Tigress and Hasir went their seperate ways, Tigress went up to her room and Hasir walked over to the sad Khajiit sitting on the
benchwho was singing something soflty under his breath. Hasir eyed his with curiosity,
"Inigo, what was that song you were singing?" He inquired
The Khajiit shook his furry head,
"It's nothing my friend, I was just rehearsing my spider killing song."
Hasir's forehead creased in thought. Inigo turned to him and told him of his love for smashing spiders to bits with his sword; if not
that then shooting them in their many eyes with his ebony bow. Hasir smiled and told the khajiit that he could sing it when they next
see some spiders. He frowned and said that might not be for a while as he now has to undergo the last of the trials Tigress has to
teach him.
He padded Inigo on the knee, got up and went to find Tigress. He went down the stairs, past the lone bazier surrounded by stone
pillars and up another set of steps. He found himself in an identictally stone wall and ceilinged hallway as iif the hall was
symmetrical. He turned left and to his surprise, he found the Ka'po'tun's room. She lay sprawled on her furred bed with her head in a
rolled up wolf fur which served as a pillow, the same as in his and Inigo's room. This one, though, had one exception, it ran thick
with Tigress' tears.
Hasir strode across the darkened room as silently as a shadow and sat on the bed and scratched behind Tigress' ear with a clawed
finger,
"Hasir, come to punch me again?" She said, her voice muffled by the pillow
Hasir cupped his hand to his ear,
"Sorry what was that?" He asked cupping his hand to his ear, "I can't understand pillow talk. Could you speak up?" He asked
She rolled over, Hasir could see her face was streaked with tears and pillow impression marks. Hasir bent closer and told her flat out
that he only sees her as a friend and, yet again, that he already has a mate. She looked at him with her lamp-like eyes and hugged
him. Hasir tried to shrug this unforeseen event away, but Tigress held on tight. She lent close to him to whisper something.
Tigress had thought that Argonians have no ears, but, in actuality, they have a kind of flap over their inner ear which picks up
vibrations in the air and translates them to sounds their brain.
Hasir looked at her completely dumbfounded. He tore his eyes away from her, looking instead at his scaled feet enveloped in the
black fur boots. Tigress lent so close to Hasir that he squealed in fright; toppling to the floor. the floor, nearly taking the fur out
from beneath the Ka'po'tun. He got up and sat back on the bed and stared at the Ka'po'tun in an intense glare as if she was grilling
him for information. He had misjudged the force with which he sat down and sent Tigress somersaulting backwards to land on the
floor with a dull thud. She got up, glared at the argonian and sprang cat-like onto the bed sending him flying five feet in the air and
landing back on the bed. She began to wrestle with him rolling in a mess of green scales and orange fur which lasted a mere five
minutes before they both lay still near the head of the bed giggling madly.
Hasir looked curiously at her while his brow furrowed,
"Why did you keep that secret from me for all these years? Why did you make me think Kassamae, a reptile I never met, was my
mother?"
Tigress sniggered and shook her head,,
"How dumb are you? You thought I was your mother? hardly, Kassamae is your mother, not I," She looked down at the furred
bed spread in shame, glanced over at Hasir and saw no recognition at the name. "You see, Kassamae, she, er, made me your
godmother."
Hasir looked shocked when he finally scrambled onto the bed,
"Ggodmother? How did that happen? does that mean Quinchal is my..." His voice tailed away as he thought on this some more.
Tigress shook her head,
"Yes, but we are not married, you see, there are rules in Akaviri culture that cross marriages are forbidden; by Oblivion, if the
leaders of those two nations found out about such an event would be a death sentence fro the the offending 'couple'."
She looked at Hasir and he scoffed loudly at her,
"Forbidden marriage? That is utterly ridiculous." He turned on the bed to face her, "If what you say is true... and you are my
godmother, than how in the hunting grounds did you and Quinchal meet? Surely you did not venture all the way to Blackmarsh?"
Tigress shot him a look that could have soured histsap.
