Poison Song V
2920, Evening Star
2920, First Seed
2920, FrostFall
2920, Hearth Fire
2920, Last Seed
2920, MidYear
2920, Morning Star
2920, Rain's Hand
2920, Second Seed
2920, Sun's Dawn
2920, Sun's Dusk
2920, Sun's Height
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 1
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 10
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 11
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 12
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 13
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 14
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 15
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 16
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 16
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 17
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 18
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 19
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 2
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 20
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 21
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 22
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 23
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 24
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 25
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 26
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 27
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 28
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 29
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 3
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 30
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 31
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 32
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 33
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 34
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 35
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 36
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 4
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 5
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 6
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 7
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 8
36 Lessons of Vivec, Sermon 9
A Dance in Fire, Chapter 1
A Dance in Fire, Chapter 2
A Dance in Fire, Chapter 3
A Dance in Fire, Chapter 4
A Dance in Fire, Chapter 5
A Dance in Fire, Chapter 6
A Dance in Fire, Chapter 7
A dying man's last words
A Fair Warning
A Game at Dinner
A Hypothetical Treachery
A Less Rude Song
A scroll written in blood
A Short History of Morrowind
A worn and weathered note
Aedra and Daedra
Ajira's Flower Report
Ajira's Mushroom Report
Ancestors and the Dunmer
Antecedants of Dwemer Law
Arcana Restored
Arkay the Enemy
Azura and the Box
Biography of Barenziah v I
Biography of Barenziah v II
Biography of Barenziah v III
Biography of the Wolf Queen
Blasphemous Revenants
Bone, Part One
Bone, Part Two
Breathing Water
Brief History of the Empire v 1
Brief History of the Empire v 2
Brief History of the Empire v 3
Brief History of the Empire v 4
Brown Book of 3E 426
Chance's Folly
Charwich-Koniinge, Volume 1
Charwich-Koniinge, Volume 2
Charwich-Koniinge, Volume 3
Charwich-Koniinge, Volume 4
Cherim's Heart of Anequina
Children of the Sky
Chimarvamidium
Chronicles of Nchuleft
Confessions of a Skooma-Eater
Corpse Preparation v I
Corpse Preparation v I
Corpse Preparation v II
Corpse Preparation v III
Dagoth Ur's Plans
Darkest Darkness
Death Blow of Abernanit
decoded package
Directions to Caius Cosades
Elante's Notes
Elone's Directions to Balmora
Fellowship of the Temple
Feyfolken I
Feyfolken II
Feyfolken III
Fighters Guild Charter
Five Songs of King Wulfharth
For my Gods and Emperor
Fragment: On Artaeum
Frontier, Conquest...
Galerion The Mystic
Galur Rithari's Papers
Ghost-Free Papers
Grasping Fortune
Great Houses of Morrowind
