You seem to want to use the nth function.
From the docs for that function:
clojure.core/nth
([coll index] [coll index not-found])
Returns the value at the index. get returns nil if index out of
bounds, nth throws an exception unless not-found is supplied. nth
also works for strings, Java arrays, regex Matchers and Lists, and,
in O(n) time, for sequences.
That last clause means that in practice, nth is slower for elements "farther off" in sequences, with no guarantee to work quicker for collections that in principle support faster access (~ O(n)) to indexed elements. For (clojure) sequences, this makes sense; the clojure seq API is based on the linked-list API and in a linked list, you can only access the nth item by traversing every item before it. Keeping that restriction is what makes concrete list implementations interchangeable with lazy sequences.
Clojure collection access functions are generally designed this way; functions that do have significantly better access times on specific collections have separate names and cannot be used "by accident" on slower collections.
As an example of a collection type that supports fast "random" access to items, clojure vectors are callable; (vector-collection index-number) yields the item at index index-number - and note that clojure seqs are not callable.