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Abah's Landing's Merchant Lords was a historical work written during the days of the Three Banners War in the Second Era by Tamonir, the Master of Secrets to Shela II Barrim, the Queen of Taneth. The book details the most important merchant lord Houses and their histories, and was directed at Queen X personally. The book was stolen by an unknown thief from the messenger used to send them to Queen X, and was then publicly transcripted and circulated to reveal the underhandedness of X.
Contents[]
The four Houses emerged as Houses at-Addin, Vien, Thazahrr, and Gurges. In time, the lords of these four Houses controlled almost all of the commerce and gold flowing through the port city—both legitimate trade and illicit activities. Most of their profits came from smuggling, slavery, and other unlawful transactions. The merchant lords supplied Abah's Landing with goods and services while also establishing lucrative (if modest) trading partnerships in distant lands. As fortunes grew in Abah's Landing, it wasn't long before other groups began to take an interest in the area. This began a long and tumultuous relationship between the merchant lords and local criminals and crime bosses. Indeed, rumors of a "hidden" merchant House even began to circulate, and evidence abounds of a covert war being fought among the houses and the so-called "hidden House". While I have not been able to uncover any details concerning this conflict, the outcome can clearly be seen. House Gurges was shattered and the other three houses were reduced to pale shadows of their former glory as a clandestine power emerged as the controlling interest in the port city.
For the last fifteen years or so, the merchant Houses took a step back. Oh, they continued to engage in business and provide funds to support city services, including guards and infrastructure, but they no longer showed the swagger and bravado that exemplified their behavior for the decades prior to that time. Though no lord or House or secret guild took centre stage, it appears evident to me that someone or something has influenced Abah's Landing from the deepest shadows. For this reason, I urge caution when dealing with Hew's Bane.Chapter I: House at-Addin[]
As time passed, the House added armour and shields to its inventory, seeking to provide a one-stop shopping destination for anyone in need of protection or those interested in sailing into battle. Pirate crews, sellsword companies, and even privateers in service to one flag or another were clamoring for armour and weapons with the House seal of quality and assurance. These connections led to another lucrative profit line—the House began serving as a broker for mercenary contracts.
The current leader of the House, Orahan at-Addin, rules his trading empire with an iron fist. Ruthless and brilliant, he treats every negotiation as a battle, every competition as a war. In fact, war has become at-Addin's primary avenue of trade, which allows him to keep the family enterprise profitable even in the wake of the unrevealed calamity that befell each of the merchant Houses recently. As my Queen is well aware, the machinations of the unknown party I have dubbed "the Hidden House" continue to be evident while also continuing to elude me. I will have answers, I just don't know when I will have them.
Orahan at-Addin deals in arms and armaments, mercenary contracts, and smuggling supplies to all sides of any given conflict. He has no trouble selling weapons to the Covenant, armor to the Pact, and vital supplies to the Dominion—as long as each side has the gold to pay for his services. With the sudden absence of the power that had held the merchant Houses in check and had even weakened them with a masterful yet secret attack, House at-Addin has begun to make moves to put it back into a position of power in Abah's Landing.
Regardless of other concerns, I recommend caution when dealing with Orahan and his family. But make no mistake, you will have to deal with them if you plan to make a move on Hew's Bane and Abah's Landing.Chapter II: House Vien[]
Whatever the situation that sent her to Abah's Landing, Lady Felice wasted no time purchasing property and establishing the Winsome Welwa, a tavern and inn that soon became the talk of the port. What started as a humble eatery and fest hall began offering other entertainments, entertainments of the less than legal kind. Lady Felice saw that the people moving through Abah's Landing had particular vices, and she knew that there was gold to be made if she could satisfy their needs.
