15 Frost 120
The Velvet Cabaret
Midday
The Velvet Cabaret
Midday
Too low to find my way
Too high to wonder why
I've touched this place before
Somewhere in another time
Jacun had thought that he needed a break. Jacun knew everything. He wasn't actually a bastard about it, but Sivan had an eternal chip on his shoulder, and hated being subservient to anyone. Not that Jacun was lordly. It was the idea of it. It had taken time for him to get comfortable with his previous master, who had been impossibly benevolent. Perhaps it was because he had begun as more of a friend and teacher before things were formalized. Perhaps Sivan was just reasonably out of sorts because suddenly, the one person he had cared about most in recent memory was gone. He had inherited a grief-stricken automaton, stumbled upon a veritable babe in the woods, and was now in Kalzasi trying to fend for himself as well as the automaton and the fae, one hibernating and the other apparently cursed.
But he had a little cottage of his own. Well, he shared it with his dependents, which now included a passel of elemental sprites whom he paid in aether to keep his new home livable until he could afford to make improvements, which he would hold off on until he knew this apprenticeship was going to stick. He hoped it would. He didn't know if he liked Kalzasi yet, but it wasn't like he had a sense of direction insofar as where his life was heading. His master had wanted him to learn alchemy, so he was learning alchemy. IX needed his skills as an artificer to keep it in shape, and alchemy might help with repair and improvements, too, so he was watching over the inert form of the automaton, who took up a huge chunk of real estate in the cottage without contributing a misting thing. Flower needed a curse-breaker, and so Sivan was going to have to start learning about that, as well.
Perhaps Jacun had a point. He was taking quickly to the books and scrolls assigned for reading. He was diligent in assisting Jacun in his own works, as well as throwing himself into the small, insignificant projects he could complete with the barest understanding of alchemy. It didn't help that he didn't speak the language. It had never mattered before when the two people he spoke to were fluent in Mythrasi. He could get by here, but it was always awkward. People spoke too slow, too loud, and with big gestures because they thought he was stupid. It required a lot of daily meditation to keep his calm. His mother's race had a penchant for falling to darker emotions, and he seemed to have inherited that as well as the ability to communicate with spirits. He couldn't complain, really, as that helped a great deal with his summoning and he could mostly avoid people who irritated him. The tradeoff seemed a great deal fairer than a lot of the other tradeoffs in life.
Jacun had said he could take the delivery around to the back, that the Velvet Cabaret had a service entrance for such things. Be that as it may, Sivan still didn't know the Plaza of the Jeweled Arches well, even if his cottage was nearby, as well as his new place of employment. Perhaps they would send him out that way, and he could find his way back to the shop and from that point on, he would know where it was. But he didn't want to get lost because then he would have to talk to people who would treat him like an idiot because he didn't speak their ugly language.
He didn't know the word "Cabaret" but then he didn't know many words in Common. Seeing it next to an obvious theater and looking similar enough, he took it for the same thing and walked in through the unlocked front doors. Dressed well enough now that he had settled in long enough to do laundry, he didn't stand out so much for what he was wearing, at least. He was confused, though. There was a stage area, and there were entertainments, but most of the people here present were playing cards or dicing.
Not quite sure how to proceed, he walked up to the nearest bar, caught the attention of the barkeep, and indicated his rucksack, wherein there lay a supply of charas, the psychoactive resin specially rolled and alchemized so it shone with more than its natural sparkle.
"Aurin?" he asked, golden brows raised in question. Names, at least, didn't bear translation, and that one sounded musical enough with his exotic phonation.