• Welcome to The Worlds of Katherine Kurtz.
 

Recent

Discord

If you would like to join our alternate Discord chat please click on the Discord Link. If you have questions please click on the Discord Support link.

Join Discord

Discord Support

Forgotten Shadows

Started by Bynw, April 30, 2024, 07:47:56 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

Bynw


Collos and Amy enter the larger safehouse, there she is reunited with her friends and is able to tell them what transpired during the ritual. It is good news that Sir Airich will live and is recovering well with Trevor and Darius to see to his needs.

Lord Thane rises and greats Collos. "I have news Master that we must share with this Bishop's investigators. And now that they are all here, save the one. It is the best time."

Collos calls everyone to sit and listen to what Lord Thane has to say.

"Grecotha is been heavily infiltrated by the Custodes," he begins. "And I have learned who these men are and where they are in the city. They are the ones responsible for the increased violence against the Deryni. They are the ones who have planned the burning of this city. And they have the means to do so with Byzantyum Fire."

Seeing their questioned looks he answers before they even ask. "It is substance that water will not extinguish once lit. And it burns hot enough to destroy most everything. If this plan were to succeed. Grecotha would be burned to the ground."

"But now. We have the information needed to stop them. There are 5 Custodes priests here. And they have been here for some time. Three are in the Seminary teaching new priests-to-be, planting anti-Deryni seeds in their teachings so these priests once ordained will be ready to reinstate the Statutes of Ramos. The other 2 priests are in parishes across the city."

"Unfortunately, you don't have enough men to take all 5 priests at once. And this needs to be done otherwise the word will spread and they will either flee or set fire to the city. Or both."

"Use your influence with the Bishop and deputize others to help you take out these rogue priests. There should be a trained Deryni in all of the 5 parties to make sure you have the strength to overcome any obstacle these men might possess."

"Even then you may need men-at-arms as well. Master Collos has already agreed that we can assist you in this task. The Custodes will fight, they may be armed with merasha tipped weapons. You will need all the help you can get."

"Including going to the Bishop as these are priests you are about to take into custody on charges of sedition, arson, and treason against the Gwynedd Crown. When you are ready. Let us know and we will join you in bringing these men to justice."

President/Founder of The Worlds of Katherine Kurtz Fan Club
IRC Administrator of #Deryni_Destinations
Discord Administrator of The Worlds of Katherine Kurtz Discord
Administrator https://www.rhemuthcastle.com

revanne

#331
With thanks to Jerusha for Elspeth's support

Edwin found irritation rising again within him. Who were these men who presumed to give them instructions? He trusted Amy and was prepared to accept that the one called Collos had been instrumental in helping to heal Airich, and he found that he was genuinely happy to know that Airich had not only been healed of the attack upon him but also of whatever had been threatening to drive him mad. But this other man - My lord Whatisname -who had knocked so politely at the door as though he had not previously used his powers to sneak amongst them, how far could he be trusted? Edwin wondered sourly had his presence as a Deryni not been sensed what might then have happened to unshielded human minds. Well he was Deryni, untaught and unskilled, but Deryni nonetheless and it was perhaps time he stopped shilly-shallying and fully accepted the reality of who he was.   

Edwin tentatively reached out and began to truth-read the intruding lord. To his surprise there was no resistance, and, even more to his surprise, he could detect no deliberate falsehoods or intent to deceive. The man met his gaze and briefly nodded in acknowledgement. Less welcome was the slight smile which played around his lips which caused Edwin to redden and did nothing to soothe his irritation. And, even if the man was speaking no falsehood, a tocsin was tolling in Edwin's head as loudly as the bells of Culdi when they had feared invasion in the Mearan war. It was all very well for the man to talk about them being the Bishop's investigators, that hadn't prevented Airich from being very nearly murdered. Perhaps it would be better not to say that out loud but there were questions he definitely was going to ask. After his own experience of being kidnapped and his mind messed with he was not about to take very much on trust. What if these men were playing with them for their own game?

