The rise of Veloth power under Ayden Vai was unheralded and unforeseen, and it took the world completely by surprise. One could place the Septim Empire a distant second, next to the Oceanic Khaganate but the old Cyrodiil Empire was born of previous empires before, already possessed of a vast sweeping country with innumerable manpower and resources. When the third era came to a close, Ayden Vai was merely one among a number of other obscure Velothi khans, and neither he nor his tribe had any reputation whatsoever outside of the barren plains of Vvardenfell, where they and their fellow Ashlander barbarians lived on horseback among their flocks and herds. Neither in civilized nor semi-civilized Tamriel, nor in civilized nor semi-civilized Akavir, was he known or feared, any more, for instance, than the wild Dremora hordes from the Marshes of inner Skyrim, the Dreaded Wild Hunt Bosmers of Valenwood, or the Aldmeri Dominion of ages past.
The Septim Empire, the greatest civilization and military machine known to man and mer at the time in Tamriel, held sway but a succession of inept emperors combined with political and moral corruptions at the highest levels of government steered the empire towards an impending decline, and subject nations all around it were plotting to take back their autonomy while jealous and ambitions legion generals with their loyal armies in far flung posts all throughout the empire plotted to seize the ruby throne. The land of the Bretons was a feuding feudal patchwork of kingdoms, dukedoms, and princedoms. The land of the Re Gada was divided between Totambu nationalists and Imperial adherents, the Forebears and the Crown nations respectively. The reigning King of Sentinel, a Forebear sovereign, Lhotun the Lucky, made his aspirations very clear in conquering independent Crown territories, ruling the western half of a large desert country known as Hammerfell. Summerset Isles was made up of several Altmer kingdoms. Racked by bloody rebellions, social, and civil unrest, Summerset was a torn land. The rich forested land of Bosmeria is a nation of warring tribes with no national cohesion--each clan a law unto itself. The Nords of Skyrim were themselves a nation of warring kingdoms, princedoms, and chiefdoms, off and on organized into a kind of loose confederacy that managed to expands east and westwards into new lands. Elsweyr and Argonia were tribal nations of betmer who were not easily ruled over by the Septim Empire. In Morrowind, the Dunmer were one race but of many nations. In the west, bordering the marches of Cyrodiil was the Emirate of Hlaalu, that province of Dunmer merchants and trader, who were the Empires' allies and supporters of the Septims' reign. In the southern heartland was the fabled capital of Morrowind as well as the Emirate of Indoril. Its legendary farmland and bountiful grazing were a boon to both the farmer and the herder. It was from Mournhold that ancient Chimer and Velothi kings ruled Morrowind. Further south of the Indoril nation was the Emirate of Dres; also a nation of merchants who plied the slave trade and warred with Argonian tribes to the south. In outer Morrowind, Septim's justice and the Imperial legions dominated these lands but in the north central region between the Amu and Dirya rivers lay the great steppes of Vvardenfell, where was found the Velothi-an untamed nation of warring tribes of horse-lords, emirates, and khanates where Ayden Vai, a man of the Cheremisa plains from the Rayylani clan of the Kir'ghuz Tribe long destroyed by Imperial legions, who would one day rule Vvardenfell through inhuman charisma, cunning, ruthlessness, and overwhelming military might. To the east of Vvardenfell past the Dirya, in the Marrarun (The land beyond the river) reigned the Telvanni Shahdom; an aggressively expansionist military power with ambitions to the west. They possessed advanced technology and siege engineering derived from the eastern Akavir and Dwemer constructs of yore. And in Akavir, the Jade Empire of the Ka Po' Tun, was probably superior in civilization and in military strength to any nation of Tamriel, surrounded by lesser nations of various Akaviri races.
