Unfortunately for him, Devroux would have to spend the following weeks rising early and sleeping late. His sleep schedule was not aligned to the one that Sam had taken, given how old he was. If he wanted to have any face time with Sam himself and still manage to work on his own time, Dev would be forced to manage his time somehow.
Every night the mink would stay late, working personally on the crafts any clients had ordered. In the mornings he’d arrive early enough so that Sam could check each piece of equipment for faults or critiques. After that was over, he’d spend the day watching Sam work on the single anvil he owned, motioning in unison as Sam did it to physically process the old man’s technique. If given the chance, Dev would take a seat and help craft on his own, but that rarely happened aside from when Sam left for bed. This routine carried on for a week before Dev was able to strike up a conversation about Bart during idle chit-chat with the old man.
“If you were his teacher and Bart was such a rowdy child, how did you sit him still enough to teach him smithing, let alone enjoy it?” Sam had been open about his relationship with Bart, having just been telling stories about the man back when they were together. This question, however, put a solemn look on Sam’s face.
“He rolled into town one day on one of those ships. He was so earnest about his desire to be a blacksmith and assist his crew mates. The look of sincerity on his face made it hard to turn him down, so I told him to get a better piece of steel to work on and let him continue his work in spite of his past.” During his time on Drum, Dev had the opportunity of learning a little bit about the life of Bart. However, when it came to anything about the ocean and what caused his desire to settle onto a calmer island was brushed off with a mere mention of his regular home life. The fact that he gave no specifics, just as Sam was currently doing, made it sound as if he wasn’t just some sailor, but was once part of a pirate crew.
“Bart worked hard. He soaked up the information I gave him about blacksmithing and turned it into his own. He was an apprentice to end all apprentices. It’s a shame that he had to up and leave one day.” This piqued Dev’s interesting.
“What do you mean by that? He just disappeared?” “Well, not out of thin air, but quickly. The first mate of the crew he was part of, “ he stammered, putting a finger to his lip in thought.
“I think it was Tom. Tom something. Tom came into the shop one day, told Bart it was time to go, and I haven’t seen the bastard since.” “So, you have no idea what has happened to him since?” “Well, kind of. Every now and again someone will come in bearing the weapon or armor of Bart. That’ll, at the very least, give me comfort. He was like a son to me, so it was hard seeing him go. I just like knowing he’s alive.” “It’s incredible that the one person I ran in to would know about Bart. It’s like I’m skipping a step and learning from the original.” Sam chuckled at the notion.
“Well, I hope you take what I show you and do good things with it. Not all eggs have been as good as Bart was.” “Who was the worst person you’ve taught?” Dev asked, amused. Someone terrible at the craft or just another asshole pirate was the likely answer, but he was having a good conversation with Sam and wanted it to continue.
“Uh...” the old man hesitated.
“The worst is probably Cassius. Cassius Butler was his name. He’s now a fucking kingpin.” It wasn’t one of the expected answers.
“He is one of THE kingpins of Baltigo? You taught someone so important?” “Heh,” Sam grunted. His face showed his lack of amusement with the statement.
“Important is one way to say it. That little shit took what I showed him and has done terrible things with it. Same kind of stuff that makes up the blade on your back. I saw that, by the way.” Sam was referring to Yoru, the weapon that Devroux always had strapped to his back. It was a keepsake of one of his first big adventures since leaving Zou, but it was also a weapon with beautiful craftsmanship and purity. But if Sam was so fired up about it, he wasn’t talking about the quality – he was talking about how it was created.
Yoru, as a weapon, was rumored to have been created using the bones of the people that lived in the master blacksmith’s home town. He folded their bones and blood into the steel, then heat-treated the weapon in a bath comprised of more blood. It now held the horrors that those people saw, often times too much for those with weaker willpower to wield. Dev had only barely gotten used to it, but it didn’t make it any less of a monstrous weapon.
If Cassius Butler were indeed what he was rumored to be, he’d be an interesting person to meet and potentially learn something from. The only question now was how he’d garner the attention of someone that important.
The conversation had taken a darker turn, so both of the men returned to their efforts rather than continue the conversation. There were still many orders that had to be completed.
[EXIT]