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Eiroldas, 30th of Searing, 120th of Steel
Alcohol wasn't really that good was it? Althalos found himself immersed within what had clearly become his favorite haunt, having concluded another day of work and longing for a bit of relaxation. What he had instead discovered had been a surprising rowdy game of cards being played across a number of different tables within the inn. Here and there was the sound of hard farthings striking wood as gamblers wagered and bet their daily earnings on chance and deception. At first, Althalos had found the card games to be somewhat interesting, having drawn away from his normal table in order to watch a particularly hardy band of -- he believed they were lumberjacks given the wood shavings that still clung to their shirts and the thick workman's gloves at their sides -- as they jostled for position, each one wanting to win a steadily growing pot.
Yet, while the sport wasn't too terribly complicated to understand, Althalos found himself wondering why they were so encapsulated with it. People took turns revealing cards, calling bluffs, and lying through their teeth so obviously that even he knew they were full of it, and he hadn't even played before. Wandering away from the band of card players before they could manage to wrangle him in through sheer peer pressure and swindle him out of the money he had made earlier in the day, Althalos had returned to find that his normal table had been reclaimed by a wandering pair of drunken sods. They whispered in proper moronic fashion at each other, occasionally forgetting to whisper and screaming into their ears only for the offending drunk to shove the other one back a foot or so and continue the conversation.
And so, he had meandered over to an empty stool at the bar, sliding onto it and attempting to out-stretch his arms enough to his sides that the other patrons got the hint and gave him at least enough space to swing his elbows. Ordering a glass of mead -- he enjoyed the sweet taste of it, and found honey, in general, to be especially palatable -- he slid over the four farthings required, and then nursed his drink for several minutes, sipping at it only whenever he felt someone watching him. It was pleasant to drink, and yet, he knew that his digestion didn't function exactly the same way it would for a living person. He'd never had to expel the drink before, and so he wondered whether it simply sat within his stomach, slowly pickling him from within, or whether it was magically absorbed and annihilated.
So long as he didn't drink a great deal of it at once, he felt confident that he would be alright. Taking his mind off of his undead condition, he returned to his observations about the room, and about his reasons for visiting in the first place. Was this really the relaxing atmosphere that he had hoped that it would be, or was he simply forcing himself to socialize so that he didn't appear to be a miserly misanthrope? He wasn't a drunkard by any means, and obviously he wasn't a card player, so he wasn't here for either of those reasons. Perhaps it was true, then, that he had regularly come to the Silver Lion exclusively to make himself known to the locals and to learn more about their ways in the process. At least he didn't have any living creatures in his drink this time, he mused.
Finishing his drink with a sigh, the cold-blooded Siltori slid the mug across the bar and began to watch the staff of the establishment, wondering how they were putting up with the heavy traffic.