"We have many ships that journey to Blackmarsh, once in the capital city of Lilmoth, we disembarked the Akavir ship and made our
way all the way to the hatching pools where we heard a clutch of Argonian would soon be placed under a nearby Hist tree to receive
their names and souls." She smiled warmly at him, "We journey to the Hist tree by directions given by the Tree-Minder-situated just
north of the hatching pools- and that is where we first beheld the beauty of a little hatchling in the amber liquid surrounding the
tree," She laughed as she remembered this, "He was splashing around in the hist sap and trying to propel himself through it using
his small tail."
Hasir looked at her with a knowing grin, he was certain she was talking about him, to which she smiled and nodded,
"Your mother, Kassamae and father, Istansehk were looking at your like you were the jewel of Argonia, er, at least to them." She
smirked as Hasir rolled his eyes, "Anyway, I, er, saw you, er, he had captivated my with the bluest eyes I've ever seen," She stared
into Hasir's blue eyes, "When I knelt down and scooped the small hatchling up in my arms. Just then something strange happened."
Hasir eyed her curiously,
"What happened? Come on, spit it out." He said impatiently
Tigress looked at him and smiled,
"Very well then, I will tell you. When I touched the hatchling, I saw a symbol of swiling black and white explode behind my eyes like
the red mountain. In Akavir, that is a sign of a great warrior, it is hung in the homes of many Akavirian warriors. I walked over to
your parents who were standing on the far bank of the hist sap pool. I told your parents of what I saw and they shrugged, knowing
nothing of the image."
Hasir got off the bed and paced the room, not beleiving a word that Tigress had said,
"So what your saying is... you were made my godmother because of some image you saw?"
Tigress leaped off the bed, walking to the Argonian, placing her hand on his shoulder,
"That is the jist of it, but, your parents needed a bit of persuading so I started to explain the symbol's meaning and what it meant
for Akavr. In the days that followed." She sighed, spinning Hasir to face her, "I told your parents that the Akavirian warriors, named
dragonknights, rever the symbol above all others. Your parents considerered this and made me your godmother knowing your were
destined for greatness and likewise, that I, or Quinchal, your godfather, could get your there, unfortunately we had to depart shortly
after that exchange and we told Kassamae to had him over to an Argonian named Drujeeta and quickly depart because I foresaw a
great calamity coming."
Hasir had a million questions to ask his godmother but he knew now was not the time to ask them as he knew this training was
important to her. He instead let the questions settle in to his mind for later and walked out to the main room where, surprisingly, he
found Angier standing there smiling at him,
"Hasir, this is Angeir, he has volunteered to help me train you in the way of the voice just as he has trained me." She gestured to her
mentor, "Angeir, you may start the training whenever you are ready." Angeir bowed and thanked her.
Angeir beckoned Hasir to follow him up to the intricately carved door and pushed one of them open. Tiigress hurried to keep up with
them. Outside, Angeir turned to Hasir and Tigress and asked Hasir if he was a dragonborn. The argonian nodded and said he did
absorb a dragon's soul and indeed learnt a word of power. Angeir was eager to see him shout. He took a deep breath and a singular
high pitch note escaped his scaly lips.
AAAIIIEEE!!!
Both Angeir and Tigress frowned, shook their heads and they requested Hasir to feel the words inside his mind's eye, feel them in his
very soul and then shout. Hasir tried this and closed his eyes, muttered the word to himself, felt the words throughout his entire
body and saw them in his mind's eye. He took a deep breath and shouted in a tongue unknown to him.
"Fus Ro!"
a clear blue wind eminated from his scaly lips and pushed Angeir back just five inches despite the power that he, Hasir, had put into
his shout,
"What in Oblivion was that?" He asked, eying Angeir with a confused look
Angier strode over to the confounded Argonian,
"That was called a Thu'um or shout." He said, chuckling slighty as he beheld Hasir's nonplused expression, "It is the ancient
language of dragons. "
The aged greybeard told Hasir that when dragons attack, they actually are speaking in an ancient language known as the Thu'um.
