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I don't think I have anyone to invite, unfortunately. At least no one that I'm not pretty sure is too busy.

How do you think you are going to approach player characters this time around? Is everyone going to be students again, or are you going to make things more flexible based on the preferences of the collection of players you get? I'm just trying to decide on if I want to try a new approach to a character, or re-tread old ground.

I would say there is a good chance I would be interested in joining. I am looking for something to join where I would be reasonably confident in having a good amount of activity. I think having a small group is a good start for that, to avoid the waiting game.

I'll need to think up a character. Maybe a huge, psychic winged lizard...
I think I could be interested in something of the sort.
Do’rhajul had heard the Altmer’s request, though he had already been taking his assessment of the situation. Their momentum was stalling, which was particularly dangerous for a battle against a larger force. Perhaps doubly so with the composition of their own forces. He had been a commander in Skyrim’s civil war, and he had experience fighting with and against Nordic forces. Their warrior culture, and particularly their belief in Sovngarde, could make them both ferocious and surprisingly fearless in battle. The Nordic recruits in his own forces tended to fight harder and did not easily waver, though they sometimes broke formations and became “lost” in the fighting. Legion training could even out their eccentricities, but the Stormcloaks fully embraced those tendencies, molding them into their strategies. If they had high morale and momentum in a battle, the Stormcloaks could seem unstoppable. Their attacks were quick and powerful, and their victories devastating. But, the other edge of that blade was that they could be reliant on their morale. When their momentum could be stalled, when they could be made to call into question their victory, the formations they fell into were undisciplined. In Do’rhajul’s experience, Stormcloak retreats were costly, and their losses disastrous. He did not know the histories of Hjergir’s soldiers, but he could see plainly that they fought much more like Stormcloaks.

What the Dominion commander wanted might have been appropriate for his own forces, but Do’rhajul had to adapt his approach to the soldiers he was given. Hjergir himself was embroiled in a duel with a Xivilai, so Do’rhajul had to be the one to act. “These are Nords; we must use them to their strengths. Push the frontline when we make the opening.”

“Yerig, behind me. We need to clear a path.” Do’rhajul said to the old Nord. They moved closer to the battlefield’s right flank, where many of the Nordic warriors were fighting. The frontline had become a brawl between the Thu’um-empowered Nords and the Daedra. The Nords were more deadly, but every kill the Daedra did make was more impactful. If Do’rhajul wanted to take advantage of the Nords’ ferocity, he needed to give them a more clear advantage, and for that, he had to make sure none of his allies were in front of him. Do’rhajul himself took up the task of clearing the way for Yerig. Over the years, the threat that the lycan clans had perceived from Do’rhajul as Vile’s general had diminished, but he was the man who had once defeated Meesei in single combat, leaving a mark on her health that had lasted a decade. He had not grown as the Champion’s pack had, but he was still showing that prowess.

Do’rhajul’s push through the brawl looked almost effortless. He too had the winds of Yerig’s shout guiding his weapon, and he knew more than most how to take advantage of it. Skaafin and Dremora both saw the towering Khajiit as an obvious threat, but each encounter lasted mere seconds. A single decisive thrust to exposed flesh from Rhajul’s ebony sword, or perhaps a quick parry and counter if the Daedra sighted him first. Without an organized effort from the Daedra, there was hardly anything that could be called a fight to slow his steady and sure advance, and with Spellbreaker as an impassable wall to opposing mages, Yerig could simply walk behind his protector as they moved into position.

With their allies finally behind them, Yerig, his breaths deep and steady, gave a gentle tap with his sword’s crossguard to the back of Do’rhajul’s shoulder, prompting him to move out of the way just as Yerig filled his lungs with air. “FUS-RO-DAH!

While they were outnumbered, this was still a much smaller fight than out on the main battlefield, and they had killed enough of the Daedric force that Yerig’s shout was able to reach to the very rear flank of the Daedra’s loose formaion. The unrelenting force of Yerig’s shout threw everything from Scamp to Ogrim through the air. Many would survive, though depending on how far they flew or how they landed, some would not be so fortunate. Yerig’s shout had only affected a long line of foes directly in front of him, but he had still cleared out an opening straight through to the rear of the Daedric forces, and the Nordic warriors around him were more than happy to charge straight through, inspired by the might of Yerig’s voice. Do’rhajul did not have to even give the order.

