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6/25/2025, 9:23:23 PM
You have yet to get accustomed to the weather of this region, this Tilano. It is warm and sunny, yet also humid, damp. The greenery of this land puts the forests of your own homeland to shame. You have read once, that some lands to the distant northwest of Mirevale, above even the drylands of Fasia, hold vast 'jungles' within them, forests so thick with growth that roads are reclaimed by the wilderness the very next week they are made. You've no surety of the truth of this statement, but after the ever increasing stream of rain and mud you've had to face these latest weeks, you'd do well to never set a foot in such a hellhole.
It is very surprising, then, when you hear that your scouts have found an entirely new road that had not been included in your maps, not too distant from the shoreline. It must have been made after this map of yours was drawn! You're not sure of where exactly it shall end, but close as it is to the coast, you've not much worry.
In foraging matters, your fortune is even greater; nestled in the valleys that coastal path, your men find yet another villa surrounded by wide and bountiful fields. Whether it had been left unfound by the rest of your army, or perhaps even ignored such that the produce may flourish, you are not sure, but by the time your men had found it, they were already mid harvest. Though the villagers were unwilling to part with their produce, a few volleys from your skirmishers soon broke any fighting will, and you were left to reap the rewards.
+ RESERVE MAINTAINED
+ RESERVE INCREASED
Yes, so rich were these fields that you would have been able to feed your army for twice the time of your filled reserves, were you to take it, taking the wagons and oxen they too had left for your own usage. And with this shortcut you had found, you'd be able to reach Montechia in but one week all the same. It would certainly be of good help should the siege take longer; but then again, it is not strictly necessary, given the fleet that is there to aid and supply them.
>Increase your reserve to four weeks and fill it
>Increase your reserve to three weeks and fill it
>Keep things as they are
Regardless of what you chose, for tonight, your men would still yet celebrate: to those who had found the village, your skirmishers, it was the valuables that they had taken from the villagers homes. To the rest of your army, it was the fruits and wines, jams and meats they had found, and had been granted as repast for morale. That night, amidst a light drizzle and burning campfires, your men drank and ate with joy.
It is very surprising, then, when you hear that your scouts have found an entirely new road that had not been included in your maps, not too distant from the shoreline. It must have been made after this map of yours was drawn! You're not sure of where exactly it shall end, but close as it is to the coast, you've not much worry.
In foraging matters, your fortune is even greater; nestled in the valleys that coastal path, your men find yet another villa surrounded by wide and bountiful fields. Whether it had been left unfound by the rest of your army, or perhaps even ignored such that the produce may flourish, you are not sure, but by the time your men had found it, they were already mid harvest. Though the villagers were unwilling to part with their produce, a few volleys from your skirmishers soon broke any fighting will, and you were left to reap the rewards.
+ RESERVE MAINTAINED
+ RESERVE INCREASED
Yes, so rich were these fields that you would have been able to feed your army for twice the time of your filled reserves, were you to take it, taking the wagons and oxen they too had left for your own usage. And with this shortcut you had found, you'd be able to reach Montechia in but one week all the same. It would certainly be of good help should the siege take longer; but then again, it is not strictly necessary, given the fleet that is there to aid and supply them.
>Increase your reserve to four weeks and fill it
>Increase your reserve to three weeks and fill it
>Keep things as they are
Regardless of what you chose, for tonight, your men would still yet celebrate: to those who had found the village, your skirmishers, it was the valuables that they had taken from the villagers homes. To the rest of your army, it was the fruits and wines, jams and meats they had found, and had been granted as repast for morale. That night, amidst a light drizzle and burning campfires, your men drank and ate with joy.
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