Into this world burst the Velothi. In an astonishingly short time, Ayden Khan spent the early years obtaining first the control of his adopted nation of Redoran warriors and the Ashlander nomadic tribes, to form an irresistible force of Redoran heavy cavalry and Ashlander archer cavalry. Next, he established the absolute supremacy of his khanate over all its neighbors. Finally, his work complete, his supremacy over the wild mounted herdsmen and aristocratic warriors was absolute and unquestioned. Every formidable competitor, every man who would not bow with unquestioning obedience to his will, had been ruthlessly slain or worse, and he developed countless numbers of able men who would live and die for him, who were willing to be his devoted slaves, and to carry out his every command with unhesitating obedience and dreadful prowess. Out of the Veloth horse-bowmen and horse-swordsmen he speedily made the most formidable troops in existence. East, west, north, and south he sent his armies, and under his immortal rule, he conquered every nation and people. None could hold their own against the terrible Velothi horsemer and their subject allies. Everyone feared the Great Khan and his armies. The Khan put to the poisoned sword, King Helseth the Usurper of Mournhold, he annihilated numerous Breton, Altmer, Cyrodiilic, and Nordic kings, chieftains, and other potentates, and ruthlessly crushed so many Khajit, Bosmer, and Argonian tribes. Ayden even put to death the last Septim Emperor. Securing the greater part of eastern Tamriel, Ayden brought low Lhotun, the King of Hammerfell, , and killed the all-powerful Heavenly Emperor Pu Wu the Mighty; ruler of the Jade Empire of the Far East, just as they sacked the principal cities of Cyrodiil, Skyrim, High Rock, Hammerfell, Summerset Isles, and the nations of Akaviri.
They were inconceivably formidable in battle, tireless in campaign, and on the march; utterly indifferent to fatigue and hardship, of extraordinary prowess with bow and sword. The Khan and his armies, marched incredible distances and overthrew whatever opposed them. They struck down the Nords at a blow and trampled the land into a bloody mire beneath their horses' feet. Here now is the story of the greatest of the great rulers whose rule is everlasting.
EARLY LIFE
Ayden Vai was born in the year of 400 into the Rayylani clan of the Kir'ghuz tribe; a mix of Dunmer and Nibenese nomads of the Cheremisa steppes. The shamans of the clan declared that the infant was destined to rule the world. It was said that when Ayden came forth from his mother's womb, in both hands he was grasping blood clots; an auspicious sign that the blood of millions would be shed by his hands. Ayden was but a young boy when his Dunmer father, a hard fighting Gulakhan, lost his life in a battle over cattle. His Nibenese mother killed herself before becoming a forced bride to her late husband's rivals. His clan was torn apart and was given over to the main Kir'ghuz tribe with client status. Despite or perhaps because of the early trauma, he thrived and learned the martial and equestrian skills that would save his life many times over and forge an empire one day.
As kids, he would gather his brothers and likeminded ruffians and roam the windswept plains and practice mounted archery and master the hunt for game. Then the Septim Empire sent in its legions to claim the barbarian land in the name of the Emperor and Akatosh. In their native lands, the Kir'ghuz fought valiantly and bravely, but the manpower of the legions was seemingly limitless and they had made alliances with hated Nord tribes to attack them from the north. Nearly to the man, the tribe was wiped out. Those that survived fled to Cheydinhal but never to live as nomads. Ayden, a brave boy of 13 years, speared a legionary knight off his horse, killing him. Taking his horse with a reflex bow and quiver of arrows, Ayden took flight from the legions, killing or wounding three legion cavalry that pursued him and the rest of his brothers.
In their escape, Ayden became separated from his brothers and was later caught in an ambush by Jarnhold Nords who enslaved and tormented Ayden. The Jarnholds put him in a cangue and used him wretchedly for two months, they intended on either killing or selling him to the Cyrodiil slave market, but Ayden, clever and patient, waited for an unwary guard to come near him. He tripped and beat him to death with the cangue--hitting the Nord so hard that the cangue broke loose. Ayden fled again on a fleet mount again with bows and arrows outran the bulk of his pursuers and shot down the persistent.
Ayden had found his last remaining younger brothers and took care of them. On his own, surrounded by brigands, wild animals, and enemy nomads, carved out a hard scrabble life for himself and his two younger brothers but in time, formed a band of raiders whom he commanded to great effect, plundering eastern Cyrodiil and Dunmer settlements east and west of the Valus Mountains. The Empire was roused to action and employed all its manpower into destroying the Qara-Jebe band (Black Arrow) and its mysterious leader, Ayden. Ayden killed many of His Majesty's soldiers but in one battle, he was reduced to ten warriors including himself and faced a brigade of a hundred legion knights. It was a bloody fight that resulted in the death of the legionnaires, the loss of his entire band, and he himself wounded and the last of his brothers killed. The remaining members fled to the southern heartland of Cyrodiil where the name of the Black Arrow bandits would live on. Ayden escaped capture by donning the dress and uniform of one of the slain legionnaires. All by his lonesome, he decided to seek fortune in the east; the home of his ancestor's ancestors, in Morrowind, in Marrarun, the land beyond the river, nearest the Vvardenfell steppes.
