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Chapter One: Arrival
Words she knew not the meanings of streamed through her head as she stood in a strange, sand-blasted landscape under a red sky. Shielding her eyes from the stinging sand in the wind, she trudged forward, naked, trying to find shelter, as a familiar voice she could not place spoke in her head.
You have been taken from the Imperial City's prison, first by carriage, and now by boat - to the east, to Morrowind. Fear not, for I am watchful. You have been chosen.
"Many fall, but one remains," she murmured for a reason she didn't know. The winds ceased and rain poured from a cloudless night sky. "Wake up," someone said. "We're here. Why are you shaking? Are you okay? Wake up!"
Tharlennis opened her eyes as she felt Jiub's wiry arms helping her to her feet. "Stand up. There you go," said her fellow prisoner, a pierced and scarred elf who had lived first in the cell next to her and later, once they had reached the Inner Sea, her cabin. "You were dreaming. Not even last night's storm could wake you," he informed her. "I heard them say we've reached Morrowind. I'm sure they'll let us go." He paused and looked over his shoulder at the sound of footsteps. "Quiet - here comes the guard."
The guard's key rattled in the cabin's lock before the guard opened the door. "This is where you get off," he said with a brusque nod in Tharlennis's direction. He unlocked her manacles, grabbed her by the arm, and began leading her away.
"But Jiub -"
"Stays here. Come with me." The guard jerked her arm uncomfortably. Tharlennis looked once more over her shoulder at the only friend she'd had in her captivity.
Jiub just shook his head. "Better do what they say," he said as the door slammed once more.
The guard led Tharlennis through the ship's bilges, then its upper level where the crew slept in hammocks. He shoved her roughly toward a ladder leading to a hatch. "Get yourself up on deck, and let's keep this as civil as possible," he ordered.
"You needn't shove," Tharlennis said to her liberator with a glare. "You don't know how to treat a lady at all, do you?"
"On deck. Now, prisoner." The guard's tone was dangerous, and the Dunmer woman obeyed. She pushed open the hatch, and the bosun's strong, dark-skinned hand helped her to the deck.
"This is where they want you," said the bosun. He smiled at her - it was the first smile she'd received from any of her captors, and it was something of a blessing. "Head down to the docks and they'll show you to the census office."
Tharlennis nodded. "Thank you," she said to him, and walked down the gangplank where another Imperial guard waited for her.
"You've finally arrived, but our records don't show from where," said the guard.
"I had no idea I was so important," Tharlennis said sincerely. "If you're like every other Imperial I've met you're not going to explain what you mean by 'finally' to me, either."
"In good time," said the guard. "Now, please fill in these missing parts of our records - you have my apologies."
"Fine. Cheydinhal. I don't know why it matters if I've been banished from Cyrodiil, but there you are," she told the man.
The guard nodded. "Great. Thank you." Looking at her blue-gray skin, he said, "I'm sure you'll fit right in. Follow me up to the office and they'll finish your release."
"Thank you. Are all Imperials in Morrowind this pleasant? The ones on the boat certainly weren't," she remarked as the guard walked her to the door.
"Of course not. You were just another prisoner to them," said the guard cryptically.
"You mean I'm not?" Tharlennis replied. "As far as I know, I'm just an unlicensed hedge witch whose crime of non-union magic was somehow grounds for deportation."
"Tell that to Socucius," said the guard as he opened the door for her. "Head on in."
"None of you are going to tell me what's going on, are you?" Tharlennis asked rhetorically as she stepped into the stone-and-wattle building. She strode up to a desk, where an elderly Breton man she assumed was Socucius sat writing. "Tharlennis the hedge witch," she said to him.
He looked up. "Ah yes, we've been expecting you," he said, and Tharlennis simultaneously wondered again at the maddening question of what exactly she was doing here and winced at the whining quality of his voice. "You'll have to be recorded before you're officially released," he continued. "No mistakes, and all that. Can you tell me a bit about yourself - profession, skills, experience?" He brandished his quill.
"Give me those," said Tharlennis, grabbing the forms and quill from Socucius's hand. She looked them over, placed them on the table, and filled them out herself. "There," she said, and handed them back to him.
Socucius picked up the forms and looked them over. She had filled them out fully and correctly, more so than he would have expected. "Very good," he said. "Now, the letter that preceded you mentioned you were born under a certain sign. And what would that be?"
"I have no idea why it matters, but it's the Lady," Tharlennis told him, and he dutifully wrote it down after checking the letter in question.
"Interesting," he said absently. "Now, before I stamp these papers, make sure this information is correct." He showed Tharlennis the scroll he'd been writing on, which she glanced over quickly.
"It is," she said.
Socucius took the scroll from her, stamped it with his mark, and handed it back. "Show your papers to the captain when you exit to get your release fee," he said, waving his hand toward the door she hadn't come in by. She nodded, tucking the scroll under one arm, and turned to do so.