"Forgive me for speakin' out my mind, my Lord, but if these Custodes have been plotting in the dark for nigh on two hundred years as ye say, and ye, and whoever ye speak for, know all about them, why is it only now that ye decide that something needs to be done about them. And why would ye think that the four o'us stand any sort of chance if trained Deryni such as ye canna? If they are as strong here as ye say they are, then I'm thinking this is beyond the likes o'us. And, ye'll pardon me but do ye speak for his Grace the Bishop in giving us these orders?

Lord Thane continued to meet Edwin's gaze levelly but made no response other than again that slight smile. If it was meant as reassurance then it failed in its intent as Edwin allowed his anger to surface fully bringing his border speech with it.

"Besides which, ye say that they'll burn down the city wi' this Byzuntan fire o' theirs. I've heard tell o'it from a student who travelled down ahint the Southern Sea and he spoke of it as a fearful thing. In the south, where all is tinder dry and scorched by the sun, mebbe just a little would burn doon a toon. But here, where the roads are running wi' mud and the very stanes are soaked wi'the rain I dinna speir sa."

Before Lord Thane could answer, Elspeth stood, hands on hips, her eyes locked on his.

"Master Edwin is correct, Lord Thane," she said crisply. "You ask a lot of us. When Sir Airich approached the Bishop with proofadmittedly, secured through Deryni meanshis report was tossed aside, as was his warrant. Now you want us to convince the bishop to allow us to arrest five of his own priests, declaring they are Custodes, plotting treason against the king, and threatening to burn Grecotha to the ground! That is a bit much sir, to expect the bishop to believe, unless we have some proof other than you said so!"

Elspeth's bright blue eye flashed in anger. "I for one will not risk spending the rest of my life in the Grecotha dungeons based on someone's hearsay!"

Edwin turned and looked gratefully at her. It was good to know that it wasn't just his own anger speaking.




God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.
(Psalm 46 v1)

Bynw


It wasn't Lord Thane who answered Edwin and Elspeth's questions. Collos was the one to speak up.

"We are not from Gwynedd. We have our own motivations for stopping the Custodes and removing them from any power base. But we are only 3 and in this city there are 5 of them."

"Yes, we could act on our own and be somewhat successful in taking them. But we could fail at getting all of them. They could escape and possibly set fire to part of the city. And this is what we are trying to prevent."

"The Bishop believes you, at least in part, since he has ordered the preservation of some documents. To safe guard them from this possible inferno. But you also don't need the Bishop to take the Custodes. Once the young lord is up again, the 5 of you, with our help, could take all of them without any assistance from the Bishop, the City Watch, or the Purple Guard."

"But it could be more difficult as someone is bound to put up a fight and resist being taken. And without the Bishop's blessing, it could look bad, the Deryni attacking the Church. You may even be forced to kill one of them."

"Going to the Bishop. Getting him to give you his blessing. Then you have the City Watch and the Purple Guard to assist in bringing these anti-Deryni fiends to justice. And seeing armed troops will make them think twice about resisting or fighting back."

Collos pauses for a bit. "As for proof. Yes we have physical proof that the Custodes never truly dispersed, defying a Royal degree in Gwynedd. And we have proof of their treason against your king."

"But there isn't time to bring those documents so you can look them over and determine their validity or to bring them to the Bishop so he can do the same. The city would burn around us while we waited."

"As outsiders, we are very unlikely to get any support from the Bishop if we went. And we are not going to do so either. However, if Lord Iain is still in the city, he could be of help getting this goal achieved."
President/Founder of The Worlds of Katherine Kurtz Fan Club
IRC Administrator of #Deryni_Destinations
Discord Administrator of The Worlds of Katherine Kurtz Discord
Administrator https://www.rhemuthcastle.com

Jerusha

Jimmy Taylor was not fond of dungeons. They were dank, they smelled bad, and the prisoners smelled worse. Some of that, of course, was the smell of fear.

Jimmy had been ordered to accompany Phillip while he questioned Jasper and the other prisoners rounded up from the stable. Jimmy suspected Phillip didn't want him wandering off on his own.