RISE TO POWER
Ayden made his new home as a young man of eighteen in the Redoran ulus deep in the heart of Vvardenfell, a land of green steppe, rolling hills, and black desert a.k.a. Ashlands; whose center was a 400 mi wide corridor between the two greatest rivers in Morrowind, the Amal and the Dirya. He resided in the territory of Ald'ruhn, in a village called Kesh--the heart of Redoran domains. The Redorans were a warlike Ashlander tribe in the olden days, known for their ferocious cavalry charges. They were conquered by the nascent Almsivi Empire under Vivec the Rogue-Emperor and in exchange for their arms and domains; they adopted the Almsivi faith--forming a half-settled, half-nomadic culture. They were still very much warlike and paid homage to the old ways. Ayden's people were the Redorans. Though he had Velothi blood but was rejected by the nobles for his Kir'ghuz background. The Redorans held sway in the western half of Vvardenfell which formed the Marrarun. To the east were the Telvanni Emirates; a profligate and double dealing lot of warring urban dwelling emirs who dominated the Jade Road; where caravans from the East brought exotic commodities, from silk to slaves, everything could be had for a price. The extremely rich Telvanni guarded it jealously from the other emirates. They were erstwhile allies of the Manghuks, a mixed breed of Dunmer and Toghan people--descendants of a Kamal horde that invaded centuries ago. They worshipped various gods of Akaviri and the eternal blue sky and roamed the Angaraland steppes south of the Hunger Steppe, east of the Telvanni Emirates but owing to external pressures from the Jade Kingdoms of the Ka Po' Tun peoples, the Manghuks migrated west, lured by Telvanni coin, who sought to wipe out the Redorans, allowing the Manghuks to settle in Redoran and Ashlander lands. There was conflict within the Redoran ulus. Tensions boiled over between the settled nobility in the towns and villages and the nomadic, military aristocracy in the east. The more nomadically inclined aristocrats scorned the settled people as "qura'annas" (half-breeds or mongrels), to which was returned by the western Redoran, calling them "Jetes" meaning robbers or bandits. Eastern and Western Redoran was divided by Red Mountain, where the powerful demon lord Dagoth Ur and his minions held great power and sent its vile hordes to plunder both parties equally. Tensions were further escalated by privileges granted to the military by previous emirs. These imposed crippling burdens on poorer members of the local population, who were forced to feed, clothe, and arm the warriors. The current Emir Athyn Sarethi declared his support for the settled farmers, traders, and agriculturalists at the annual qurilitay (council). And the Barlass Tribe of the Redoran ulus (Ayden's adoptive tribe within House Redoran) was in accordance with his policies but Sarethi's rival for power and greatest detractor, Bolvyn Venim, a brash and blustery warlord supported the militant aristocratic nomads of eastern Redoran. Vvardenfell was cleft in twain, to the west, Marrarun, to the east, the Telvanni Emirate and nomad infidel Manghuks battled against settled Redoran Emirs of the west whilst the Redorans themselves bickered among each other. In the southern heartland of ancient Morrowind, the Cyrodiil Imperial legions of the Septims invaded centuries ago and held in its yoke, the heartland Dunmer and the Great Houses, imposing Imperial culture, trade, and rule of law in the west and south-central part of Morrowind. And to the north, existed the Ashlander Tribes in the Kara Kum, in lands mixed with black-sand deserts and seas of purple-green grass. They were completely nomadic hordes of Veloth mounted herders, hunters, and warriors who worshipped many of the old Daedra gods but gave particular reverence to the Moon-and-Star Goddess Azura, the mother goddess of the ancient Velothi. Few Veloth south of Kara Kum thought them anything but mere savages and the Redorans in recent times launched religious crusades against the "Daedra worshipping heathens." Ashlander chiefs and petty khans returned the favor with raids on caravans and settlements of Great House Veloth and sometimes destroyed those armies sent from the south--such was their ferocious might and cunning on the open plains. This was the chaotic world that Ayden lived in.
