Showing posts with label The Reach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Reach. Show all posts

2020-08-28

Always Lost, Always Hopeful (195) Let Love Shine Through?



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SPOILER INFO
This fanfic novel is largely based on the events that occurred in an actual game of Skyrim I played. Therefore, it's inevitably a spoiler.
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previous day






4-202-03-02 14:59
Proudspire Manor, Solitud, Haafingar, Skyrim



Looks like I'm kind of late getting up today. I'm not even entirely sure we can make it to Morpork tonight. Not during business hours, that's for sure.

Obviously, there's no time to go looking for Jaree-Ra either. I know, I should have done it yesterday, but I was too excited about the Cushioned  enchantment.

Bathing and eating and such takes me about an hour and then we can leave. There are many people on the streets. I'd love to stick around and socialize some, but I don't want to waste any more time. Jarl Igmund will be traveling along main roads and at a leisurely pace, but we still have to arrive in Morpork well before him (in other words, before tomorrow morning) to make sure there'll be no trouble.

With the sky partially cloudy but the weather very nice regardless, we run to Dragonbridge.
a guard stands on the side of Dragonbridge main street facing a house wall
I wonder what that guard on the left is doing. Guess I'd better not get too close.  ;-)

A few minutes after we've arrived, a dragon attacks. He flies around a lot and I'm having severe difficulties getting a good shot at him, especially because I, my followers and the guards get a bit in each other's way running back and forth in a relatively narrow space between the houses. Oh well, I've seen much worse.

As we cross the river and trot southwestwards, it begins to drizzle. A little farther, we get a few minutes of sunshine and then the rain starts anew and grows heavier by the time we reach The Reach. We arrive in Karthwasten at a quarter past seven, still in halfway decent light, but the weather is pretty much as joyless as can be.

I want to pay a visit to that place where Elle, the former sweetheart of that insane fire mage Uthor, is expected to dwell. Lady Stone or Lover Stone or what was it called? It's quite close to the Karthwasten–Morpork road, but presumably up the mountains. That's why I don't want to descend to the riverside just yet. Instead, we leave Karthwasten over the hills, moving almost parallelly to the road, only on higher ground.


We end up killing a mysterious creature called a wispmother who conjures several flying magical things during the battle. A little later, we witness a traveling mage fighting several bandits. We have an excellent observation point at elevation and quite a safe distance. However, they are taking their time and we're too impatient to wait (okay, I am), and it's practically dark now, so we'd better get a move on. That's why we shoot them dead without finding out who would have won.

Approaching Lover Stone, we can see a glowing figure from far away.

Don't tell me that lunatic fell in love with a spriggan!

No silly, my girls tell me, it's a flame atronach.

Right. Whom else would a pyromaniac fall in love with? [Rolling my eyes]

So let's go over and say hello.

Yes, its name is Elle all right. She warns us not to approach, because she's in a foul mood. When I bring up Uthor, I'm shocked to learn he brought her here from Oblivion against her will and bound her to this Lover Stone. (That's how he knew she would be here!) Elle feels utterly miserable in our world. I promise her I'll make the bastard cancel the spell he cast on her.

I almost turn to go, but then I ask, on an odd chance:
"Do you know why there aren't any female dragons?"
She shrugs (or maybe I imagine she does): "They all lost their lives in The Dragon Wars. What of it?"
"Just curious. What about the dragon eggs?"
"Well, what about them?" Elle seems to be at the end of her patience.
"Could they be hatched?"
"I suppose they could, but how do you expect a baby dragon to survive without its mother taking care of him? And will you finally get out of my sight?"
Sure. Thanks.

We reach Morpork without any further incidents and go to bed a little after ten.

I'm not too sleepy, but Lydia and Jenassa are tired (not Jordis, for obvious reasons) and I don't fancy sitting in the taproom without them, so I'm going to bed as well.

