Giving you an update so Athynae has something to read over the holidays

And a long installment since I have no idea when I'll be able to update next.
@mALX - Adryn's nightmares are definitely meaningful, but I shall say no more... I'm very happy you liked Helviane! I wanted to present her as a little more three-dimensional than "woman who owns a brothel, omg" but didn't have much space to do it in, so I'm glad it worked for you!
@Athynae - I'm glad you're still enjoying, and am sure that some of the things Adryn and co. have in store (or rather, things I have in store for them) will live up to your expectations *rubs hands together in evil glee*. Just, er, hold off on that balding spell!

@Thomas Kaira - I think I can safely say Ervesa will be returning! Honestly, she barrelled her way into the story with such force that there's no way I could send her off with just one appearance. Riften, now, might be a good place for Adryn (alas, I wouldn't know as I haven't played Skyrim) but she has her own reasons for not wanting to return there which will become clear... er... eventually.
Speaking of which, I need to whine for a moment: when I was working out the rough shape of Adryn's backstory a few years ago, I first considered having her spend a long time in Cyrodiil but opted against it. Why? Because my computer could barely manage Morrowind (at the moment, I'm not sure whether it *can* manage Morrowind) and Oblivion was totally out of the question, and so I'd have real trouble getting Adryn's history to mesh with what we'd learn about Cyrodiil in that. So I decided to plonk her into a place where no one had any more than a bit of lore as info and I could make things up to my heart's content. Namely, Skyrim!
...I sometimes get the feeling Bethesda is
mocking me.But anyway!
PreviousChapter 5.2Last installment, Adryn had a sequence of nightmares, then chatted with Helviane Desele and is now off to get the silt strider back to Balmora.
*****
Some perfect, amazing, wonderful person who I was prepared to compose love letters to had come up with the idea of extending an oiled awning on one side of the silt strider platform to allow waiting passengers to wait dry. I ducked under it, shaking drops of water from my hair. The platform hadn't been far away from Desele's and shouldn't have taken much time to reach... unless, that is, the person trying to reach it was a total stranger to the city with the approximate sense of direction of a drugged chicken. Let's just say that I was quite damp by the time I found the place.
"Oh, hello there! Going to Balmora too?"
"Hello," I sheepishly greeted the Breton woman I'd been ignoring completely in order to revel in
dryness. She was about my age and small for a Breton, with dancing eyes, short brown hair and wearing some sort of leather armour. She was also munching on something that made my stomach remind me that the only thing it had had all of yesterday was breakfast and some kagouti 'meat'. (I use the term loosely.)
I suddenly remembered I hadn't answered her question yet. "Yes, I'm going back to Balmora - I just joined the Mages' Guild there," I explained. I was absolutely not showing off, I told myself. It was relevant information.
"Really? I just joined the Fighter's Guild." At least there were two of us bragging now. "I'm a scout, you see. My name's Fasile."
"I'm Adryn," I responded. I was going to continue, but was interrupted by my stomach deciding to make its general state of emptiness and displeasure at that audible. I blushed.
"Here, take some." Fasile gestured at an open pouch at her side, out of which drifted a lovely smell.
"Oh no, I couldn't possibly..." my protest was very weak.
Fasile shook her head, grinning. "I got breakfast to take with me at the tradehouse, and Ashumanu, the owner, gave me far too much - I could never eat all this myself."
"Well, in that case..."
The pouch contained rolls with scrib jelly, which I was very proud at myself for being able to identify. They didn't taste quite as good as the ones I'd had yesterday - the cook here wasn't as dab a hand with the spices as Dulnea - but were fresh out of the oven, and offset nicely by the sweetness of the scrib jelly.
"A scout?" I asked as we chewed. "What does a scout do for the Fighter's Guild?" I'd thought Fighter's Guild members ran more along the lines of big brawny hulking fighters who were confused by words more than two syllables long. Scouts didn't fit into the picture.
