Antiris, Free City of the North
16 Frost 117
16 Frost 117
If Aurin thought his wandering days were done when he finally settled in Kalzasi two years prior, he was wrong. His running days were over for the time being, though. He had employment that he didn't hate, that wasn't what he was trained for but for which is training made him strangely suitable, and he now had a small home of his own, though he hadn't let anyone into his fortress of solitude yet. Perhaps he never would. Life left scars on the most fortunate of people. His wounds, forever unexamined, might just never heal. But few people knew he was wounded, and those who did probably assumed he had bled out by now.
In Kalzasi he was charming, even when prickly. But if it was going to be his home indefinitely, he had to have something more than just managing a brothel-cum-cabaret for an exigent Hytori woman. And so he was listening, sutbly training those around him to listen as well. Alcohol was the least of the intoxicants running through the veins of the Velvet Cabaret's clientele. Neither was lust. But so far, he hadn't weaponized the things he had learned. He was only now beginning to monetize them. It was a subtle knife, information. And now, having time and space to breathe, he was able to play the long game. He might never be Shokaze of Kalzasi, but there were many ways to rule. Politics was only one of them.
Chasing this lead out of the city served another purpose, too. Lunaria had been an inch from ordering him to take a vacation. He didn't fuck her whores. He didn't skim her profits. Well, he didn't make a habit of fucking her whores, and if it happened, it happened without drama so she didn't have to deal with it. Three years of exemplary service was uncommon in her experience and so, while she took care of all her employees, she was motivated in seeing that he stay happy because he kept the money flowing into her coffers and he dealt with the minutiae that would give her headaches or a heart attack.
Wheeling around back to Antiris, nobody remembered him, but he knew the lay of the land. He could practice old skills to whittle the rust off them and bring them back to a killing sharpness. In Kalzasi, he was wicked. Elsewhere, he had been bad. He was content to be wicked most of the time, but if he had to be bad to survive, he wanted to be good at being bad.
Affecting dress and the dialect of a man from Haqs, he was haggling with a merchant. The merchant thought he was haggling over jewelry—his stall was affixed to the front of his shop, and only the flashy, but ultimately not priceless things were displayed there. Inside, there were valuables. Deeper still were goldsmiths and jewelers producing things to bring him wealth. He was a spider sitting atop his supply chain, thinking he was spinning his web around a rich man whose purse needed lightening, not knowing the man wasn't rich at all, and was angling for his inner sanctum to draw intelligence out of him.
And so the mummer's farce continued, Aurin's attention on the merchant and the boy manning the stall with its trinkets and dross, pretty baubles for pretty maids who would spread their legs for any shiny thing, not on the thief who wanted his candy. They were all of them going to get more than they bargained for that day.