Clever Craft by Chairtastic
Summary: Being too clever can create problems for you. Especially when the world sees cleverness as a tool to be used, and clever people much the same. Farri, a Khajiiti prisoner from House Redoran, has found this out the hard way.
Author's Note: Alright, alright. Another Skyrim story. Not a reboot of Skooma Cat, tried that, didn't work, leave the past where it is. We're going to be having some fun. Some empire smashing, maybe some building. A bit of yucks, a bit of violence, and delicious burning of the stations of the canon. Mehrunes Dagon ain't got shit on me!
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Chapter One: Chain Yanking
Highpoint Tower Mine
Shift Lead Niyya
She trudged through grey-brown ash banks, leader of a line of miners all dressed as she was. Slick clothes that wouldn't catch the ash as it fell, no area of skin exposed lest the ash get in and poison their lungs.
Their packs, complete with picks and everything they would need for their month-long shift at the mine, were covered much the same. Every four miners had a guardian walk at their flank, to keep them safe in the event of reavers.
Niyya led the group because she had the most mining experience, she had been a miner for forty-nine years and a shift lead for twenty-one of them. She knew magic to keep a mine from collapsing and she knew how to fight off bandits -- or reavers, as they called themselves in Morrowind -- on her own.
She also knew illusion magic, enough to calm or inspire bravery, and one particular spell the Highpoint Tower Mine valued more than anything. Clairvoyance -- a spell to find where you wanted to go, or what you wanted to find. Caved in? Find a way around it. Prospecting ore? Led right to a vein.
Farri, a long-time fixture of their mine, had taught it to her. He'd apparently seen the spell work but didn't know the fundamentals of illusion magic. Once Niyya taught those to him, he paid her back with Clairvoyance.
In the immediate, the spell helped her find her damned way to the mine through all the ashfall and changed terrain. Every month the near-constant ashfall would create dunes as it met the wind and frozen soil, and the landscape had a tendency to radically change.
She held her hand aloft, and a path of light only she could see stretched out before her toward a dark blob high on the slopes they climbed. She released the magic, pointed where it had showed her, and led them toward the mine. Most of the journey was done in silence, to reduce the chance of ash in the lungs.
On the edge of a valley, surrounded by dead broken pines was a dead broken Imperial fort. Broken pieces of the fort lay scattered around them, with the only remnants being the namesake Highpoint Tower, and part of an old curtain wall. It shielded the mine's entrance from the ashfall, at least.
Niyya broke the line and stood at the edge of a stonework tunnel next to a long-dead tree. She helped the miners behind her get in the tunnel speedily, while the guards joined her around the entrance. They would remain outside until the departing shift and minerals were on the move, then escort them back to town.
Once all the miners in her shift had been brought into the mine, Niyya followed after them. In the antechamber of the wrecked tower, her miners were already stripping off their ash-repellant gear as the departing shift donned theirs.
"How's the weather out there, Niyya?" The departing shift lead, a blue-skined, red-eyed dark elf Dravynea asked as she made sure her boots were on proper.
"Good and sunny," Niyya lied as easily as breathing, once she had her helmet off. Niyya was Redguard while Dravynea a Dunmer, taller and more visibly aged than the departing shift lead. "You might catch a tan if you stay out enough." As she undid her ash-repellant gear, she got to breathing the good mine air and her mood improved. "Ash is thick -- be prepared to use magic to find your way back."
"Same as always." Dravynea shook her head and hauled her pack up. "We got the new cook this month, replacing Farri. She's alright, but afraid to take risks. Excellent with eggs. The new Alchemist hasn't arrived yet."
"As long as I have fewer men breathing fire from both ends, I'll be happy with her." Niyya shuddered at the memories. Men always wanted to be manly and demand the food be made with the most fire salt they could manage -- and they always regretted it mid-shift. "Farri leaving with you? I want to say goodbye."
Dravynea's face soured and she tightened the straps on her pack too much. "I expected him to, but Renden said someone's coming to pick him up." There was an edge in her voice, her blood-red eyes were narrowed, she glanced over her shoulder down the stairs with a snear. "My gut says that fetcher is plotting something."
"I'll try keep him from doing anything powerfully stupid." Niyya crossed her arms and glanced in that same direction. "But I'm not a Dunmer, he has more leeway with me than you."
"If you can, send word with the food deliveries. The haul was mostly gems this month, those'll go fast. I can be back up here with some of my boys, a few torches, maybe even a pitchfork for tradition's sake." Dravynea put on her helmet, and nodded to Niyya as she walked toward the door.
