My dearest Kib,
I write this letter with optimism that one day, a trader will pass through and I’ll be able to send a packet to Mirrorvirtues. At least, they promised that in the autumn, there will be a caravan from home. And oh, how a few months of exile can make even the oppressive regime of Mirrorvirtues feel like “home”. But I have become the defacto leader of our motley group, and I cannot abandon them here, no matter how homesick I become. They look to me for leadership and I must set a good example. Here, in my office, I can let my guard down and shed a tear for missing you. Even the furniture reminds me I’m here, and not there; instead of the rich, warm hues of Mirrorvirtues’ stones in the room we shared, here I’m surrounded by drab grey rock. The walls of my office, my chair, my table, even my door…the same shade of grey. Kol insists that there's marble down there somewhere, and has promised me a shiny white door, but even that will not be the same.
We broke ground just after the new year. The hill the surveyors identified was indeed there – a tiny hummock, barely a rise in the ground, a stone’s throw from the edge of the haunted forest with its dead, looming trees. Obedient to our orders, Dishmab, Domas, and Stukos dug into it as if it were the towering rock to which they were accustomed, rather than a pile of dirt in the western wilds.
After three months of backbreaking, beard-tangling work, I think we’re finally hitting our stride. We’ve carved out a warren of little clay rooms for food-making and sleeping. Kol and I dismantled the wagon and I set to trying to figure out how to fashion beds for our brave dwarves. I had no idea that working with wood was so very different than crafting stone toys! The manufacture of beds took me half the season.
While I was hammering away, Tholtig Weighthatches, a marksdwarf who signed on with us at the last minute, was patrolling our eastern borders. He grew weary, but refused to leave his post. Suddenly, we in the fortress could hear him bellow! We poked out our heads and there he was, running through the dead forest, blood streaming from his wounds, a skeletal deer hot on his heels. Three other unnatural beasts scattered at his shout, but the one clacking horror kept pace with him. He fired his last bolt, which slid harmlessly through the thing’s empty ribcage. Finally, he’d had enough of running. As we all watched in amazement, he turned about, swung his useless crossbow in a mighty arc, and bones went flying in all directions. A second swing, and the deer’s skull bounced off a nearby tree. Grimly, Tholtig stalked back to the compound to treat his wounds while his dogs pulled down the remaining zombie and skeletal deer.
His back pains him when it rains, now. He’ll practice his marksdwarfship, but his heart’s not in it, anymore. He blames me, of all people, for his injuries! I have told him time and again that the creatures don’t like to leave their haunted forest, and if he leaves them alone, they’ll leave us alone. I’ve hidden his crossbow and set him to hauling. He grumbles about his bruised tailbone while the miners make jokes.
My biggest news is: while Stukos was digging me a carpenter’s workshop in an ugly mishmash of rock and sandy loam, he struck a vein of copper! Beloved, we will have metal for you when you arrive.
Lovingly,
Tosid Mistychannel
5 Hematite, Year 61
In the settlement of Shotstockades, in the Sprayed Plain