A Question of Ambition
Posted: Fri Oct 11, 2024 4:00 pm
I knocked on the heavy door and opened it once I heard the familiar voice call out to enter. The Mistress of Novices sat behind her desk and didn't look up as I closed the door behind me. I curtseyed low, but she still didn't look at me. I knew better than to think she wouldn't notice if I skipped the motion.
"Have a seat, Hadley."
I felt my brow furrow against my will. I obeyed slowly, not sure what this new development brought. Novices do not sit in Sheriam Sedai's office.
"You are one of our oldest novices, Hadley." Was she saying my name too much? Was I being paranoid? "Ordinarily, that means the novice is too weak in the power to progress and likely will not be a danger to herself or others, or the novice has disciplinary issues. In your case, aside from some cheekiness that we need not discuss at the moment, neither is true for you. So, tell me from where your lack of ambition stems."
"I...do not believe I lack ambition, Sheriam Sedai." I was wholly unprepared for this line of questioning. I had assumed my glib tongue had run away and gotten me in trouble again. "I have seen my peers" I laughed inside a little at that, my peers were girls far younger than I, "rise and do all I can to aide the new girls in acclimating to their new environment. Having met so many, I can say my humble beginnings have given me perspective that possibly differs from theirs. My home here offers an assurance that I not go hungry. That, in itself, had been one of my major ambitions before I came here."
"Well, we do not train our girls in white to excel as maids. We will address what your goals will be. Now, let's see." She moved a sheet of paper in front of her and peered down for a moment. "Tell me where you came from. I know about Qaim and running away. I see it says here you lived on the streets of Illian before being discovered and sent here. Tell me really what drives you, for I know something does. Hunger alone did not keep you safe on the streets as a child."
"Yes, Sheriam Sedai." I nodded once. "Safety, hunger, fear. All these and some more things. I will need some time to tell it all."
"I expected as much and have planned for it. You may begin."
I had never talked about it before, but I began, and the words came.
*******
My first terrified, hungry, lonely nights in Illian were behind me. That isn’t to say I was some street-wise phantom of the docks, pilfering whatever my heart, or belly, desired whenever I wanted. I was just a girl, a suggestion of the woman I would someday become. I was soft, too-wet clay, so easily molded by the breath of the sea, the cobblestones of the streets, the whip of the wagon driver, the boot of the guard. I was nothing, I was the freedom taunting the smith’s apprentice. I saw it in his eyes when stared too long. At least, I hope that’s all it was. He would never dare risk the hunger, the uncertainty, but he yearned for the freedom he thought I had.
No, that isn’t right. That’s how I look back now and watch my memories. I hadn’t gotten my bearings. I hadn’t learned the ways of the world in just a few days. I was still terrified that every step would take me into the hands of whatever monster lived inside men. I looked a hundred directions at once to spot the dangers that could be coming my way. I looked a hundred directions at once and saw none of it.
Nights were the worst. My first night in the docksides was my luckiest and I hadn’t even known it at the time. The search party had stopped when the sun went down. My parents kept looking but the lanterns hadn’t been lit so they had to call an end.
I look back at the foolishness of my youth, to think my parents could have ever wished for a life without one of their children. To think seasickness in a child of Qaim meant I should no longer be a child of Qaim. We were not Atha’an Miere. We were Seafolk-adjacent. Nevermind that, I did what I did, and perhaps it could have been no other way.
I spent that first night trailing two street urchins, younger than I. I assumed they knew where children could spend the night. I was right, they knew the forgotten children of the world slept amidst trash heaps. They made their way down an alley and I slunk in behind them. As they made a hollow in a rubbish pile, I found a small niche where buildings met. I found a half a mealy apple and made it my dinner. I watched as the boy, maybe older than I was, maybe not, pushed garbage around to conceal himself and the girl. A sister? A lover? I comforted myself with the thought of the happiness they somehow found among the refuse. I convinced myself things weren’t so bad and I drifted off to sleep.