He earned placement within the Redoran Emirate as a quartermaster, whose responsibility was to round up mer for the Emir's army. This position he earned while acting as a herder for Kesh, he and a bunch of fellow herders drove off a horde of Telvanni raiders who assaulted a Redoran baggage train. The noble within had his wife stolen by the Telvanni chieftain and Ayden impressed everyone when he single handedly slew the chief, the remaining raiders, and rescued the Redoran noble's wife unharmed. He was the scourge of warring nomads, bandits, and raiders precisely because he lived the life of such a rogue in his early youth and knew well the tactics and hold-outs of the brigands. His valor, cunning, and might was known from Vvardenfell to Kara-Kum. In Bal Isra, he was among friends and the Redoran people shared their family hearths with the famed outlander. He befriended the likes of Trey of High Rock, a man much like himself who grew up as a slave who was forcibly traveled for thousands of miles until he was bought at a Redoran slave mart and used for his skill at herding, something he acquired as he grew up in the slave caravans and Alandro Sul, a young man and superb hunter and archer, whose wife and child were killed by a Manghuk raiding party. In 418, he married Marobar Uvlen, daughter of a well to do herder. Such were his accomplishments but he was spurned for his mixed blood and would never rise in the Great House of Redoran not to speak of that he was a retainer in a client tribe and not of Redoran nobility. Yet there was no stopping Ayden's ambitions for he was a man of unconventional means.
In the serene and savage Bal Isra valley, Ayden honed his skills of the steppe without which his dreams of world domination would be naught. An age-old proverb dictated his every action: 'Only a hand that can grasp a sword may hold a scepter.' Self-advancement in this brutal world was unthinkable without excelling in the martial arts. Though he was a low ranking retainer, the aura of destiny and overpowering charisma he possessed as well as his familiarity with steppe customs impressed the Ashlander tribes to the North, a people who were peerless horsemer, an untapped resource of formidable manpower that every Emir overlooked, deigning them mere savages. Already Ayden recruited Ashlander warriors to his cause.
In 420, the Grand Emir of the Redorans, Athyn Sarethi, was assassinated by the Telvanni, some suspected collusion with Bolvyn Venim, Athyn's son-in-law who married his daughter-Venim was a rival to his power and an eagerly ambitious Redoran warlord. The Manghuk Khan, Uldiz Khoja, invaded from the east to conquer the heart of Vvardenfell. Haij Beg, the Chief of the Barlass Tribe, that ruled the Bal Isra valley, decided to flee. Ayden accompanied his leader as far as the Amal, where he asked to be allowed to return home. Ayden declared that he, with a body of men, would prevent the invading Manghuks from seizing more land. He convinced his Chief.
Rather than fight against the invaders, the pragmatic Ayden offered his services to the Khan. It was a supremely audacious about-face, but his offer was accepted. Henceforth, he would be the Khan's vassal ruler and was given titles, wealth, and women to accompany the honor. At the age of 20, Ayden successfully claimed leadership of the entire Barlass Tribe. On a dime, he turned against his cowardly former chief and had him and his subordinates gored at the end of his warriors' lances during a night raid.
To strengthen his position, he contracted an alliance with the aforementioned Emir Venim, the son-in-law of the late Grand Emir Sarethi and aristocratic ruler of Balkh, Northern Ald'ruhn. Venim was leader of the Qara'unas Tribe. Ayden and Venim had a secret pledge to rid Marrarun of the Manghuks. To strengthen the alliance, Ayden married Venim's sister, Aljai-as much as it secretly pained Venim to give his sister to whom he regarded as a half-blooded mongrel.
The Khan purged the place of local leaders and appointed his son Ilyas Khoja as Governor of Marrarun. Ayden would not stand for being second in command. Ayden maintaining a placid nature gained an audience with the Khan and slew him with a hidden dagger and his two bodyguards in his yurt. Ayden did another about-face and rallied the people of Ald'ruhn. Ayden and Venim spurned the Manghuks and turned outlaw. Though both went their separate ways for the time being, Venim consolidated power in the north and Ayden's Barlass Tribe, ever faithful, kept his treasure and harem under guard in Bal Isra. Though both men left Ald'ruhn in rebellion against the Manghuk occupiers, Ayden was a wanted man and had to bide his time in the south.