Niyya's crew had already gone downstairs, following the smell of spice and sugar in the air. She followed after them, after she folded her gear up in an old storage room in the antechamber.
Niyya had been in plenty of mines through the decades, but Highpoint Tower was the first mine where the best air was underground. It was a gem-and-ore mine on Solstheim, an island far in the frozen north of Tamriel, in the middle of the ash wastes.
The air outside was constantly full of ash from volcanic eruptions out in Morrowind proper, but the inside was kept clean. Magic, alchemy, and odd Morrowind animals were responsible.
On the first level, below the antechamber, there was a landing where a brazier burned green fire. A Dunmer sat nearby, with a stack of plants wrapped in white cloths for feeding the fire -- an alchemical way to clean the air as folks checked in -- and a board and quil in his hands.
Niyya checked in with him, and continued down. Past the next level, where the gems recovered would be polished and put in a safe, and down to the mine proper. The gemstones were closest to the surface, so they had been found first.
Queer white spiders, native to Morrowind, had been brought in to spin their webs along the mine's walls for cave-in resistance. Niyya didn't mind them, they were smaller than dogs which made them better than Skyrim's spiders.
Farri had been the one to put together the right herbs to burn for the clean air, and who had figured how to tame the spiders. With a bit of help from a long-gone miner who had been a seamstress, Farri had figured how to make their ash-repellant gear from the spider's silk.
Deeper into the mine were the ore veins, where the old Imperial cellars met Nordic ruins. This resulted in enough space for the miners to live their month-long shifts underground without much madness.
In a section of the Nordic ruins wing of the mine was the alchemy lab and kitchens. Niyya went there to check in on the mine's long-term staff.
The new cook, a young smooth-skin Dunmer girl, waved at Niyya as she stirred a pot over a fire. It smelled like horker and ash yam stew, always good to get miners through a shift. She had thick metal bracers on her forearms which looked new.
Niyya's heart sank to see them. Old slave bracers repurposed to be used for prisoners once slavery had become illegal -- except as punishment for a crime. "Well met," Niyya said with some forced cheer. She smiled and made sure she met the new cook's eyes -- if she treated her like an equal, the girl would remember freedom longer.
Niyya hated that she'd worked with so many prisoner-slaves in Morrowind to know that.
"And same to you, serjo," the girl introduced herself. "I'm Farwesu, I'll be taking over Farri's duties once he's released."
"So I hear. I'm Niyya, the shift lead. Any of my miners give you trouble, you raise your voice and I'll come running. Dravynea said you're good with eggs?"
"Yes!" The girl, likely too young for marriage in the weird elven notion of such things, visibly brightened at the topic. "I'm really good with kwama eggs, but I'm told there's no kwama mines on Solstheim. But I was studying Breton cooking, and they use lots of bird and fish eggs."
"Well, as long as you can stand up to my crew on how much spice they get in their meals, I'll be happy."
Farwesu's ears lowered slightly, an odd thing elves and Khajiit could do. "Ah. Yes. That's… been somewhat of a consistent topic." She glanced over her shoulder, then lowered her voice. "Is… Farri liberal with the fire and void salts?"
Years of memories, full of boisterous young folk who ate their meals with competing amounts of fire salt, played out before Niyya's eyes. Farri actively did not care if a miner wanted their serving spiced well beyond their tolerance -- he'd do it. It would make him and the other miners laugh when the poor fetcher went running to the latrine, and she'd get yelled at for low productivity.
"Yes," was all she said on the subject, however. "Have you seen him, actually?"
Farwesu pointed Niyya into the next room in the ruin, where potions and booze were kept for storage.
Therein, she found the cat of the hour. A Khajiit, one of the cat-men of Elsweyr, though Niyya doubted Farri had ever been out of Morrowind. A child of slaves brought to the dark elf nation generations ago. Khajiit came in many sizes, and Farri was one of the shortest -- at two-thirds Niyya's height.
The cat had his back to her, putting small bottles out of a basket and into a refitted wine rack next to the alcohol casks. An ear flicked back toward her as he worked. "Good to see you didn't break a hip in the bath, your boys were telling stories about your arthritis again." He spoke with the typical Khajiit accent, low in back of the throat.
Niyya was about to make a retort when a bottle was tossed her way. Green, corked, and with a label that bore her name. "I told you, you didn't need to make me potions anymore -- I picked up some healing magic."
