The Galloping Minotaur
A noisy, overpriced place widely known among travellers. Its broad reputation has caused it to slip in its service, relying on its name and convenient location for market vendors and shoppers to keep its rooms full.
Its rooms, however are full; the proprietor has instituted a system of advance bookings. Merchants valuing the guarantee of a place to stay have patronized the Minotaur to the degree that the inn has expanded to occupy two additional buildings. One is a former warehouse now housing stables at ground level, cheap rooms above, and servants' quarters below ground. The second, a former storefront, is given over to an open salon and four private rentable meeting rooms. Servants tend the private rooms by means of hidden passages behind the paneled walls and answer to the tug of a bellpull, but can easily eavesdrop on what goes on within.