Ayden adventured in the heart of Morrowind. He roamed across the south with greedy intent, working as a highwayman, thief, and bandit and the scourge of all three alternately. He spent time as a mercenary in the pay of Great House Emirs, served a short stint as a legion auxiliarist, an Imperial Cult Priest and Tribunal Imam--strong-arming the faithful pilgrims disguised as a man of faith; robbing the male worshippers and ravishing the females. He even became a Morag Tong assassin and had the ear of the Grandmaster Eno in Vivane, a solid ally of the Redorans. It was fortunate that he learned the tricks and trades of an assassin for he was assailed one night at an inn. He killed the two assassins who were members of the Dark Brotherhood--a splinter faction of the Morag Tong. Curious to know who was behind the hit, followed the trail to the Queen of Cities, Mournhold, the fabled capital of Morrowind found within the province of Deshaan, nestled in fertile river valleys in what was known as the Granary of the East. Ayden fell in love with the city and the surrounding region and vowed one day; he would make it his capital.
With aid from Morag Tong agents, Ayden discovered it to be none other than King Hlaalu Helseth, a usurper on the throne who reputedly poisoned his uncle, the former King of Morrowind, propped up by Hlaalu-Imperials, and his heir Talen Vandas. Helseth heard of Ayden's exploits in the land of Vvardenfell, in Marrarun. A place regarded by southern Dunmer as a land of half-civilized and savage steppe nomads. Helseth did not desire a renegade warlord traipsing about his domain and sought his death through a Dark Brotherhood contract. Ayden did not take it to heart.
Maintaining a non-plussed demeanor, Ayden cut a dashing and heroic figure, regarded by many of the Dunmer maidens and courtesans, to be unearthly handsome, he impressed all at court with his air of power and dignity, something that Helseth, with his sullen demeanor, scratchy voice, and frail shoulders, could only hope to project. Nonetheless, Ayden, after cleverly dodging all of Helseth's courtly methods of assassination, convinced Helseth of his honorable intentions in the land of Mournhold--outmaneuvering and outwitting Helseth in his own court, the King bit his tongue and hired Ayden into his service. Helseth sent Ayden against a rebel Dres town, while in fact, Helseth already had an alliance with House Dres through his marriage to Lady Dinara Dres. It was a suicide mission in which Helseth ordered the Dres Lord to attack and kill Ayden with his superior forces. Arriving in the desert province of Sistan, Ayden was greatly outnumbered but showing again his unrivaled genius and outrageous daring, he swallowed a basin of wild boar's blood before parlaying with the Dres lord. During the meeting, Ayden vomited back up the blood, the Dres lord and his captains, thinking that he was dying, let their guards down and late in the night; Ayden ordered his mer to fall upon the hapless Dres, slaying them nearly to the last. Ayden sought succor with rebel Argonian tribes on the borders of Argonia and Basra, leading insurrections against the slave holding Dres whom were despised by the lizard folk. Ayden returned to Mournhold, much to the dismay of Helseth who nonetheless rewarded him for the attempt. Ayden was given command of troops to put down a rebellion of Indoril warrior monks in the territory of Ganja and Hlaalu rebellions in Narsis. Ayden was awarded with riches enough to return to Vvardenfell and fight against the Manghuks.
Ayden returned to fight the Manghuks. He became known for his brilliantly inventive battle tactics. In the final battle against the Manghuks, he ordered his mer to light hundreds of campfires on the hills around the far larger forces of his enemy to convince them they were surrounded. When the foe fled, he ordered his mer to fasten leafy branches to their saddle sides to stir up dust clouds as they gave chase, giving the impressions of a huge army on the move. The foe was fooled and Marrarun was his.
In 423, the Battle of the ash mire, tensions were visible between the two aspiring warlords, Ayden and Venim-resentment, rivalry, and jealousy abounded and it negatively affected the outcome of the battle. Ilyas Khoja, the former Governor of Marrarun invaded again and battle was met. Ayden had the upper hand but Venim held back his reinforcements and turned what could have been a devastating rout into a barely won and costly victory for both Ayden and Venim. The Manghuk force was crushed, Ilyas Khoja was killed through an arrow through the heart, but the two men lost a great deal of mer. Ayden hated Venim for he could not be trusted.