Guide to Ald'ruhn
Guide to Balmora
Guide to Sadrith Mora
Guide to Vivec
Guide to Vvardenfell
Guylaine's Architecture
Hallgerd's Tale
Hanging Gardens...
Hanin's Wake
Hanin's Wake
Homilies of Blessed Almalexia
Honor Among Thieves
Hospitality Papers
How Orsinium Passed to the Orcs
Ice and Chiton
Incident in Necrom
Invocation of Azura
Kagrenac's Tools
Last Scabbard of Akrash
Legions of the Dead
Lives of the Saints
Lord Jornibret's Last Dance
Mages Guild Charter
Master Zoaraym's Tale
Message from Dagoth Ur
Message from Master Aryon
Mission to Vivec -- from Caius
Mixed Unit Tactics v1
Mysterious Akavir
Mystery of Talara, Part 1
Mystery of Talara, Part 2
Mystery of Talara, Part 3
Mystery of Talara, Part 3
Mystery of Talara, Part 4
Mystery of Talara, Part 5
Mysticism
Nchunak's Fire and Faith
Nerevar at Red Mountain
Nerevar Moon-and-Star
Nerevarine cult notes
N'Gasta! Kvata! Kvakis!
N'Gasta! Kvata! Kvakis!
Night Falls On Sentinel
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Notes from Huleeya
Notes on Racial Phylogeny
Odral's History of the Empire 1
Odral's History of the Empire 2
Odral's History of the Empire 3
Odral's History of the Empire 4
On Morrowind
On Oblivion
Ordo Legionis
Origin of the Mages Guild
Overview of Gods and Worship
Package for Caius Cosades
Palla, Book I
Palla, Book II
Peke Utchoo's last words
Plan to Defeat Dagoth Ur
Poison Song I
Poison Song II
Poison Song III
Poison Song IV
Poison Song V
Poison Song VI
Poison Song VII
Progress of Truth
Provinces of Tamriel
Realizations of Acrobacy
Red Book of 3E 426
Redoran Cooking Secrets
Reflections on Cult Worship
Rels Tenim Journal Page
Response to Bero's Speech
Saryoni's Sermons
Saryoni's Sermons Manuscript
Scroll of Tyronius
Senilius' Report
Sharn's Legions of the Dead
Silence
Sithis
Smuggler's Island
Song of the Alchemists
Special Flora of Tamriel
Spirit of the Daedra
Starlover's Log
Surfeit of Thieves
Tal Marog Ker's Researches
Tamrielic Lore
Tarer's Aedra and Daedra
The Affairs of Wizards
The Alchemists Formulary
The Annotated Anuad
The Annotated Anuad
The Anticipations
The Arcturian Heresy
The Armorer's Challenge
The Art of War Magic
The Axe Man
The Battle of Red Mountain
The Black Arrow, Volume 1
The Black Arrow, Volume II
The Black Glove
The Book of Daedra
The Book of Dawn and Dusk
The Brothers of Darkness
The Buying Game
The Cake and the Diamond
The Cantatas of Vivec
The Changed Ones
The Consolations of Prayer
The Doors of the Spirit
The Dowry
The Dragon Break Re-Examined
The Eastern Provinces...
The Final Lesson
The Firmament
The Firsthold Revolt
The Four Suitors of Benitah
The Gold Ribbon of Merit
The Hope of the Redoran
The Horror of Castle Xyr
The House of Troubles
The House of Troubles
The Importance of Where
The Legendary Scourge
The Locked Room
The Lost Prophecy
The Lunar Lorkhan
The Madness of Pelagius
The Marksmanship Lesson
The Mirror
The Monomyth
The Old Ways
The Pig Children
The Pilgrim's Path
The Posting of the Hunt
The Prayers of Baranat
The Ransom of Zarek
The Real Barenziah v I
The Real Barenziah v II
The Real Barenziah v III
The Real Barenziah v IV
The Real Barenziah v V
The Real Nerevar
The Rear Guard
The Red Book of Riddles
The Ruins of Kemel-Ze
The Seed
The Seven Curses
The Seven Visions
The Third Door
The True Nature of Orcs
The True Noble's Code
The War of the First Council
The Waters of Oblivion
The Wild Elves
The Wolf Queen, Book I
The Wolf Queen, Book II
The Wolf Queen, Book III
The Wolf Queen, Book IV
The Wolf Queen, Book V
The Wolf Queen, Book VI
The Wolf Queen, Book VII
The Wolf Queen, Book VIII
The Wraith's Wedding Dowry
The Yellow Book of Riddles
tradehouse notice
Trap
Unnamed Book
Vampires of Vvardenfell, v I
Vampires of Vvardenfell, v II
Varieties of Faith...
Vernaccus and Bourlor
Vivec and Mephala
Where Were You ... Dragon Broke
Withershins
Words and Philosophy
Words of Clan Mother Ahnissi
Yellow Book of 3E 426
Zainsubani's Notes
 

