45th Day of Summer, 503 AV There was a new apprentice working in Granddad's shop today. Minerva didn't like him. She never liked any of them. None of them tended to stick around very long. Sometimes she thought maybe Granddad fired them because she didn't want them around. He'd never said as much, but she liked to pretend that was the reason why. It wasn't very fair to her when Granddad had another apprentice. SHE was supposed to be his apprentice. Except he always told her she was more than an apprentice, she was family. The boy's name was Romney. He was fourteen, and kinda cute (she supposed), except that he stared at her in ways she didn't like. Ever since she started growing into a woman, men of all ages tended to look at her in ways she didn't like. She'd heard comments, when they didn't think she could hear them, that made her uncomfortable. Things like, 'She's gonna be a real looker in a few years,' or, 'I'd like to teach her how to please a man...' It bothered her, but the only thing she could do was ignore them. She tended not to hang around any men when she could avoid it. Most times it was her father's friends that came over to drink, and she'd spend that time hiding in her room to avoid the unwanted attention. Romney hadn't made any such comments, and he was likely too young to know what such things meant, any more than Minerva herself knew (nor did she want to find out). But he still looked at her, and she didn't like him. She didn't talk to him unless she had to. Granddad had them working on assembling a wagon. One of the merchants in the city had hired him to build it. Minerva hadn't helped him build something this big very often, and he usually just gave her small tasks to help out in the overall construction. For the moment he just had her cutting boards. He lined up a stack of them on a workbench and led her over, showing her the measurements on the first one. "Gotta keep 'em all the same, right dear?" he said, marking on the board where he needed her to cut. "The 'ole set's gonna line up good, y'see? Otherwise the side o' the wagon'll be all lopsided, an' 'at ain't the sign of a proper craftsman, aye?" She nodded and grabbed the wood saw off the rack. She knew better than to touch Granddad's personal tools, and just took one of the regular ones. His tools were just for him to use. They were of exceptional quality, and Granddad was very protective of them. Minerva and any of Granddad's apprentices were only allowed to use the ordinary tools. "Ya all set, dear?" Granddad asked her, watching as she lined up the cut. "Aye," she replied, keeping her eyes on the thin line etched across the wood. "I done got 'er, Granddad..." She didn't like it when he wouldn't let her do it herself. She braced her left hand on the board, the right side being clamped firmly to the table, and started to cut. Holding the board steady helped make sure the cut would be clean. That was one of the first things Granddad had taught her. She kept focused on her cut while Granddad went over to show Romney how to work the lathe. She quietly grinned when she heard him having to go through the process step by step. Minerva had started working the lathe when she was ten. She knew how to do it by herself. But the new apprentice didn't seem like he'd ever held a tool before in his life. |