The guard who had escorted her in unlocked the indicated door. "Continue through to the next building and talk to Sellus Gravius," he told her. She thanked him and walked past, into the hallway. Turning, she saw a door she presumed was the one she was meant to go through, and a comforting sight: A dagger, stuck point-first into a table. She wrenched it free and examined it. Blunt, but at least it was a weapon - she pocketed it and looked for anything else of value. After picking the lock of a small wooden chest with a hairpin, she discovered a small number of coins equal in value to thirty-one Septims. She helped herself to the bread and flin on the table, and walked out the door and through the small, walled courtyard to the next building, stopping to pick up a greenstone ring she noticed on the ground (closer examination revealed a faint sparkle of magic and an engraved message too worn to read). She was greeted in the next building by a man in the golden armor of an Imperial templar. "Are you Sellus Gravius?" she asked him.
"I am," he replied. "First, let me take your identification papers. Thank you. Word of your arrival only reached me yesterday. I'm here to welcome you to Morrowind."
"And I suppose you're not going to tell me why everyone's treating me like an Imperial dignitary, either?" Tharlennis asked as the captain perused her information.
"I don't know why you're here - or why you were released from prison and shipped here," said Captain Gravius, "but your authorization comes directly from Emperor Uriel Septim VII himself, and I don't need to know any more than that. When you leave this office, you are a free woman. But before you go, I have instructions on your duties - instructions from the Emperor, mind, so pay careful attention."
Tharlennis frowned. "This certainly does get stranger and stranger," she remarked. "All right, if there are conditions for my release, that's not a problem."
Gravius picked up a thick envelope, sealed with wax, from the shelf beside him. "This package came with the news of your arrival. You are to take it to Caius Cosades, in the town of Balmora," he instructed. "Go to the South Wall Cornerclub, and ask for Caius Cosades - they'll know where to find him. Serve him as you would serve the Emperor himself. I also have a letter for you, and a disbursal to your name." He turned again to the shelf, and handed Tharlennis a sheet of parchment and a purse filled with coins. "You are free to go."
"Thank you, sir," said Tharlennis, counting the coins in the purse. She pushed open the door to the sleepy fishing village of Seyda Neen, and leaned against the wall to read her letter.
Tharlennis -
You have been given these directions and a package of documents. Do not show them to anyone. Do not attempt to read the documents in the package. The package has been sealed, and your tampering will be discovered and punished.
Follow these directions.
Proceed to the town of Balmora in Vvardenfell District. Report to a man named Caius Cosades. He will be your superior and patron; you will follow his orders. His residence is not known, but ask at the cornerclub called "South Wall". People there will know where to find Caius Cosades. When you report to Caius Cosades, deliver the package of documents to him, and wait for --
"Are you the one that boat dropped off? Odd to see a boat arrive at that time of the day. Hope the Imperials treated you okay. I swear they took my ring," said someone a full head shorter than Tharlennis.
She moved her letter out of the way of the speaker's face to see a male Bosmer with a turned-up nose. "Ring?" she asked.
"I swear one of the Guards has it. I had it last week before their weekly 'Let's shake down Fargoth' ritual -"
"Yes, yes. What does it look like?"
"Oh! An engraved healing ring, family heirloom of mine. You haven't seen it, have you?"
Tharlennis sighed and dug in her pocket for the ring she'd found - hopefully it was the right one, and Fargoth would leave her alone and let her finish reading her letter. "Is this it?" she asked, showing it to him.
The Bosmer's eyes lit up when he saw the ring. "You found it! Amazing!" he said, snatching it from her hand. "Thank you, thank you!" he gushed. "You are now my favorite friend!"
"That's lovely," said Tharlennis. "May I go back to reading my letter now?"
"Yes, of course. I'll be sure to tell the others, especially..."
Tharlennis had ceased listening, and returned to her letter.
When you report to Caius Cosades, deliver the package of documents to him, and wait for further orders. Remember. You owe your life and freedom to the Emperor. Serve him well, and you will be rewarded. Betray him, and you will suffer the fate of all traitors.
I have the Honor to prepare this at the direction of his Most Sovereign Majesty the Emperor Uriel Septim.
Glabrio Bellienus
Personal Secretary to the Emperor
Making a small noise of further confusion, Tharlennis folded the letter and stowed it. She didn't know where Balmora was, or what kind of a place it might be. She took stock of her current location. Seyda Neen almost defined "backwater," with a few stone-and-wattle houses at the town's center, flanked by several wooden shacks where the poorer fishermen lived. A lighthouse stood lonely on a point of land behind the census and excise office. There didn't seem to be much to the village besides the census office, the lighthouse, and a moderately-sized building she presumed to be a tavern and inn. It was to there that she decided to go first. A sign read "Arrille's Tradehouse." She opened the door and stepped inside.
"Ah, you're a new face," said an Altmer standing behind a counter. "You must be the one Fargoth mentioned. Welcome to Arrille's Tradehouse - I'm Arrille, publican and proprietor."