The Poison Song
Book V
By Bristin Xel



For two days, the House healers attended Tay in his bed, and Baynarah sat by his side, holding his hand. He was feverish, neither asleep nor awake, screaming at invisible phantoms. The healers complimented the young man's fortitude. Bodies had washed ashore on the island of Gorne several times, many during the War, but never once had they seen one that lived afterwards.

Aunt Ulliah came in several times to bring Baynarah food: You must be careful, dear, or when he's all well, he'll have to attend you on your sickbed.

Tay's fever broke, and at last he was able to open his eyes and see the young woman with whom he had spent seventeen years, all but the first year of his life. She smiled at him, and called for food. In silence, she helped him eat.

I knew you wouldn't die, cousin, she whispered fondly.

I hoped to, but somehow I knew I wouldn't either, he groaned. Baynarah, do you remember all those nightmares I told you about? They're all true.

We can talk about it when you've rested some more.

No, he croaked. I must tell you everything now, so you'll know what kind of a monster you call your dear cousin Tay. If there was some way you could have known before, you might not have been so eager to see me well again.

A tear rolled Baynarah's cheek. She had grown into a beauty, even in the few months he had been away in Mournhold. How can you think I would stop loving you, no matter what you've done?

I saw my old nursemaid Edebah, and spoke to her.

Oh, Baynarah had feared this moment. Tay, I don't know what she told you, but it was all my fault. You remember when Kena Grafisi taught us about the House Dagoth, and its corruption. That night, I saw your nursemaid making some kind of altar out on the north lawn, using the symbol of the Sixth House. She must have been doing it for years, but I never knew what it meant. I told Uncle Triffith, and he sent her away. I've wanted to tell you so many times now, but I was afraid to. She was so devoted to you.

Tay smiled. And didn't it frighten you even more to wonder if there was any connection between her devotion to me, and her devotion to the accursed House? I know you, Baynarah. You're not one of those women who doesn't choose to use her mind.

Tay, I don't know what she told you, but I think she was very troubled, and whatever she thought about you and the Sixth House was wrong. You have to remember that. The ramblings of one madwoman are proof of nothing.

There's more, Tay sighed, and held up his hand. For a moment he blinked, and then turned to Baynarah angrily. What happened to my ring? If you saw it, you must have known already that everything I'm saying to you is true.

I threw the filthy thing away, Baynarah stood up. Tay, I'm going to let you rest now.

I am the heir of House Dagoth, Tay was wild-eyed, almost screaming. Raised after the War as House Indoril, but driven by the Song of my ancestors. When we were young, I killed Vaster because the Song told me he had stolen my inheritance. When Edebah told me who I was and gave me this ring, I killed her and burned her house to the ground, because the Song told me she had served her purpose. When I returned to Kalkorith's house, my love was there, telling me that she was of the House Dagoth too, and my sister. I fled, and when Kalkorith tried to stop me, I slew him, because the Song told me he was an enemy.

Tay, stop, Baynarah sobbed. I don't believe a word of it. You've been feverish...

Not Tay, he shook his head, breathing heavily. The name my parents gave me was Dagoth-Tython.

You can't have killed Edebah, you loved her. And Vaster and Kalkorith? They were our cousins!

They were not my true cousins, Tay said coldly. The Song told me they were my foes. Just as it's telling me now that you're my foe, but I won't listen. And I'll keep from listening... as long as I can.

Baynarah fled from the room, slamming the door behind her. She took a key from the her startled maid Hillima, and secured the lock.

Serjo Indoril-Baynarah, Hillima whispered, with great sympathy. Is all well with your cousin, Serjo Indoril-Tay?

He'll be perfectly fine once he rests, Baynarah recovered her dignity, wiping the tears from her face. No one is to disturb him under any circumstances. I'll take the key with me. Now I have much work to do. I don't suppose anyone's spoken to the fishermen about restocking Sandil House's supplies?

I don't know, serjo, said the maid. I don't think so.

Baynarah marched down to the docks, and relieved her troubled heart the only way she knew how, by concentrating on small things. Tay's words never left her, but she found temporary comfort talking to the fishermen about their haul, helping determine how much should be smoked, how much should be sent to the village, how much should be delivered fresh to the House larder.

Her aunt Ulliah joined the discussion, oblivious to Baynarah's well-disguised agony. Together, they discussed how many provisions Uncle Triffith and his commanders had devoured during their weeks on the island, when they would be expected to return, and how best to prepare. One of the fishermen on the docks called out, interrupting.

A boat is coming!

Ulliah and Baynarah greeted the visitor as she arrived. It was a young woman dressed in the robes of a Temple priestess. As she docked her small boat, Baynarah marveled at how beautiful she was, and strangely familiar.

