I plan to update Chapter by Chapter, weaving the Harborage Quests with the DC Questline until they merge, and going from there.
I've recently edited my previously posted chapters to include a few side quests and some random NPC dialogue where appropriate for giving extra perspective, and am again posting new chapters to the story.
Chapter One: Soul Shriven in Coldharbour
Gasping, disoriented, I jerked upright as I woke, vivid flashes of a dream or memory echoing through my mind. I sat on the bare stone floor for several moments, fingers splayed against the rough coldness before pressing them to my aching chest, where I could have sworn a strangely garbed Altmer had moments ago stabbed me.
Silent stillness greeted my hands, and I blinked in shock, frantically relocating them to my throat in a futile search for a pulse. Nothing but my harshly tearing breaths, and in the distance shouts and clashing weapons repeated a message of danger on the heels of my nightmare. Or was it?
Scrambling to my feet I looked around and found myself in a cell, alone except for a few bedrolls, several occupied by the pale bones of skeletons. I shuddered, turning away to stare at the flames of a small fire, and recalled the sound of flaming torches, of footsteps and chains, the feeling of a metal collar around my neck as I stumbled down a stairway, shackles on my wrists, half dragged by the collar’s chain as the prisoner in front of me was jerked forward…. a strange red banner, behind the silhouette of a figure holding aloft a dark purple crystal in one hand as he stabbed down with the other, then green-blueish vapor rising into the crystal from his victim…. the many, many shards of crystal heaped everywhere…. a limp body being dragged from the stone altar before I was thrust in place, arms pulled roughly apart keeping me prone…. droning whispers as shrouded figures prayed…. pale hair and cruel eyes, the flash of a blade – a monstrous face, dark, horned, eyes glowing blue as I was swept towards it-
I flinched in reflex, then tried to search further back in my mind, uneasiness spilling into alarm as I realized there was nothing to be seen, no memories prior to those glimpses of horror, nothing of myself, of family, of anything beyond darkness, pain and death. But am I dead? I decided I didn’t really want to know just yet.
“How do you feel?” The words, spoken in a deep, almost concerned tone, echoed in my mind. “Can you move?”
I took a few steps towards the door, sidestepped first left then right, backtracked a few quick paces on my toes, then moved forward again. Surprisingly my body felt alert, responsive and well-balanced. I approached the shallow stone steps leading to the cell’s door, wanting a clearer view of what lay beyond it, but as I reached them the translucent image of an old man in rags, holding a simple wooden staff and standing on an intricate sigil, appeared in a burst of pale blue-green light.
“Slowly now.” His voice was the same one I’d heard in my head a few moments ago, calming my instinctive alarm. “You’ve been through an ordeal. Take a few moments to collect yourself.”
“What’s happening?” I asked shakily. “Who are you?”
“Like you, I am a prisoner in this place, yet so much more.” He replied cryptically. “I am the past and the future both. I am despair and hope. The tapestry we weave is a complex one. You cannot hope to see its pattern in its entirety. Not yet.”
“What do you want from me?”
“You must rescue me. And I, in turn, must rescue you. You must escape from this cell. Take up arms and protect yourself. Then, find Lyris Titanborn.”
“Lyris Titanborn? Who is that? I don’t understand…”
But with another burst of pale light, he vanished, leaving in his wake the oddly patterned sigil and a cloud of - wait, are those… moths? - before those too faded moments later.
Running footsteps outside my cell, closer than the distant din of conflict, had me move towards the iron gate, and a tall blonde in rags similar to my own appeared on the other side of the jagged bars.
“Whoa there! Are you alright?” She asked as I climbed the steps towards her. “The name’s Lyris.” She continued, checking the bolt before she swung a huge axe at the lock on my door, sending sparks flying at the impact. “I hope you’ve still got some fight left in you. You’re going to need it.”
I hurried out through the door to find Lyris already several feet away, crouched over a fallen body, and ran over to join her. Is that a – a Dremora?
“Dead.” Lyris noted. “Must have been the runt of the litter.”