The prisoners had been chained in two separate, narrow cells. The first two they questioned, Caolán and Drake, were essentially Jasper's followers. They maintained they had only watched and cheered Jasper and Baines on; they had not harmed the knight themselves. Neither would admit to being the one who knocked him to the ground from behind. Jimmy truth-read them as they spoke. They told no falsehood, but skirted around their level of participation. It didn't matter; the fact they allowed it to happen and left a good man to die would see them expelled from the university.

The second cell held Gareth and Jasper. Their wounds had been bandaged, though Jimmy doubted much care in the task had been taken. Why waste good bandages and medicines on men soon to hang? And they were far from comfortable with their wrists manacled and dangling from chains, although from a height that allowed them to sit and relieve some of the weight.

"I have run out of patience!" Phillip announced as a guard let them into the cell and closed the door behind them. Jimmy remained standing near the door, careful not to brush against the dripping wall. Phillip turned to Gareth. "You attacked the bowman, who says he holds a warrant from the bishop. That's a hanging offence; do you have anything to say in your defence?"

Gareth licked his lips. "I could speak more easily if I had a bit of water first."

Phillip took a menacing step forward and Gareth held his uninjured arm out as far as he could to forestall him.

"I was only following Jasper's orders," Gareth rasped.

Jimmy spoke up from his position near the door. "Jasper's only, or was someone higher up a party to this?"

"Speak when I give you leave to!" Phillip snapped.

"As you wish," Jimmy replied and bowed his head slightly.

A look of increased fear, if that were possible, crossed Gareth's face. He had a wife and a young daughter. If he betrayed de Guerra, the swordmaster would see that they suffered.

Gareth shook his head. "All I did was sweep the man's feet to help Jasper. I did no direct harm, and it was only Jasper's orders I followed." He was sweating heavily.

Jimmy read the lie in his words. Jasper called Gareth something foul.

"Ah, Jasper," Phillip said. "According to this guardsman," he nodded in Jimmy's direction, "you confessed to stabbing Sir Airich O'Flynn and leaving him to die."

"I only said so to save my hand! What good is a swordsman without his favored hand?" Jasper said desperately.

"Sir Airich will shortly have his chance to speak," Jimmy said, ignoring Phillip's angry look. "Your little story won't stand."

"It wasn't just me who wanted that investigator out of the way," Jasper said desperately. He had no wife to worry about, thanks to Bede. "There is another, he's...."

The sound of Phillip's fist hitting Jasper's jaw left no doubt in Jimmy's mind that Jasper's jaw was broken. Probably in more than one place. His howl of pain made Gareth cringe.

"Was there more you were going to say?" Phillip leaned down to the prisoner's face, leaving no doubt he would do more to keep him silent.

Jasper shook his head, as much as the pain would allow, and said no more. He was clearly unable to speak anyway, his jaw was now resting at an odd angle.

Sir Iain Cameron sighed. Jasper had not lied, but it wouldn't matter now. He would go before the Magistrate as soon as it could be arranged and if well enough, Sir Airich would give his evidence. Jasper and Gareth would be sentenced to hang, and de Guerra would be in attendance, just to make sure.
From ghoulies and ghosties and long-leggity beasties and things that go bump in the night...good Lord deliver us!

 -- Old English Litany

Laurna

All this important yet devastating talk about Byzantyun fire, re-established religious orders full of hate and intolerance, and how the people in this room had to resolve it, was making Amy's head burst.

Amy scooted over to Elspeth, who was deep in the conversation backing Edwin and Bede's assertions. But Amy got her attention by resting her hand on her friend's shoulder. "Speth? Do you have any of your medicines here? I am so tired and my head is pounding."

Elspeth instantly pulled Amy to a back corner, away from the men. "Oh, Ams, I am sorry to say it is all back at the safe house. All of our stuff is there. And it doesn't look like we are going to be leaving here tonight. Not with Airich so close."

Amy nodded with a deep breath, "I don't think I can sleep tonight, even though Father Trevor said I should. There is so much running through my mind. Much of which is being chased by a damn green squirrel beating a drum. I need to get out of here for a little bit. Away from all this, just to clear my mind. I have so much to tell you, Speth. But not here, not now."

