"Well," he said grudgingly, cracking a grudging smile, "if you're garbage then so am I."
He glanced over his shoulder, noticed the bar wench returning.
"Ask him about dessert if you want. Might as well take me all I'm worth while I'm feeling penitent and nostalgic." His smile turned into a smirk, which seemed to fit his face better. "Just don't go porking to the point where you hork up my peace offering. That's just fucking rude."
And then bar wench was there asking after things. Maybe it was also fucking rude to think of him as bar wench, but he wasn't going to ask him his name like one of those customers who wanted to form a personal connection like that made them nobler than customers who were polite and paid them for doing their job. And he was somewhere between realizing the stupidity of offering the thief his alias and not quite wanting to share his real name.
"How was everything, sirs?"
"Obviously disgusting," he said, indicating his empty bowl and the remains of the bread that the thief hadn't quite finished. "I'll have another ale, though. As for him..." He nodded toward the one he might have called my friend for politeness' sake, but didn't say because it would have been a lie and possibly been upsetting. "We both have to get back to work, but it's up to you." That said, he drank more of his dwindling ale, leaving him to order another if he thought best and ask about dessert if he wanted it. He was a young man, but Aurin didn't know if he was too young to drink here in Antiris. The way he figured it, if the city wasn't going to afford people a childhood, then they ought to leave them alone to drink adult beverages and drown the sorrows inflicted by an uncaring city.
He glanced over his shoulder, noticed the bar wench returning.
"Ask him about dessert if you want. Might as well take me all I'm worth while I'm feeling penitent and nostalgic." His smile turned into a smirk, which seemed to fit his face better. "Just don't go porking to the point where you hork up my peace offering. That's just fucking rude."
And then bar wench was there asking after things. Maybe it was also fucking rude to think of him as bar wench, but he wasn't going to ask him his name like one of those customers who wanted to form a personal connection like that made them nobler than customers who were polite and paid them for doing their job. And he was somewhere between realizing the stupidity of offering the thief his alias and not quite wanting to share his real name.
"How was everything, sirs?"
"Obviously disgusting," he said, indicating his empty bowl and the remains of the bread that the thief hadn't quite finished. "I'll have another ale, though. As for him..." He nodded toward the one he might have called my friend for politeness' sake, but didn't say because it would have been a lie and possibly been upsetting. "We both have to get back to work, but it's up to you." That said, he drank more of his dwindling ale, leaving him to order another if he thought best and ask about dessert if he wanted it. He was a young man, but Aurin didn't know if he was too young to drink here in Antiris. The way he figured it, if the city wasn't going to afford people a childhood, then they ought to leave them alone to drink adult beverages and drown the sorrows inflicted by an uncaring city.