In the cool autumn chill Arryn drew her mottled black-and-grey cloak closer to her slender, lithe frame, her peculiar eyes pinned to what was in front of her. Sunberth's streets were ever dangerous, and at this hour of day, with the sun making its descend behind the horizon, the criminals only grew bolder. As if they needed the cover of night to hide most of their activities - muggings, brawls and even murders were executed nearly as often during the day as at night. Sunberth is a cesspool; a sludge of humanity that was so utterly depraved of any semblence of order, left to run amuck on loose morals and whatever sick and disturbed fancy took the mind. With no real government of any kind, no way to enforce it if there was, and no real desire for one... well, Sunberth was what it was. Tainted and corrupted, more or less ruled by syndicate bosses that sliced out a little of the city for themselves, and the pick-pockets, gang members and worse that plagued the city, it was hardly the first tourist destination spot. It was possibly the most decrepit monument to all the sins and faults of humanity, a city best left to fall off the face of the world with all its inhabitants in it. Gods, how she loved it. Arryn stopped at one of her favourite dives, the Pig's Foot Tavern. Not much of a name, but it suited the tavern that wasn't... well, that much of a tavern. It had the gamblers, the drinkers, the fighters and the wenches. Not very much in the way of entertainment, and when there was a singer or dancer they were poor at best, but she loved the place. Stepping through the worn door of the place Arryn was immediately assaulted with the pungent smells of stale ale, the bodily odor of the hygienically inept, and pipe smoke, layered with the slightly repugnant smell of the mystery soup; served with a mystery meat that shouldn't be too closely inspected if one wished to retain some claim to sanity. Through the thick haze of smoke the candle lights flickered heroically, as if to offer some sort of light in such a sordid squabble of humanity, and it brough the corner of her lips up in a sardonic smirk. There was no purity in Sunberth, no hope for redemption. There were villains and victims, and nothing more. Inclining her head a few inches to the Pig's bodyguards flanking the door, Arryn stepped into the tavern. Over the hum of voices dice could be heard rattling on the table, spinning to an end that could win or lose small fortunes - if the circumstances were right. Arryn's right hand twitched at her side, eager to play a hand at the tables, but subsiding for the moment. There was a place and a time for such games - usually after a drink or three - and now she would rather sit and just... listen. Sitting at a nearly vacant table (nearly, because an already thoroughly intoxicated man laid in a pool of his own drool, completely oblivious to the world in his drunken slumber) Arryn casually studied the people around her, gauging her successes at whom she could rob, and when. It was something of a skill that became second nature, assessing if one person would feel the quick, light hands of a thief or not. Certainly it wasn't a perfected art, but it helped her chances more. A wench came by, red hair, freckled-face and a pug-nose, took her order and left. Arryn resumed her speculative gaze. |