Why not stay and host the conclave as the cardinal had planned to do? Perhaps, as deacon, that wasn't his place. Or, perhaps that wasn't his mission at all....

Deacon_Allan_Brightpoint wrote:
"So did I bore you to death with all that? I hope not, as the road is long and much more agreeable with someone to share tales with. I hope the Abbey in Port Lairge will be able to arrange a ship to England for me.

Where are your trails going to take you? What do you seek? Who do you serve?"


The deacon's own questions put her musings on hold. "No, Deacon, ye're not borin' me. I'm lookin' forward to hearin' more as we journey to Port Lairge. My own trails will take me where they will. I have no destination in mind. I seek only a friendly tavern in the evenin' to share my music with fine folk, an' an open road come the mornin' light. My wants are simple." Or, at least, she wished it was that simple. She still had her unanswered questions.

"As fer who I serve... I don't know ... I am naught but a lordless player lookin' to avoid trouble, if i can help it." Except the trouble of her own far-too-inquisitive mind. That always seemed to plague her no matter what she did.

In an attempt to forestall her questions, she looked down the road. "Speakin' o' the road, shall we continue? We'll never reach Port Lairge at this rate."

But her questions could only be stalled for so long. She tried to appear casual in her curiosity as she lifted her satchel and added, "Perhaps as we walk, ye can tell me o' this mission o' yers."
_________________
--Deacon_allan_brightpoint


Deacon Allan smiled at the nudge to action and got up, tossing the last of the bread to the now-plump pigeon who had been feasting this whole time. Not going to fly very far this night Allan thought as he wrapped his cloak around him and looked towards the road.

He met the emerald gaze of Destini steadily as he gave a tiny smile and answered her question.

"Aye...Perhaps I can tell you more of my mission whilst we walk. We do need to be going towards Port Lairge, because like most port cities, it simply refuses to come to us."


Allan grinned at her expression as he brushed lightly past her question and started walking down the road at her side.

"So tell me, have there always been robbers and pirates in Eire? or is it just Anto Capone's lot?

I suppose my only problem with that fellow is the way he keeps making that annoying breathing sound..."


Destini
She hadn't really expected him to tell her his mission. The grin on Brightpoint's face told her she wasn't going to get anything further from him. Her sigh of mild frustration formed a cloud of vapor in the chill, evening air. Glancing at the pigeon, she joined him at his side.

Deacon_Allan_Brightpoint wrote:
"So tell me, have there always been robbers and pirates in Eire? or is it just Anto Capone's lot?

I suppose my only problem with that fellow is the way he keeps making that annoying breathing sound..."


"Nay," she answered his question with a subtle shake of her hooded head. "Anto is only the more organized. There are others."

She thought on his final statement with a frown. "Deacon Brightpoint, is it usual fer a man o' Jah to speak so against his fellow man?"
_________________
See the RP information <<   1, 2, 3, ..., 74, 75, 76   >   >>
Copyright © JDWorks, Corbeaunoir & Elissa Ka | Update notes | Support us | 2008 - 2024
Special thanks to our amazing translators : Dunpeal (EN, PT), Eriti (IT), Azureus (FI)