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= Letters from the Low Vaults =
= Letters from the Low Vaults =
''Collected Correspondence from the Inkwell District of Dalr''<blockquote>Assembled from loose folios, margin notes, bundled correspondence, and copied extracts preserved in the Low Vault archives of Dalr. Dating uncertain; internal references suggest composition across several decades in the mid pre-TRA centuries. Orthography modernized for clarity.</blockquote>
----
== Entry — Ledger Margin, Scribe Halvek ==
''(Undated; believed late autumn)''
Tonight a wounded man was brought into the lower chambers. Recognized as Tarren the Cutpurse, known to the watch.
He had been knifed beneath the ribs and beaten about the face. Companions carried him through the alley entrance, seeking a quiet place to bind him before the watch could find cause to question.
While we argued whether to turn them out, a woman descended the stair from the street.
She was not known to me.
Dark of skin, silver of hair, dressed plainly in grey wool. Her manner was calm and without apology. Several objected to her presence; she did not respond to them.
She knelt beside the injured man and examined the wound without asking leave.
No poultice was applied. No stitch was made.
She placed her mouth briefly upon the worst of the injury.
The man cried out once, sharply.
When she withdrew, the bleeding had ceased. The flesh appeared closed as if days into healing.
There was a faint scent in the air — not incense, not smoke. Something warmer.
She stood and departed before further inquiry could be made.
When questioned later, Tarren refused to provide her name. He stated only that he had “met a saint in the shadows” and would speak no more on the matter.
I record this without commentary.
----
== Letter — From Maros, Spice Merchant of Dalr, to Factor Enner in Norin ==
You will hear rumors and I would prefer you hear them from me first.
An incident occurred in the market square. A warehouse boy was found skimming dried clove from a crate. I ordered him struck for discipline, as is proper.
Before correction could be carried out, a woman in a grey cloak intervened.
She did not shout. She did not threaten. She addressed the boy quietly and then turned her attention to me.
Her gaze was… disquieting.
I cannot say what she spoke precisely; I recall only that I dismissed the punishment and ordered the boy back to work.
It was not coercion in the ordinary sense. I simply found the matter no longer worth pursuing.
She departed without giving a name.
If this same woman appears in Norin, I advise caution. There is influence about her that is not easily accounted for.
— Maros
----
== Watch Report — Eastern Gate, Captain Relren ==
A person matching the description circulated in bounty notices was observed near the eastern gate at dusk.
Description: female, silver hair, dark complexion, of elven cast.
No attempt was made to detain.
Instruction received earlier that week to avoid confrontation unless direct threat presented. No further detail provided in orders.
Subject departed city without incident.
Report filed for record only.
----
== Copy of Testimony — Attributed to Child Called Mina ==
''(Original lost; copied by Vault Scribe)''
The lady with silver in her hair came when the rain was heavy.
She brought bread and wrapped it in cloth so it would not spoil. She told us to share it and not fight over the crust.
She gave Jorren a blanket because he was coughing.
She said the warmth must be shared or it is not warmth at all.
I asked her if she lived in the big houses above. She said she did not live in any house that kept its doors barred to children.
She left before morning.
----
== Fragment — Unsigned Note, Found Among Loose Folios ==
The bounty remains active.
Ten thousand gold for the woman described.
Alive and unspoiled.
Several hunters passed through Dalr this season asking questions in the lower quarter.


'''Letters from the Low Vaults''' is a collection of correspondence and chronicler's notes compiled in the city of [[Dalr]], preserved in the archives beneath the old quarter known as the Low Vaults. The letters span several decades and record eyewitness accounts, merchant reports, and scribal observations of events and figures that passed through or near Dalr.
None have found success.


== Provenance ==
There are those who would hide her.
The Low Vaults of Dalr are a warren of cellars, scriptoria, and storage chambers beneath the district once known as the Inkwell. Scribes, notaries, and minor officials used these spaces to store records, copy contracts, and maintain the city's informal chronicle of comings and goings. The collection was assembled from loose folios, ledger margins, and bundled correspondence discovered when the vaults were later surveyed and catalogued. No single author produced the whole; the "letters" are a mix of private missives, official memoranda, and personal notes. The passage describing the healing of a thief's wounds is ascribed to a scribe whose hand appears in several other Dalr documents of the same era.


== The Entry Concerning the Dark-Haired Woman ==
There are those who would betray her.
A chronicler's entry describes a night in the Low Vaults when a wounded man — a known cutpurse — was brought in by companions. The entry reads in part:


: ''"A dark-haired woman who healed a thief's wounds with a kiss that burned and soothed at once."''
There are those who owe her more than coin.
----


The full entry states that a woman "of foreign aspect, dark of skin and hair, with eyes that caught the lamplight oddly" approached and, despite the protests of the onlookers, knelt beside the thief. She did not use herbs or bandages; she kissed the worst of his wounds. The chronicler records that the man cried out once, then fell silent as the flesh closed. The woman left without giving a name. The thief, when questioned later, said only that he had "met a saint in the shadows" and would not speak of her again.
== Archivist’s Note (Later Addition) ==
The recurring references to a silver-haired woman across unrelated documents suggest a consistent presence in Dalr over several years. The absence of a recorded name is notable. The bounty mentioned aligns with notices attributed to Ori of the Vale, later known as the Hollow King.