"Charmed," said Tharlennis with a smile. "If you're a trader, do you have any kind of clothes that beat these rags?"
Arrille sniffed. "I'd be hard pressed not to, except in the case that I did not have any clothes for sale at all," he said. "Fortunately I happen to have a robe that a customer brought in yesterday. It's on the table behind you."
Tharlennis turned and unfolded the garment to examine it. It was made of a rough green cloth and cut for a man. "I'll pass," she said. "Thanks, but no thanks. What else do you have?"
"Various forms of gear that travelers find handy," said Arrille. He showed Tharlennis what he had for sale, and she soon spent a portion of the gold Captain Gravius had given her on a backpack, bedroll, and traveler's lantern, along with a simple mortar and pestle for potionmaking. She turned to leave and ran smack into a large, red-bearded Nord.
"Whoa, lady!" he said loudly, then looked her over. "I haven't seen you before," he remarked.
"Of course not. I was just shipped in from Cyrodiil," Tharlennis told him.
The man gave a loud bark of a laugh. "Ha! Well, you look like you could a friend, outlander," he said, eyeing Tharlennis's threadbare clothes. "I'm Hrisskar. Perhaps I can be your friend." He clapped an unwelcome hand onto Tharlennis's waist and steered her up the stairs.
"I'm all right, thank you. Really." Tharlennis tried to budge his hand from its place but Hrisskar had a grip like a limpet. "No, I'm serious. You're not my type. I'm not into beards." They were halfway up the stairs.
Hrisskar laughed loudly again. "And I'm not into elves!" he replied. "No, I'd like you to help me recover some gold."
That caught Tharlennis's attention. "You've lost some money?" she asked. If this Nord was as much a drunken, foolish lout as he looked, she stood to gain a good bit of cash with a spot of deception.
Hrisskar nodded and slapped her on the back. "That's right," he said. "See, I had a bad run of luck playing Nine-holes, and lost a bit of money. Normally, I'd be fine. We can usually keep some gold in our pockets just from the money the locals pay us for... protection."
"I see," said Tharlennis. She was liking Hrisskar less and less the more he spoke.
"But I know some of them are holding out on me, especially that little fetcher Fargoth. He's come up light the past couple of weeks when I've shaken him down. I know he's stashing it somewhere." Hrisskar dropped his voice as he said this.
"Fargoth... I've heard that name. Redheaded Bosmer with a rude habit of talking too much and interrupting people while they're reading?"
"That's the one!" Hrisskar replied, loud again. "Though he never interrupted me reading anything." He dropped his voice again. "I'd like you to find Fargoth's hiding place. I know the little fetcher's got one somewhere in town. Just not sure where yet. I've already gone through his whole house, so I know he's not hiding it there. If you can find where he's stashing his money, I'll give you a share of the wealth."
"That sounds an agreeable deal," said Tharlennis, as a sly grin crept across her face. "Do you know anything that might help me find it?"
"I'm not sure where he goes, but he wanders around town at night," said Hrisskar. "I'd tail him myself but I'm on duty at night, and he'd be watching for me anyway. If you keep an eye on where he goes, I'm sure you'll be able to figure out where he's hiding that gold."
"You have a deal, Hrisskar," said Tharlennis. "I'll let you know if I find anything." Nodding to him, she left the tradehouse and went to collect mushrooms for her potions until night fell.
Twilight came, and Tharlennis had a good quantity of mushroom and draggle-tail samples in the outer pockets of her backpack. She returned to the town center and watched for Fargoth. There he was, looking nervous and twitchy, always looking over his shoulder. She ducked behind the corner of a house and, with a few arcane gestures, became less noticeable. When she came out, Fargoth was nowhere to be seen, but he soon reappeared, slinking along the wall of Arrille's tradehouse to hide behind a large tree. Tharlennis flitted after him, hiding in a doorway and watching. She cursed silently as he doubled back, but he hadn't seen her. He walked right past her, only a foot away, not noticing her standing there in the shadows. Soon as he had a good enough head start, she followed him. He took a wide path, passing the lighthouse south of town, and Tharlennis darted behind a tree as he looked over his shoulder again. When she looked out, Fargoth was waist-deep in a pool of scummy water, doing something with what looked like an old tree stump. She heard the clink of coins, and Fargoth waded back out of the pool, then dashed off to disappear into his house.
That must be the hiding place, Tharlennis decided, and for once was grateful for her worthless clothes. Making a face, she waded into the swampy pool and approached the stump. It was hollow, and Tharlennis removed a heavy sack of coins and put it in her backpack. She felt something long and skinny - a lockpick - and pocketed it. The last thing she found was Fargoth's ring. She considered it, and replaced it in the stump. Wiping scum from her pants, she left the pond and kept walking until she was just out of town. She saw no reason to let Hrisskar know she'd found his money, and avoided him as she walked away from Seyda Neen.