Valentin Valentin did not react to the engineered appearance of Darus of Haqs, but nobody watching could know whether this was because he did not recognize Aurin or because he did not intend to react. The lawyer's brow furrowed as he finished perusing the page on the log he'd asked for, and only once the room was empty and the reading was finished did he slam the ledger together between two palms, looking entirely exasperated.
"Even the swindles are second-rate here." the lawyer complained, "Even if I were writing these during my 'nightly ablutions', I wouldn't cut the exact same weight from every bale. Zum Donnerwetter! If this were the city I would drag these farmers before the magistrates myself."
He stood, perhaps propelled more by his acute annoyance than any sense of decorum, and tossed the book into a pile, shaking his head.
"They are fortunate that I have thornier hedgehogs to brush." Valentin turned to face "Darius", frowning as he looked Aurin's outfit up and down, then nodding slowly. "Awful. A truly tasteless ensemble! It's a generation out of date, the fit is all wrong, and an expensive foreign thread when you could have bought the like for half the price at home. You'll be the envy of the local gentry."
Looking considerably more cheery than he had at the start of his rant, the lawyer returned to the desk he'd commandeered, pushing various documents and ill-bound books aside without care. At the bottom were a pile of papers he himself had brought- notes concerning the various notables present in the duchy's capital, and most especially those connected to the decedent whose wealth they so surreptitiously sought.
"So, Darus, what's your in? Doubtless you've the money to show up on the scene, but you'll need a story to draw attention and wiggle your way into the Allstead house. Have you an angle?"
Valentin, of course, had never practiced the criminal arts himself- but he'd seen these things play out, again and again, on a hundred different stages. At every level it was simply a confidence game, for if you allowed your scheme to be committed to numbers and paper, even an idiot would soon realize skullduggery was afoot. Doubtless Aurin knew that, but he was curious to see just how the man's mind worked.