The argonian was about to say something but the greybeard cut across him and instructed him that the Thu'um is something not to
fool around with and it requires strict discipline of one's soul and mind so as to not have the Thu'um eat him alive as it has done to
the dragon priests of old.
Both Angier and Tigress smiled broadly while Hasir looked nonplused,
"Is that it? Am I a fully fledged dragonknight or whatever now?" He asked, his brow furrowed
Tigre strode over put a furred hand on his shoulder and sighed heavily,
"No, You may have the dragonblood and used it to utter a single word, but you must obtain some more words of power before your
training can officially begin."
Hasir looked at Angeir as if he had a massive weight he had to get off his mind,
"Angeir, Ermmm, can you tell me more of the dragon priests? Who where they? How were they related to the Thu'um?" He asked,
head cocked sideways
Angeir held up his hands to silence him,
"Relax dragonborn, all will be revealed in time." He said reassuredly
He told Hasir to go to a word wall a bit north of the monastery and obtain some words of power and then come back and his final
stage of training can begin. Hasir was about to ask how he was to get there when out of nowhere the gates opened and, as if on cue,
a white horse outfitted with magnificent golden Imperial armor came charging at him, snow flew with every step the horse took.
Hasir's chin hit the floor and eyes bulged as he roll dodged out of the way just as his horse, Hashire was about to crash into him.
Hasir skidded to a halt an inch from the mountain side while using his claws to slow his momentum. The horse came to a full stop
while the argonian ran toward him and jumped on Hashire and beckoned Tigress over to him.
The Ka'po'tun paused as if weighing the consequences of going with him. In the end, she took his outstretched hand and got hoisted
up behind him, they waved farewell the Angeir and the horse sped through the gates and down the path that wound down the
mountain. They rode for what seemed, at least to Hasir, for at least a day when the came to a large open area with a word wall
nestled between two upthrusts of earth. He and Tigress dismounted the horse and walked to the word wall, He heard chanting and
the familar sensation of warmth filled his body. All of its energy spent, the words ceased glowing and died altogether. His ears heard
the dragon before he could see it. A great gout of flame missed him by inches and singed the snow cover wall. Hasir looked around
and found himself nose to snout with a giant dragon that had green skin stretched almost to snapping point over its gargantuan
bones.
Tigress' head snapped to her left and saw the small lizard backing away in fright from the giant lizard. She moved closer to Hasir to
try and help him. Unseen by the pair of them, an additional presence glided over the snow like a cold winter wind. He was ripped
from his moment of euphoria by a dull thunk of something heavy falling to the ground. Hasir whipped around and saw a skeletal
being robed in what he could only surmize to be a burial shroud of some kind. The being opened its eyes, which glowed a malicious
red and it did not take kindly to being woken up. Immediately Hasir used the shout he had just learned and zoom across the room at
lightning speeds. Both he and Tigress stared this creature down. Was this one of the dragon priests that Angeir was talking
about? He thought. He unsheathed his axe from its hip holster and, as an afterthought, readied his off hand axe as well. Hasir told
her to deal with the additional threat and he will deal with the dragon.
Tigress bellowed and ran at the undead priest and delivered a round house kick hard in the face, Tigress saw the golden mask fly
threw the air and land with a muffled 'thump' as it lay in the snow in front of the word wall. Tigress turned back and shrieked in
fright as she saw a face with the same knotted and scabbed dead flesh that adorned his hands, yellow teeth and sunken eye sockets
with burning blue eyes completely devoid of every feeling except for pure hatred. Hasir looked over at her and saw the dragon priest
unsheathe a curved staff topped with a dragon's head that breathed a giant ball of fire. It hurtled toward her. He yelled and ran as
fast as he could toward her.
He took a deep breath as he ran, when he was two feet from the dragonpriest he released it,
FUS RO!
