Aurin cracked a wider smile at the lad's sembling and dissembling. He seemed incapable of smiling without smirking, but it was more of a smile than a smirk, which was rare for him. The attraction was mutual, and while his aura was knotted up tightly into a ball, he relaxed it somewhat for the lad, a show of goodwill since they were apparently not hiding their thoughts--surface ones, at least--from each other.
He avoided the obvious and crass joke about skewering hot meat, made a motion to lead the way and he would follow.
"I mostly only gamble when I know I'll win, but drinking games are usually fun regardless of whether you win or lose. And the trick to cheating is... well, it's like lying. You often do better with half-truths, bending truth, than you do with outright lies." That wasn't always the case. Sometimes one just had to lie one's face off with unshakable confidence and aplomb. "I'll never call myself a mage, but I'm not above a few magic tricks, you see?"
Along the way to the tavern, he bought them some skewers--again, following young Castor's lead--and then ordered them some cheap drinks at the bar. Settling on the stools, he gave the room one more look-over, marking points of egress, any dangerous-looking folk, and the like. He was only paranoid if everyone wasn't out to get him and, in his experience, everyone was.
"So... drinking games?"
An auburn eyebrow rose like a bird's wing taking flight as he pulled an entire chunk of meat off of his skewer to devour.
He avoided the obvious and crass joke about skewering hot meat, made a motion to lead the way and he would follow.
"I mostly only gamble when I know I'll win, but drinking games are usually fun regardless of whether you win or lose. And the trick to cheating is... well, it's like lying. You often do better with half-truths, bending truth, than you do with outright lies." That wasn't always the case. Sometimes one just had to lie one's face off with unshakable confidence and aplomb. "I'll never call myself a mage, but I'm not above a few magic tricks, you see?"
Along the way to the tavern, he bought them some skewers--again, following young Castor's lead--and then ordered them some cheap drinks at the bar. Settling on the stools, he gave the room one more look-over, marking points of egress, any dangerous-looking folk, and the like. He was only paranoid if everyone wasn't out to get him and, in his experience, everyone was.
"So... drinking games?"
An auburn eyebrow rose like a bird's wing taking flight as he pulled an entire chunk of meat off of his skewer to devour.