"Well, the guild takes a lot of escort and protection quests - travellers hire us to protect them from bandits or the wildlife, people exploring ruins and caves hire us as back-up, that sort of thing. Other times we're asked to hunt down criminals who are trying to hide in the wilderness. Having someone who knows the area and can set up camp and hunt for food in the wild can be very important."
I nodded. "That makes a lot of sense. So what brings you to Suran?"
"Well, Eydis Fire-Eye, she's head of the Balmora guild, she asked me to drop off a message. But it was a good opportunity because I'd be a bad scout if I didn't know a lot about different regions, and I've never been to this area before," Fasile explained. "I mean, imagine what would happen if someone asked to escort them to Suran, or to Marandus, or to the Vandus tomb, and I got them lost? I wouldn't dare call myself a scout after that." She shuddered. "Oh, but, I also picked up something amazing at the shops here! One of the traders had a glass dagger for sale, see?"
I squinted at the weapon she held out to me. There is a euphemism for when something is in particularly bad shape, saying that it 'has seen better days'. This dagger, now, had probably seen better centuries. The hilt seemed to be in the process of dissolving, contrary to the laws of physics, and even from a distance I could tell that with that edge the weapon probably ought to be classified as a blunt instrument, as it wouldn't make a difference whether you hit an enemy with the flat side or the "sharp". I could still tell that somewhere underneath all the chips, scratches, and what looked like old blood that hadn't been cleaned off in so long it might actually have become one with the weapon, the blade was made of some reflective greenish material - wait, had she called it glass? Who in their right mind would make weapons out of glass?
Fasile stared at me for a moment after I voiced this opinion, then laughed. "Oh right, you must be new to Morrowind. This isn't ordinary glass. Volcanic glass is one of the hardest materials known to man and mer, and durable enough that it makes excellent weapons. If you want better, you'd be looking into ebony or Daedric... which is why a glass dagger usually costs around forty septims." Four
thousand drakes? I whistled and stared at the weapon with new eyes. "But because it's in such bad shape," understatement of the year, "and because it's really hard to repair glass weapons the trader let me have it for much less!" The girl bounced. And I do literally mean bounced. I paused in the process of reaching for a new roll to blink at her - this was the first time I'd ever seen that outside of literature.
I spotted a flaw in her plan. "But... if it's so hard to repair, will
you be able to?"
"Oh, I'll take it to old Wayn. He's the smith at the guild - bit of a stick-in-the-mud but very good at what he does. I'm sure he'll be able to fix it for me." Fasile smiled dreamily - I could almost read the words 'and then I'll have a glass dagger of my very own!' above her head - then blinked as though something had just occurred to her. "But what about you? What brought you to Suran?"
"I was looking for ingredients," I said, ruefully thinking of my vials which currently all contained that precious, rare, difficult to harvest ingredient known as
air. "I'm an alchemist, one of two at the guild, and our guild mistress asked us to study some of the flowers that grow near Lake Amaya. I had a few... misadventures, and ended up staying the night here."
"That's funny, I don't remember seeing you at the tradehouse last night..."
I decided to take this as an opportunity to practice my poker face. "We must have just missed each other, I'm sure."
"I suppose. Did you at least manage to get the flowers?"
"No," I moaned. "All I got from yesterday were near-death experiences and this map here." I wiped my hands on my trousers and fished the damnable thing out of my pack. "I suppose it's useful to have one, but when you were expecting a reward that's a little, shall we say, shinier and more metallic..."
"Oh, yes," Fasile clucked sympathetically. "Wayn told me it's why the guild insists on a proprely negotiated contract before accepting any missions, to avoid this kind of thing." Yes, thank you for telling me
now. "Although... wait, can I see that map for a moment?"
I handed it over, puzzled. Fasile took it, stared at it, then spoke a word I didn't quite understand. To my amazement, a glowing dot appeared on the map - I leaned over and saw that it was just at Suran.
"Is that..." I was stunned.
"It's enchanted with a location spell. Some Telvanni worked it out, I hear. They're really expensive - I've seen them selling for almost five septims! I've been thinking of saving up for one." She eyed the map hungrily while I tried to incorporate this new fact into my worldview.