The dragonpriest did not even budge as Hasir hoped he would do. Hasir's eyes narrowed and his tail rose like a snake and fell hard
on the burial chamber floor, kicking up dust in the process,
"By Hircine, I thought the outcome would be better than that." He said, face falling like his head was full of rocks instead of brains
The dragonpriest rushed toward the Argonian and flung a fireball at him. The argonian failed to see the flaming orange sphere as it
struck him full in the face. The force of the impact hurtled the Argonian sideways. His body bounced along the snow and skidded to a
halt just inches from the sheer dropoff into the valley below. Tigress' head snapped to the side and her eyes filled with angry tears.
She turned to the dragonpriest, and snarled at him
"You bastard! How dare you hurt my son." She yelled in an accusatory tone
She kicked the dragonpriest so hard, it flew past Hasir and toppled over the edge out of sight,
"Yeah and stay dead, you asshole!" She called, looking toward the direction the priest had fallen. She walked over to the fallen
argonian and helped her son up. He asked her how she learned how to use her feet like that, like they were not merely limbs but
missiles of fur. She laughed to herself and began her tale.
"I trained in the same temple you did with Quinchal." She said as she ruffled his black leaf-like hair
Hasir's tail whipped wildly behind him. He wondered how she knew he trained at the same temple for his beginning trials. Had she
been spying on him? How did she travel to Akavir? Did she have a ship of her own or did she borrow one? For the second time since
the argonian found out the Ka'Po'Tun was his mother he had many unanswered questions whirling about his head. He looked
sideways at her and gave a wry smile,
"Tigress, erm, how did you even get to Akavir in the first place?"
Tigress sat down on on one of the bits of rubble dotting the room and told Hasir that she arrived on the isle of Akavir on a ship that
she learned how to make from her father when was a cub. She told him the boot was called The Silver Moon. Hasir cocked his head
and asked what happened to it. Tigress sighed and said that on the return trip from Akavir, a storm swirled above the ship and
waves the size of frost giants battered the ship. Tigress said she tried to steer the ship away from the strom squalls but the ship's
bow hit an iceberg and sank to the bottom of the sea of ghosts. She told him she swam safely to shore but as she looked back all
that remained of the ship was a mast stinking out of the ocean water.
Hasir scrambled to his feet and stared at the claw marks in the curved stone wall,
"That story is great and all, but it does not get us any closer as to why or even how the 'dragonpriests of old' factor into this." He
said narrowing his eyes and digging into one of the claw marks with one clawed finger. He started to turn around as something
golden glinted in the pinkish-orange sky.
He bent down and saw a golden mask half hidden by snow that looked so fresh he thought it could have fallen in the past two days.
Looking curiously at the strange object, he picked it up, dusted the snow off of it and put it into his leather bag. He called over to
Tigress, her head whipped around to acknowledge him. He beckoned her over to show her the object.
She looked at this carefully,
"I've seen one of these before." She said as she stared wide-eyed at the object
She was about to ask Hasir what in Oblivion was going through his mind as he dealt the final blow to the dragonpriest, but changed
tactics immediately. She explained that her mentor was studying these dragonpriests to find out how they came to be and, in a
hidden chamber in a mountain top nordic ruin called Forelhost, how he came upon a prophecy that lay strewn across the rear wall
from one end of the wall to the other. The propechy, Tigress explained, was a tangled web in its own right and told Hasir it is their
job to find that prophecy and decipher it. Tigress smiled and handed the mask back to the argonian who returned the gesture and
placed the mask amongst the vension and potions that lay at the bottom of his leather bag.
No sooner did he put the mask in his leather bag did another spurt of fire singe the word wall further forcing the Argonian and
ka'po'tun to shield themselves from the intense flames. Hasir's madness axe rattled in its sheath as he ran toward the snarling
dragon, tail swinging to and fro behind him. The dragon's long spiky reptilian tail lashed out, forcing him to roll sideways out of the
way to avoid getting crushed.
