Member
EXP: 485, Level: 1
Level completed: 25%,
EXP required for next Level: 1,515
The air was clear, the sun was warm and the crowds were bustling. The scents and sounds of the city reached Henry’s ears, and he grinned widely. He had been wandering from Corone, and had hitched and bummed to rides for hours and days as he traveled. Thankfully, people seemed more than willing to give a wandering minstrel a ride, in exchange for a few tunes to pass the time. And Henry was never one to turn down an opportunity to play his fiddle and spread a little cheer.
And now, he was here, making his way into the port city. The young man felt more relaxed here than he had in the wilds l. At heart he was most definitely a city boy, and felt more comfortable by far surrounded by the hustle and bustle of people coming and going, taking care of their daily business. It was familiar it was good. And people like these, well, a little bit of music was never looked at poorly. At least, so long as you could play half-decently, and Henry, Henry could play well.
So through the streets he went, spinning his bowstick around his fingers as he held onto his staff with his left hand. He was looking for a good place to set up and earn a few coin busking - it would be best to be close to a crossroads, or maybe down towards the port itself. Sloshed sailors usually were the kind who wouldn't mind parting with a few coins in exchange for some lively music. Yes, the young man felt that playing near the harbor would be a good idea to start with here. He snapped his fiddlestick back into its case and set off with new purpose in his stride, and a wide, easy grin on his face.
The fiddler followed the sounds of the cries of the gulls circling in the air up ahead. He felt that where the sea birds were, it was a good bet the sea itself would be nearby. And as he stepped past a row of shops, his grin widened. The sea stretched out before him, down a small hill and further away. The shimmering blue waves mirrored the sky, and people were moving back and forth, vim and vigor in their steps. His kind of people, for sure.
“Well now. Let's find a place to set up, lovely girl.” Henry’s fingers drifted across the case slung on his back, holding the mahogany fiddle he cherished. Taking a deep breath he began strolling down the hill, bright blue eyes scanning about for a good place to set himself up. He didn't want to actually be on one of the main thoroughfares, the people moving on them would be in too much of a hurry to appreciate some fine music in their lives. No he needed a place where people were slowing down a bit, taking the time to appreciate what was going on around them.
Ah, now there looked like a fine candidate. Henry smiled. It was a smaller tavern, and it faced towards the seafront. A simple wooden sign with a pair of fish - tuna, maybe? He didn't know fish - etched into the wood. And the people walking about here were taking their time to go about their days, as they came and went from the tavern and surrounding buildings. Excellent, better and better. This looked like a great place to set up. Henry dropped his bag and staff on the ground, and swung the case for his fiddle around. Deft fingers snapped the case open, and out came the finely crafted and carved instrument.
The brown-haired man spent a few minutes tuning it, giving a few experimental plucks here and there as he adjusted the strings for the salty air. He was already drawing some attention as he prepared, but he let the curious gazes slide off of his back as he focused on his task. He'd be a poor musician if he let curious what eyes make him damage his instrument through negligence. With a final strum of his fingers across the strings, he nodded, finally satisfied. Henry lifted the fiddlestick back out of its holster on the side of the case, and set the case on the ground, leaving it open.
Then he was up, sprightly leaping and twisting, spinning around and dropping himself on top of the pier log he had set up against. Sitting on top of it, with his back to the sea, the bard grinned widely, and tucked the along the length of one arm, the butt resting against his jawline. He took a deep breath as he tried to figure out where to start - and then his inspiration came to him as a rather sloshed man came out of the tavern the bard had set himself up across from.
He waited a three count, his right foot tapping on the pole he was sitting on top of - and then he was off, sawing a tune that caught the attention of many people who were moving back and forth across the docks. One that made them smile and laugh - even the sloshed man who knew it was directed at him.
What Would You Do With A Drunken Sailor?
And the fiddler was off, fingers and bow dancing across the strings as he was approached his foot to keep the tempo - more for the crowd that was beginning to gather about him than for himself. The music was infectious, happy and raucous as he shifted from the end of Drunken Sailor to the opening chords of Wizard’s Walk. And the people moving back and forth seemed to enjoy the lively fiddling, if their smiles and the coins tossed into his case were anything to go by. He grinned widely, and kept playing.