My eyes kept straying to the odd features of the corpse’s face as I quickly searched its body, obtaining a bow. I grimaced at the too-large sabatons and left them, hoping I’d find some boots to replace my sandals soon, before jogging down the passageway after Lyris, unwilling to lose track of the one person in existence who I knew, if only barely.
“Keep your weapon ready and stay sharp,” she advised as I caught up, amazed by how much taller than me she was. “This place is full of surprises.”
No sooner had she spoken than another Dremora appeared, axe raised above his head to attack. I stepped aside for a better angle as Lyris parried with her own weapon, all too aware I needed to find a blade of some sort for closer combat. A quick arrow above his shield to the neck staggered our opponent and I continued backing away, drawing the Dremora Churl away from Lyris to keep a clear path for my arrows until he fell. Checking the corpse I found a pair of daggers, and felt slightly less anxious about our chances of survival and escape, despite my lack of armor.
We passed other prisoners, some fighting, some fleeing, and a few pushing against a door which shuddered under the impact of a weight hitting the other side, dust raining down on those holding it closed.
“Don’t stop now.” The Argonian with his shoulders braced against the door warned, pushing back against it, heels firmly wedged in place as he locked eyes with me. “Keep moving! More guards are on the way!”
I sprinted after Lyris, into a large chamber with chains and cages hanging from the ceiling, drawing my daggers when a Dremora Kynval materialized in front of us. I circled him warily, looking for an opening while Lyris attacked with her two handed battle axe, but while blocking against his single-handed axe she received a hard bash with his shield and stumbled back. I darted in, driving my daggers quickly into the narrow gaps between the plates of his armor in quick thrusts, dancing back out of the way and blocking his attack when he swung at me. My smaller size and lack of heavy armor made me quicker, and I darted in and out of range, unbalancing him then slashing and stabbing before retreating, keeping him away from Lyris while she recovered.
The moment he fell, a Kyngald with a flaming staff appeared, and began charging a spell. I crossed my daggers and shoved her off balance, slashing at her deeply when she staggered, her attack disrupted for the moment. I dodged the fireballs she shot at me, stepping in to stagger her whenever she tried to build a stronger spell, then finished her off with a deep slash of my blades.
“Hold a moment.” Lyris rose, walking towards me. “Come here, we need to talk.” I took a few steps closer and she continued. “This place is an abomination. You can almost feel the hatred emanating from every rock.”
“Who are you?” I asked her, wondering what the chances were that this Lyris was the same one the Prophet had insisted I search for.
“A fellow prisoner.” She replied. “The name’s Lyris.”
“Lyris Titanborn?” I guessed. Even if there’s more than one woman down here named Lyris, I doubt there’s anyone else with her height. “I was told to find you.”
“What?” She eyed me suspiciously. “Who told you to find me?”
“A strange figure appeared in my cell.” I explained. “An old man in rags.”
“The Prophet!” Lyris exclaimed excitedly. “He spoke to you? What did he say?”
“He said our fates are intertwined.” I replied. At least, I think that’s what he meant by that weaving comment.
“Ha! That sounds like the prophet, all right.” Lyris laughed. “He’s a prisoner here, too. It was very dangerous for him to speak to you, even for a moment. He must think you can help me.”
“I can still hear his voice in my head?” I admitted. “What does he want me to help you do?”
“Break him out, of course!” Lyris shrugged, fidgeting as though impatient to get moving. “Believe me, I can use all the help I can get. That blind old man is the only person alive who can help us get back home. Tamriel’s a long way from here.” Her words plunged through me, sinking my stomach as they did so. Yeah, that’s what I thought.
“I’ll help you.” I promised.
“These tunnels will eventually take us to the Towers of Eyes.” Lyris told me. “That’s where we’ll find the Sentinels.”
“I have so many questions.” I groaned, unsure where to begin.
“I’m sure you do.” Lyris, despite her urgency, seemed to understand my frustration. “And I’ll answer them as best I can.”
“Who is the Prophet?” As good a start as any, I decided.