Elspeth looked at her friend; there was more in Amy's eyes than just her concern for Sir Airich.
"I can go get our things," the physicker volunteered.

"Oh no, not you! Please, don't go," Amy pleaded. "You are the only one I truly trust to look in on Airich and make sure he is sleeping comfortably through the night. I know these other men mean well, but I do not trust them, not the way I trust you."

"You cannot go there alone. I'll send Bede."

Amy actually laughed, "And if Muirea is there, as I hope she is, I don't want to have to break up a fight between them. It might be better if I talk to Muirea first, to try and explain why Bede wasn't able to meet her after her shift. It will sound better coming from me." Amy could see from Elspeth's gaze that she had made the right assumption. "Send Edwin with me. He needs to talk to Kierran Duggan anyway and explain what happened to him, and warn Kierran about this potential fire and finding where these fire pots might be stashed. I think the literary students would be an asset in this, Bede proved their usefulness earlier today. Edwin could build on that.  Another reason I would like Edwin is that the streets are getting dark, Edwin knows the best way to get there and back. I would get lost alone." Amy snickered at the thought, but then grimaced, She did not want to leave Airich but this headache and other needs were driving her to move.

"But your headache? You should rest."

"Speth, please, I need fresh air. And I will be able to take your medicine as soon as we get to the safe house. I know which pouch to take. Then we will get everything back here, and with luck, we will have Muirea and maybe some food."

Elspeth nodded, convinced. "Edwin?" She caught the student's attention with her steady voice. Even Lord Thorne stopped talking. "Take Amy to get our gear. Stay out of trouble. No encounters, hear me! Double time it and be back here, two hours at the most. Or I will send Bede out after you both. And you do not want me sending Bede out to rescue you, do you?"

"No mistress—I mean, yes mistress! Back within two hours." Edwin almost looked glad to get away from the planning so he could start to think about it all.

Lord Thorne and Lord Collos looked unhappy about this sudden departure, but it was clear that Elspeth was in charge of her group, and butting heads with her at this juncture would be detrimental to their plans.

"As Mistress Elspeth says, caution is key," Collos said. "When you come back, I hope to have our plans finalized."

"Thank you," Elspeth bowed to Collos. Then she squeezed Amy's shoulder with one hand and Edwin's hand with her other. "Be attentive," she said as she waved the two out of the room.
May your horses have wings and fly!

Evie

Aidan McLain was scared, and he wasn't entirely sure what he'd just overheard or why, but what he had overheard hadn't sounded good, not at all.

The two priests had been whispering together between the library stacks. Aidan had been standing just on the other side of one of the sets of bookshelves, not meaning to eavesdrop, but given his close proximity to the men, he couldn't help but overhear bits of their conversation.

They were discussing the sudden flurry of activity in the vicinity of the Bishop's Palace, and the disappearance of a great many books and scrolls from the shelves and niches where they were customarily stored in the Great Library of Grecotha. One of the men said something about the likelihood that the Bishop had somehow received word of the impending torching of Grecotha with Byzantyun fire. Aidan prayed fervently that he had misheard. He had known about the book evacuation because the Bishop's investigators had discovered some sort of plot to burn the city, but he had thought they were just talking about a regular fire, not Byzantyun fire! He had recently read about that frightening substance in one of the ancient histories he'd been given to read as part of his monastic education, and the thought of such a lethal weapon being used against the town of Grecotha terrified him. If Grecotha were to burn to the ground, how many hundreds of people might perish?

For that matter, if Grecotha were to burn to the ground and Aidan were to somehow survive the conflagration, where was he to go? That thought terrified him almost as much as the thought of meeting a fiery death just like his brother Corbin had.

"Look at this, whole shelves of books emptied and taken away to God only knows where!" groused one of the priests. "Maybe we should move our plans earlier, lest they have time to smuggle out any more of their Deryni writings or other heretical texts!"

"In this rain?" complained the other. "Granted, Byzantyun fire can spread even given far less than optimal conditions, but it would be more certain to catch and spread if we just wait another day or two until the wood and thatched roofs have had a little time to dry out more. Besides, if rumors have spread about our plans already, you can bet that people will be trying to leave the city. Delaying things would allow a few more innocent people to leave than might have done otherwise."

