The 3rd of Spring, in the year 512 AV
Krishpeh glanced around nervously. Having never spent much time in a city before this, he wasn't used to crowds or tight spaces. Perhaps he was claustrophobic. He wasn't sure. Whatever the case, he was not enjoying the quarters he had been assigned--an objectively large catacomb that had been shoved full of enough people to make it, relative to the crowd inside, like a mass grave. I should stop thinking like that, he thought, It's not going to change my situation, and it looks like enough people have already had that same thought.
This was quite true. Among the people crammed into the shelter, more than a few were jittering wrecks. Either that, or where screaming to be let out of there. Krishpeh could understand where they were coming from--a harsh storm could kill them all, could destroy their homes, could lay to waste all that they had ever known--but didn't particularly sympathize with them. After all, he was new to this city, he had few possessions, and virtually no one knew who he was. He was trapped here too, unable to see what was happening or how soon they would be let free. And yet, you didn't see him screaming in frustration or fright. Then again, he had already left his home behind long ago.
Then he looked up again, a thought coming to his mind. In the past weeks since entering the city, he had not been able to find employment. Perhaps this was a perfect chance to kill two birds with one stone--he could display his talent and at the same time perhaps make this confinement a bit easier to bear. Of course, it was also likely to annoy some...but he would have to count on more people being impressed than annoyed. He made his way over to a corner, stumbling over people in the process.
When he got there, he swung his fiddle off his shoulder. He was careful about this part--if it looked like he was slinging the sharp steel scythe, he could accidently cause a riot. Funny, he mused, how a situation like this leaves people balancing on a razor blade, one side, calm and the other hysteria, with only a gentle breeze enough to push the either way. Perhaps he could use that in a song someday. As for now--
He was done quietly tuning the fiddle, and now he set the bow properly on the strings. This fiddle had been his father's, and the woodwork had been painstakingly carved by his mother. It was his most prized possession. With the horsehair bow he coaxed out a simple but cheerful dance tune that nearly everyone in the known world was sure to recognize. It was simple enough that he didn't miss a note, though when he added his voice to the song it cracked a little from nervousness.
I've heard of a land
where the hills can dance
where the sky and trees all proudly sing
The sky is clear
and the harvest fair
and their people love their king.
Away, lass, away with me,
out to paradise,
Do not doubt
do not think twice.
And so forth for about twenty verses. At about verse eight a few people began to sing along. When he was done, he paused to gauge the crowd's reaction.