Underneath sunned Lorrum, the tunnels spread deep and far, like holes in a molding cottage, sick with filth. Your breath catches in your throat as you dash down them, molded bricks flying by your vision. Left and right, the tunnels gape and shrink, the dilating pupil of some vast stonework beast, swallowing your rays of light. You stop, for a bare moment, to catch your breath, to listen close for the thundering footsteps of your pursuers. This day was not always the travesty that it mutated into, a foul slime of a day running across the surface of the pond of your life. You've been training for this day for years now, your fifteenth birthday, the opportunity to find yourself under the command of a caring Knightfather, ready to train you in all of 18 arts of war, the 7 Sacred Precepts of the High Church, the schools of horsemanship and archery, smithing and flagbearing, song and dance.
There was nothing you could have wanted more.
They would not tell you the reason why. Was your half-lame, sinister arm unfit to wield a sword? Sure, the scarring is unsightly, but it's not... as if it was your fault! Men cannot control their childhood injuries, nor how they decide to make manifest. Or was it your long hair, posing a potential weakness to an opponent? Surely, you could have cut it clean with a sword given the opportunity. It's not as if you would have been the first girl to be apprenticed under a Knightfather. Sir Aurelia Highwinter occupied the highest station one of ignoble birth could achieve! Yet, something about you prompted not only repudiation, but expulsion. Having taken a moment to breathe, the blooming pain in your left side, the side marked by sin since childhood, reasserts itself to the forefront of your mind. The wraps you used to hide the appearance of femininity soaked in a layer of drying brick brown.
They came at you, lances drawn, blades at the ready, as if you were an enemy. You knew so little of the art of the lance, but you knew that they were wearing armor, and you were not, so you fled.
Today is your fifteenth birthday. Although it was fifteen years ago that you were given life and a name, it was only today that you will be given a purpose and meaning.
What is your name, young squire?