This forum is to be used for all discussions pertaining to Bethesda Softworks' The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind and its Tribunal and Bloodmoon expansion packs.
*****Don't bother reading any further unless you have already completed the main quest in Morrowind******
I'm currently playing thru Morrowind for the first time (and loving it ) I have just been given a quest to find Ashkhan Kaushad a wife before he will name me Nerevarine. I was told by the wise woman in the village that I should go and buy a slave and dress her up as a high ranking Telvanni woman.......................... I have a certain dislike to slavery and even more so the thought of buying and selling women this way I happen to like women that have a voice and a brain and are more than happy to use them, but hey that's just me.
Is there any way to satisfy this idiot without actually dealing in the slave market?? I tracked down a walkthrough but they just bought the slave woman for him, can I somehow get around this? It seems a bit stupid from a roleplaying sense that a good character trying to save the world would deal in slavery/the sex market
Well there are backpaths to avoid the big plot, but I suggest just going through with something you hate, just this once. Unfortunetly I know of no different paths in this specific quest.
“Caw, Caw!” The call of the wild calls you. Are you listening? Do you dare challenge their power? Do you dare invade? Nature will always triumph in the end.
[color=sky blue]I know that I die gracefully in vain. I know inside detiorates in pain.[/color]-Razed in Black
I agree, and had a hard time bitting the bullet on his one myself. Go ahead and follow through with it though.
Possible minor spoiler:
I think you will be pleasantly surprised how it all works out. Be sure and read all of the dialougue from the bride. You will see quite a transformation.
Scayde Moody
(Pronounced Shayde) The virtue of self sacrifice is the lie perpetuated by the weak to enslave the strong
*Agrees with Scayde* I usually run around freeing the slaves and killing slavers, myself, so I didn't like the idea of buying a bride either, but fortunately, this does have a happy ending.
There's nothing a little poison couldn't cure...
What happened here was the gradual habituation of the people, ... to receiving decisions deliberated in secret; to believing that the situation was so complicated that the government had to act on information which the people could not understand, or so dangerous that, even if he people could understand it, it could not be released because of national security.