DrakBibliophile wrote:Even if the Inquisition leaves Thirsk alive, there's the danger of him viewing their "rescue" as kidnapping.
IE they were kidnapped in order to force him to violate his oaths.
Of course, this assumes that he hadn't agreed to their rescue before hand.
It
would be a kidnapping unless he & his family had agreed. That's one of the reasons I don't see it happening unless they do.
n7axw wrote:Randomiser wrote:MacGuinness
Taking Thirsk out of the action by rescuing his family and letting the Inquisition draw its own conclusions has certain delicious attractions!
(He might even agree to it. In a weird way it squares the circle; he keeps his vows by staying at his post, his family are safe and he doesn't have to commit any more atrocities because the Inquisition won't let him stay at his post.)
The instant Thirsk's family disappears, he is a dead man. As a loyal if somewhat disillusioned son of the church and vassal of his king, he will stay at his post.. family or no family.
The only way out I see for Thirsk is if Dohlar is conquered and the inquisition overthrown.
Don
My suggestion is a way out for Thirsk in the sense that it saves his family and solves his moral dilemma. I never said I expected him to survive it. I was only reflecting on how ironic it is that he could trust his enemies to treat his family much better than the King and Church he serves. If Thirsk's fleet gets beaten again it's only too likely that he
and his family will be executed. Pushing Clyntahn into sending Thirsk, their best admiral, to the Punishment could be seen as both poetic justice for Gwyllym Manthyr et al, and a profound demonstration of how sick the CoGA has really become. (I have bad thoughts sometimes)