Day 16, Summer 512 AV...
Late Evening...
A place like Zeltiva was full of two sorts of people. There was your academic sort, who wonder the streets with some degree of well mannered dress about them and protocol as to how they were suppose to act and speak. They inhabited the university and spent their days learning in forums and lectures, or at least that's how he imagined it in his head. They could be seen walking on one side of the street while on the other side of the street was a second kind of person. This was after all a dock, and having one of the largest populations of peoples in the entire world, Zeltiva had a thriving lower-middle class of individuals that was made up of sailors, fishmen and people that found life by the sea primarily. Of the two classifications, the second were those who were normally visited places like the "Kelp Bar".
So where did Seluj fit in this spectrum. A dark skinned human wearing the only clothes he could hang on to, too young to drink by some standards, thankfully there were no standards here. Seluj was a dancer, a performer, and most importantly a party starter. He was here to stir up the stagnant feelings in these people and pull forth their spirit, to make the taste of tangy salt water booze only slightly less unbearable and bring men with bum knees and numb hearts to sing and dance and forget the day. After all that's why they were here. No man drank kelp beer without a good reason, or a bad memory.
And in exchange for a night of merriment, a tip here and there added up to enough to make a living. Not only that, but by closing out the bar, when everyone else left, he could at least have a well lit place to call his shelter for the night, for even he had lost everything that he had once upon a time...
He walked in, checking out the place. It wasn't the first time he had been here but it was the first he had been for this purpose; to entertain. He found a corner and settled in, looking about the place for familiar faces or perhaps opportune moments. There was an art to inspiring gloomy and tired men to smile and chant after all. The place was quiet in spite of being full to the brim. Not a stool in the bar was empty as only small whispers of men conversing among themselves could be heard. Most men kept to themselves, looking down and not making contact with others...
This was going to be a tough crowd.