“He’s a strange one, no doubt about it, but he’s the wisest man I’ve ever met.” There were stories, layers of them, in Lyris’s eyes as she said this, as though she was reliving epic adventures. “He sees things. The past, the future.”
“What is this place? Where am I?” Although ‘Who am I?’ is a more urgent concern, I doubt you’ll have that answer for me.
“You’re obviously not in Tamriel anymore.” Lyris noted. “Think of the most miserable, depressing place you’ve ever been in your life. That’s paradise compared to Coldharbour. And to top it off, well… there’s no easy way to say it. You’re dead.”
“Then how are we having this conversation?” I asked, having already come to that conclusion.
“I don’t know.” Lyris admitted, frustration lacing her voice. “Once we rescue the Prophet, he can tell you about the Gods and the ways of Oblivion. I don’t understand any of it, myself.”
“If I’m dead, who killed me?” Memories of the cold-eyed Altmer standing over me with his dagger raised stirred, and I squashed them firmly.
“A man named Mannimarco. His Worm Cult is doing some kind of ritual back in Tamriel. They sacrificed you and everyone in this prison, to the Daedric Prince Molag Bal. After you died, whatever was left showed up here. They call you the Soul Shriven.”
“What does that mean?” Probably that my soul has been stripped from me if I take the words literally.
“It means you’re a slave and you’ll spend the rest of eternity here in Coldharbour, working under the lash of the Daedra.” A hint of impatience showed in Lyris’s voice. “Unless of course, you come with me.”
“Are you dead, too?” She didn’t seem to be, but then, I probably didn’t either, at a glance.
“No, I wasn’t sacrificed.” Lyris replied. “The Prophet and I were brought here… conventionally, if that makes any sense. But we’re prisoners here, same as you.”
“How can we rescue the Prophet?” I asked, turning back to the matter at hand now that it seemed I had exhausted Lyris’s knowledge, and possibly her patience, too.
“It won’t be easy.” Lyris shook her head. “The place is watched by magical constructs called Sentinels. We won’t stand a chance unless we can blind them. I’ll tell you more when we get there. And we’ll never get there if we don’t get moving.” I nodded my agreement, following when Lyris turned towards a nearby door. “We should keep moving.” She repeated.
We entered what seemed to be a forge of sorts, just as a huge Dremora threw a man several yards through empty air, screaming, to be impaled onto spikes taller than even Lyris was. Horrified, I kept my distance and fired arrow after arrow, moving obliquely to keep a clean shot as Lyris rushed forward, her battle axe aloft. We made short work of him despite the fire enchantment on his mace, but I was guilt stricken. If I hadn’t delayed us, hadn’t needed so many questions answered, we may have been in time to save the poor wretch on the spikes from his terrible fate.
“Well played friend!” Lyris must have seen some of my self-recrimination, and was making an effort to lift my spirits. “Arkay’s beard, you’re good in a fight!”
I attempted a smile in response, and as we headed for the far passageway, the Prophet’s disembodied voice startled me.
“The God of Brutality knows of your escape.” He warned us. “Hurry!”
We picked up our pace, pushing through the next door so quickly I almost tripped.
The chamber beyond was vast, the ceiling far above us, with jagged outcroppings thrusting up from the ground. I stared in awe, wondering how we would find anything in so large a space.
“The Sentinels are connected.” Lyris told me as we took in the vast space. “If we destroy one, the others will also be blinded for a time.”
If I wanted to keep watch, I’d pick a high point to do it from. I quickly scanned the chamber for stairs or a ramp leading up one of the outcroppings, and decided to head for the closest, hoping there might be some means of access hidden behind its bulk.
“The God of Schemes can see every part of Coldharbour.” Lyris cautioned me. “We need to distract him.”
Thankfully a path appeared to our left, and we raced up the slope, killing any Dremora we saw before they could raise an alarm. The Soul Shriven here were mindless, shuffling, practically corpses, other than a few aggressively feral ones who attacked if we strayed too close. Killing them felt like a mercy.
Eventually, a narrow stone walkway curved up into midair, leading towards what I fervently hoped to be one of the Towers we sought.