Looking towards the ceiling which is invisible in the darkness, I believe to vaguely remember having visited various paternal relatives with my parents, sometimes even in other towns. Now I'm beginning to see the actual ceiling as my eyes adjust to the lack of light. I imagine looking past the ceiling and seeing streets and houses from my childhood. I had a best friend Petrille. She was a Breton, born and raised in Camlorn and knew every broken fence where a child could crawl through and every hidden spot one could comfortably climb up to when one felt like watching people unobserved. The sounds of the Silver-Blood Inn taproom are fading away as I try to recall her birthday, but I can't. I remember how Petrille and I always hung around Cortoran and his friends, but at some point they began to avoid us and we couldn't understand what was wrong, and at the same time they became interested in girls about their own age who were so pompous and self-important and looked down on us.

I suddenly recall a scene where I sat with my brother in his room and asked why he had become different and he told me that in five years or so some things would change in my body and then I would understand what would be very difficult for him to explain to me now. It has something to do with the reasons why grown-up men and women want to be together and live together like our parents do, he said. Cortoran assured me he will always be my brother and he'll protect me and help me, and whenever I want to ask him something – about boys, for example – I can come to him, but we can't be together all the time. A boy of his age will inevitably need some privacy from his younger sister. Especially when he's talking to a girl, they want to be left alone.

Yes, dear brother, I understand it all by now...



next awakening






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2019-09-19

Always Lost, Always Hopeful (66) Revenge and Public Service



———————————————
SPOILER INFO
This fanfic novel is largely based on the events that occurred in an actual game of Skyrim I played. Therefore, it's inevitably a spoiler.
———————————————




previous day






4-201-10-22 08:07
Proudspire Manor, Solitud, Haafingar, Skyrim



I find myself alone in the bed. The girls are waiting downstairs with the breakfast.

I ask Jordis about her family and learn her parents still live in their farm outside Dragonbridge. Jordis's two elder brothers are twins. They weren't too fond of their little sister. In fact, at certain age, Jordis often found herself in fistfights against one or both of them – at the losing end, naturally. But then her parents succeeded in talking sense to them and the brothers got older and more reasonable, and also she learned to yield instead of provoking a conflict, and they became quite a harmonious family.
"Hasn't anyone had an elder sister?" I wonder. (Rayya, as I probably didn't tell you, had an elder brother, three younger sisters and a younger brother).
"I have," says Jenassa. "But I didn't get to see much of her."
There's an awkward silence. I sense that Lydia is struggling with exactly the same inner conflict as I am – maybe this is the moment when we could coax Jenassa into telling us more about her mysterious past; on the other hand, she looks very sad remembering her sister.
Jordis who doesn't seem to notice it, goes on about her growing up and then stops when she's about to reach the age of falling in love seriously-like. I leave it at that for the time being.

We go out and say good morning to our neighbor Vittoria Vici who is on her way to work. I'd like to ask her why she backed off in that dispute we had at the time I was a complete nobody here, but I still feel uneasy remembering it. So I just act like normal and go start working on our gear. Lydia is also getting a cool-looking Glass Helmet now.
close-up of Lydia and Jordis in a stony cave
The picture is from later today.

Jenassa and Jordis will have to do with magical hoods that don't look like much but actually give good protection as well as enhance Archery. Nevertheless, I will give them beautiful helmets as soon as we find some. The thing is, while I was working at the smithy, I chatted with the local blacksmith, Balimund. When I told him about our recent successes and mishaps, he mentioned that from certain point on, it makes little sense to make your armor stronger, because it already absorbs almost all the damage from conventional weapons and the effect of further improvements is negligible. What can really make a big difference with stronger armors are enchantments.

Reflecting on his words later, I realized the armor pieces we're using are really approaching the point where we can stop worrying about their technical characteristics and start paying more attention to looking good. When a somewhat weaker armor looks beautiful and a stronger armor looks ugly, the former can still provide adequate protection, especially when it's got good enchantments.

Speaking of looks – Jenassa has marvelous breasts. Would you like to see her naked? Here you are [grin]:
silhouette of naked Jenassa in huge cavern with poor light
This picture has also been taken later.

