This is totally your fault, guys.
A Holy War
Recommended listening - Mutilate, by Archive
Chapter I - Surrender
Dela started her day by sketching the city.
Stick of charcoal in her hand, she caught the shapes of empty Vivec�s cantons as they loomed from the dawn mist. She snatched the image from the morning light like a child grabbing an insect from the air and pinning it into a case. Later, she knew, the balconies of the huge pyramid buildings would be thronging with people, vendors selling wares from stalls, children running and playing, Ordinators on patrol in their magnificent golden armour and plumed helmets. The guards had always made her think of birds, the gaudy ones which flitted between the hanging fronds of the mushroom trees, puffing up their chests and displaying colourful feathers to win a mate.
There was a sense of outrage welling in her breast as she reproduced her view of a city which left her amazed. A sun of fury burned in her being with that wonder, a swelling tumour of anger, rage that this place could be so quiet and calm after all that had happened. For a moment Dela stopped her sketching, staring out at the city with her fingers gripping the charcoal.
With the faint ringing of a miniscule bell, the charcoal stick rattled on the floor and Dela cursed as she saw the fine fragments of grey powder that coated her finger. Sighing and brushing the particles off her hand, she picked the charcoal up and resumed her work with the end that wasn�t crushed. The mist that lay lethargic over the city became a smudge that consumed her page�s horizon and the furthest part of the cantons, the buildings� lines emerging from the fog like clarity from confusion.
Accompanied by the sound of a faint splash, singing echoed up from a canal. Dela glanced down the sandstone slope of the Hlaalu Canton�s sides, craning over her windowsill to see a gondolier splashing through the water. Dipping his paddle into the water, raising it up again to swivel over his head like some warrior in combat whirling an axe or spear, the boatman guided his long, flat vessel through Vivec�s waterways. As he went, he sang, a low and slow song of mourning. The words were lost in the distance they travelled to Dela�s ear, but she recognised the tune.
�Tribunal three, we beseech thee,� she chanted along with him, voice low as she followed the melody of the gondolier�s prayer-drone. �Scholar guide, general guard, mother comfort. Watch the one we lay before you, carry them safe in your arms, bear them home.�
Who do you sing that for? she wondered. Everyone?
She added the gondolier to her sketch out of sympathy, capturing him as he stooped low and drew his paddle from the water. He was a formless outline in her drawing, nothing more than the flat cone of his hat and the column of his cloak, wielding his paddle. With the final detail of her sketch completed, Dela placed it on her desk, the chalk resting alongside it. She tugged the bell-pull that hung from the sandstone wall of her bedroom and busied herself with putting her sketch away into a guar-leather binder. The binder held her charcoal drawings of Vivec�s mornings, along with the one sketch she could never bring herself to look at.
�Mistress called?�
�Ah, Ta�varda, good morning,� Dela said, glancing towards the slight, ash-coloured khajiit who had appeared at the doorway. �I was about to prepare for the day. I was thinking the blue robe today, the one from Balmora, and the dark green moccasins to go with them.�
Ta�varda dipped her head, the chain collar she wore clinking with the movement.
�Of course, mistress,� she said. �Shall khajiit fetch some hackle-lo tea?�
�You didn�t bring it?�
�I am sorry, mistress, but khajiit was still doing her chores. She did not expect mistress to call for her so early in the morning.�
�You�re right,� Dela said. �Never mind, I�ll have some later with breakfast.�
�Of course, mistress.�
Bowing low once more, Dela�s hand-slave retreated. Dela spent her time staring out at the watery streets of her home city, absent and distant. After a moment, she dragged herself from her reverie; she wasn�t in a safe space right now and she couldn�t afford to lose herself, spend too much time in contemplation. Getting pulled back down again, as deep as the last time, that was dangerous. She couldn�t afford to do that.
She stood up, the motion decisive, striding to the dresser. Picking up her hairbrush, she began to pull it through the strands, sitting down once more. There was a determination in her movements. She had to do something, anything, just not spend too long sitting around in one spot. She would paint something, she decided, colour her sketch. She would need ochres for the sandstone of the cantons, a good amount of grey for the mist, and for the water. Would Aldano�s be open at this time in the morning? Probably not, but she could always send Ta�Varda out a bit later on that errand, once she had completed her chores. She would wile away the time by reading until then. Perhaps Odanris would be awake once she was dressed. If he wasn�t working, it would be nice to spend some time with him, though she suspected that he would be busy today. Of all days, she was sure today would be one of his busiest. Ta�Varda could keep her company, though.
She was deathly afraid of spending too much time alone today. There was no knowing what she might do.
