LeeHastens
War had stripped his voice
But peace had taught him to speak again
In the quiet days after returning from the battlefield, a nameless soldier finds himself haunted not by sounds and cries of war, but by the fragile wonder of survival. With neither medals pinned nor stories to recount, he turns instead to pen and paper-choosing to record not times of war, but something far braver: devotion.
These memoirs gather the letters he wrote in the stillness after war, each one addressed to a woman he reverently calls The Madam. With patience, wit, and the steady courage of a man who has seen how fleeting life can be, he courts her not with grand gestures, but with sincerity inked line by line.
Like the careful song of a bird returning after winter, his words rise again-hopeful, tender, and unafraid to be heard.
For in the aftermath of war, he discovered that the truest victory was never on the battlefield...
but in earning the right to sing for her heart.