“Try to be inconspicuous.” Lyris murmured. “We just got free of this place. The last thing we need is to get recaptured.”
Considering our options, I dropped to a crouch, slowing my ascent, moving as silently as I could.
Lyris nodded in approval and halted. “I’ll keep watch.” She whispered, and I moved forward, trusting her to guard our escape from anything following us. Peering over the summit of the walkway, I found a small plateau ringed by jagged stone, with what could only be described as a disembodied, enormous eye, glowing with dark blue fire, suspended under an archway. Its gaze swept back and forth as it spun in place, and I froze.
You can’t see me, I thought as hard as I could, look away, look away. As if it had heard me, the eye spun away, and I rushed silently forward, dagger drawn, and stabbed it from behind. It stopped, darkening, before dissolving into nothingness, and I turned and fled back to Lyris.
“Quickly!” She urged me, “While he’s blinded, we must get to the Prophet’s Cell!”
We raced back down the walkway and onto solid ground, then through a shallow, glowing stream that felt strange and into the middle of the chamber. Before us was an ornate gateway, and I paused near it, wondering if I was going the right way.
Suddenly blue flames erupted over the gate, then settled into the pattern of an arcane sigil, locking us out.
“Fool!” Thundered a deep voice that sent dread skittering down my spine instinctively. “You will never escape my realm!”
“Herma-Mora’s wagging tongue!” Lyris swore, “The door’s warded. We’ll never get in this way.”
I turned to face her, and saw that she was beyond frustrated. “Damn it!” she continued. “Destroying the Sentinel must have triggered these wards. We’ll need to find another way in.”
I sighed at this, hoping Lyris had something more up her sleeve, and was rewarded when her expression turned thoughtful. “Hmm. Maybe Cadwell can help us.”
“Who’s Cadwell?” I asked, wondering if finding them would prove any easier than our current task.
“Cadwell is the oldest of the Soul Shriven.” Lyris explained, almost fondly. “After years of torment, Soul Shriven usually go insane and turn feral, but not Cadwell. He was already insane before he left Tamriel. Mad as a box of frogs, but completely harmless. You’ll see.”
“How can a madman possibly help us?” I decided not to ask about my possible fate of insanity by concentrating on the here and now instead.
“Cadwell sees things as he wishes them to be. To him, Coldharbour is a wondrous place. It’s his home. And he knows it like the back of his hand. He’s usually down by the river. Let’s go find him.”
I nodded my agreement, and Lyris led me to a campfire where one of the prisoners sat, playing a lute and singing a rather nonsensical song full of contradictions. He had the milky eyes and gaunt features many of the other prisoners shared, but unlike them he seemed sprightly and animated, although the upturned pot he wore on his head gave evidence of his insanity.
“Hello, what’s this? Out for a stroll, then?” He greeted us. “Lovely day for it.”
“You must be Cadwell.” I ventured, as the pot slipped further over one of his eyes.
“Sir Cadwell, yes indeed.” He corrected. “A pleasure! And fair Lyris! Good to see you m’dear! How are you, then?”
“We’re trying to get inside the Prophet’s Cell.” I interrupted. “The door is sealed.”
“Oh dear, oh dear.” The odd man hid his face behind his lute in alarm. “Well, that is inconvenient, isn’t it?” Lowering his lute, he brightened a little, continuing. “Tell you what – I happen to know another way in! Much more of a scenic route. Rather a fun little jaunt, actually. Full of traps, and corpses, and nasty beasties filling up the bits in between.”
I stared at him, bemused. “How do we get through all of that?” I asked, wondering just how bizarre his response would be.
“Rather cautiously, I expect.” Was his reply. “Watch your step, hold your nose, and do mind the traps. There’ll likely as not be a fair dose of running and skull-bashing as well.” Well, I did ask…
“Where’s the entrance?” I thought to check.
“Follow the river.” Cadwell advised us. “You’ll find the door to the Undercroft at the water’s end. Once you’re inside, stick to the light and you’ll find a ladder that will take you right up to the Prophet, straightaway. Do give him my best!”
