Wisdom, my title granted by the General himself is not something I would ever claim to uphold, but I am pained while writing this to inform you that the knowledge I report should be considered fact, unless I am mistaken in what my own two eyes have seen. We followed a trail to an unnamed city, one of relative importance holds nothing for you or any of us to even blink about. Yet our trail brought us into its harbor and further into its barbaric entertainment. It was there that we could be sure we had found the General. We were prepared to stop at nothing to free him from his incarceration and my lady, I swear it to be true that were he not the one to claim otherwise, he would be in the camp now.
But he is not. He assured us that he had a purpose in being treated like cattle, in being forced to face death each prolonging night. Were I not bound by my loyalty to him, I would have disregarded his wishes. It pains me now to write that I wish I had. Before we could get a day's distance between us and that damned city the night sky cried before the awe of spectacle that shined so bright even the stars failed to relinquish their envy. The shockwave was too much, we could not turn around to go investigate the city but from what I could find, my lady, I regret to even write further... I am the General's Wisdom and on this day I wish I could have been granted to be the General's Hope, for right now.. I'm afraid I have none."
~ Wisdom
Rayvinn stood within her tent, senses alert and filled with the sound of the rain pelting down upon the thick canvas of her tent, the thunder not too far in the distance, and the sounds of her men going about their daily tasks (whether rain or shine, she kept the camp in order). The smell of the fire at the center of her tent lent its heat with the smoke wafting upwards and out the makeshift chimney. She could feel the damp sliver of breeze that breached the flap of of her tent; though not enough to cool the burning in her heart or the sting of tears that threatened to spill down her cheeks. The fingernails of her left hand dug so deeply into her palm that four crescent shaped wounds now showed red, while the scroll clutched tightly within her right hand felt so smooth and unmarred, so...normal. That was the random thought that plagued her at this moment when her heart felt as if it would pound out of her chest: the scroll upon which news of tragedy (that threatened to bring her to her knees) felt so normal.
With a sharp inhale of breath and a firm resolve that manifested itself in the sudden ramrod rigidity of her spine, she called out to the guards posted on each side of the flap of her tent. "Have Daeatria brought to me but do not saddle him." One guard stuck his head within the flap and bowed to her. "As you wish, my Queen." Then she heard him call to one of the orphan boys she had found along the road to this camp and had given a chance for a future by learning some of the trades from masters within her camp; it wasn't the softest life for these children but they fared far better with her army than they would have on their own.
When Rayvinn heard Daeatria whinny, the scroll was rolled up tightly and tied before being placed inside her simple brown tunic. She'd been preparing and had a bedroll, rucksack full of provisions, T'alathian's journal, both of her magic imbued elvish blades in their crossed harness upon her back, the various daggers that were always hidden upon her person, her longbow with a side quiver of arrows, and...T'alathian's red spear that had rested upon a rack since the day she took over this tent; the very spear used in the slaughter of so many of her own people back when his father was still alive and had led the mercenary army into Faerondalen on that fateful day. T'alathian had been so young and naive to the ways of war, or even to the ways of his father as it had turned out. She now held very same spear he had offered her to strike him down as he knelt at her feet and pledged his oath of fealty. Forgiveness--this was the proof that her hardened heart had finally found a way to truly forgive him.
Rayvinn stormed from the tent, her guards stepping to the side simultaneously as she moved past the flap. After securing her gear, she mounted the unsaddled horse effortlessly and with a fluid sort of grace most could not accomplish that weren't of the elven persuasion. There was one last stop to be made before she could be on her way.
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It had taken a few weeks of reconnaissance and dead ends but the elf had finally located the “unnamed city” of which one of T’alathian’s horsemen had written; or what remained of it. For nearly a mile in every direction the earth had been scourged by worse than fire; by a heat so intense that everything retained its shape and definition but was simple ash. In the center of this devastation stood the ruins of a coliseum, with its arena and stadium seating partially preserved. The last source of intel, that she’d nearly died to receive, had led her to this place. Her heart sank in her chest as her gaze swept over the ruins, certain that none could have survived the catastrophe that had crumbled stone and seared land to mere ash.Rayvinn dismounted, unsheathed one of the elvish blades strapped to her back, and led Daeatria through the open gates...
The letter quoted at the beginning of this post is cross posted from here.