Season of Winter, Day 22, 512 AV
By now, Subira could no longer remember if she had ever felt guilty for cheating blatantly on the Day of Banquets and having every invitation she received brought to her by servants using trays or tongs. This practice allowed her the chance to examine the various invitations and fastidiously choose from among them without ever handling them herself, neatly bypassing the tradition that she must accept the first two that touched her hands. Everyone she knew did the same thing to avoid accidentally accepting an invitation that they would regret. If she'd ever experienced guilt over this, it had long been subsumed by the assurance that a South's life was too short and their time too valuable to be wasted on tedious or indigestible dinners.
This year, she looked over the somewhat diminished array of invitations with narrowed, appraising eyes. While she could still hear tong-wielding servants clattering back and forth with more invitations for other Souths, Subira knew the handful resting before her were all she would get this year. For some reason, few wanted a crotchety old maid with a reputation for neither beauty or charm at their tables. The thought made her snort amusedly.
Of the missives before her, the most elegant by far was sent by a noble-born gentleman from the North Winds. Despite its curlicued calligraphy and richly scented wadj, though, Subira turned up her nose. The very sight of the man's name stirred up vague but compelling recollections of a haughty, uninteresting creature she didn't like or respect, even if his nephew's niece's grandfather's third cousin-once-removed was Sadiki of the North Winds.
Tucked behind it on the tray, a far humbler invitation made Subira's eyes light up. Addressed to Subira in blunt, blocky letters, the brief note came from her uncle Harpenres' quartermaster, inviting her to supper with his wife and three strapping young sons. Even if his father had sold fruit and vegetables in the Pavilion, the quartermaster was wise, fair, and clever and she thought very well of him indeed.
With a decisive air, she reached for the quartermaster's invitation and the one to the family gathering and eagerly announced, "I have chosen!"
The servant bearing the tray silently bowed and backed out of the room.
That evening, though, Subira was swiftly reminded of another important difference between the North Winds nobleman and her uncle's quartermaster besides temperament: wealth. After exchanging merry, boisterous greetings with their guests and seating them in places of honor on long benches, the family began handing out platters of food that struck Subira as painfully plain and scant. They didn't have any cooks or waiters either, so the quartermaster or his wife frequently excused themselves to fetch the next course and offer it to their guests. A squat, grave woman with a surprisingly luminous smile, the quartermaster's wife smiled proudly as the first course, consisting of bowls of bean soup, traveled down the rows of guests to the children.
Taking a sip of the soup, Subira just barely kept herself from making a face. It tasted rough and heavy to her palate, long accustomed to more delicately spiced bisques and broths. There wasn't a single bay leaf in sight, but plenty of salt, which no doubt accounted for his wife's pride in the soup.
She quenched her thirst during the next course with several slices of pale, juicy melon, which thankfully tasted much the same as what she was used to. The next course, however, came as a shock to Subira. Remembering the pheasant in mint sauce served with flaky tubers and aromatic onions that she'd eaten two nights ago, she took one look at the chunks of celery and steamed fish being handed around and repressed her sigh with a long sip of beer. The thought that this would be a long, hungry night, though, was quickly cut short when the neighbor on her right, an old sail-maker, began bantering and poking good-natured fun at their host. Subira burst out laughing at one particularly droll pun and even threw in a few quips of her own about her uncle and his quartermaster.
Somehow, the laughter and jesting made the fish taste sweeter in her mouth, even if there wasn't quite as much of it as she would've liked. Around when the platters of grapes, jackal nuts, and almonds came around, the guests started singing sea shanties and rowing songs, and Subira's warbling contralto sang along with them.
Despite the fun, though, she couldn't help wolfing down great quantities of beef, leeks, cabbage, and fresh-baked barley bread when she returned to attend her family's gathering. Her little sister Teshrshan watched Subira feasting with a mixture of amusement and astonishment.
"Sicpw, you're slowing down," Tesha teased. "I think you actually took long enough to taste that last loaf!"
"If I wasn't so busy enjoying this bread, I'd definitely shoot back something witty and sharp," Subira mumbled around a mouthful of barley bread.
"Where did you go tonight?" Tesha asked. "How in Dira's name did you leave so hungry?"
Subira told her.
"That sounds like you, Subi," Tesha remarked, a little dryly. "I, on the other hand, went to a dinner hosted by," she named a prominent teacher at the Courtyard of Jackals, "and I certainly ate my fill. Ah, well. Did you enjoy yourself, at least?"
"Yes," Subira answered firmly. "I did." |
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