Hasir unsheathed his orange spider netted, stone headed axe and swung hard at the spiky tail. The axe bit in but the tail was
carrying too much momenum on the upswing that the shocked Argonian was flung sideways with it. The scaly owner of the large tail
flew skyward and started zigzagging through the air to try to dislodge him. Despite the dragon's best efforts, the stubborn Argonian
still hung on, face screwed up in a half concentrated, half worried way. Keep hold and don't look down. Whatever you do don't look
down. The dragon continued its zigzag flight pattern. He climbed higher as the Argonian clamped his eyes shut to fight the wave of
nausea flooding over him like a ship rocked on the ocean by a fierce storm.
An invisble force whizzed past Hasir and with a roar of distress, it hurtled toward the ground like a out of control carriage tumbling
down a rocky hillside. The Argonian's eyes went wide as he saw the ground spiraling ever closer. Oh Hircine, this is not how I wanted
to die, stuck on the tail of a dragon like a dragon shishkebab! The ground drew closer and closer. Hasir heard a muffled thump as
the dragon kicked up snow as he crashed down feathery wings spayed against the snow, its tail rising in an arc behind it. Hasir
dislodged the axe and slid off the tail like a seasoned dragon hunter.
The dragon roared and a plume of flame exited his own maw; Hasir rolled sideways as he narrowly escaped certain death. The
dragon did not even flinch as it roasted its own scales. Hasir unsheathed his offhand axe and walked around to the front of the scaly
beast, rested his furred foot on the great beast's snout and hoisted himself up on its back so he was riding it like some deluded
cowboy tale of the cowboy riding some kind of scaly horse. Hasir raised both axes into the air so that the moonlight glinted off of the
polished stone heads of the axes. He did not need to worry about transforming because he had on the ring that Kodlak gave him.
The twin axes descended in a downward arch and cleaved clean through the dragon's scaly neck. Tigress clamped her eyes shut and
brought her hands up pressing them into her eyes; careful not to gouge her eyes out with her claws. She did not want to see her
godson roasted alive by a large dragon. She cringed as she heard the horrible ripping noise of flesh ripping open; had it been Hasir's
flesh or the dragon's? She did not knew for certain.
The dragon's head came off and bounced along the snow, painting the snow red as it bounced; a steady stream of crimson, life
giving fluid gushed out of the dragon's neck like some grotesque fountain. The headless body twitched and writhed in agony. It lifted
itself off the snow, wings flapping feebly and then, it fell to the snow again, laying deathly still. He searched the dead body of the
dragon for anything that could of use to him; he found some gold, 2 sets of both ivory bones and scales on the giant creature.
He walked oved to the female ka'po'tun and gestured with his head to the horse,
"Shall we go? Angeir will be worried sick if we don't get back soon." He lowered his godmother's hands and held them in his own,
"Hey, it's okay, that dragon won't bother use anymore I assure you. I killed it." He said, his tail swayed this way and that.
Tigress nodded and walked towards the horse with her son. An inch from the horse she stopped and turned to him tears glistening in
her amber eyes,
"Hasir, I thought I lost you. When I heard the ripping of flesh, I was sure you were dead. I even saw your dead body on the ground.
Thank akatosh you are alright. Let's go back to High Hrothgar so you can get on with your training."
She nodded. He got up on the horse lent down and helped her up on the horse behind him. Griinning stupidly, he kicked the horse
lightly in the sides and rode back to High Hrothgar. On the journey back, Tigress asked Hasir how he finished off that dragon. Hasir
told her that he had to cling to the scaly beast's tail as it continually flung up into to sky to try to shake him off andsome blue spirit
caused the dragon to lose its ability of flight and crash to the ground. Tigress chuckled to herself and whispered into Hasir's ear that
it was she who felled the dragon.
Hasir turned to her and chuckled to himself,
"You? How?" He asked, brow furrowed
Tigress told him to keep his eyes on the road and told him how when Angeir rescued her from that horrible orphanage he brought
her to the ancient monestary on the Throat of the World to train her in the way of the voice to help her defend from the bullies she
had to deal with her entire life. She told Hasir what she had used was a shout called dragonrend.