Today, House Vien handles the more intimate and discreet demands of Abah's Landing, including illicit substances, prostitution, and other vices. The Winsome Welwa, modeled after the infamous Chaste Harpy in High Rock, serves as a brothel and the base of operations for the current head of the House, Lady Ylanie Vien. Despite the calamity that befell all of the merchant Houses, she continues to make a modest profit administering to the illicit needs of pirates, merchant crews, and visiting nobles looking for a bit of adventure. All of the House's trade is focused on Abah's Landing, all under the Lady's discerning eye. She presents a proper, genteel countenance when she strolls the city streets and meets with clients and vacationing dignitaries, but she has a violent, even murderous, temper—though few who have the misfortune to see that side of her live to tell the tale.
Secrets are as much Lady Ylanie's stock and trade as are sex and drugs. She might prove to be a powerful ally in your ambitions, provided you never turn your back on her or partake in any of her tempting pleasures.Chapter III: House Thazahrr[]
How could a Khajiit run a buisness of slavery? Quite handily, it turns out. The legend of Thazahrr-ra grew as fast as the fortunes of her House, describing a woman who would sell her own children if the profit was high enough. In addition to processing Argonian and Khajiit slaves on their way to distant lands, her House expanded into the areas of smuggling and buying and selling information. Make no mistake: being willing to sell your own people makes the House extremely dangerous, as many of their competitors discovered over the years.
Today, Nisani the Goldfang oversees the House's businesses. She appears restless and unhappy with the state of the Houses in Abah's Landing, and with the state of her business in general. Whatever occurred to hinder all of the merchant Houses seems to have hit the House harder than most. She longs to return her House to the position of power and prestige it enjoyed in the days before the activities of the "hidden House".
Nisani the Goldfang bubbles over with anger and ambition. She feels that Abah's Landing owes her a level of wealth and respect that, frankly, it has no intention of awarding her with. For this reason, she remains frustrated, anxious, and more than a little dangerous. My recommendation? Do not approach the Khajiit slave trader. Not even with a ten-foot pole.Chapter IV: House Gurges[]
Of course, legitimate business means something very different in a place like Abah's Landing. Isobel began by making loans with exorbitant interest rates, but it wasn't long before she took House Gurges into gambling, fencing, laundering, and higjacking (where she had her crews steal cargo from merchant vessels so they could sell it back to those same merchants for an immediate profit).
When the merchant House crisis rocked Abah's Landing fifteen years prior, House Gurges was nearly bankrupted. The tumult since, as well as events leading up to the Three Banners War, all but spelled the doom of the merchant House. Today, the Gurges have only a handful of descendants and vassals, leaving its current patriarch, Martinus Gurges, a bitter and jealous man. He has plans, however. Plans to rebuild his House, reclaim his fortune and holdings, and once again make the Gurges name something to be honored and respected, if not feared, in Abah's Landing. He has a long way to go to make his dream come true.Chapter V: The Hidden House[]
I've suggested in my previous reports that there was another House hindering and even actively attacking the merchant Houses of Abah's Landing. I've referred to this as the "Hidden House". Like the vast chasm in front of you in the middle of the night, you can feel the Hidden House's presence looming in the darkness, even though you can't see it.
What is the Hidden House? I really don't know. Every avenue I approach that promises to reveal the truth of the House instead sends me running in a dozen different directions, searching for the next clue that always seemed to be at least one step out of reach. Here's what I do know. I believe that the House was formed about forty years ago, suddenly coming on the scene to challenge the merchant lords after a century of only having to deal with themselves. Within twenty-five years, the Hidden House had risen to a place of prominence that allowed it to actually cause the merchant Houses to step back and concede a portion of their power and influence to this new and secret House.
I believe a battle of some sort took place in the deepest shadows. In this battle, the Hidden House emerged victorious while the public-facing merchant Houses were grievously wounded and forced off the pedestals they had raised themselves upon. The worse casualty was House Gurges, which stopped being an active concern almost overnight and has since become known as "the Fallen House".
Is the Hidden House the true power of Abah's Landing? I cannot say for certain, and that is what troubles me the most.