"And also allow some of those devil's spawn Deryni to slip past the gates as well," the first voice snarled. "Even with the roadblocks, there's no guarantee some wouldn't manage to slip away, and then what would all this planning have been for, I'd like to know?"

"They wouldn't be able to go far," the second voice assured him. "Soon, there won't be any safe refuges left for them to flee to."

He felt a sudden need to catch a glimpse of the whispering priests. Aidan didn't know why; deep down, he really wanted nothing more than to leave the library as fast as possible and tell Canon Damian what he had overheard. His heart thumping in his chest under his brown robes, he silently tiptoed closer to one end of the bookcase he stood behind, eventually finding a gap between the books that allowed him a brief glimpse of the two men beyond, if he crouched down long enough to peer through it.

The two priests wore ordinary black cassocks with nothing noteworthy about them to make them stand out from any other priest in Grecotha, but he noticed that one man wore an eye-catching red and gold rosary that was looped over his white cincture. Even that might not have caught Aidan's eye despite the bright coloring–after all, it was hardly out of the ordinary for a priest to own a rosary–but where Christ or Mary or some saint might be depicted on the small oval medallion above the cross, this particular rosary's medallion sported a lion's head with a halo. Something about that embossed motif teased at the edges of Aidan's memory. He was fairly certain he had read about that symbol somewhere, maybe in his history lessons, but the specific reference was eluding him at the moment. Despite that brief moment of near recognition, he might have thought little of the showy rosary or the medallion except that the other priest wore a ring with an almost identical motif.

The man Aidan thought might have been the priest his mind had labeled as "number one" had dark hair, but the aisle where they stood was shadowed enough that he couldn't quite make out if it was black or a dark shade of brown. He didn't know the priest's name, but he thought he might remember his features well enough if he saw him again in future. The other man had his back to Aidan, so he only caught a glimpse of brown hair, neatly tonsured, in a shade that was slightly lighter than Aidan's own hair, a nondescript color that would be difficult to pick out in a crowd. But he had a faint scar on the ringed hand that Aidan was also fairly sure he would recognize if he saw it again.

The two men moved further away, looking as if they meant to go deeper into the library. Aidan slowly released a breath he hadn't realized he was holding and slipped out silently, heading in the opposite direction. Canon Damian must be told of this!

#

Edwin and Amy had left Elspeth back at the secret sanctuary and were heading back towards the Duggan house to pick up their belongings and see if Muirea had returned yet. As they made their way through one of the sections of town near where the foreign students tended to congregate and seek out lodgings, they spotted a familiar figure in the near distance.  "Is that the boy who assists the Canon?" Amy asked, laying a hand on Edwin's arm as she tilted her head in the direction of a young lad just up ahead who was dressed in the familiar brown robes of a monastic oblate or novice.

"Canon Damian's assistant?" Edwin asked, shading his eyes with one hand and following her gaze. "Aye, looks t' be him, right enow. Aidan McLain, I think his name is."

They started to head in his direction. As they drew closer, Edwin took note of his distracted appearance, the boy's sky blue eyes darting fearfully around as if searching for someone.

Amy frowned. Even from a slight distance, she could sense the boy's distress. She glanced at Edwin, wondering if he sensed it too.

They were nearly upon him now, but he showed no signs of recognition yet, unlike the other times they had encountered him at the Canon's office or elsewhere. Finally, when they were nearly on top of the lad without him seeming to notice their approach, Edwin stepped up and caught his attention. "Oi, Aidan! Ye're a bit out o' the way o' yer usual haunts, aye? Were ye lookin' for us?"

Aidan shook his head, looking slightly confused. "Nay, I'm lookin' f'r...." As if registering their presence and his surroundings properly for the first time, his expression grew even more baffled. "I ought t' tell th' Canon, but he ain't here."

"Should he be?" asked Edwin, equally confused. Why would the Canon be in this remote area of town? It seemed a bit out of the way from the places he normally frequented.