"So when I thought about throwing it away..."
"...it would have been very, very stupid, yes. Whoever gave this to you must have really liked you."
I giggled. It may have sounded slightly hysterical. "No, I... doubt that. I really, really doubt that. I think it's more likely she just didn't know and thought it was a cheap copy off the streets. I mean," I paused for dramatic effect, "when I met her she
was holding it upside-down."
We looked at each other and burst into laughter.
"Ahoy the strider!" A new voice, this one, and - to my surprise - unmistakeably tinged with the accent of Wayrest.
I was even more surprised when the owner of the new voice turned out to be a dark- a Dunmer. Given the accent, I'd been expecting a Breton... and wasn't that hypocritical of me, given the amount of people who, upon hearing me open my mouth, probably expected some fur-clad axe-wielding Nord!
But my ruminations on accents and their owners, who are not always quite what you expect, were interrupted when I noticed that the newcomer was surrounded by a glowing purple bubble of energy - one that the raindrops hit and then bounced off.
I may have drooled. If so, it was obviously to do with being a Mages' Guild member confronted with a type of magic I didn't know (a shield spell, something hidden in the dim mists of memory nudged me), about the passionate search for magic-related knowledge of all kinds, and nothing whatsoever to do with a way to stay dry.
"Oh, hi Eddie!" Fasile greeted as she handed the map back (with noticeable reluctance.) Apparently she knew him. "That's a neat trick. So did you get back without getting lost again?"
I hid a grin as 'Eddie', who'd strolled under the awning puffed up with his own cleverness, deflated. "Ah, of course not, I would never..."
"I met him yesterday," Fasile explained to me over his protests. "Said he was looking for Sulipund, but he was going the wrong way, was about to enter an ancestral tomb," a dark expression crossed her face, "and had already managed to fall into Lake Nabia twice. I ended up escorting him there, but I couldn't take him back to Suran and I was worried he'd manage to end up at the Ghostfence or eaten by Daedra at Bal Ur."
It's funny how sometimes, you can read "please let the earth swallow me right now" on people's faces clearer than if they'd spoken out loud.
As I was still smarting from my various misadventures yesterday, I was more sympathetic than I might have been otherwise. So he fell into the lake twice? At least he hadn’t almost been killed in a very embarrassing way by a rampaging kagouti. "Well, these things happen, especially when you’re not an experienced scout." I smiled encouragingly. "My name’s Adryn, by the way."
"Ah! Your sympathy is a salve to my poor wounded soul, o fair flower of beauteousness." He bowed with a flourish. "Edd Theman is your humble servant."
My sympathy vanished like a puff of hot air in a Haafingar blizzard.
"I think you must be confused. The bushes are over there, you see. At least, I assume that since you were talking to a 'fair flower of beauteousness' you were trying to address the local plant life, given that I told you my name just now."
"Ah, but such a masculine name hardly suits a gorgeous orchid in this arid wasteland such as yourself-"
"
Excuse me?"
His shield spell chose that moment to wink out of existence.
Fasile, probably sensing that there would be violence done in a few moments, interrupted. "Look! There’s the strider."
*****
Notes: Some years after I'd started writing this story, at which point Adryn had firmly cemented herself in my mind, I realised that Adryn is a
male Dunmer name. Think Athyn Sarethi - I checked all the lists, and all NPCs with names ending in -yn (of whom they are
quite a few) are male. Women have names ending in -yno, -yna, -yni, -yne... you get the picture. Adryn flatly refused to become Adryne, and I worked out a way to make that doable, but this is where Eddie's surprise at her "masculine" name is coming from.
Also, I swore I wouldn't give in on currency, that I'd stick with what we're given in-game, but I've got so used to the "septim = 100 drakes" from various stories (e.g. Teresa!) that it actually threw me when I reread my own story. So I'm surrendering and using it too... and I'm going to go back and edit previous entries where I was using the two interchangeably to be in line with this when I have time.
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