There was still a small force of Daedra on the far right flank that had not been caught in Yerig’s shout, but they were caught between the Nords on one side, and Senche cavalry on the other. The main force of Daedra would now find themselves with both Nordic forces and cavalry moving around their flank and behind them, with an organized Dominion formation in front of them. The Daedra would fight to the last, but that advantage they had in numbers would not be as relevant when they were outflanked on nearly every side.

From Sabine’s portal, Meesei landed on the ground with a thud just behind the Dominion forces, so she was not in a position to lead the charge among her own soldiers. Though, that did not terribly concern her. Even if she had no actual authority among them, she did not need to be giving orders to fill an impactful role among a magically inclined force. With the gaps they had initially opened up to accommodate the Nords’ retreat, Meesei moved forward between the Dominion ranks towards the front. She stood tall above them, taking a moment to observe, perhaps even inspect their formations. They were professional and disciplined like the Legion, but there was something even more to them than that. It was something that was difficult to really identify at first, but Meesei felt that she finally understood it. It was a trait shared among soldiers from some of their own clans from Dominion territories. It was confidence that make them seem like more of an unbreakable unit compared to even Legion soldiers. They had the same degree of training, but also complete confidence both in that training, and in their leadership. Even in the face of Daedric hordes, their formation was as clean and organized as if they were putting on a show in a parade, because they trusted fully in the skill of the commander that ordered them into that formation.

Nevertheless, as enlightening of an observation as it was, Meesei still had the battle in front of her to fight. She supposed she would see how adaptable they could be to the actions of an outsider among their ranks. For magically-inclined allies such as these, Meesei could easily think of what would serve the greatest advantage to them. Something that was, perhaps, familiar to them, if not surprising to see come from a werewolf.

Though not a damaging spell, the power Meesei pushed through her fingertips was still great. Once at the frontline, Meesei extended her hands out wide, giving structure and form to a spell for which that very idea seemed like a paradox. Long, sharply-glowing dispelling chains shot forth from her hands, which she then lashed across as much of the Daedric frontline as she could. Compared to her early attempts at the spell during her duel with Teroiah, she had refined the technique considerably. They now tore apart the structure magical structure of spells and enchantments more easily, and without as much of a drain on her magicka. All across the Daedric front, wards and other spells were essentially ripped apart into formless magicka, leaving them with no magical defenses to speak of. Meesei was not sure if any rumors of her duel with Teroiah had escaped that arena, but if they had, then Meesei was certainly giving them credibility.
Along the left and right flanks of the Daedric force, the Senche-raht and their riders were in position. The riders tended to wield lances, bows, or spells, though especially compared to horses, the battlecats themselves were also particularly fearsome. Cavalry generally relied entirely on their maneuverability and could not fight head-on, but the might and intelligence of Senche could allow them to break that rule. They were effectively another frontline force that was surrounding and constricting the Daedra, but the advantage they provided would not matter in the end if their actual frontline were to break.

The spiderlings had already begun to move in by the time their presence was made known. Across the front, both the Nords and Dominion would find some of their soldiers dropping from paralytic bites, weakening the cohesion of their attack. Some of the more ravenous and opportunistic Daedra, like scamps and clannfear, pounced on the opportunity to execute their helpless foes before they could be defended. The efforts of Rossarm and his mages did provide a quick and effective defense. The Nords in particular were resistant to the chilling cloud of frost at their feet, but for the spiderlings, it was like a blizzard. Those that were not killed became sluggish, especially compared to the mortal warriors who were now aware of their presence. The frail creatures were easily crushed, but their intervention had halted the momentum of the mortal forces. Casualties were still far greater among the Daedra, but the chaos had broken up formations and caused the front to devolve into effectively a brawl. It was a fight that would still have favored the mortals empowered by the Thu’um, but with less pressure on the Daedra’s mages, some of them began to empower their own warriors as well with enhanced speed and strength. Restoration may not have been the strongest skill among Daedric mages, and they were not as effective as Yerig’s Thu’um, but it meant the Daedric warriors were not entirely outmatched.

