n7axw wrote:The thought of Maik detaching himself from the inquisition is fascinating. We don't have any direct pov stuff from Maik, but there are plenty of indirect hints pointing in that direction.
It occurs to me that I misspoke when I said Maik had sworn a personal oath to Zhaspar Clyntahn.
Maik is a Scheulerite and a member of the Inquisition. But internal evidence makes Maik an older man (his silver hair), and it's likely he was an Inquisitor
before Zhaspar Clyntahn got elected by the Vicarate (with a little help from a vote count rigged by Willem Rayno.) So his oath would be to support and obey the
Grand Inquisitor. He may not be the only Inquisitor who saw Zhaspar Clyntahn get elected and thought "This can't end well."
So beyond Maik, I wonder how many other loyal servants of the Inquisition might be having second or third thoughts about just who and what they now serve. The culture of Safehold is that sworn oaths are
not broken, but aply enough pressure and they may just shatter under the load.
I don't see Maik doing anything
overt that will make it apparent his heart is no longer in it. But anyone in a position like his has long since become adept at playing his cards close to the chest and not revealing what he
really thinks. It's part and parcel of advancing in the hierarchy and gaining power and wealth. I
do see him being even more creative in the dispatches he sends to Zion describing affairs in Gorath and what Thirsk and the Dohlaran Navy are doing, and covering up what he suspects Thirsk and others are really up to.
My impression is that the people aboard Prodigal Lass are already under inquisition control...hence already hostages.
Yes. Clyntahn fully intends to see all of them punished for their "failure" to deliver the survivors of Captain Ahbaht's squadron captured during the action in the Kaudzhu Narrows to Zion for his grand auto-da-fe. When Clyntahn doesn't get his way, he throws deadly temper tantrums, and the fact that what he wanted simply wasn't possible or that he got himself into the mess is not something that will cross his mind. Only Rayno's reminder about the potential morale effects on the still loyal supporters of Mother Church and the Jihad has stayed his hand, and that only so long as he feels he must to avoid fallout.
Thirsk can't protect them, and
knows he can't. That was part of his conversation with Maik after Prodigal Son limped into Gorath Bay with the survivors of the transports and escorting galleons sent to deliver the prisoners to Zion. Maik states he knows they weren't at fault, and has already said so in his dispatches to Zion, but cannot guarantee that
his superiors will agree. (And even if any of those in the hierarchy above his
do agree, they won't say so where
Clyntahn can hear them. They'd prefer to go on living, thanks. I suspect Maik has a good idea how Clyntahn will react, but can't come out and say so.
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Dennis