Gunnar seated himself in the leather chair that the Duke once sat in at his large, polished wood desk. The view from that angle was strange. The only other person who had ever sat there was Arthur—rightfully so.
As the knight then took in the scene in front of him, the very child of that knight sat down across from him and waited for instruction on what to do next. He placed out quills and paper for them to begin.
The first on Gunnar's list of things to do was to pen a letter to His Majesty with thinly veiled begging to be more decisive when it came to the north. There was a heavy emphasis on the suffering of common folk, how monsters would take advantage of their disorganization, and how the apprentices needed more decision-making power as knights.