Field Report
Maila,
My love, you could not believe the state of this place. Were I not here, I would
not.
We have been marching for forty and five days now, come up from the port of
Planae, east of Nesortania. We have passed into the Dericost marches, and the
weather has turned noticeably chiller. But there is something strange about the
weather here, something harder to express.
It seems as if the land is under a strange sense of oppression. I know it is
foolhardy to think it, but the quality of the light here seems changed. As I
look at the blighted fields we pass through each day, it is as if I were viewing
them through dark gauze, or through the sooty outgassings of our volcanic pyreal
forges.
I am more distressed by the fact that we encounter fewer people as we press
north. Yestereve, we passed through the village of Daralet, only to find it
entirely abandoned. Of most of the population, there was no sign. Only the
bodies of the elderly and infirm could be seen, and these were strewn about the
streets in a manner most horrible. I am disturbed by the thought of an enemy who
could so maltreat their opponents. The army has not been made fearful by these
sights, but has only redoubled its grim determination. I am wrathful, my love -
and you know how difficult it is to raise my ire.
The army has encamped for the night on the Plain of Avrilan. I have sent mounted
chevairds out as pickets, and the enchanters have raised walls of sod around us.
I now sit in my tent, alone save for Kelderam, before my captains assemble to
present their evening reports. I can hear the men and women of the army around
me - thousands and thousands of them, turning the plain into a garden of
campfire-blossoms. They sing rounds, they play their dicing games, and they do
the things that men and women do. Spirits are high.
For the past two nights the pickets have brought back unusual reports. While
they have not seen anything untoward, they feel as if they have been watched as
they perform their patrols. The night, they say, moves when they do not look at
it. I think the enemy knows we are coming. So much the better; I have with me
the most experienced and well-equipped army in the world. I am confident we can
prevail, should our captains be wise, and our soldiers be constant.
Atlan
Bretself the Translator tells you, "Curious. This is a letter home from a
soldier on campaign. A singularly disturbing campaign, if I may venture the
opinion. My thanks for recovering it. We may be able to cull some valuable
knowledge from this."