I woke to the yells of the boy and almost left my niche. He was fighting. Three sailors had come down the alley. No, one of the sailors was knocking the boy around, who was helpless against the large man. The other two had found the girl. I slowly secreted myself away and closed my eyes. I didn’t sleep and I tried not to hear.
The next morning, I crept out as the crowds grew. I walked numbly up to a stall where a portly woman was skewering meat for the charcoal grill. She scowled and told me she had nothing for me. When I told her I needed a knife, she glared at me. When I told her I needed to cut off my hair, she paused. She did it for me.
If you can’t defend yourself on the street, stay off the street. I spent days wandering, eating scraps, drinking from puddles. The Manetherendrelle was surprisingly filthy for such a large river by the time it met the Sea of Storms. It gathered all the filth of the surrounding city and dumped it into the ocean. Not realizing my part as a scavenger contributed to this fetid ecosystem, I thought I was above them. Maybe location gives perspective. I was actually above them. Small and light, I crept along the rooftops, having learned my safety lay in being unreachable. I looked down on them as I looked down on them.
Each night I crept back to my home, a place where three buildings met. They met unevenly and their overlapping roofs hid me from sun, rain, and other people. I spent my days hungry, only eating at night when I unloaded the fruits of my urban foraging. I found safety in being no one. I found my security was being unseen.
I found myself woken with a hand over my mouth, yanked backward from my tiny home. I kicked futilely until a second man punched me in the thigh. My world became pain, pushing back the fear. I looked up at my captors, wondering if I’d let my hair grow too long. Neither was large, in fact, they were both slender and rather short. I squirmed as hard as I could, but their grips were iron. I felt a blow to the back of my head and the night took me.
“Boss wants a word.” The whisper slithered into my mind through the darkness.
*******
A knock at the door. A call to enter. I saw a white dress from the corner of my eye so I didn't stand. A mug placed on the desk in front of me, and the dress disappeared.
"Like I said, I planned for an extended tale and sent for water. Continue when you are ready."
I took a deep breath, gathering my thoughts. I had been staring at a whorl in the wood of the desk and found it again.
"Have a seat, Hadley."
I felt my brow furrow against my will. I obeyed slowly, not sure what this new development brought. Novices do not sit in Sheriam Sedai's office.
"You are one of our oldest novices, Hadley." Was she saying my name too much? Was I being paranoid? "Ordinarily, that means the novice is too weak in the power to progress and likely will not be a danger to herself or others, or the novice has disciplinary issues. In your case, aside from some cheekiness that we need not discuss at the moment, neither is true for you. So, tell me from where your lack of ambition stems."
"I...do not believe I lack ambition, Sheriam Sedai." I was wholly unprepared for this line of questioning. I had assumed my glib tongue had run away and gotten me in trouble again. "I have seen my peers" I laughed inside a little at that, my peers were girls far younger than I, "rise and do all I can to aide the new girls in acclimating to their new environment. Having met so many, I can say my humble beginnings have given me perspective that possibly differs from theirs. My home here offers an assurance that I not go hungry. That, in itself, had been one of my major ambitions before I came here."
"Well, we do not train our girls in white to excel as maids. We will address what your goals will be. Now, let's see." She moved a sheet of paper in front of her and peered down for a moment. "Tell me where you came from. I know about Qaim and running away. I see it says here you lived on the streets of Illian before being discovered and sent here. Tell me really what drives you, for I know something does. Hunger alone did not keep you safe on the streets as a child."
"Yes, Sheriam Sedai." I nodded once. "Safety, hunger, fear. All these and some more things. I will need some time to tell it all."
"I expected as much and have planned for it. You may begin."
I had never talked about it before, but I began, and the words came.
