TASK ONE : who do you love? // @embersrpg
{ a handwritten letter to their assistant, zero holloway, sealed in an unlabeled envelope, as of yet unsent, tucked between the last page and back cover of the notebook silver keeps locked in the middle drawer beside their bed }
Z.H.,
It’s not an easy thing to put sentimentality into words. Facts are easier to deal in, concrete calculations, problems that have real solutions to discover, questions that have answers, I have no trouble lecturing on those sorts of things for hours. This sort of thing is...different, though. But I’ve always found it more possible to offer vulnerability, honesty in written word rather than spoken.
To start, I have to admit that I’ve done you a disservice by being more inclined to focus on my work, and by forcing you to do the same while you’ve worked for me, and I apologize for that. I think you’ll understand one day sooner rather than later why that’s been for the best, especially recently, although you’re intelligent enough that I wouldn’t be surprised if you had already reasoned why I’ve done so.
That wasn’t always the case, of course. It’s always been an intentional choice, yes, but it’s rarely been an unselfish one, more for my own benefit than for the benefit of any of those around me. In a way, it still is a selfish choice now, as I would rather you live freely, as you want to, with the potential to see a kinder future, or at least a more just one, than to end up in a position similar to my own. Or, more likely, a position much worse than my own, because of me.
I’ve had dozens of interns turned assistants over the past two decades, all hand-chosen by my overseers, all intelligent in their own right, all helpful to varying degrees, and I’ve had several interns turned tributes, too––intentionally, I believe, but that’s a theory for another letter––but it would be a lie to say I’ve cared for any of them on a personal level. I say this with no amount of pride, but with a certain sense of guilt now. There’s a great deal more that I could have done, but it’s difficult to see the sense in attachment when there’s no future, and it’s safer to keep a distance for all involved. Or that’s what I’ve told myself, anyway. I don’t think that’s as true as I believed; it’s just an excuse I’ve used. It’s a punishment, after all, or perhaps more accurately a reminder of how easily things can be taken away, the power held over my head, no single moment of any of our lives truly safe, only it hasn’t had the effect they hoped for.
(And I refuse to give them credit for any change in opinion I may be ruminating on as I write this.)
This is all to say that I’m grateful that they sent you to me, I’m grateful that none of the twenty slips of paper with your name on them were chosen, and you have the chance at a future I know I wouldn’t have been able to guarantee if it had. I’m grateful to call you an assistant, and I’m grateful that I’ve had the chance to be a mentor to you in a perhaps more meaningful sense than I might’ve been able had the circumstances been different. I only wish that I could reverse the hands of time and offer something better to the others that came before, in this arena and other Arenas.
I’d like to think I’m doing a better job of that now, though, and you’ve nearly forced me to do so, with your rather relentless stream of interest in the personal, and care it’s difficult not to offer back, but I’ll let you judge that, being more objective than self reflection. At the time of writing this, there’s still a long way to go, I think, but everyone has to start somewhere. I can only hope that I’m not starting too late.
As sentimental as it sounds, it feels serendipitous that you came to me when you did. At the right time, in the right place, against unfathomable odds, here you are, to serve as proof and motivation at the same time. Proof of the things I’ve tried to ignore in the world, the cruelty I’ve been apart of and the pain I’ve helped cause, and motivation to take some semblance of control back so that I don’t let down another person whose well being has been put in my hands.
The thing I fear, though, is that my passivity and distance is the only thing that’s kept you safe, and I can’t comfortably give either of those things any longer... Which you’ve likely noticed, if this letter has found its way safely into your hands, or unsafely into another’s.
I think they sent you to me to try to show you it’s better to keep your head down, and do as you’re asked, and that’s likely what I would have taught before the sparks of something both new and old at the same time were lit around us. But now? Now I’m prepared to admit I hope you won’t do anything of the sort when the time comes, whether I’m with you or not.
Your mentor,
S.O.












