3 Frost 120
The Velvet Cabaret was a different animal by night. Between the intoxicating substances and the intoxicating company, time lost some of its cohesion within its storied walls, but perhaps the bodies inside sensed what their eyes could not. Outside, gloaming gave way to night as it always did; some went home to solitude or family, while others gathered in places like this for conviviality or distraction or to scratch some other itch. And the Season of Frost had arrived, drawing many to the communal warmth and making them loath to leave, knowing their walk of shame would involve shivering and slip-sliding on ice if they weren't careful
The pungent scents of the hookah lounges gave way to the clearer air of the main hall as Aurin did his rounds. He was everyone's best friend, holding court here for a moment, asking after someone's children there for a moment. Most people were either friends or friends he hadn't met yet. Some greeted him with ill humor, but none actively disliked him. A nod here, a signal there, and various of his co-workers moved like fine clockwork to see things done, to let the good times roll like so many dice. Even when the house rolled snake eyes, the house won in the end. But, to Aurin's mind, everyone won. A bad night at cards oughtn't to beggar a person. The Cabaret didn't want to lose a customer, just keep their cash flowing into its coffers. It was an engine for Kalzasi's economy as much as its gold and green sisters on the same stretch of street, and helped citizens cope with the vagaries of life.
Everyone needed to cut loose sometimes.
"Well played!" he exclaimed, clapping a regular on the back who had just won a nice little pot with a clever bit of bluffing. He spun with a lazy grace and snatched up two flutes of sparkling wine, setting one down and holding the other out to celebrate with him. "Cheers!" A sip of the heady stuff, then, "Should I tell Madame you're playing hard and fast for her silkiest knickers tonight?"
"Is it true her cat's fur isn't the only stuff that's white?" the man asked, loosened up by the headier stuff of winning.
"Sir!" Aurin exclaimed, hand clutching imaginary pearls at his chest. "A gentleman doesn't kiss and tell." Once that settled, he leaned down and whispered something in the man's ear that made his eyes bulge and his mouth gape wide with raucous laughter. "You'll just spend it all on lap dances anyway."
With a hearty pat on the man's shoulder, Aurin moved off glancing toward the stage where a large ring was suspended from the ceiling, spinning slowly as a man and a woman wearing very little and all of that sequined to catch the light danced with each other and sang a duet. He was well and duly impressed both by their flexibility and their breath support.