Solitud is the kind of place where you won't have difficulties selling anything. Shortly before noon, we have done everything I had planned (except making love to Hadvar which I couldn't because he's on duty), and can move on. All our current important tasks are in southeastern Skyrim, but we won't be going there quite yet. That is because I want to have another hunting trip, traveling across the western part of The Reach, and make one more attempt to talk to the jarl and the steward of Morpork. This means we'll have to go to the southwest from Solitud.

We head for Bruca's Leap Redoubt first. Last time, we killed just a couple of soldiers outside. This time, we enter the actual stronghold which is in a cave. After we've slain everyone and come out again, we have a nice swim in a river and proceed to the southwest. The landscape actually has a certain savage beauty to it.
[series of 3 pictures you can click through; click on the first picture to make it big, then click again to see the next picture etc.; press  Esc to return to the text]



Navigation is not too difficult. We are not attacked on the roads and even bears leave us alone when we run past. Eventually I find myself in an ideal sniping position overlooking another forn nest called Druadach Redoubt.

They have two men outside. One is caught out in the open and has nowhere to escape. The other one is very fast and manages to cover the not inconsiderable distance to a path that leads uphill to my position. He has no chance to get past my three followers, though. I'm a little worried about Jordis who ends up in a close-range fight with him. I take very careful aim and succeed in hitting the forn and not Jordis.


After looting the two dead bodies, we take a winding path uphill that leads to a cave entrance that looks properly scary, as well as cool. Inside is a large cavern with tents and such, as well as quite a few enemies.

The battle gets a bit our of hand, because we are not familiar with the terrain while they know every nook and cranny. But we are victorious by the end.

As the daylight slowly fades away, we move on southwards. We find an Abandoned Forsworn Camp where we kill only a snowtroll. The forns are already dead, so they don't count towards our goal of 100. But, of course, every dead forn means a little less danger to the travelers in the Reach.

Halfway to Morpork, we discover a most impressive ancient Nordic ruin Ragnvald.

We have to kill a skeleton and a draugr to get past, but we won't be going inside today – or ever, if I can avoid it. As you've surely realized by now, I'm not exactly a fan of ancient Nordic ruins.

An hour later, we're seeing the tower of a windmill or something east of Morpork behind some lower mountains. A few more minutes and Morpork reveals itself in all its glory – far, far below the edge of the cliff on which I'm precariously standing.


view from a high moutain; river, roads, bridge and farm far below, dusk falling
Lower right corner: road to the city gate.
Right side, across the short bridge: Left Hand Mine suburb. (Note the row of three low stone houses.)
From the center across the long bridge to the upper left corner: road to Granite Hall, Hviterun and Windhelm.
Center to left, along the nearer riverbank: road to Karthwasten.

After a little rest, I begin my climb down. The girls will have to wait up here to be teleported to me safely.

They even feel all right afterwards. Guess teleportation gets smoother as I gain more experience. Either that or we just got lucky this time.

It's just barely not yet completely dark when we walk in through the city gate. This was a flawlessly planned day. I'm so happy and proud of myself.

At this late hour, there's no more business that could be done in the city, so we just spend a convivial evening in the inn.

We learn a lot about the Silver-Blood family. Hard to avoid when you're in this city. Remember I mentioned them the first time when we were in Karthwasten, about a month ago? They had sent thugs to occupy Ainethach's mine, in order to force him to sell it to the Silver-Bloods. Well, in Morpork, the Silver-Bloods own not only a silver mine (it's called Cidhna) but essentially the whole city. Taking a generous cut from every business, they are really the government here. Even convicted criminals become their slaves for the duration of their sentence, digging silver ore in the Cidhna Mine. And the city guards are making sure there are always enough people to convict.

So, what about the jarl and the traders, I ask. I understand the Silver-Bloods tax all the businesses, but from what I've seen, most traders aren't currently doing any business to start with.

That question causes the people to fall strangely silent. This evening is turning out not so convivial after all. Guess we'd better go to sleep.

Yeah, apart from Jordis, evidently. She is sitting in the farthest corner with that youngster Hreinn and acts like she doesn't even know us. Lydia and I find it very amusing.



next awakening






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