“Thanks.” I offered dryly.
“Best of luck.” His white eyes seemed to twinkle merrily. “Do check in now and again, won’t you?”
Not if it means coming back here, if I can help it! I thought to myself, then realized that was rather ungracious of me.
“Tell me about yourself, Sir Cadwell.” I invited him, wondering how much like this odd fellow I might yet find myself becoming in time.
“Well, there’s not much to tell, is there?” How can someone sound so delighted and self-deprecating at the same time? “It’s the same old pish-tosh.” He continued. “Gallant knight, epic quests, rescued maidens. I came to this land when my head was quite unceremoniously separated from my body. Bad luck that, but you make the best of things.”
“How long have you been here?” I encouraged him.
“Oh, quite a long time.” He mused. “In fact, I wouldn’t be a bit surprised if I was the oldest of the Soul Shriven. Of those who didn’t go feral, that is.” I suppressed a shudder, hoping he hadn’t noticed. “I know every tunnel and path, every nook and cranny. The others look up to me, I suppose.”
I glanced at the other Soul Shriven nearby, remembering that one had been pressing his hands to his ears as we approached, clearly not a fan of Sir Cadwell’s singing. But there were several more nearby, little more than shuffling corpses, milky eyed, silent. How long does it take to become like that?
“How do you know Lyris?” I changed the subject.
“Ah, Lyris. Girl’s as mad as Sheogorath’s jammies.” I blinked at that. Pot, kettle? “Heart’s in the right place, I suppose. Says she’s going to rescue the Prophet to save us all from eternal torment. How an old blind man could do that is quite beyond me!” I had my own doubts, but considering my other options for escape were exactly nil right then, I deemed it prudent not to mention them.
“How do you know the Prophet?” I asked.
“An Imperial gentleman.” News, but not relevant. “Apparently he was once a powerful mage, but the years haven’t been kind. Lyris says he knows of a path back to Tamriel. I rather think that if one existed, I’d have found it by now.” Sir Cadwell sounded a little miffed at this.
“You don’t think there’s a way to get home?” I asked, my silent heart sinking.
“I hadn’t actually given it much thought. Anything’s possible, I suppose.” And he sounded distinctly disinterested in that possibility. “Truth is, I’ve been here so long, this place feels like home. But a good uprising now and again is a pleasant diversion, so where’s the harm, eh?”
Lyris was right, I decided, Sir Cadwell is most definitely insane.
Thanking him, we bade our farewells and followed the river towards the Undercroft, Lyris muttering her misgivings as we ran; “Cadwell seems to think this Undercroft is a delightful place. That probably means it’s a death trap. We’d better be careful.”
Finding a locked door barring our way, Lyris shrugged at me as though to say her axe wouldn’t be of much use on its less exposed mechanism, and I dug through the pockets of my rags in futile hope of a key. What I found instead was a handful of lockpicks, and I was glad of the extras as my clumsy attempts broke more than one.
“The sooner you get that door open, the sooner we can get out of here!” Lyris urged me, and I clenched my teeth, hardly daring to breath as the final tumbler clicked into place. Whatever secrets my past held, I doubted picking locks had been a frequent past-time, but at least we were through.
“This place stinks of death and decay.” Lyris muttered as I stared a the glowing blue pods on stalks growing from the rocky ground, a shimmering ward ahead I had no way to avoid, and flames of orange fire. Stick to the light? Which light? I attempted to leap the ward, but caught the edge, activating it. I broke free of the frost spell and hurried down the tunnel to fend off a rising skeleton in tattered robes. It fell quickly after a few blows, and ahead the tunnel branched at a set of stocks, into a twisting labyrinth of dead ends, glowing blue puddles and those strange pods, and both blue and orange flames.
My indecision was interrupted by yet another skeleton attacking us, and after it was defeated, Lyris bellowed out a challenge.