"I...dinnae ken," admitted Aidan with a thoughtful frown. "Mebbe I should find 'im, but I need t' tell Ol–" He stopped abruptly, his brow furrowing as he looked around more closely at their surroundings. "Where are we?"

Edwin glanced at Amy, equally confused. "Where are we? Where do ye think we are? And Ol' Who? Do you mean th' Canon?" Surely the boy wouldn't be referring to his master by such a familiar form of address as 'Ol' Damian'!

"Nay...." The boy looked distractedly around again, this time turning slowly in place to look behind him before turning back to Edwin. "I ain't even near th' Library anymore!"

"Nay, ye're no'." It was Edwin's turn to frown in puzzlement. "Aidan, are ye unwell? Should we get ye hame?"

"How'd I get here?" Aidan asked, his eyes widening in alarm.

#

Amy glanced uncertainly at Edwin. "Maybe we should see him safely home. Or do you think Elspeth should have a look at him?" she whispered. Loud enough for the boy to hear, she added, "Aidan, did you maybe bump your head or something? Maybe I should have a look."

The boy took a step back in alarm, not understanding why he did so. It was just an instinctive reaction. "Oh, no worries, mistress, ain't nowt tae see in there anyways, just a bit of straw mebbe," he joked with a disarming grin, ducking his head shyly. In truth he didn't know why he felt so reluctant to allow Mistress Amy to check for a head injury, from being fairly sure he didn't have one.

Well, that and she was female. And pretty. And he was just a year or two away from taking holy vows, so he didn't need a woman taking such liberties. Just looking at her made him feel a bit funny inside, not in a bad way, but just in a way that maybe a future monk didn't need to be feeling.

Yet again, as he had with increasing frequency in the past year or two, he wondered what it would be like to take a wife, marry, and settle into some form of trade. But he was uncertain what sort of future he would end up with if he left the order to find his own path in life. What if he ended up back in poverty, but with a wife and bairns to feed, like his father before him? Aidan wasn't at all sure it was worth the risk of leaving the safety and security of monastic life to chase after some silly romantic fancy.

"Oh, I'm sure it's stuffed with something a lot more substantial than straw!" Amy joked back, though she gave Edwin another quick look. "Though you do seem to be a bit disoriented. Are you hungry? Maybe we should get some food in you; that should sort you out."

"Nay...." The puzzled look crossed Aidan's face again. "I'll ken 'im if I see 'im, though."

Amy's brows rose even higher towards her hairline. "Well, maybe we'll see him on the way to getting you fed. In the meantime, why don't you join us? Once we've all had a chance to eat, if you're still not feeling quite like yourself, maybe Elspeth will be back. You remember our physicker, don't you?"

"Aye, mebbe tha's it," agreed Aidan, feeling some relief as Mistress Amy stepped back, allowing her companion to come forward and take the lead.

"In tha' case, why no' come wi' us?" suggested Edwin. "We're just off t' see if one o' oor companions has made it back tae oor lodgin's yet, but there's food there that'll tak th' edge off yer hunger."

"Tha' sounds richt guid...." Aidan's voice trailed off. "Nae, on second thought, I need tae find Ol–there's a man I need tae find first. 'Tis gey important, an' 'e needs tae hear it iffen I c'n find 'im...." His eyes darted back and forth again, making Edwin wonder if the boy was about to dash off again.

"We could help ye look," Edwin offered. Amy raised her brows at him, not at all certain they could risk any delay with their own errand, but he had a gut feeling that Aidan needed help, and not just with finding whoever he was looking for. "C'n ye describe th' man?"

"Nay...." The puzzled look crossed Aidan's face again. "I'll ken 'im if I see 'im, though."

Amy's brows rose even higher towards her hairline. "Well, maybe we'll see him on the way to getting you fed. In the meantime, why don't you join us? Once we've all had a chance to eat, if you're still not feeling quite like yourself, maybe Elspeth will be back. You remember our physicker, don't you?"