Hasir was about to ask why the greybeards taught her this particular shout but Tigress cut into him,
"By Akatosh, you think the greybeards taught ME that shout?" She asked him outraged, "Oblivion no, I learned the shout from a
vision I had at the top of the mountain in what is known as the time wound.
They rode back toward the snowy courtyard of High Hrothgar in silence. They galloped to the passageway that snaked its way down
the side of the mountain and retraced their, er, hoofprints back to where Angeir stood anxiously waiting for them.
Pulling the reins hard to make the horse skid to a halt, Hasir dismounted closely followed by the Ka'po'tun. Angier strode up to them
and wore a pleased look on his face and asked the argonian if he finished the task that the greybeard set forth for them,
"So, Dragonborn, did you find what you sought? Are you ready to start the training?" He asked him, "Tigress told me that she is
prepared for the final test." He assured him placidly
Hasir nodded but remembered the item which he had taken from the nordic ruin. He reached a clawed hand into his bag and
extracted the enchanted mask. He moved over to Angeir, his tail slid between his legs as he walked as a horrific thought entered his
mind: what if this were some kind of trap and the greybeards want the dragonpriests' power to themselves? He had to shake off this
thought like an annoying fly that kept buzzing around his head yet his tail did not relax it still lay tucked between his legs.
He smiled at the greybeard who held he hand out for the mask and handed it over, but stopped suddenly,
"Angeir, before I give you this magical tinket, answer me two questions." Hasir asked, eyebrows raised
Angeir looked nonplused but relaxed, giving the Argonian a warm smile,
"Of course dragonborn and what might they be?" He asked
Hasir asked him if they have no ill will intended for the artifact he was to hand over. He said they indeed had no ill will intended. He
said the second question he had banging on the walls of his mind was how Tigress learned the 'dragonrend' shout. Angeir cringed at
the mention of the shout as if that particular shout was taboo with the greybeards,
"Dragonborn, the greybeard are not privy to the 'dragonrend' shouts in fact we do not teach or even speak of it because it was a
shout made artificially. Hasir cocked hs eyebrows at him in a 'how can one make a shout artificially?' way.
Angeir explained that years ago when the humans saw themselves to be greater than the greybeards, they created a shout to force
the dragons to experience mortality for a short time. The humans feared the greybeards and, in turn, the greybeards cut that shout
out of their teaching curriculum. Hasir asked who could have taught the humans such a diabolical shout. Angeir told him that the
shout was invented by the great shadow to overpower the dragons and warp them to his will.
Angier held his hand out more forcefully toward the argonian coupled with an impatient expression,
"That is why we need the masks, they hold special powers that we can use to combat the great shadow and his minions."
Hasir asked who its followers were. Angeir sighed and said coldly that he already told him that the dragons and dragonpriests are
being turned by the being for some reason, a reason that they had not yet known.
Tigress gasped and told Angeir the dream vision she had of the great shadow and his winged servants. Angeir walked over and put
his hand on her shoulder,
"Tigress, why did you not tell me that you had the gift of foresight?" Tigress shrugged, apparently not knowing this herself.
Angeir turned to Hasir who was leaning against the stone pillar to the right of the double doors. Again, he held out his hand,
reluctant to do so, he slowly lowered his hand into his bag, grasped the mask and thought of knocking the greybeard unconscious
with the mask and preparing to make a run for it, but thought against it. He extracted the mask and handed it over. Hasir expected
the greybeard's eyes to turn red or the sky to turn dark with lightning flashing but it did not. The sky remained the way it had been
and the greybeard's eyes did not flash red. What it did do, however, was brighten a little bit as Angeir scanned the golden mask
with the outline that the shimmering light cast on the mask,
"How extraordinary, I appears what you brought was a dragonpriest's mask, Krosis' I think." He said, deep in thought
Hasir and Tigress cocked their heads and gawked at him,
"Who is Krosis?" They asked in unison
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