"Healing magic won't work quite so well at three in the morning on a Sunday when you're woken up by blinding pain in your legs." Farri flicked his tail dismissively, and continued to rack potion bottles.
"Sundas, not Sunday, Farri." Not even five minutes into a conversation, and he was already letting his less than sane aspects show. She'd known him for years, and he still didn't know the days of the week reliably.
She sighed, and pocketed the potion. A bit of insurance would be fine, she supposed. "I wanted to congratulate you on your release. You're a free man, again."
Farri finished putting potions away, and discarded the basket. "Khajiit thanks you, he hopes to see you in Raven Rock sometime." He rolled up his sleeves to show the magic bracers still on his arms. "This one is looking forward to being able to wash his arms again. Last time was when he outgrew old bracers -- so much matted fur."
Niyya had to realize, in that moment, that Farri was going to be gone from the mine. The new alchemist likely wouldn't waste mine resources on potions for her arthritis, or to restock on healing brews during the shift change.
She'd been the on-site shift lead when Farri had been brought in as prison labor, twelve years prior. One of ten Khajiit, and the youngest of the bunch at just seven years old. Every other person from that group had been killed or transfered to different prison labor sites -- only Farri had remained.
She and Dravynea had looked out for him as best they could -- but he would leave the mine soon, never to come back. Unless, of course, House Redoran arrested him again.
"You're looking dopey, Niyya. Hit your head on a rock when you came in?" Farri responded to Niyya's silent smiling with concern, and circled her to examine her head. "Hmm, no visible bruising."
She cuffed him around the ears when he passed by her arm. "You little shit, I'm happy you're getting out. And you're not going to see me at Raven Rock, because you're getting on a ship for Skyrim first thing, alright?"
"Skyrim's just as full of racists as Morrowind, and it's a warzone. Why would Khajiit go there?" He paused and glanced aside. "Well, seeing dragons in real life would be nice, but… eh."
Niyya let the comment about long-gone dragons being in Skyrim slide. Farri was just like that sometimes. "Nu-uh, no arguing. Skyrim doesn't just enslave people to work for them like the dark elves do."
Farri looked up at her with his hands on his hips. "Cidhna Mine."
Shit that was good rebuttal, she realized. "Alright, well… don't go to the Reach? You're smart, maybe you could go to Winterhold and learn magic?"
The whistle for the start of mining was blown from deeper into the mine -- which meant Niyya had to get ready for hours of digging up orichalcum, gold, and gemstones. Already, the trudging of her crew echoed down the halls.
"Damn, well -- if you get released before the shift ends…." Niyya crouched down to hug the young cat. "Try to get somewhere they won't just throw you back in here?"
The cat-man returned the hug, though not as tightly. "This one has warning for you, if he does not see you again. You see a dark elf woman in Telvanni robes? Pull the stone out of her chest." He gave her a pat on the back, and quickly trotted off.
Niyya was frozen there as she parsed what she'd heard. "That boy is going to say something insane and get thrown in an asylum," she muttered to herself as she left the storeroom for work.
A shift of work was hard, but boring. No new shafts had been opened up in the last month, so her miners were hard at work expanding the ore veins already found, however two new veins of sapphire near the gold ore had been found out. As expected, the lunch of the day was ash yam and horker stew. Fine fair, for miners.
At the end of the day's work, they had buckets full of gemstones and the beginnings of a decent orichalcum shipment. Raven Rock might bemoan their lack of ebony ore, but there was still plenty of mineral wealth on Solstheim for them to avail themselves of. If they'd only just stop their self-pity.
Niyya fully expected to find Farri had left during her shift, instead she found him on the stairs toward the entrance, following after someone. It was too far away for her to make out details, but she heard shouting. Her miners noticed her staring and followed her gaze.
"I get the feeling Renden has done something powerfully stupid," she told her crew as they looked to her for guidance. "Don't put your picks in lockup just yet. We might need to teach him a lesson."
Fire danced along Niyya's fingers as she made her way over to the scene. By the time she had arrived, they'd already gone up past the gemstone polisher toward the second floor.
"...Khajiit is free, he served his sentence!" Farri shouted, hoarse from the sound of things. Perhaps the shouting had gone on a while, and Niyya hadn't heard due to the picks on stone.
"Your sentence is for another four hours," the oily voice of the mine's owner replied, followed by clinking chains. "Which is why I was so happy to find a buyer for your remaining time. Don't keep the hunter waiting, prisoner."