Welcome to Gorne, said Baynarah. I am Indoril-Baynarah and this is my aunt Indoril-Ulliah. Have we met before?

I don't believe so, serjo, the woman bowed. I was sent by the Temple to inquire whether word had come from your cousin, Indoril-Tay. He has been missing from his classes for some days now, and the priests have become concerned.

Oh, we should have sent word, Ulliah fretted. He came here a few days ago, half-drowned. He's better now. Let us escort you up to the house.

Tay's resting now, and I asked that he not be disturbed, Baynarah stammered. Actually, I know it's dreadful manners, but I need to talk to my aunt for a moment. Would it be too terrible if I asked you to wait for us at the house? You have only to follow the path up the hill and across the lawn.

The priestess bowed again humbly, and began the walk. Ulliah was scandalized.

You know better than to treat a representative of the Temple that way, she snapped. You can't be so exhausted from tending your cousin to have lost all sense of civility.

Aunt Ulliah, Baynarah whispered, drawing the woman away from the ears of the fishermen. Is Tay truly my cousin? He believes himself to be ... of the House Dagoth.

Ulliah took a moment to respond. It's true. You were just a baby yourself during the War, so you couldn't know what it was like. There was not a part of Morrowind that wasn't ravaged. There was even a battle here on the island. Do you remember that burned pile of wreckage you and Tay and poor little Vaster discovered so many years ago? That was the remains. And after the War, when that accursed House was finally defeated, we saw the little innocents, the orphans whose only crime had been born to wicked parents. I admit there were some in our armies, the combined forces of the Houses, who would have had them all slaughtered to annihilate the legacy of Dagoth. In the end, compassion prevailed, and the children of the Sixth House were adopted into the other five. And so we thought that we had won the war and the peace.

By the Mother, Lord, and Wizard, if all that Tay believes is true, then there is no peace, Baynarah trembled. He claims that the Song of his ancestors called to him, and forced him to slay three people, two of them our Housemen. Cousin Kalkorith and ... when he was a little boy ... Vaster.

Ulliah held her hands over her tearful face and could not speak.

And it is only beginning, said Baynara. The Song still calls to him. He said there were others who knew, who would help him raise up the Sixth House. His sister...

It must be an evil fantasy, Ulliah murmured. She noticed that Baynarah's gaze was now upon the path leading from the docks towards the house. Niece, what are you thinking?

Did that priestess give us her name?

The two women ran up the path, calling for guards. The fishermen, who had never seen the mistresses of the house so undone, looked briefly at one another and then followed quickly behind, pulling out their hooks and blades.

The front gate to Sandil House stood wide open, the first of the corpses lying close within. It was now an abattoir, painted fresh with blood. There was Aner, uncle Triffith's valet, gutted but still seated at the foyer table where he had been enjoying his afternoon glass of flin. Leryne, one of the chambermaids, had been decapitated while carrying some once-clean linens up the stairs. The bodies of guards and servants sprawled about the hall like blown leaves. At the top of the stairs, Baynarah had to hold back a sob when she saw Hillima. She lay like a broken doll, slain as she tried to pull herself out onto the narrow window ledge.

No one spoke, not Baynarah, nor Aunt Ulliah, nor the fishermen, as they walked slowly through the blood-drenched house. They passed Tay's sick-room, its door broken open, and no one within. When they heard the sound of footsteps in Baynarah's room down the hall, they approached slowly, cautiously, with great dread.

The priestess from the docks was standing by the bed. In her hand was the silver ring Baynarah had taken from Tay's finger. In her other hand was a long, curved blade, splashed like her once pristine gown, with gore. She smiled prettily and bowed when she saw she was no longer alone.

Acra, I should have recognized you by Tay's description in his letters, Baynarah said in her steadiest voice. Where is my cousin?

I prefer to call myself Dagoth-Acra, she replied. Your false cousin, my true brother, has already gone to fulfill his destiny. I'm sorry you were not here so he could give you a more permanent farewell.

Baynarah's face twisted in fury. She motioned for the fishermen, who advanced with their weaponry. Tear her apart.

The Sixth House will rise again, and Dagoth-Tython will lead us! Acra laughed. Her words were still echoing as she gave the sign of Recall and vanished like a ghost.