3 Frost 120
The Velvet Cabaret rarely closed entirely. A dedicated reveler might wish to see dawn creeping over the horizon when they quit the premises. More dedicated revelers wouldn't stop until their bodies gave out with exhaustion, full of sensual pleasures. Part of Aurin's job was gauging the clientele and ushering them toward the end of their night before they got violent, violently ill, or other things inconvenient to him. As the place normally only closed in parts during slow hours to allow for cleaning, Aurin could not be in all places at all times forever and always, so he wasn't the only fixer in the place. Some would say manager, though Madame Lunaria didn't delegate authority so much as responsibility. The man with straight teeth and a crooked smile was perhaps the most senior of her lieutenants if only because he had stuck around long enough to earn her trust. Or because her cat had liked him straightaway—it was difficult to tell sometimes.
In any event, outside of the red building, dawn had come and morning matured when Aurin stepped out of his little red-roofed outbuilding to walk to the nearest service entrance. He was the help—he didn't use the front entrance where it stood, a proud strumpet between the Golden Peacock Theater and the Jade Crane Bathhouse. The elder sister looked up to higher art, the younger sister served the health of its patrons, but they were the raunchy middle sister, flashing her goods, tossing dice, and otherwise debauching but still with enough of a veneer of civility to draw the monied classes.
That morning, the back of a sandy head waited at the service entrance. Aurin didn't know how long the man had been standing there, but on the same ring of keys that locked his house was a key to let him in the back door of the Cabaret. He let the keys jingle a bit, not making an effort to step softly, so the man wouldn't be startled by his presence. A quick assessment saw they were of a similar height and build, though when he caught the young profile, he decided that this one was going to be burly if no taller ere long. But he didn't hold himself like the sort who was well trained for violence, and it was rather early for belligerence.
Anyway, he came burdened. It was just a delivery.
"Good morrow, friend," he called as he approached. His walk was a calculated saunter, eating up the ground with his long legs but making no show of a hurry. "What have you brought for us today—or have you come to audition?"