Dice at the Docks Spring 36 512 AV The workshop was quiet. Fogle was the only other worker there and the boy had nothing over a year’s experience in handling the glass. Half the crew had been roped in to help the effort elsewhere in the city, as glasswork was a ‘non essential element’ to the rebuilding project at this time. The only reason Montaine hadn’t been coerced into going with them was because he threatened to pitch a fit. The gang leader had muttered something derogative about his ability to aid in the manual labour and slumped off with his fresh faced new workers. Unfortunately, that was not the sole hit to the glasswork’s numbers in recent days, two of the lads had been arrested in a riot down market way and old Gadder had upped sticks and travelled northwest. Montaine slid his pipe into the batch oven with practiced ease and watched for the reflection of the metal on the molten glass. It was often tempting when you were inexperienced with the work, and sometimes even after years of practicing the art, to simply force the tool in and gather up as much of the thick, fiery liquid as possible. It was a foolish thought and risked damaging the equipment and wasting time. The fire burned so hot within the heart of the oven that it was nigh on impossible to tell where the surface of the glass was within and so it was a necessity to use the pipe’s image, mirrored on the molten surface, to judge its position. Early in his career, before Calbert had permitted him to begin working proper, he had spent many hours in front of the oven as others worked, spotting the reflection. Often he would come home, sweating with hair plastered to his face. The craftsman gathered up a weighty batch and pulled his pipe free. A new requisition had arrived, with some rather unusual stipulations. Much of their business in recent days had been requests for new glass panes to replace those windows broken by the storm, and true to type this order had been for windows too. But this one was different, this one was special. A captain from a ship called the Heart of the Alvina had sent his cabin boy in search of a glassworker to make repairs to his cabin’s windows, but with very specific requirements. The captain’s cabin spread along the stern of the ship and possessed one grand bay window stretching the whole width. The man had inherited the Heart from his father and was incredibly proud of its design, particularly the bay window. Whilst the inner panels were fairly standard, the outer panels had been formed in such a way that the centre of the glass was warped. It was an old method of production that had gone the way of the Valterrian as it produced glass that was rather difficult to see through, somewhat unpopular for windows to say the least. But the customer had insisted, he also wanted the regular centre panels refitted as well, but it was the stylised outer glass that he was concerned with. Montaine blew into the mouthpiece and watched the sienna glass expand. |