�Come in, Ta�Varda.� The khajiit entered from where she had knocked at the doorframe of Dela�s room, carrying her mistress� clothes. She rose as the khajiit approached, and Ta�Varda placed the robe down as she went to help Dela out of the shift she had slept in. As the slave helped her dress, Dela looked out at the quiet city beyond her window. �Why is it so silent out there?�
�Mistress?�
�Why aren�t there people in the streets? Why aren�t there protests?� she said. �There should be people out there rioting. They should be kicking down doors, they should be burning things. This city should be screaming, Ta�Varda, but it�s just so�quiet.�
�Are you planning on doing anything like that, mistress?� Ta�Varda asked.
�No, of course not,� Dela said. �It�s just this silence, this sleepiness, nothing about it feels right. We should be outraged. We�ve�we�ve lost, Ta�Varda, we�ve given up everything. Our sovereignty, our pride as a nation, we�ve given it all away. Everything we sacrificed was for nothing.�
�People are still digesting it, mistress,� Ta�Varda said.
�I suppose you�re right. The shock must still be sinking in.�
It would make sense. After all, today was only the day after the treaty had been signed. Morrowind had been a nation under Tiber Septim�s rule for less than twenty four hours. So far, Vivec�s most vehement protest had been a few stones pitched at those souls unlucky enough to deliver the news, and the odd scuffles with the guards. There would be more trouble for a while, Dela was sure, but for what Ta�Varda said made sense; the city was still wrapping its collective head around this, digesting the news while it remained stunned and rocked back on its haunches.
�Do you think he�ll visit?� Dela asked as Ta�Varda helped her into her robe.
�Who, mistress?� the khajiit asked, tying the robe�s gold-threaded belt tight.
�Tiber Septim. Ysmir, Talos Stormcrown, whatever title he�s given himself now.� Dela gave a chortle of bitter amusement. �Maybe he�ll even think of a new one now he�s the ruler of Morrowind. He�s bound to come here sooner or later, to visit his latest conquest. There�ll be diplomatic matters to deal with, no doubt, maybe some kind of grand ceremony to hammer home the message of this treaty.�
�Message?�
��We own you dunmer now. Your armies have failed you and so have your gods. Your nation is ours now�.�
�They might be good owners,� Ta�Varda said. �Tiber Septim�s conquered territories seem to be doing well, do they not? You might have been conquered by a bad man, rather than this good one.�
Dela sighed. She supposed that Ta�Varda had more experience with being owned and controlled than Dela ever would.
As if sensing that she had hit a nerve, and well aware that her position in the household was dependent on Dela�s good will, Ta�Varda added; �But Khajiit can see why mistress would be upset by this.�
�Thank you,� Dela said. �You�re right, though, it�s just, after everything, with Edroth�� she cut herself off. �Are you going into town later today, Ta�Varda?�
�Khajiit had some errands to run, yes,� Ta�Varda nodded.
�Ah, good. While you�re there could you go to Aldano�s, please? I need some pigments to be picked up. I�ll give you a list.�
�Of course, Mistress.�
Once she was dressed, Dela made her way to the master bedroom. Odranris was still asleep in their bed, and Dela smiled as she saw the expression her husband wore, the faint open-lipped pout of sleep. There was an innocence in that look that she couldn�t help but find immensely endearing, one that was never present when he was awake, that expression was one of canny drive and intense calculation.
He stirred when Dela shook his shoulder, blinking awake.
�Dela,� he said. His red eyes flicked up and down as he took in his wife�s state of dress. �How long have you been up?� Those same eyes took a gleam of concern. �You did sleep, didn�t you?�
�I�ve only been awake an hour or so,� Dela said. �I was sketching.�
�Fine,� Odranris nodded. He stretched and rubbed his eyes with the heels of his broad, blue-grey palms. �One of your city sketches?�
�I�m sending Ta�Varda around to fetch some pigments for it later,� Dela said. �I�m going to turn it into a full painting. Today feels like it should be recorded.�
�Today is going to be busy, certainly,� Odranis said, propping himself up on his elbows. �There�s a whole army of Imperial bureaucrats and clerks descending on the city, wanting to talk about tariffs and imports and exports and all that. Visceral, thrilling stuff, but the Council want it dealt with now.�
�Sounds fascinating,� Dela said. �So it�s business as usual, isn�t it?�
�Who doesn�t want that?� Odanris said. �We�re far away from the front lines for business as usual to be the form of the day. Better that than the mess they�re in in Mournhold. Besides, making money hand over fist is the Hlaalu way, and in the Council�s eyes the sooner we can re-establish trade with Cyrodiil the better.�
He hauled himself out of bed, shaking his head to try and wake himself up like a Guar trying to dislodge ticks.
�When�s breakfast?� he asked, and that was when Dela realised that he was glad the war was over, even if Tiber Septim had won. The urge to confront him over it rose, but Dela quashed it. This wasn�t a morning where she wanted to argue.
Once Ta�Varda had the asked-for pigments, she would paint.