“Come get some more, you skeeving Horkers!” she shouted, and I winced at her volume. Deciding to follow the burning torches as the only things emitting light that didn’t glow blue, we battled through skeletons and feral soul shriven, splashing through the puddles of odd, glowing liquid and dodging the intermittent spurts of blue flames erupting from the walls. “Who taught that one to fight, the god of self-punishment?” Lyris quipped after felling a final skeleton, as we finally reached the exit Sir Cadwell had promised us, a door above a short flight of wide stone steps.
I followed Lyris into a round room with a large sigil with Molag Bal’s face in the center, the inner ring of runes glowing blue, the outer one carved into the metal ring containing it all. I picked my way over it cautiously, wondering what message the runes spelled, and through a spiked archway into a larger room than I had expected.
“The Prophet’s cage should be just ahead. Quickly now! We haven’t much time.” Lyris urged, racing ahead. In the center of the room was a sigil just like the one I had stepped over moments ago, except that this one was missing the central ring of glowing runes and depiction of Molag Bal, and instead held a pale sigil that reminded me of the one which had barred our way at the other door to this cell. Familiar purple crystals were piled around the sides of a pair of pedestals, one on either side of the ring, with clusters of blue-flamed candles dotted around the whole. Hovering above and beyond this, between two taller spikes of rock, was the Prophet, suspended within an orb of swirling dark blue, and past him was another spiked archway at the top of yet more stairs.
I really need a moment to figure out the different shades of blue for everything. I decided. Why can’t anyone use a different color?
Coming to a halt beside me, Lyris glanced around quickly. “All right.” She announced. “The good news is, we made it here in one piece and the Prophet looks unharmed.”
Surely nothing could be worse than what we’ve already faced to get here. I thought privately.
“Now the bad news.” Lyris continued, and I wished I hadn’t tempted fate as she spoke. “It’s going to be up to you to keep him safe and get him back to Tamriel. I’m not going with you.”
Wait, what?
“There’s a trick to opening the cell.” Lyris turned to face me as she explained. “The only way for a prisoner to leave is for another living soul to take their place. I need to swap places with the Prophet.”
“There’s no other way?” I asked, horrified by the thought of leaving her here.
“Believe me, I wish there was.” She said ruefully. “But I don’t see anyone else here with a beating heart, do you? If Molag Bal isn’t stopped he’ll destroy everyone and everything we’ve ever loved.”
I couldn’t remember having loved anyone, I couldn’t remember anyone but her and the prophet – and that cult and the elf who killed me – but what she said and the conviction with which she said it, convinced me she felt her sacrifice worth the possibility of preventing something catastrophic from happening.
“I’m ready when you are.” I offered, hoping she could hear in my voice the respect I felt for her bravery, the regret our lack of options caused me.
“Once it’s done get moving,” she advised. “The Prophet will know where to go, but he’ll need your eyes, and your protection.”
At my nod, Lyris stepped onto the glowing sigil, was lifted into the air and an angular pinion erupted from each pedestal. I couldn’t keep watching her as several Dremora materialized and I drew to my daggers, slicing as I stepped towards the first maul-wielding Baunekyn, turning and twisting in a dance of death that my body was finding itself unexpectedly fluent in.
From the corner of my eye, I could see glowing strands of magicka weaving between Lyris and the pinions, before they snapped open to reveal smaller versions of the orb which held the Prophet.
Trying to block out Lyris’s cries of pain I felled the second Baunekyn, and quickly touched the inner orbs to close each of the pinions. Lyris struggled as the strands of magicka, no longer connected to anything else, filled her with light, before dragging her screaming towards the orb-like cell as the Prophet was expelled, somehow passing through her with an echoing boom to fall to the floor beside me.
“Freedom!” He exulted, “I remember this feeling. It will be fleeting though, if Molag Bal has his way.” Straightening and brushing himself off, the Prophet turned to face me despite my silence.
“Thank the Divines, you are safe!” He continued. “There is that, at least. Lyris sacrificed everything, that we might go free. Her sacrifice must not be in vain.”
As he spoke, I stared up at Lyris floating in the swirling orb, her expression stoic, almost blank, before turning back to him.
