Hi Henry Brown,
We know there are other competent people in Dohlar, the first minister the Duke of fern and the Duke of Salthar, besides Rychtyr and Ahlverez, each with their own followings.
I suspect when the crunch comes they will quietly ally to save the kingdom, while eliminating the incompetents in a breathlessly ruthless fashion that will have us all cheering.
I suspect Bishop Maik may be one of the go-betweens, after all who would suspect an intendant inquisitor?
I've posted before Ahlverez may help free Thirsk's family, to his astonishment.
I hope Duke Fern survives as he seems as smart and dedicated to Dohlar as Grey Harbor and Green Mountain were to Charis and Chisholm, despite the slob of a king he serves.
Which is why a regency for one of his sons or grandsons makes such sense to me, they serve up Rahnlyd IV to the alliance, or report his 'untimely' death when it was very timely as a matter of fact, if he doesn't abdicate to save the kingdom.
There are lots of entertaining ways that could happen!
Too many posters here seem too fixed on shelling Gorath city, when it doesn't help the alliance or taking the Go4 down.
Destroying the palace rather than the whole city seems more appropriate, Cayleb won't play into Clyntahn's hands with anything near what could be claimed as an atrocity.
L
Henry Brown wrote:EdThomas wrote:Bit of a rant follows
Not sure where this Thirsk-bashing is coming from. This is from Snippet 6. You know, theone before this one!!!
"Gorath Bay’s temperature seldom fell below freezing, yet it could be bitterly cold in winter, especially for anyone out on its waters. The bay’s cold snaps, with their raw, biting chill, might last for five-days, despite its southern location. That was what had caused so much sickness among Gwyllym Manthyr’s half-starved, half-naked crews when they were confined in the prison hulks.
Oh, yes, Thirsk thought. The bay can be cruel, especially when human spite sees a chance to make it worse.
His jaw tightened as he remembered that winter, remembered his shame and the way the Inquisition had countermanded his orders to provide his prisoners — his prisoners — with food and healers. That wind-polished sheet of pitiless winter water danced before his eyes again, and he felt the helplessness he’d felt then. Oh, how he’d hated Gorath Bay throughout that cold, bitter winter."
Am I the only one here who remembers THirsk's anger at what the Inquisition was ordering him to do? Were it not for his religious guy (Intendant?) Thirsk would have ended up in the Inquisition's loving clutches. He knows the Inquisition is watching his children and their families to keep him in line. He has to make sure his young whiz kid doesn't go too far, or too fast and run afoul of the Proscriptions, as well.
THirsk is one of the most honorable characters in the series and I'm taking personal offense at folks impugning him for actions that he was ordered to do when opposing those orders would have accomplished nothing but his own demise and probably even the deaths by torture of his children and their families.
Are we reading the same books?
I agree. I see Thirsk as a good, honorable man and commander who is stuck in the service of a bad cause. And if he was the only one at risk, I think he might try to push the issue more. But his family is under the "protection" of the inquisition. So if he rocks the boat too much then they might suffer.
However, he is a capable strategist and technician. Even if we have not yet seen it in snippets, I would be highly surprised if he is not searching for a way to get his family to safety. And if he can ever find a way to pull that off, the Kingdom of Dohlar and the CoG better watch out. Because in addition to being highly capable, it seems to me that Thirsk is becoming more and more disillusioned with the political situation. If he is ever free to act as he wants, it could be the biggest surprise since Shannon Foraker's "Oops" in
Ashes of Victory.