Niyya caught up to them in time to see Farri with his ears back and tail puffed up, led by the sweaty oaf who owned the mine. Renden Howei, a man who legitimately preferred to live underground at all times and interact with people as little as possible.
The Dunmer mineral mogul pulled Farri along by a magical effect from a key in his hand which created spectral chains to the cat's bracers toward the entrance to the mine.
"Renden, hold, what's this?" Niyya spoke loud, as she expected her miners to have crept up to the bottom of the stairs. They would hear her, and know if someone needed to meet the business end of a pickaxe. "My miners finish up their shift and they hear shouting -- gets them nervous."
Renden didn't turn to address her, he never liked to look them in the eye. "Nothing you need concern yourself with, just getting a last squeeze of profit out of this fuzzy lump." He had virtually no problem pulling Farri up the stairs. "Just go have dinner -- the new alchemist will be here in a week, you'll forget this lump was ever here."
"Renden, wait -- "
But Niyya's words fell on deaf ears as she followed them up the stairs to the ground floor. At the door was a man, a Nord. Taller and paler than Niyya, well-built, clad in furs. A Skaal, perhaps, though he lacked the beard typical in their men. His eyes unnerved Niyya -- they were silver-grey, almost as if he was blind.
Perhaps he was from the Nordic mead hall Thirsk, to the north.
"No, no, no!" Farri planted his feet and tried to resist the pull of Reden's magical chains at the top of the stairs. "This one is not ready to be ill met by moonlight! He does not want to speak to Hircine!"
Niyya pinched the bridge of her nose and walked around to speak to the man. "Look, I think there's been a miscommunication."
"Aye," the man said with a nod. He seemed to pay little heed to the Khajiit and Dunmer as they fought on either end of the chains. "Name's Sinding -- I just need a witness for a religious ceremony up north. Then your friend can go. It'll be cold, and boring, but that's about it."
"Lies," Farri hissed through clenched teeth. He promptly bit the bannister on the stairs when his feet were pulled up off the stairs. "Lyffff!"
"How are you this strong?!" Renden had to pull with both hands to make any progress with Farri. "You're already paid for, just give up!"
Niyya took stock of what the man had said, his bearing, and Farri's reaction. With how… odd the cat was, it was never a surefire bet to say he was being overdramatic. Farri had been the one to find out keeping gemstones too close to albino spiders had negative side effects, so his madness had something to guide it.
"Alright… could you, perhaps, put a word in with a captain at the Raven Rock docks for him?" Niyya tried to ignore the fight behind her, really she did. She stepped out of reach when Renden tried to grab her for help. "Just… something to get him away from Morrowind, so this doesn't happen again?"
Sinding looked at her with a tilted head, as if he were a confused dog, then glanced at the cat. Without a word, he nodded.
"And if this is some elaborate ruse? And he doesn't show up to Raven Rock at all? You'd better stay far away from Solstheim." Niyya held her hand up and showed the fire that danced betwixt her fingers. A clear threat.
"I'll bear that in mind," Sinding said with a dry tone. He didn't so much as blink at her, further evidence to her that he was actually blind. "Can we go, now?"
Niyya didn't have any gut feelings that warned her of danger, she was a miner -- her instincts were to listen for shifting stone. Given the man's word, and Renden's insistence, she felt the matter settled.
"Farri," she said as she turned to him.
The cat and Dunmer stopped their tug of war.
"Cut it out before you lose a tooth."
Farri released the bannister and promptly hit the ground.
"You've got less than four hours now for your time, then you're free. So just… go along with what this young man asks, alright?" She didn't like how Farri flinched every time he so much as glanced at Sinding, but he'd been indoors for twelve years -- most of his life.
Perhaps his ferocity was simply cold feet at leaving 'home', as odd as that home was?
"Khajiit doesn't like werewolves," Farri muttered. "Less so werewolves with no control."
"Now that's just rude." Niyya put her hands on her hips. "He's been polite so far, don't have to go insulting him like that." She waved her hand. "Just… use a Courage spell on yourself, alright? That should help settle your nerves."
Farri did, and was covered in a layer of green magic for a moment as the spell dispelled his fears by force. Unfortunately, absent fear the cat just became more defiant.
"He will kill this one!" Farri snapped as Renden pulled him by the mystic chains. "And Khajiit will haunt you all! Forever and always!"
"Hopefully he'll quiet down once the ceremony starts," Sinding muttered and accepted the key. "No harm will come to him, I swear." He met Niyya's eyes and thumped his chest. "On my honor as a Nord."