Aidan nodded. He reckoned it would be fine if their physicker wanted to give him some potion for these odd forgetting spells he'd had lately.  Maybe she might even find some bump on his noggin that he'd forgotten about while she was at it. There was just something deep down that made him feel like he oughtn't let folk go poking about inside his head. Not that he had anything against Deryni folk in general, and none had ever done him any harm, so far as he knew, but a lad couldn't be too careful about that sort of thing. At any rate, he had formed an instant respect for the woman they called Elspeth despite her somewhat unnerving mismatched eyes. After all, she couldn't very well help ((H)) those, any more than he'd had any say over the small birthmark on his left shoulder. He wasn't sure what it was about her, maybe it was just her efficient, no-nonsense way of doing things, but something about her vaguely reminded him of what few memories he had left of his Mum. If she could figure out why he kept losing bits of time, he'd be grateful, because these funny spells kept happening with increasing frequency now, and they were most annoying.

But now he was letting himself get distracted from the importance of his mission, he realized as he caught sight of a black-clad man walking swiftly in the opposite direction. Time was of the essence, and if he couldn't find the man called Oleg, he would need to tell someone he could trust. Tugging at Edwin's sleeve, he whispered, "There's summat important I need tae tell ye, but no' oot here. Mebbe I should gae wi' ye after a'."
"In necessariis unitas, in non-necessariis libertas, in utrisque caritas."

--WARNING!!!--
I have a vocabulary in excess of 75,000 words, and I'm not afraid to use it!

Marc_du_Temple

Not too many hours ago, in The King's Arms, Eustace had stopped by to see Muirea. She had given him her usual amicable maid persona, strained nigh imperceptibly by the mutual knowledge that she was an informant first. "Ah'm just finishing up my shift, Eustace. What can I do for ye?"

((What Eustace remembers on ((2d6 3 + 1 = 4))) "Bede said to tell you that he might sound like he's lying, but he wants you to believe him anyway. And that he'll fight anyone on any terrain to get back to you, no matter the altitude."

That perplexed her terribly, furrowing her brows and flushing her cheeks. "When? What holds the man up?"

He related the rest of the events of the afternoon as he saw them, and she knew then that she may well be walking back to Duggan's alone. She had half a mind to demand Eustace go back with a message of her own, but chastised herself for even thinking of sending him back into such intrigue. Yes, it was out of her hands, now, and she did not like it, as she did not like walking alone, until she remembered halfway home that she had neglected to appreciate the good news: Jasper had met his match at last! Yes, her one-time savior, the kind Deryni knight, was in mortal peril, Bede was in over his head for sure this time, and the rest of her new friends fared little better. But the monster in her story was as good as slain! She could almost dance her way to the Duggan's doorstep. But still, she worried for them all. She decided she would pray for them, repetitiously, when she could.

In the spacious attic of the Duggan household, she knelt as many do in ritual, but merely praying with a child's training in religion. "In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit ... there are four ... five people I still care about. Now, they are so far away, being charmed by strange men I dinna ken. I am finally free from the murderer of my sister, but so alone. I dinna ken what is next for anyone. That is na gift of mine. I just want to see them all, soon. Including Airich. I'd blame meself, Laird, if he died in my city! And the kind girls. It's been so long since I've had friends like them. Who knew that Kelsonites could be so kind? The bookish one. He could do with less tension, sometimes. And Bede ..." she trailed off, there, feeling a memory of warmth on her lips. That was some un-Bede-like nonsense Eustace was saying, she thought. But she admitted to herself that she liked the sentiment, as she drifted off to sleep.

But sleep gave her less comfort than the waking world. She heard a trample of footsteps and shouted for Jasper to stay away from her.