Meesei and Sabine, too, were encountering more resistance. The Daedric mages near the rear of their force, too far to assist the frontline, could still easily attack the top of the tower from afar all at once. They were met with a barrage of fireballs and spikes of ice that forced Meesei to halt her attack just to protect herself. Given the range they were attacking from, the incoming spells did not have pinpoint precision, and they could not overwhelm either Meesei or Sabine’s wards, but they did force the pair to split their attention between offense and defense. Meesei still launched exploding fireballs from above while maintaining her ward, but she was not as effective as she wished to be.

“We can do more on the ground.” Meesei said with a slight, frustrated growl. Not only were they more limited in the kind of attacks they could launch, but from their position, neither of them could help defend their allies from enemy magic. “Could you get us down there again? Right to the front. You might be able to use him.” She remarked, tilting her head back towards Leaps. Fendros had to leave him on the roof to fight in the tower, so the agitated Wamasu was currently just waiting and hiding away from the incoming fireballs.
The use of wards from the likes of Rossarm’s mages and Dominion soldiers did help to reduce casualties among Hjergir’s forces through their charge, but it was Sabine that truly gave them their opportunity. Even Meesei had not been sure what to expect when Sabine started to call forth her spell, but she ended up in almost as much awe as their soldiers on the ground. The Staff provided the power for the scale of the spell, true, but Sabine still had to be the one to give the magic shape and form. It was no spell that Meesei had taught her, but rather a combination of her own making. But, Meesei’s pride aside, she still had to focus on her own contributions.

Meesei, from atop the tower, did not opt for a complex spell, nor even an original one. Indeed, the spell she charged was the same, straightforward torrent of lightning that she had attempted to use against the Daedric Titan. Though, this time, her target could not simply fly away. Mages like Sabine and Rossarm had ample ability to cast their spells over large groups, so Meesei decided to focus more concentrated power on specific targets. Daedric spellcasters were the greatest threat to their frontline, but from above, the sources of the spells were easy to see. Once she was surrounded in a storm of lightning, Meesei pushed both hands forward and, with them, sent a stream of lightning into the Daedric lines. She did not aim too close to the front, so as to avoid friendly fire. Her spell was like a knife, cutting a narrow path from mage to mage through the Daedra, with such power as to completely overwhelm any attempt at a ward or other defense.

When the Twilights were knocked from the air, it removed a majority of the incoming spellfire and allowed their warriors to focus purely on the Daedra in front of them. And with the Thu’um empowering them, they hit the Daedric lines like a charging mammoth. Hjergir’s force consisted of skilled warriors, each one an experienced veteran. Granted, the same could be said of the immortal Daedra, but the Nords were not ones to squander the advantage they had been given. If one watched any individual duel, they would see Nordic blades, axes, and werewolf claws dancing with impossible speed around their Daedric opposition, the winds flowing around and guiding their weapons. The Senche were moving along the sides of the battlefield, climbing through rocks and other terrain that would normally be impossible for cavalry. Hjergir himself picked out the largest, most intimidating Dremora he could see and made him into his prey. While the Daedra was rearing back his cruel, barbed blade for a swing, Hjergir hooked his axe around the Dremora’s shield and yanked it downwards with such force that he nearly broke the Dremora’s hand before he could drop it. The Dremora was experienced enough to keep his swing on course for Hjergir’s neck, but his agility at the moment was nothing short of supernatural. He parried the flat of the Daedric blade with the edge of his shield, then slammed it into the Dremora’s head. From there, he reversed his grip on his axe and delivered a furious assault of repeated blows against the Daedra’s helmet with the spike on the axe’s head. Even Hjergir’s strength and speed could not pierce Daedric metal, but it hardly mattered. The sheer force of the blows were enough to kill the being within.