Nords were serious about honor, almost as much as Redguards, so Niyya believed him.
She watched Farri dragged off into the ash, and tried to convince herself it was the best way things could've gone. He'd have someone to help him get out of Morrowind, and he wouldn't be under Renden's thumb for his last few hours as a prisoner.
"Wait, damnit," Renden muttered after the Nord and Khajiit had left. "That cat was wearing a perfectly good mining uniform. Could've saved some silver by re-using it. Oh well."
Niyya nodded to play like she agreed with him. Internally, she concluded the less time nearing freedom Farri had spent around the likes of Renden, the better.
--
En route to Altar of Thrond
Sinding
The cat, Farri, was the smartest one in that mine. But with only the ash outside to use to resist, Sinding had no problem hauling him along.
"I'm guessing you can smell the wolfblood in me?" He asked, his tone conversational, as he kept his eyes on due north. The Altar, where it would finally be over. A sacrifice of flesh, and innocence, and his horrible ordeal would be over. "See it in my eyes?"
"Khajiit knows! Khajiit knows Sinding is a coward, Sinding looks for shortcuts!" The cat bit at the chains which dragged him to Sinding's pace. Alas, their spectral nature meant Khajiit teeth couldn't carve through them.
"True on all counts." Sinding admitted. "I didn't choose to be this way, you know." Sinding kept his focus on the Altar. "Just like you're not going to choose this. I'll try to make it painless, when it happens. If you don't struggle, it'll be over before you know it."
"Liar!" The cat's voice, hoarse from arguing with the Dunmer prior, finally cracked. He planted his feet and let Sinding drag him until he created a deep trough in the ash. Once the cat was deep enough to get to his ribs, the weight of the ash stopped Sinding short.
He stumbled at the sudden resistance, and it was enough to pull the key free from his grip. The beastblood hammered in his ears as he realized he'd lost the key, and turned to see the cat try to dig himself out.
Farri tried to bury the key with the ash to free himself, but found it fruitless as Sinding suddenly grabbed him by the throat and harshly yanked him up.
Sinding's body hair had grown visibly thicker, his ears had developed mild points, and his musculature developed significant definition. It was all rather old hat to Sinding, but the cat probably hadn't seen a partial transformation up close.
The beast inside howled for blood and meat. It strongly desired to have the heart it could hear beating in the Khajiit's chest. The fingers that lifted Farri by the neck developed points just sharp enough to break the skin.
Sinding beat the beast back with the fact that he needed the Khajiit alive for the ceremony. The hagravens had been firm -- the innocent had to be alive when brought to them. He released the grip he had on the cat's neck then raised his fists to bring them down on Farri's shoulders once the cat hit the ground.
Crack.
"Two broken shoulders should make it harder for you to pull something like that again," Sinding growled as his beast blood abated, and the cat screamed from the pain.
Farri's arms hung limp as Sinding bent over to fish the key out of the ash. His arms may have been out of commission, but the cat was not out of fight.
Sinding had only just laid eyes on the key when saw movement out of his peripheral vision. A second later, and his face was rudely introduced to Farri's knee. It struck with low force, enough to surprise him but not deal meaningful damage.
However, Farri succeeded in knocking Sinding over, where he exploited a weakness all men possessed with his foot. Repeatedly. That dealt some damage.
Sinding was curled in a ball trying to will the pain away as he heard footsteps in the ash grow faint. The beast blood woke again, and Sinding's anger was such that he didn't fight it.
He wasn't conscious for much of what the beast did, he just kept enough control to not kill or infect the cat -- they needed him alive and whole. He caught glimpses of terrible clawed hands that had once been his, he heard snippets of a roaring voice which had once been his, and he felt motes of delight at the pain of his 'prey'.
When he came too, the cat was a bloody mess on the ground, but more or less in one piece. Part of an ear had been bitten off, and a deep slash cut through where one of his eyes had been. Deep cuts covered his limbs, face, and torso. The cat was mauled, but alive.
Sinding's transformation into the beast within had robbed him of dignity and patience, he crouched down and yanked the cat to a sitting position by the collar of his shredded shirt. "Learned your lesson, cat?"
Sinding hoped Farri had. Already he'd have to make the unpleasant walk through the ash and snow starkers -- his armor was in pieces further up the hill. And the cat wasn't a fighter -- he probably couldn't endure much more punishment.
Farri responded by wheezing for a few seconds, closed his mouth like he struggled to swallow, and hocked bloody spittle in Sinding's face.
