You both have very good arguments, and frankly, I could go either way with this, but there's one thing that neither of you is taking into account... Thirsk is a military commander of a country with which the EoC and Siddarmark are at WAR!!!WeberFan wrote:SNIP...Don: You state that (with regard to Thirsk) "his faith goes to the bone..."n7axw wrote:Whatever the risk factor of a letter--personally I think it is minimal-- the risk of telling Thirsk the truth would be very high. Accorsing to what textev we have, his faith goes to the bone, putting him in the same category as Gray Harbor and Green Mountain for the same reasons.
Don
I absolutely agree, but would also suggest that the same was also true for all of the members of the Inner Circle. UNTIL there was some sort of defining event - indeed some epiphany - whether internally driven or externally driven. Throughout the series, I've been struck by the events that have forced the various members of the Inner Circle to confront their faith and its implications in the face of the new "heretical" information.
In the same way Sharleyan was forced to confront her faith following the Abbey assassination attempt... In the same way that Iris was forced to confront her faith when faced with Hektor's impending death... In the same way that Yairley was forced to confront his faith, not out of the desperate scenarios confronting Sharleyan or Iris but out of his love of Charis and his King... And the list goes on and on. In fact, the only epiphanous scenarios we don't have any textev about are the ones for the Brethern... Everyone else who has been added to the fold had something...
There are no citizens of enemy countries in the inner circle, and certainly no one who is subject to the orders of the Go4 and commands forces actively engaged to kill sailors and soldiers of the EoC. People like that can be snatched away and tortured, and verification that Merlin is a demon who uses technology reserved for the archangels would be crippling to the cause of the EoC - if anybody on the mainland were likely to actually believe that tired accusation at this point...
We all desperately want Thirsk to sign up with the good guys, then get his fleet to strike its colors before the Cities or the Haarahlds are forced to destroy it, along with the tens of thousands of sailors, marines, officers, etc. who are aboard those floating wooden targets. We want to see him being instrumental in convincing Dohlar to drop out of the Jihad. (After all, Desnair actually has, they just haven't admitted it yet.)
But it's true that Thirsk believes in the CoGA to the bone, although he has some serious personal opposition to its current management. He's a Reformist who would actually feel quite at home attending the CoC instead, although he'd never actually do that. Unfortunately he's a man of unflinching honor, and despite his personal tragedy and the fact that he's been betrayed by the CoGA and the Inquisition, he still feels that he's sworn to his God, his (ideal) version of the CoGA, his King, and his subordinates in the NoG.
At the moment he's probably mad enough to gladly wrap an anchor chain around every member of the Inquisition and the entire Go4 and toss them in the Gulf of Dohlar. But his faith in Mother Church hasn't been destroyed, as we saw so eloquently in his thoughts while the announcement of the "Kidnapping of Irys and Daivyn" was announced. So I tend to agree that even if he defected, he may well fall into the "can't tell them the truth or you'll destroy who they are" category.
Learning that his family is safe will pull him out of his funk and make him care about living again, and since the Inquisition no longer needs him, it's only a matter of time until it shows up at his door to arrest him or visits him in the night and leaves a corpse. So I expect he'll move back to his flagship and probably spend the rest of HFQ keeping safely out of the Inquisition's reach. His crews and his officers love him, and they'd cross the Rubicon by refusing valid orders from the Inquisition to take him into custody. Clyntahn is stupid enough to try it, and at the very least he'd demote Thirsk and put someone else in charge of the last remnants of the NoG, although he could end up with a mutiny on his hands! (Which alas, Thirsk wouldn't condone.)
Of course this only matters in passing, because the Dohlaran fleet will cease to exist soon, since we're FINALLY gonna see the ICN sail into Gorath Bay to pay back good King Ronald for sending the captured Charisian sailors off to Zion to be tortured to death!!! And we only had to wait for FOUR books! (RFC likes to kid me and PeterZ because we've been screaming for this to happen in each of the last 3 books, and he's been kind enough to point out why the ICN can't quite do it yet.) But the impediments are out of the way, the Cities and Haarahlds are already en route or just about to come out of the shipyards, and Gorath's days are numbered...
I was looking forward to some skullduggery from Merlin and Nimue to get Thirsk's family out during the ICN's attack on Gorath, but the Inquisition made that much easier than I expected, and they managed to rescue them before the ICN's version of Manticore's 8th fleet arrives at Dohlar's doorstep. (But I did enjoy the skullduggery!)
So the only question in the looming battle is how many men of the NoG are going to die before Thirsk gets his fleet to strike its colors. Only RFC knows for sure, and he's not telling. (Or snippeting, or having Drak snippet and theoretically we OUGHT to be getting snippets by now, since it's only 3 months until the publication date, although I expect that date will slip from November, dang it!)