However, despite the heavy casualties the Daedra were already facing, the tides of battle could still turn in an instant. From within the Daedric formation came a hidden threat, crawling around their feet. Spiderlings, the spawn of Spider Daedra, started to swarm into the allied forces. Their bites carried a form of magic paralysis that threatened to halt their charge in its tracks, and to give the Daedra a chance for a deadly counter-attack.
As difficult as it would have been for the average archer to use a bow in such tight quarters, Fendros was not the average archer, and the pack was more than coordinated enough to enable him. Since Lorag could not move forward, he stayed back just behind Fendros to support him in case the enemy slipped past Kaleeth. Though, the werecrocodile took up more than half of the stairway by herself, and certainly, she had no trouble creating opportunities for Fendros. The axe-wielding Skaafin were aggressive, going straight for Kaleeth’s head, though she demonstrated a surprising amount of control in response, even for her. Her beast spirit was not normally one to fight strategically, but this time, she tilted her head to let the blows deflect at an angle off of her helmet, while at the same time pressing through the Skaafin’s defense with sheer force. She charged forward into the one on the right, allowing her body weight to barrel through him, and the row behind him. Just after, she took a swipe at the Skaafin on her left. Her claws might not have been able to get through Daedric armor directly, but she could still break his arm if he tried to block her. Though, the Daedra behind them were not without the means to fight back. Spearmen who were not being crushed under the weight of those in front of them were trying to find gaps in Kaleeth’s armor, and a mage let loose a stream of lightning straight into Kaleeth’s head.

At the same time, Ahnasha took the chance to conjure a creature while the enemy was distracted. In the spot she could just barely see behing the ranks of Daedra, she summoned forth a daedroth. There might have been more Skaafin farther down the tower, but at least for this group, she could trap them between two imposing, powerful reptiles.

On the ground, the two sergeants that the Dominion officer dedicated to the reinforcements did not command nearly enough troops to effectively resist them, as would be evident once they crested the hill. Hjergir, however, trusted in the Champion. If she and her pack saw fit to break with the plan, then it must have been for a good reason. He pulled every single one of his warriors into support of Do’rhajul. By this point, the Daedra garrisoning the tower had been pushed back entirely inside and were much less of an immediate threat.

With their allies gathering, Yerig stood beside Do’rhajul, calming his mind and taking in a deep breath. He focused, then let out a shout that echoed through the mountains: “MID VUR SHAAN!” The magic of the shout imbued seemed to stir up the wind around each and every one of his allies, allowing them to move and attack with much greater agility.

“By Talos, the Thu’um!” Hjergir shouted as he raised his axe in the air. “Brothers and sisters, the winds of Kyne guide our blades! Charge!”

With various shouts and battle cries, the largely Nordic force charged ahead to meet the much larger Daedric force head-on. Despite their numeric disadvantage, they seemed nearly as fearless as the immortal Daedra they were attacking.

No matter their enemy’s courage, however, the Daedra were not a force to be underestimated. The rain of fire from Rossarm’s mages was undoubtedly effective. From front to back, their ranks were thinning under the magical onslaught, but they did have mages of their own, and the wide area of the spell meant that each individual fireball could still be blocked by a well-placed ward. Even before the armies had reached one another, Skaafin, Dremora, and Winged Twilights flying above shot fireballs, spikes of ice, and lightning bolts into the advancing Nords, against which simple shields provided only limited defense.
Going down into the tower provided a different sort of battlefield for the pack. Although it was a large watchtower, the stairway was still constricting to the amount of people who could fight side-by-side at once. Two of them could move alongside one another comfortably, perhaps three human-sized individuals. Though, it would be hard to justify not sending in Kaleeth in the very front of their advance. In tight quarters where she could not be surrounded, and the enemy had few options for escape, a behemoth like her could thrive.

Following Fendros’ order, Kaleeth moved down into the stairway alongside him, with the others following behind. Ahnasha decided to allow Janius and Lorag to move in the middle, with herself at the rear. Unlike the others, she could actually meaningfully help without being at the front. The top floor, below the roof, was empty of resistance, though as they passed by, they would be able to see several tables with maps, scrolls, and some other objects. Once the tower was clear and the reinforcements defeated, they could potentially gain some useful information from it, as long as there was someone present who could read the Daedric language.