“Can we find a way to take her with us?” I asked, hardly daring to hope.
“I wish that were possible.” The Prophet’s voice was pained. “But I promise you, once we escape Coldharbour we will find a way to rescue her together, Vestige.” He vowed.
“Vestige?” I queried, confused.
“That is the name I have given you.” The Prophet stated, and I considered that reasonable, given that I couldn’t remember any other name I might use instead. “You are but a trace of your former self. A soulless one. An empty vessel that longs to be filled. It is as the Scrolls foretold, but not exactly as I imagined.”
“Why does Lyris call you the Prophet?” I asked, wondering what the Scrolls were, and why he mentioned them with such… reverence?
“That is what I have come to be called. My true name is lost – even to me.” At this I felt an unexpected kinship with him. “Years of torment have taken their toll. Quickly now, we must make haste to the Anchor!”
“Anchor?” I repeated, wondering what a ship might be doing in these tunnels. Even if this place was named Coldharbour, it didn’t seem very nautical. So, I have some experience with sailing, perhaps? I wondered as the terms sprang to mind unexpectedly.
“The Anchors are Daedric machines of the darkest magic.” The Prophet explained. “Their chains bind our world and pull it towards Coldharbour. I can use one of these Anchors to return us to Tamriel, but you must lead me to it.”
“Alright.” I agreed. “Stay close then.”
“Up the stairs, quickly!” The Prophet instructed, turning and moving faster than any blind man should be able to. “We must get to the Anchor mooring!”
Following the Prophet to the stairs, I overtook him and led the way up through the spiked archway and along a curved passage, praying silently to whichever Divines might be listening that we could by some miracle navigate a safe route through Daedra-knew-where to find Daedra-knew-what.
Once through the door ahead I was stunned by the vast chamber we entered, and what filled it.
Massive gears turned in place around some esoteric pattern of raised circles and glowing sigils in the floor, with enormous pale blue crystals and a ring suspended above stairs leading to midair over a chasm, secured by barbed chains, each link larger than my torso.
“There it is! The Dark Anchor Mooring!” Is this man really blind? I wondered. He seems to see fairly well… and no, not a ship to be found after all.
Breaking into a run, we ran forward only to be halted by an eruption of blue flames from the chasm and the roaring apparition of Molag Bal himself, eyes and gaping maw glowing with the blue flames of stolen souls.
“The mortal thinks it can defy me?” The Daedric Prince of Brutality roared. “Futile! Soon your world will be in my chains.” With that he summoned an enormous skeletal monstrosity to prevent our escape before fading from view.
“Come, I will protect you!” The Prophet promised, and I began firing arrows as quickly as I could before the monstrous skeleton closed the distance, switching to my daggers as it drew too near to fire upon safely. The bones seemed held together by those blue flames alone, but when I looked closer I saw dark strips of leather binding the spine and limbs, and focused my attacks on these. Twisting and ducking, I drew the hideous summons away from the Prophet, surprised by the blind man’s accuracy as he shot glowing bursts of magicka at our foe until our attacks finally caused it to crumple, defeated, in a disjointed pile.
“A moment, Vestige.” Snatching up an amulet from the remains, I approached the Prophet, who appeared unharmed. “The Dark Anchor’s portal is high above us.” He explained, “I will prepare a spell to lift us to it. But first, you must re-attune yourself to Nirn in order to regain your physical form. To do this, you will need a skyshard.”
“A skyshard?” I repeated, unsure what he meant. I could be alive again?
“A shard of Aetherial magicka that carries the essence of Nirn. Some link them to Lorkhan, the missing God of Creation. If you collect and absorb its power, it should restore your corporeal form. I will summon one of these shards for you to absorb.”
“I’m ready.” I couldn’t adequately express how anxious I was to be gone from here.
With this the Prophet turned towards the chasm, raising his face and staff upwards.
“Shard of Aetherius, fall upon us now, and anoint us with your blessing.” The familiar pale light suffused him, filled with a swirling cloud of glowing moths, and a large crystal, shining with a pure, clean blue light, appeared in the center of the nearby glyphs.