*******
My first terrified, hungry, lonely nights in Illian were behind me. That isn’t to say I was some street-wise phantom of the docks, pilfering whatever my heart, or belly, desired whenever I wanted. I was just a girl, a suggestion of the woman I would someday become. I was soft, too-wet clay, so easily molded by the breath of the sea, the cobblestones of the streets, the whip of the wagon driver, the boot of the guard. I was nothing, I was the freedom taunting the smith’s apprentice. I saw it in his eyes when stared too long. At least, I hope that’s all it was. He would never dare risk the hunger, the uncertainty, but he yearned for the freedom he thought I had.
No, that isn’t right. That’s how I look back now and watch my memories. I hadn’t gotten my bearings. I hadn’t learned the ways of the world in just a few days. I was still terrified that every step would take me into the hands of whatever monster lived inside men. I looked a hundred directions at once to spot the dangers that could be coming my way. I looked a hundred directions at once and saw none of it.
Nights were the worst. My first night in the docksides was my luckiest and I hadn’t even known it at the time. The search party had stopped when the sun went down. My parents kept looking but the lanterns hadn’t been lit so they had to call an end.
I look back at the foolishness of my youth, to think my parents could have ever wished for a life without one of their children. To think seasickness in a child of Qaim meant I should no longer be a child of Qaim. We were not Atha’an Miere. We were Seafolk-adjacent. Nevermind that, I did what I did, and perhaps it could have been no other way.
I spent that first night trailing two street urchins, younger than I. I assumed they knew where children could spend the night. I was right, they knew the forgotten children of the world slept amidst trash heaps. They made their way down an alley and I slunk in behind them. As they made a hollow in a rubbish pile, I found a small niche where buildings met. I found a half a mealy apple and made it my dinner. I watched as the boy, maybe older than I was, maybe not, pushed garbage around to conceal himself and the girl. A sister? A lover? I comforted myself with the thought of the happiness they somehow found among the refuse. I convinced myself things weren’t so bad and I drifted off to sleep.
I woke to the yells of the boy and almost left my niche. He was fighting. Three sailors had come down the alley. No, one of the sailors was knocking the boy around, who was helpless against the large man. The other two had found the girl. I slowly secreted myself away and closed my eyes. I didn’t sleep and I tried not to hear.
The next morning, I crept out as the crowds grew. I walked numbly up to a stall where a portly woman was skewering meat for the charcoal grill. She scowled and told me she had nothing for me. When I told her I needed a knife, she glared at me. When I told her I needed to cut off my hair, she paused. She did it for me.
If you can’t defend yourself on the street, stay off the street. I spent days wandering, eating scraps, drinking from puddles. The Manetherendrelle was surprisingly filthy for such a large river by the time it met the Sea of Storms. It gathered all the filth of the surrounding city and dumped it into the ocean. Not realizing my part as a scavenger contributed to this fetid ecosystem, I thought I was above them. Maybe location gives perspective. I was actually above them. Small and light, I crept along the rooftops, having learned my safety lay in being unreachable. I looked down on them as I looked down on them.
Each night I crept back to my home, a place where three buildings met. They met unevenly and their overlapping roofs hid me from sun, rain, and other people. I spent my days hungry, only eating at night when I unloaded the fruits of my urban foraging. I found safety in being no one. I found my security was being unseen.
I found myself woken with a hand over my mouth, yanked backward from my tiny home. I kicked futilely until a second man punched me in the thigh. My world became pain, pushing back the fear. I looked up at my captors, wondering if I’d let my hair grow too long. Neither was large, in fact, they were both slender and rather short. I squirmed as hard as I could, but their grips were iron. I felt a blow to the back of my head and the night took me.
“Boss wants a word.” The whisper slithered into my mind through the darkness.
*******
A knock at the door. A call to enter. I saw a white dress from the corner of my eye so I didn't stand. A mug placed on the desk in front of me, and the dress disappeared.
"Like I said, I planned for an extended tale and sent for water. Continue when you are ready."
I took a deep breath, gathering my thoughts. I had been staring at a whorl in the wood of the desk and found it again.