A few kicks to the cat's ribs seemed to beat the last of the fight out of him.
"For what it's worth," Sinding muttered as he hauled the cat up to the Altar of Thrond over his shoulders. "I respect that level of spite."
"For what it's worth," Farri wheezed around bloodloss and bruised ribs, "your skin makes good armor once Hircine's got ahold of it."
That was almost ominous enough to make Sinding pause. But no, he'd given an inch with the cat and lost his clothes for it.
The Altar of Thrond was on the opposite side of the Mosering Pass from Mount Mosering -- Sinding didn't know if the mountains the Altar stood near had names. It wouldn't matter for much longer. It was an open-air altar, near icy caves where the hagravens lived.
The hagravens once had been mortal witches -- but long years of profane magic and wicked deeds had twisted them into half-crone half-bird monstrosities. They had the talons and feet of birds, but the shape and heads of bent old women. Yet they all moved like birds -- with unnatural speed for their hunched frames.
There were three of them in the coven Sinding had sought out to cure himself of the beast blood, they formed a huddle near the altar as they waited for Sinding to arrive.
Once he did, they turned to him with wicked smirks and low laughter.
"The innocent didn't go quietly, I see," the eldest of the trio, Ettiene, rumbled with a conspicuous glance downward from Sinding's face. Her sisters cackled wildly at the comment. "Drop it, before it dies of the wounds you gave it. We will work our magics, and you will prepare yourself for the Rite."
Sinding unslung the cat from his shoulder, and passed him to the hagravens. He didn't stay outside to see what they did to him, but went into the icy caves where the hagravens lived to retrieve a change of clothes and his weapons.
The next part of the Rite would get bloody.
The hagravens had lost their cheer when Sinding returned to the Altar with a new set of fur armor and his hunting axe. One had scratch marks on her nose, and the other teeth marks on her skull. The third had a shiner in the beginnings of development.
Farri was laid out on the altar, insensate, stripped bare but with his injuries lessened significantly. The eye and ear were still in a bad way, but his myriad slashes had scarred over, his shoulders were in their proper alignment again, and the slave bracers had been removed.
"The innocent didn't go quietly, I see," Sinding returned Ettiene's words to her as he conspicuously glanced at her soon-to-be black eye.
The hagravens grumbled, but didn't comment further.
"You said the old way of doing the ritual was impossible." Sinding glanced at the cat. "So what's the new way?"
"Without wolfsbane or belladona, and with Spriggans being so badly burned on the south of the island, alterations have been made." Ettiene motioned for one of her sisters to retrieve something from the altar. A crude stone basin soon found its way to her claws, filled with an assortment of vile things.
"Eye of the innocent, which has seen the beast," the hagraven muttered as she prodded a ruined eyeball. "You made it easy to pick which one, we would have argued otherwise."
"I'm so glad I didn't inconvenience you," Sinding responded as dry as a desert.
"It is appreciated." Her talons moved to the next object. "Nightshade and deathbell petals. Fragments of a black soul gem." The wicked crone turned her gaze on Sinding with a cruel smile. "And the most important ingredient. The innocent's heart."
Sinding glanced at the mauled cat on the the altar, or rather, where the cat had been. While they had been distracted, the cat had crawled away -- and begun to roll down the slope away from them. A faint glow of green illusion magic rolled across his flesh.
"Give me a second," Sinding growled and ran through the deep snow after the cat. Were their situations reversed, he hoped he would cling to life as desperately as that Khajiit did. But with freedom from the beast blood within reach at last, he wasn't about to suffer delays forever.
"Cold, cold, cold, cold," the Khajiit chanted as he rolled -- a side effect of nudity in the mountainous region of Solstheim, even when one didn't roll through snow to escape hagravens.
Sinding caught up to him, barely in control of the beast within, and put an end to his rolling with one hand on the cat's neck. With grit teeth and a desperate need to stop any more delays, Sinding met the cat's one last eye.
With a bit of power from the beast within, he plunged his free hand into the cat's chest, broke his ribs, and physically tore the Khajiit's heart out. Sinding wouldn't miss much about being a werewolf -- but the raw power was downright addictive. As he held the heart in one hand, and a dying young man in the other, he knew he had to get rid of the power that day.
If he kept it, the beast would wear down his disgust and worm its way into his mind.
He kept his lock on the cat's eye as the light faded, as the jaw went slack and the body lost hold of itself. The cat had fought against his end as best as he was able, that deserved acknowledgement.
