Dear Finn,
It is a hard truth to wake up in a strange bed in a strange land, and not know your mode of travel. And yet the more frightening prospect is that this truth – that my mind is in slow decline – is one I have learned a thousand times over, and will forget the moment I turn this page.
Was it your idea to come to Skyrim? Was it mine? I suppose the answer is irrelevant. You will be happy to know that I am not a Draugr yet, for my mind is still sharp enough. For one, I can deduce that given my health, I would not have ventured this far from my homeland without reason, and I pray to the Divines that this reason is a cure.
Second, there are still fragments of memory that persist in my head, tiny wicks of flame lighting this unknowable path. When I awoke in Riverwood, two things came to mind. A place, and a name. The place was Greywater Grotto, in Falkreath to the south. The name was Anise. An errand boy named Hjoromir said he knew of just such a woman, living in a cabin north of the White River.
So, following his directions, I aim to go north. Forward. Away from home, and all that I love. Even now, there’s a part of me yearning for the warm forests of Falkreath, to be but a league and a fortnight away from Spring in Cyrodiil. Such are the whims of fate, to tempt the traveler even as he brings her aid. Thus I must weather each trial, do all that I can to endure. I can only hope that the boy’s directions are sound.
– Lathgwen