And ye gods does that fit as a name. Through a no-doubt amusing series of misadventures I wound up trying to cross the enormous mountain towards the Eastern edge of the map. With great difficulty and enormous luck, I managed to scale all the way to the top of that ridge, overlooking the wastes on the other side, sure that I could finally get through the pass to my destination... only to be greeted by "You cannot go this way." If I could curse in Dragon, I would.
I'm playing a Khajiit-- I almost always do, even wrote a brief ficlet about it set in Oblivion/Shivering Isles. This time, I'm even playing a woman Khajiit! Crazy, I know. Aside from various benefits (claws! night-eye! fuzzy ears!), I generally play these games with a narrative running in the back of my mind the whole time, and it occurred to me that the sort of Khajiit that journeys into Skyrim from the desert would be a very interesting character indeed!
I mean, you're going from a desert to a harsh, unforgiving wilderness-- a traveler without any permanent home, drawn by a destiny unknown. But not your typical Strong, Handsome, Muscular Hero, no. A slight, wiry Khajiit, leopard-spotted and grinning, dwarfed by the towering Nords whose homes she defends (or breaks into, depending). A shadowy, unnoteworthy furred shadow, slipping through the bleak rocks and peaks amidst howling winds and blinding snow, with the Northern Lights shining above. You can almost hear the note of surprise in the smith's voice as you agree to make the dangerous journey, and the grudging respect in various Jarls' tones as you accept, and mount, their challenges. The sneering of the bandits ("Your hide will make a fine rug, cat!"), which dies on their lips as a flank and feint takes the ground out from under their feet. The unquestioning calm of the masters, so unexpected in such a hard place. The surprising beauty of the mountain streams, and wild joy of leaping up waterfalls like the ancestral sabre-cats that delight in ambush.
...I'm probably having way too much fun with that inner narrative.