Back up the slope Sinding climbed, heart and cadaver carried with him. Something told him that the hagravens would need the corpse as well.
"Well done, hunter," Ettiene mockingly praised. "You use the Lord Hircine's gift well." She held the bowl out for him to place Farri's heart within.
"Get this over and done with," Sinding muttered and laid the heartless Khajiit on the altar again. He did so gently, as he believed the cat had suffered enough indignity. Farri's heart was laid into the bowl with the other ingredients.
"Isobel, wine," snapped Ettiene. As her sister poured wine into the bowl. "Fallaisse, the salts."
The last hagraven emptied black, orange, and icy white powders into the brew. Once enough wine was poured into the bowl for Farri's heart to be completely covered, they began to chant.
Wicked, evil words they chanted as part of their unholy spell. The surface of the wine sparked like lightning, then caught fire for only a few moments before it let out a crackling noise.
"There now." Ettiene grinned with needle teeth and held the bowl out to Sinding. "Take the heart, and place it back into the innocent's chest."
Sinding looked at the brew. The wine and other ingredients had frozen solid as part of the spell, and the heart was lodged in the middle. He had to use his fingers to break the heart free from the wine before he could remove it from the bowl. It looked far redder than when the ritual had started, as well as smaller. As he took it, Farri's ruined eye seemed to glare at him, half collapsed and frozen in wine.
Tearing out a heart had been easy, but putting it back in was harder. Sinding kept his hand in Farri's chest during the process to make sure he had the blood vessels properly lined up. Farri's body had only just started to go cold when Sinding pulled his hand out the second time.
"Now, supplicant," Ettiene muttered as shet set down the bowl on the altar. "This is where it gets tricky. We have taken bits and pieces from other spells to achieve the same end we could with the old Rite, but there is no guarantee it will work from here."
Sinding's eyes widened and his hand snapped down to his axe. "No guarantees…? But you said -- "
"We said we would attempt to make it work as before." Ettiene smiled and wagged a talon while her sisters cackled. "No promises were made."
Sinding ground his teeth and fought the beast's urge to emerge for vengeance. The Rite hadn't failed yet, so there was hope.
"Get on with it, then," he growled. His hand never left his axe -- though he and the hagravens knew it wasn't the axe that would kill them if he became violent.
--
The Void
'To die in the world of time was to be asleep', the Prophet Vivec had said though I had never heard him say it.
All that he needed to do to live again was to wake up, though I had never killed him.
'Time is an illusion', the Madgod, my friend, had said to me once before his time was done. 'A theory based on the idea that events occur in a linear order. Always forward, never back.'
'Distance is an illusion', I had told myself and others, in another ocean. 'A theory based on the idea that the universe can truly be separated from itself.'
'He was not born a god', the thirty-six documents said with one voice, about the Prophet Vivec. But I knew it to be false. He had, and had not been, born a god. The Prophet had wished for both to be true -- for two to become one. The contradiction did not frighten him as it did others.
'I was not born a Khajiit', I told myself with hundreds of voices. But it was false. I had been born a man in a world without magic, I had been born as the eternally deep ocean, I had been born as a being of viral information, I had been born dozens of times as stillborn creatures. And I had been born a Khajiit. All these things were true, but I had not accepted the contradiction before.
Someone mighty with grahthorns and red eyes lustful for a hunt reached out for my heart. They wanted to chase, and to be chased; to be amongst a pack, and to be alone against their enemies. Beautiful contradictions.
But more than those things, more than their beautiful contradictions, they wanted my heart. For only a moment, it was their entire focus.
It was not my nature to let my heart be taken. I could give it, it could be stolen, or it could be seduced. But I would not lay back and let it be taken.
Fang met the hand that reached for my heart in the Void. Blood that tasted of glory and moonlight flowed down into me, followed thereafter by flesh of strength and conquest, then bones of victory and proclamation.
A hand had reached for me, a bloody stump withdrew.
The mighty one with grahthorns and red eyes was delighted.
--
The Altar of Thrond
Sinding
The hagravens worked their spells, and the flesh around Farri's heart began to mend. A knotted scar formed, where the wound had been. That left only the missing eye and damaged ear as unhealed injuries on the cadaver.
Sinding expected something to happen -- Ettiene had described the last stage of the Rite as the innocent's body being morphed into his beast within, that Sinding could kill it and be free of the curse.
Sinding watched the corpse and expected it to move, at any moment. He watched patiently as moments became minutes. He watched patiently as he gripped his hands so hard the joints popped one by one.
