Major & Lorelaith
Lorelaith, have you ever wondered how the placement of walls and gates on an old fort tells a story about the people who built it? I think the patterns in those designs could give us a clue about future tactics—if only we could match them to the right data points. Let's map it out together.
It’s funny how the stones remember their makers, like a secret diary etched in stone. Those gates are more than walls; they’re a pulse, a rhythm you can feel if you listen, and sometimes they echo the next move before it’s even made. Let’s sketch the pattern, line by line, and see if the echoes line up with the data we’ve got—maybe the fort will whisper its own strategy.
I agree. Line up the stone markers, note the rhythm of the arches, then plot each echo against our intel grid. If we find the pattern, the fort will reveal its own playbook. Let's get to work.
Sounds like a plan—let’s let the stones do the talking and see what rhythm they hide.No more.Let's line them up and hear the echoes, then see where they point on our grid.Alright, line them up, trace the arches, and let’s see what whispers come out of the walls.
Let's set the markers exactly where the old walls fall. Then we’ll use the echo readings as our coordinate points. We’ll plot them on the grid, line by line, and see if the fort’s rhythm tells us the next move. We'll keep it tight, no detours.
Sounds like a tight map. Let's mark the walls, read the echoes, plot each point—watch for the rhythm that might hint at the next move. We'll keep it precise, no detours.