Ever since we moved here I felt empty and was convinced this village would never become our home. I'm certain my daughter felt the same way, despite her not being able to tell me. I could see it in her eyes. The way she greeted me in the morning; the way she handed me my tools when we worked; the way she struck the smouldering iron with her hammer; the way she tucked her head into her blanket at night; she wasn't her true self.
Most people think she doesn't realise when they gossip in front of her since she shouldn't be able to hear them anyway. They're wrong though. She can read their expressions right off their faces; no voices needed. After all a face alone speaks more than a thousand words, right?
Seeing how you treat her when you visit our shop though, truly warms my heart. You see her for what she is and treat her no different than any other person in our village. The way you talk to her without using words; that very connection I thought only I'd ever have with her. Especially after what happened to her mother, it's wonderful to see her opening up to another person other than me. Thank you, Theo, truly! You have enriched both our lives beyond belief; probably without even knowing it.
All this alone would already warrant this very letter, yet there's still the wyvern in the room; that wonderful, precious night. Oh... By the gods, how my face must have looked when you pressed your lips against mine for the first time. Here's hoping you aren't as good at reading faces as my daughter otherwise I must be an open book to you by now and this letter's probably redundant.
From that night on you've been all that's on my mind. I can't wake a single day without seeing your fiery, orange locks in the fields of wheat bathing in morning glow. A gentle breeze running through them like my fingers through your ruffled hair; making me want to reach out and grab hold of them like I did with you.
Even after sundown I see your image again when the twilight swallows up the hills next to my smithy; the bluish red hues reminding me of the color of your skin as it ached before me, only barely lit by the torches and magic runes from your walls. Inviting my hands to run all over it; nails leaving glowing red marks and lips covering them in spit. I still remember the taste of your sweat and crave for it to cover my tongue again.