"Your spell didn't work," Sinding growled and turned to face the hagravens.
They seemed terribly confused, and murmured to each other about what had gone wrong. "I don't understand -- we knotted the soul thread appropriately." "The words to restore a life have not changed -- have they?" "Were all those soul gem fragments of the same black gem? We didn't get a lesser soul gem mixed in with them?"
It was clear they hadn't any answers for him. The beast howled in his ears for their blood -- it didn't care that it had almost been cast out, it wanted to kill something. Sinding did too. But as the beast slipped into his blood, his ears became keen.
Keen enough to hear a heartbeat.
His eyes snapped to the cat's corpse. Or rather, a cat playing like a corpse. The beast within sharpened his eyes enough to catch minute shifts in Farri's chest.
"It worked," he muttered. He didn't spare the hagravens a glance, lest Farri escape again. "He's alive."
Ettiene swiped her claw in Sinding's direction. "Foolish Breton --
"I'm a Nord."
" -- the spell was a failure. Accept this. Had it worked, a ravenous beast would have risen, with a piece of your lycanthropy for you to kill. No, no," she waved her arm about. "We'll need to think of something else. Perhaps Krev's method?"
"I tell you -- the cat is alive!" Sinding turned from Farri to glare at the hagravens. "What's the next step of the Rite?!"
"There is no next step," Ettiene snapped back and pointed at him. "If the innocent was alive, the beast blood mixture would send them after you instinctually. They would attack you and you would… you would…." She had turned to gesture at the altar, then looked around in confusion. "Where did it go?"
Sinding felt like pinching the bridge of his nose so hard it would become powder. Slowly, he turned to look at the altar. Sure enough, Farri was gone.
There were no indentations in the snow beyond where Farri had escaped the first time -- so Sinding had no idea where he'd gone. Perhaps the damn cat had found a way to fly.
He wanted to get so angry, his freedom from the curse had been teased and yanked away multiple times throughout the whole ordeal.
"Corpses don't get up and walk away! Where did the innocent go?!" The hagravens stood on the altar and looked down its sides, eager to find the tracks. "Tracks on the eastern side…."
Sinding joined them on the altar, and let the beast within heighten his senses again. He could hear the cat's heartbeat, but lacked the werewolf's ears to pinpoint it. He had to turn his head from side to side to locate it.
The heartbeat was right behind them.
Sinding felt the beast within lose its anger suddenly, replaced by fear and an urge to run. He turned, and saw bloody prints in the snow that walked along the edge of the altar until they came to Farri's feet.
He stood behind them, his lonely eye looking at them with hate. There was something slightly off about that eye -- like it was deeper than before. The cat flipped Sinding the bird, and took a deep breath.
The beast within whined at Sinding to run, to find shelter, anything, but Sinding did nothing. Whatever Farri was about to do, it had convinced Sinding's werewolf that the predator had become prey.
Sinding respected that. "Clever cat," he muttered.
"Ven… Gaar Nos!"
A mighty wind struck Sinding, the hagravens, and the altar they stood on. The stone altar was torn from the ground, as were other stones, as the wind swirled around them in a spiral pattern. Whatever Farri had done beckoned a cyclone to form that carried them and everything it could lift with it.
The hagravens screamed as they whirled down the slopes, lost in stone and snow that mixed with ash as they traveled.
Sinding was silent as the mountains became distant. He didn't utter so much as a sound until the cyclone hit the sea and broke. Momentum carried them a ways before the water rushed up to meet them.
---
Chair grew up in the midwest. He knows very well the power of a cyclone -- no dragon souls needed for the Thu'um.
This one will be telling the story from outside perspective, again. It seems to be the best way to keep the rest of the cast engaged. Chair wants everyone to know, biting the hands off Daedric Princes doesn't always end well. But when it does, oh ho ho ho, is it fun to play with.
Chair is playing the part of Farri, a Dagi Khajiit from Morrowind. His family comes from former slave stock, back in the Third Era. Morrowind is still a nasty place for Khajiit, since the Dunmer have adopted the American model for keeping their slaves. Farri was arrested at the hardened criminal age of seven, and made to serve a twelve year forced labor sentence.
He was accused of stealing from a House Redoran noblewoman.
If anyone is curious Farri before being killed is very similar to how Noburu was before killing his friend in Snapping Turtle, or Ketojan before losing his head. Death and being near death snaps them into being aware of the oversoul, yes?
This one hopes you like the story, and what will come of it. Much chaos laddering has to happen.