Sivan was only too happy to physically and sexually exhaust his nerves so they could get some good sleep before the morrow. And on that morrow, Sivan was more careful about his clothing than Torin had ever seen him, and made several adjustments to how Torin wore his own clothes that seemed to make no noticeable change at all.
At the workshop of his former master, he regressed to a former version of himself, unfailingly polite and demure, not like a kicked dog, but certainly someone in the presence of their betters. Torin was greeted politely as Lord Torin, but as soon as the apprenticeship structure was explained, he was merely apprentice. Mythrasi or the workshop had several titles denoting different levels of apprenticeship and it was explained to him that he would begin at the beginning and that they would go over fundamentals with him no matter how good a showing he gave of his current skills.
His apprentice carried connotations of the one who sees or the one who watches, but also carried a modicum of respect for all that it was also the bottom rung of a ladder. It presumed that he was wise enough to see things that others couldn't.
Sivan's apprentice carried connotations the one who speaks or the one who knows the Names of things, and even Names in this context made Torin think of his Bronze Fox and other such Names that were not those chosen by a parent. That had been his title when he had left Sol'Valen with their erstwhile master, but after his own showing, proving to have accumulated delightful lore from his draconic professor of alchemy, was given another apprentice whose connotations were mysterious.
When the day was done, Sivan was exhausted, but he lingered to help Torin clean and tidy the runeforging workshop. At his rank, it was not his duty to do the cleaning, but it was his duty to ensure the newer apprentice knew how to do so properly. Being an apprentice here also prepared one slowly to teach apprentices of one's own so that the lineage of the craft would be a chain reaching forward and backward in time rather than a mere shining link that connected nothing beyond itself.
"It's not quite animism," he was saying, sniffing at an alchemical solution before dribbling some into a soft cloth and using it to buff the metal of a hammer. "But you know how the aether is alive and sometimes seems to have a mind of its own, even if that mind isn't in the same shape as our minds... Well, we work the aether with our tools, and even our tools are meant to be ever more perfect examples of their Form. We give them as perfect a Form as we can, then use them to shape aether. It changes their aetheric patterns subtly. Our tools are our partners in the Great Work. The same way Laurevere apologizes to a blade if he is disarmed and drops it, we treat our tools with respect."