While they had been able to surprise the archers, those below had, of course, heard the fighting above them. As they started to head down to the next floor, they finally encountered resistance on the stairs, and as it seemed, the Skaafin were putting their strongest warriors in the front. The three up front were in in heavy, Daedric armor, with shields and either swords or axes, while the two behind them used spears from over the shoulders of their front rank.

Outside, on the ground, Sabine’s magical flare illuminated the area deeper into the pass. There was a hill blocking the line-of-sight to the advancing Daedric reinforcements, but Do’rhajul immediately recognized the meaning of Sabine’s signal. He and the rest of Sabine’s pack had stayed on the ground, given how restrictive the indoor fighting within the tower would be. Whether or not the other commanders recognized Sabine’s signal, he was the first to respond to it.

“Enemy reinforcements! On our flank, up the path!” Do’rhajul shouted, moving into position to meet the enemy charge at the very front. Despite having no real authority over anyone else present, Do’rhajul was a hard man to ignore. He had been a general for Vile for many years, and a legionnaire for even longer before that. Everything from his tone to the confidence of his movements spoke to his experience as a veteran in battle, and made it easy to want to follow his lead.
I decided to focus on one scene at a time, so it doesn't get overwhelming.

Do you think Sabine's pack would have joined her through the portal, or stayed below?
Considering how close the Skaafin archers were to the portal, it did not take long to clear the top of the watchtower. Kaleeth was one of the first to drop down out of the portal, and her size alone was usually enough to draw the focus of her enemies. Three of the archers loosed their arrows at her as she rushed towards one of them, and all three simply deflected or even broke against her armor. The Skaafin in front of her tried to run, but being trappup on the top of the watchtower, there was simply nowhere to go. She clenched her hand around the Daedra’s midsection, and with one arm, simply threw him over the edge of the tower.

Being that it was close quarters, Ahnasha had dropped down with blades drawn instead of a bow. There were plenty of creatures she could summon that would be useful in this sort of situation, but for a surprise attack like this, she decided on the simpler, much more direct approach of just running at the enemy before they could effectively react. She followed Kaleeth, and upon seeing three of the archers dedicate their arrows to her, she took the opportunity. She picked one that was trying to nock another arrow and dashed ahead, thrusting the dagger in her off hand towards his neck while also slicing her Daedric sword across the stomach. The Skaafin had only a bow to parry with, and while he did stop the dagger, her sword still spilled his guts in the most literal sense. Kaleeth had already thrown her target from the tower by that point, and the last of the three had managed to draw his shortsword by that point. However, Ahnasha was still just as quick and decisive. She shoved her bleeding foe back into the other Skaafin and followed through while he was staggered, sinking both of her blades into his torso.

Lorag, despite the protection his armor provided, still found it prudent to dash and evade while charging an archer to reduce the chance of a well-aimed shot finding its mark. But, inevitably, he still reached his target and simply used his overpowering strength to smash the Daedra’s head into the stonework.

Meesei, who had dropped through first, had not bothered to move from the spot she landed. Instead, she charged lightning through her hands and waited to see who her best targets would be. The two Skaafin closest to the stairway had decided to make a run for it to regroup with the others inside the tower, so they made for an obvious choice. The two streams of lightning Meesei shot forth found their targets immediately, and with nothing to resist her power, they dropped to the floor just as quickly. She sustained the spells until the scent of burned Daedric flesh reached her snout.

It was easy enough for the pack to surprise a group of unprepared archers. Storming down the stairway into the tower would have been the next part of the plan, but from the vantage point they now had, Meesei spotted a complication. Daedric reinforcements from deeper in the mountain pass were advancing on them more quickly than expected. The frontlines were made up of Skaafin, while more bestial Daedra were dispersed among the ranks behind them, along with some winged twilights flying above like a swarm of bats. It was a larger force than what they had brought with them into the pass, so soon enough, their soldiers down below would be both outflanked and outnumbered.

Meesei was not at all hesitant to make a decision. “Sabine, stay with me here. We need to signal the enemy advance, then we can assist from above. Everyone else, clear the tower as quickly as you can, then rejoin our soldiers below.”
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