In 424, Ayden and Venim successfully and brutally overthrew the independent Sorgun reign of Maar Gan and installed themselves as the new rulers. The Sorguns hated both Telvanni and Manghuks and successfully overcame Ilyas Khoja's siege forces. Hovering like vultures around the weakened city, both men quickly seized power.
Though Venim was the senior man, Ayden was winning a personal following. His Emirs and soldiers, Ashlanders and Redorans, encouraged by his generosity in distributing plundered treasures, loved him. Venim was mean-minded--to recoup the heavy losses incurred in the Battle of the Ashmire, he raised a punitive head tax on Ayden' Emirs and followers, so expensive it was beyond their means. Venim's avarice didn't escape notice but Ayden's star was on the rise.
Between 424 and 425, Ayden and Venim officially split after exchanging fierce words and were unofficially at war. Ayden used these years profitably. He consolidated his popularity w/ his Barlass tribesmen and cast a shrewd eye over other sections of society whose support he would need if he were to govern alone: the Almsivi clergy; the nomad aristocracy of the steppes; merchants; agricultHoral workers; the settled populations of cities, towns, and villages, hurt by endless conflict. Venim though alienated his subjects w/ heavy taxes. His decision to rebuild and fortify the citadel of Balkh was a provocative insult to the nomad aristocracy who opposed settlement. They saw in its broad walls the defenses the rise of Venim's power and the decline of their own.
Around 426, Ayden gained countless followers. Outnumbered five to one, Ayden gave battle with his small army against the entire Manghuk Horde and crushed them entirely; slaying the new Khan Arat Zhengi, the commanding general who took the mantle of Khan. Ayden seized his harem and the treasury of the Manghuks. Among the most valuable of the spoils was the youthful Borta Sai, daughter of the last Kamal Khan of Khojend, she was also a princess of the Zeng Sai line--that mighty warlord who nearly overthrew the Jade Empire in the East two centuries ago. It was customary for a victorious leader to help himself to the harem of a defeated enemy. Ayden wasted no time in availing himself of the privilege. Ayden took the long view. He knew her worth when he'd one day invade Akavir and his marriage to Borta would bolster his status among the Kamal Tribes whose support he'd use to help conquer the Ka Po' Tun and their Jade empires and kingdoms.
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The wives and concubines of Ayden Vai
Ayden was well known for being an avid collector of wives and concubines as he was of treasures and trophies from his many campaigns. Though he was not monogamous by any means, the greatest love of his life was Chani Ai-Matuul, a very gorgeous woman-child of the steppes, daughter of the Urhan Khan, and possessing a calm and pleasing personality, wise and insightful. Ayden sought her counsel more than once in his everlasting reign. She was the Great Queen and Chief Wife of Ayden and none but her children through Ayden could inherit Imperial titles and land. He married so many in order to cement alliances and placate vassal rulers but once he achieved the Golden Khan of Resdaynia-Emperor of the World, he eschewed secondary wives altogether with the exception of his queen wife, reducing the other wives to concubinage. As his power grew, so did his lust for women such that he had one queen but thousands of concubines of various ranks, which can be explained in more detail in the "Imperial Registrar of Heavenly Ladies," a log of all of Ayden's concubines.
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The mixed blooded invaders, crushed and destitute, fled back east, never to invade again. With the Manghuks repelled, Ayden sought to remove the last obstacle to supreme power in Marrarun. Ayden rode north at the head of his army skirting past the dreaded Red Mountain wherein the demon lord Dagoth Ur and his Sixth House fiends held sway. There were an ancient evil that Ayden would have to deal with in the months to come. Assured of the destiny made manifest to him by Azura through the dervish Sendus Sathis of Shuran, Ayden rode on north, where his army surrounded Venim's capital at Balkh. Eventually, the walls were breached and Ayden's army cut loose. Venim was ruined. Emir Bolvyn Venim was a capricious and cruel ruler who slew his own guard officer in his household on a whim. That officer happened to be the brother of one of Ayden's chiefs, Kay Khusrau. Ayden let Kay kill Venim and he washed his hands of the matter. Ayden was victorious and Balkh was his. He gave unto his army the spoils.
Ayden seized the late Venim's treasure and harem. It pleased Ayden to no end that he had in his possession Venim's widow, Saray (32), and his 14 year old daughter, Khanum, including his sister, Aljai (22) that was given to him in marriage. Ayden's domination of the Venim clan was complete.