January 12th, 1890
Dear Mr. Oak,The wording of this Unbreakable Vow is quite strange. You must have an exceptionally uncommon surname, first of all, for your family member to believe a condition worded so loosely would protect such a dire secret. Your family must also be either very small or very tightly knit and trusting for him to have believed any family member with this last name would be equally receptive to news of his affliction, including those who may join the family later by marriage and have no blood connections whatsoever. It also excludes any women in the family who marry, which is a peculiarity. Why not provide a list of acceptable family members instead, or even make the healer swear to only speak of it in the presence of the werewolf himself? It seems exceptionally strange to me that he would resort to an Unbreakable Vow — magic which kills as punishment for mere slips of the tongue — but that he would do so in such a careless manner.
It almost suggests that he was anticipating that someone else in the family would become afflicted and created this Vow with the healer specifically for this scenario. Do you think that likely?
M
Prof. Marlowe Forfang

Jules