== Other Entries ==
Whether the woman healed by infernal art, divine intercession, or lesser glamour is not addressed in the documents themselves.


=== The Merchant's Complaint ===
What is clear is that she intervened repeatedly on behalf of the marginal and the vulnerable, and that the city’s officials exercised restraint in pursuing her.
A letter from a spice merchant to a factor in Norin complains of "a woman in a grey cloak" who had intervened in a beating in the market. The merchant had ordered a servant disciplined; the woman stepped in, spoke a few words, and the servant was released. The merchant describes her gaze as "unsettling" and notes that he did not pursue the matter.


=== The Night Watch Report ===
The Low Vaults preserve her only in passing lines.
A fragment of a watch captain's report mentions "a person matching the description of the one sought in the matter of the bounty" seen near the eastern gate. The figure was not apprehended; no pursuit was ordered. The reason given is "orders from above," though no further detail survives.


=== The Orphan's Testimony ===
History remembers her more deliberately.
A later copy of a child's testimony — the original is lost — describes "a lady with silver in her hair" who gave bread and a blanket to a group of street children and told them to "share the warmth."


== See Also ==
== See Also ==

Latest revision as of 11:07, 26 February 2026

Letters from the Low Vaults

Collected Correspondence from the Inkwell District of Dalr

Assembled from loose folios, margin notes, bundled correspondence, and copied extracts preserved in the Low Vault archives of Dalr. Dating uncertain; internal references suggest composition across several decades in the mid pre-TRA centuries. Orthography modernized for clarity.


Entry — Ledger Margin, Scribe Halvek

(Undated; believed late autumn)

Tonight a wounded man was brought into the lower chambers. Recognized as Tarren the Cutpurse, known to the watch.

He had been knifed beneath the ribs and beaten about the face. Companions carried him through the alley entrance, seeking a quiet place to bind him before the watch could find cause to question.

While we argued whether to turn them out, a woman descended the stair from the street.

She was not known to me.

Dark of skin, silver of hair, dressed plainly in grey wool. Her manner was calm and without apology. Several objected to her presence; she did not respond to them.

She knelt beside the injured man and examined the wound without asking leave.

No poultice was applied. No stitch was made.

She placed her mouth briefly upon the worst of the injury.

The man cried out once, sharply.

When she withdrew, the bleeding had ceased. The flesh appeared closed as if days into healing.

There was a faint scent in the air — not incense, not smoke. Something warmer.

She stood and departed before further inquiry could be made.

When questioned later, Tarren refused to provide her name. He stated only that he had “met a saint in the shadows” and would speak no more on the matter.

I record this without commentary.


Letter — From Maros, Spice Merchant of Dalr, to Factor Enner in Norin

You will hear rumors and I would prefer you hear them from me first.

An incident occurred in the market square. A warehouse boy was found skimming dried clove from a crate. I ordered him struck for discipline, as is proper.

Before correction could be carried out, a woman in a grey cloak intervened.

She did not shout. She did not threaten. She addressed the boy quietly and then turned her attention to me.

Her gaze was… disquieting.

I cannot say what she spoke precisely; I recall only that I dismissed the punishment and ordered the boy back to work.

It was not coercion in the ordinary sense. I simply found the matter no longer worth pursuing.

She departed without giving a name.

If this same woman appears in Norin, I advise caution. There is influence about her that is not easily accounted for.

— Maros


Watch Report — Eastern Gate, Captain Relren

A person matching the description circulated in bounty notices was observed near the eastern gate at dusk.

Description: female, silver hair, dark complexion, of elven cast.

No attempt was made to detain.

Instruction received earlier that week to avoid confrontation unless direct threat presented. No further detail provided in orders.

Subject departed city without incident.

Report filed for record only.


Copy of Testimony — Attributed to Child Called Mina

(Original lost; copied by Vault Scribe)

The lady with silver in her hair came when the rain was heavy.

She brought bread and wrapped it in cloth so it would not spoil. She told us to share it and not fight over the crust.

She gave Jorren a blanket because he was coughing.

She said the warmth must be shared or it is not warmth at all.

I asked her if she lived in the big houses above. She said she did not live in any house that kept its doors barred to children.

She left before morning.


Fragment — Unsigned Note, Found Among Loose Folios

The bounty remains active.

Ten thousand gold for the woman described.

Alive and unspoiled.

Several hunters passed through Dalr this season asking questions in the lower quarter.

None have found success.

There are those who would hide her.

There are those who would betray her.

There are those who owe her more than coin.


Archivist’s Note (Later Addition)

The recurring references to a silver-haired woman across unrelated documents suggest a consistent presence in Dalr over several years. The absence of a recorded name is notable. The bounty mentioned aligns with notices attributed to Ori of the Vale, later known as the Hollow King.

Whether the woman healed by infernal art, divine intercession, or lesser glamour is not addressed in the documents themselves.

What is clear is that she intervened repeatedly on behalf of the marginal and the vulnerable, and that the city’s officials exercised restraint in pursuing her.

The Low Vaults preserve her only in passing lines.

History remembers her more deliberately.

See Also