Cirrus stood up and swung his lyre down to his hip, moving across the room to the bar to speak to the owner, a lovely young woman by the name of... Cirra? Sarah? Serra? Something like that. You'd think she was too young to run an inn, and yet she managed spectacularly. He hadn't seen a bar fight in here yet. "A drink, if it pleases the lady," he requested politely at the bar. The innkeep smiled at him and pulled a pint from behind the counter, handing it to him without spilling a drop. "Your speed and skill with drawing pints should be legendary!" he exclaimed as he took a sip. Sadly, that would be his only drink for the night. Men who come up to the counter's top and not much higher are not famous for their ability to hold liquor. The lady simply gave him a mute smile and turned to her other patrons. He looked after her as she walked away; she hadn't a bad figure, but he could not in good conscience bed the woman who paid him. She was at her discretion to pay him at all.
Quietly, he got off the stool and walked after her. Catching up, he asked her "Any requests from anyone? I fear I have been too busy playing to receive any. I'm always glad to hear any favorite drinking songs of people." She turned to him and spoke. "Not many," she told him, "but there's a favorite song that would most likely get you tips." she leant over the bar and whispered in his ear. Cirrus smiled, then grinned, then began to chuckle. "I see," he laughed, his voice thankfully lost in the bustle of the inn. "I shall get onto that immediately."
Smiling and muttering to himself, he walked to the centre of the room and climbed atop a table. "You'll forgive me for this, please," he excused himself to the table's somewhat surprised occupants. When he was good and high in the room, his head brushing the ceiling, he strummed his lyre to get attention. Slowly, the room quietened. Everyone looked at him. He got the familiar butterflies, and a lump filled his throat. Slowly, he began, and the room filled with rustling and murmuring as everyone realised what he was doing.
"Ho! Damn to this nonesense, I pray thee, give o'er, And talk o' your ladies beloved no more, Their face and their air and their way, what a rout! Here's to thee, my lad! Push the bottle about!"
The occupants began the next verse in a drunken chorus of joyful voices; it seemed that once a drinking song started, everyone became drunk at once. Cirrus led, his sonorous male baritone ringing out over the rafters while men began to stand up and dance in circles, spilling ale to the floor and women to the tables.
"Let sorrowful men play the fool and the ape, For they dare not confide in the fruit of the grape, But we honest fellows; Gods! Who'd ever think Of pulling for love while he's able to drink?"
There was liberal thumping of tables in time with the beat now, and even the landlady was joining in (Sarah? Sirrah?) as the song became louder and louder.
"'Tis wine, only wine, that true pleasure bestows, Our joys it increases and lightens our woes; Remember what drunkards of old used to sing! 'The man who is drunk is as great as a king!'
"If Cheva comes to you, there's law to her tricks; Sivah's advices, see page fifty-six! The precedent's glorious, and just by my soul, Lay hold of, and drown the young dog in a bowl!
"What's life but a frolic, a song and a laugh? My toast shall be this, while I've liquor to quaff, May mirth and good fellowship always abound! Boys, fill up a barrel, and let it go round!"
He hopped off the table and landed nimbly on the floor to rapturous applause. Drunkards clapped him on the back, pressed drinks into his hands, roared approval through the din as he headed back to the bar. He reached there eventually, and took a seat from an admiring young man. "Was that to your liking, Miss Serra?" he called through the rowdy room.
"It was a good performance, Mr. Cirrus!" she shouted back, laughing. Cirrus waited for a bit for the room to calm down, then headed back to his old table to play background music once more. |