“There, quickly! Collect the skyshard!” The Prophet exclaimed, and I stepped up to the skyshard obediently, before pausing in uncertainty as to what I should do. Do I… what, pick it up?
But the crystal seemed to understand my hesitation, suffusing me in its glow and holding me aloft as I seemed to somehow absorb its light, until I dropped with a cry back to my feet to find it gone.
The Prophet had wasted no time, stepping up to the base of the stairs, he thrust his staff aloft.
“Great Akatosh, Dragon-God of time, I require your strength.” He entreated, lowering the staff and tracing glowing patterns with his other hand. “Let the way be opened. Let these wandering souls return home, let the will of Molag Bal be denied!”
A blinding light emanated from the Prophet, and I shielded my eyes until it faded.
“Hurry!” The Prophet called as he ran up the stairs, “We must go now!” Fearlessly the blind man leapt into the void, but instead of falling he hovered briefly before rising into the air. Following him I, too, was swept upwards, through the series of inert rings to the active portal above them, and into Akatosh’s blinding light.
I must have lost consciousness, as the next thing I knew I found myself waking on the floor of a ship’s forward hold, a glowing projection of the Prophet nearby.
“The Vestige awakens, once again.” He observed. “Come here, we must speak.”
Rising, I approached his ghostly form.
“As I feared, we arrived in different locations.” He greeted me. “I am in a city of industry, where men speak of intrigues and plots beneath layers of innuendo and pleasantry. It matters not. You have awakened once again and we must set you on your path.”
“How long was I unconscious?” I asked.
“Days? Weeks? I cannot tell. The voyage between worlds disrupted all sense of time and space.” He shrugged as if to dismiss this as unimportant. “I know only that you were deposited into the sea, and some charitable soul fished you out and brought you to dry land.”
“What should I do now?” I asked, blanching at how close to death I had come once again, and wondering where I would have found myself if I had drowned. Or perhaps I did? I've already died, then been reformed, so what would death now mean for me, if I'm not truly alive? I touched my neck to find my pulse as absent as ever.
“I’m afraid you will have to decide that for yourself.” The Prophet’s apology cut through my musings. “I must focus on searching for a way to repay Lyris’s bold sacrifice. I cannot simply abandon her to the wrath of Molag Bal.”
This I had no trouble agreeing with, and yet… I felt a responsibility to help in some way. “When will I see you again?” Somehow, I didn’t feel that our time had come to part ways, despite our current separation.
“I cannot foresee that. But we will meet again.” His promise eased any lingering doubts I had. “There is still much we need to accomplish. Be wary, Vestige.” The Prophet continued. “Our very plane of existence is in peril. The threat of Molag Bal looms across all Tamriel, and chaos spreads in its shadow. Danger roams the land and will assume many forms. Do not let it catch you off-guard.”
“Where should I go?” I wondered aloud, feeling completely adrift, without anything familiar left to me except this blind old man.
“You must find your own path.” He told me, still refusing to offer a directive. “But perhaps there is a reason for the place in which you find yourself. Explore. Search for a cause to lend your hand. Join with others. You might even seek out those who rescued you from the sea. The choice is yours.”
Finally, a glimmer of a way forward took shape in my mind. “You think there are many who need my help?” I asked, unsure what help I, with no memory of who I might be, could offer anyone.
“Indeed.” He assured me. “I sense that even now there are good people near you who face grave danger. They need your assistance should you be willing to give it. To thwart the will of Molag Bal, we must be willing to skirmish with evil wherever it rears its head.”
“And there are others who would join me in this?” I pressed, anxious for some sense of purpose, or belonging.
“We do not face these troubled times alone.” He promised me. “Many shall rise up to fight this tide of darkness. Wherever you go, you will encounter others who share your courage and valor. Help them if you can, and enlist their aid if you have need of it.”
With this we bid each other farewell, and squaring my shoulders, I walked through the open doorway and into the ship’s main hold.
Edited by Margravigne on March 4, 2025 8:40PM