— Queen Morgana Le Fay, High Lady, Dearest Mistress,
A gift, to keep you warm through the winter.
In my home, we give gifts at the end of harvest - to keep us in good cheer all through the long dark to come. One to keep you warm on the nights that can be frightful. I hope this one keeps you in good cheer and warm your heart with the thought of my care for you. For surely you have given me courage and care, and I hope that is what this will give you the same. The wreath is usually given at midsummer and kept until mid-winter when we burn them on the longest night to ward off bad omens for the new year.
In dearest care, Gilia St. Loe, Daughter-Sea, She Who Sings the Ocean to Prosperity
[ With the note comes a box that has been carefully packaged, scented faintly with lavender and rosemary. On the top is a simple wreath of leaves, chamomile and forget-me-nots, bound together with twists of herbs and other florals that make it faintly sweet, with how it has all been carefully dried. Below it is the main gift itself. A jacket, made of thick wool and silk blended together and picked out in what is her own embroidery in matching colours to elegant even with its intricacies. ]
delivered first week of novemeber —
A gift, to keep you warm through the winter.
In my home, we give gifts at the end of harvest - to keep us in good cheer all through the long dark to come. One to keep you warm on the nights that can be frightful. I hope this one keeps you in good cheer and warm your heart with the thought of my care for you. For surely you have given me courage and care, and I hope that is what this will give you the same. The wreath is usually given at midsummer and kept until mid-winter when we burn them on the longest night to ward off bad omens for the new year.
In dearest care,
Gilia St. Loe, Daughter-Sea, She Who Sings the Ocean to Prosperity