"Shh ... it's me. It's me, Muirea!" Amy soothed worriedly. Muirea opened her eyes and lifted her tangled hair out of her vision, breathing a sigh of relief. It was indeed the other maid, her friend from Carbury. And she seemed possessed of a weariness beyond anything a single day could bestow. But she was here. Laughing, Muirea embraced her.
"We're the masters of chant.
We are brothers in arms.
For we don't give up,
Till 'time has come.
Will you guide us God?
We are singing as one.
We are masters of chant." -Gregorian

Laurna

Amy wept on Muirea's shoulder, letting out her pent-up exhaustion and relief. "Airich is going to live, Muirea! He is even cured of his ailment. We did a ritual...it was working... but then it wasn't...Airich died, but then he didn't....  A... a healer came... healed him. A miracle has happened. Muirea, a miracle! I have so much I want to tell you and Elspeth, but I haven't had a chance to tell her. It's about the Healer who came. I trust him, but I can not say much more. So I've got to hold it in. I have laid my future in this Healer's hands; Airich's and my future together. I will tell you soon, I promise." Amy rambled on like a student who'd won a drinking contest; excited for the win, but dazed by the drink. Amy was indeed dizzy. Finally, she let go of Muirea and looked around, not finding what she sought. "Do you remember where Speth put her medicines? Wasn't her bag right here?" Amy looked around their small corner room. She stumbled over her own bedding and then sat down rather hard on the pallet, rubbing her forehead. The spell she had learned assisted with the dizziness, but not with the headache.

"It's in the other room, I'll get it." Muirea rushed out and back in seconds later. She plopped the leather satchel before Amy. But Muirea did not dare to even loosen the strings holding the flap closed. Too many mysteries were contained in those small vials, jars, and herbal packets. Life or death if not used with knowledge and respect. "You're certain you know what you're looking for?" she asked as Amy undid the ties and started pulling items out.

"Speth has taught me much about all of this. But I would not use most of it without Elspeth's guidance. Except for the one I need. It's a rolled parchment of crushed leaves with a green ribbon. Oh, here it is. Amy held up the roll to the candlelight to be sure of the writing on the outer parchment. "I don't suppose you brought home any ale from your shift. I don't want to go back to the kitchen to get some."

"Chef liked my work today, gave me a whole skin." Muirea smiled at Amy's side looks.

"He must like you."

"He always did. You know, he was the one who let me sleep in the kitchens when I escaped from that beast... from Jasper's house. The chef is married with a dozen kids, but he saw that I had a place to stay, and food to eat. He respected me like I was one of his daughters."

Muirea poured some of the ale into a cup and handed it to Amy. Amy then measured two pinches of the dried herbs and then tipped them over into the cup. She swirled it a little, then drank the whole cup of ale down. She closed her eyes and hummed for a moment, willing the drum-playing green squirrel to go to sleep.

"Amy, I want you to know how pleased I am that you and Sir Airich have one another. I wish we could all find such happiness." The girl years away from her home in Meara still had that Mearan friendship closeness in her blood. She hugged Amy, hoping to sooth away her friend's tired expression. When Amy started feeling a little better and looked up with a smile, Muirea finally asked,"Tell me, is Bede downstairs? He said he'd be here if he could, no?" Muirea tried to hide her concern when Amy's smile faded.

"I am sorry, but no. Bede would have come with me instead of Edwin," Amy assured Muirea, "but Edwin needed to talk to the Duggans. He is downstairs doing that now. I hope you are not mad at Bede. He seemed really upset about something, but he didn't say what."

Muirea stood and paced the room. "Eustace told me some of today's trouble. What a horror ye've all been through. Is Bede coming back here tonight? He and I have much that needs discussing. The two of us."

This time, Amy's smile returned, slightly lopsided and teasing. "I think that is what he wants, too. You know his eyes sparkle when he talks of you."  Amy squeezed Muirea's and then said more seriously.  "I was going to bring you back with us to the safe house where Bede is, very near to where Airich is sleeping and healing. But I think, now, that might not be best. See, we found the boy Aidan–you remember, Canon Damian's assistant–he was looking sickly so we brought him here. I want you to watch him tonight. Would you be willing to do that for me? I know Bede will get back here before dawn arrives. There is more going on that he will explain to you then."

Muirea looked disappointed but did not say anything.

"Here, help me carry the gear we need for tonight downstairs. Yes, that bag and that one, and those bags in the boys rooms, better included Edwin's book satchel, yeah, the singed one." Amy giggled, seeing the repairs Edwin had attempted after the satchel's harrowing in the fireplace days ago. "We can leave the rest here to get in the morning. I will explain as we carry these down to the kitchens."
May your horses have wings and fly!