The heavy oak door of Master Gutenberg’s workshop shut with a definitive click, leaving fourteen-year-old Peter alone in the ink-scented shadows. The year was 1455, and Mainz was a city built on secrets. For three years, Peter had scrubbed press beds, melted lead, and wiped black stains from his fingers, all for the privilege of learning the art of movable type—a craft the world had never seen before.
Tonight, the workshop felt different. The air was thick with the sharp metallic tang of antimony and the greasy smell of linseed oil. Peter walked over to the towering wooden press, its massive screw gleaming in the moonlight. But as his eyes swept over the compositing tables, his breath caught. The wooden case for the letter E sat askew.
Peter stepped closer, lifting his lantern. The small, rectangular pieces of cast metal—each bearing the mirrored, Gothic imprint of the most common letter in the Latin language—were completely gone. The velvet-lined compartment was empty.
Panic seized him. This was not just a theft of metal; it was the theft of a revolution. Master Gutenberg’s secret alloy was the key to the entire operation. If a rival printer got their hands on those precise letters, they could replicate the press, flood the market, and ruin Gutenberg before his great Bible was even finished.
Peter knew the watchman would not pass for another hour. If he raised the alarm now, suspicion might fall on him. He had to find the type himself.
He knelt, inspecting the floorboards. A dark smudge of fresh printer’s ink pointed toward the back window. Peter climbed through the casement into the muddy alley. The ground was wet from an evening shower, and a single set of heavy boot prints pressed deep into the mire, leading toward the Rhine River docks.
Peter pulled his wool cloak tight and ran, his leather shoes slipping on the cobblestones. The docks were a maze of wooden crates, barrels of herring, and moored barges. At the end of the pier, a lantern flickered aboard a small skiff.
Two men stood in the boat, their low voices carrying over the lapping water.
“Is it all here?” one asked, his accent thick and unfamiliar.
“Every single E from the primary font,” a familiar voice replied. It was Johann, a disgruntled journeyman who had been dismissed from the workshop a week prior. “Without them, his precious books are nothing but expensive wood and blank paper.”
Johann held up a heavy leather pouch. It clinked with the distinct, muffled sound of lead alloy.
Peter looked around wildly. He was small, unarmed, and no match for two grown men. He couldn’t fight them, but he could outsmart them.
Near the edge of the pier sat a stack of empty wine barrels. Gritting his teeth, Peter shoved the top barrel with all his might. It crashed down, splintering against the dock with a sound like a thunderclap. “Who’s there?” Johann shouted, spinning around.
Peter didn’t answer. He grabbed a heavy wooden mooring pin and hurled it into the river right next to the boat, creating a massive splash. “Watchmen! Over here!” Peter yelled, throwing his voice into the fog to sound like a grown man. “Secure the perimeter!”
The ruse worked. Terrified of the city guard and the harsh penalties for industrial theft, the foreign buyer panicked. He pushed his oar against the dock, violently rocking the skiff to escape into the dark current.
Johann, caught off guard by the sudden movement, lost his footing. He pitched forward, his arms flailing. The heavy leather pouch flew from his grip, landing with a hard thud on the very edge of the wooden pier before sliding toward the water.
Johann scrambled to recover his balance as the boat drifted away into the mist, leaving him trapped on the water with his buyer, but separated from his prize.
Peter rushed forward, diving flat onto the wet planks. His fingers scraped the rough leather of the pouch just as it began to tip over the edge. He squeezed it tight and pulled it to his chest. Inside, the metal pieces rattled safely.
An hour later, the type was back in its wooden case, wiped clean of river mud.
When Master Gutenberg arrived at dawn, he found Peter fast asleep at the compositing table, his face smudged with ink and his knuckles scraped. Gutenberg glanced at the perfectly arranged letters in the font case, then down at the muddy boots near the door.
The master printer smiled softly, placed a heavy hand on the boy’s shoulder, and said, “Wake up, Peter. Today, we print the text, and you shall set the first line.” To advance this story further, please let me know:
Should we expand this into a longer multi-chapter narrative?