Spirits White a LightningA Bedlam Bards NovelMercedes Lackey & Rosemary Edghill
Sir Eric Banyon, the Queen's Knight,
known as Silverflute wherever soldiers of fortune gathered together, strode
manfully through the thronging crowd, determined to leave the memory of his
disgrace at the hands of the foul Frenchman Black Levoisier behind him as
surely as he had left the dastardly minions of his Great Enemy in his dust . .
.. Eric
dodged around a bicycle-messenger just dismounting on the sidewalk, then
grinned, startling the bike messenger into an answering smile. Heh. Banyon,
m'lad, you ought to go in for writing Hysterical Historicals in
your off-hours. He actually was striding -- though not exactly
"manfully" -- through the noontime crowd, heading for the subway and
home. His classes at Julliard were over for the day and no rehearsals (for
once!) were scheduled for this afternoon. He could practice as well, or better,
at home than in one of the practice-rooms, anyway. And he was determined
not to sour a perfectly good day with the memory of one jealous teacher trying
to make a fool out of him in front of the entire class. Well, all right --
maybe not the entire class. Just most of it. And anyway, Levoisier hadn't
succeeded, though he'd certainly done his best. Missing his mid-term last winter (he'd been
off saving the world, necessary though it had been), had given Professor Rector
the chance he had been hoping for all term. He'd failed Eric, banishing him
from Introduction to Music Theory with unprofessional glee. Fortunately, Eric's
work in his other classes and in ensemble had been good enough that he had been
given the opportunity to make up the lost Music Theory credit during summer
term, and he had taken the chance to add a few more courses in order to lighten
next fall's course-load. Still, this hadn't quite been the way he'd envisioned
spending his July and August, which was out on Fire Island with a pitcher of
Virgin Margaritas by his side. And Levoisier made Ethan Rector look like a
prince of transpersonal fairness by comparison. Parisians. Feh. Paris would be such a
lovely place without all the Parisians in it, Eric thought grumpily. And
the man had certainly been on form today, baiting Eric unmercifully in hopes
he'd lose his temper. Once he'd lost it, the Professor would have taken him
apart in a cool and scientific dissection rendered without benefit of
anesthetic. Levoisier had begun with sarcastic comments
about Eric's depth of experience -- on the RenFaire circuit (why did they
always obsess about that? It couldn't be jealousy.) Not exactly a concert-hall environment, as the Professor
had repeatedly pointed out. Nor were the customers who so praised his playing
sober . . . or necessarily bright . . . or able to distinguish Bach from
Bacharach . . . or a flute from a clarinet. Certainly even an idiot with three
tunes in his repertoire could win acclaim on the RenFaire circuit -- which only
proved, to Eric's mind, how little Levoisier knew about the RenFaire circuit. As the Professor had expounded on each and
every way in which he felt that Eric resembled half-drunk Fairegoers -- at
exhaustive length -- Eric stood there silently. Every single word was
calculated to get Eric to explode with temper. And that would have worked, once, but Eric
was a far different person now than anyone that the Professor had ever
encountered before, at least within the hallowed halls of academe. He had
waited, quietly and calmly, until the Professor grew frustrated by Eric's lack
of agitation, embarrassment, or any other identifiable emotion. When Levoisier finally ran out of insults,
Eric had simply said, "The Review Committee and the Entrance Committee
were satisfied with my performances, Professor, as are the rest of my
teachers," and sat down again. And at that blessed moment, the
change-of-class bell sounded, and he was free. Not as satisfying, perhaps, as telling the
Professor off would have been. Not nearly as satisfying as pointing out
the Professor's own deficiencies as both a musician and a teacher -- many of
which Eric had already heard for himself during faculty recitals. Yehudi
Menuhin, the Professor was not. Yahoo Menudo, maybe. But the point wasn't to get the better of
the arrogant Frenchman. The point, in fact, was not to even bother with
making a point. The point was to take what was good, leave what was bad, and
pass through all the name-calling and innuendo like the wind through the grass.
Be Teflon. That's the only way to handle
guys like this. He's insecure, ignorant, and arrogant. Just let everything
slide right off until he gets tired of not getting a rise out of me. By then
he'll probably have gone far enough to expose himself as the trivial goon that
he is. That might take the full eight-week summer session, but Eric didn't
mind -- while Levoisier was heckling him, he wasn't picking on the
younger and more inexperienced students, who were not equipped to deal with
him. The bastard had already reduced Midori to silent tears before he'd turned
on Eric. Well, let him wear himself out on me.
Levoisier doesn't know half of what he thinks there is to know about me. I have
a black belt in Verbal Aikido, you arrogant Frog. Levoisier's appointment wasn't an insoluble
mystery. Eric knew why Julliard had such a miserable excuse for a
teacher on its staff this year. Levoisier was no great shakes as an interpreter
of music, but he was a brilliant technician. Even Eric was willing to admit
there was a lot he could learn from the man, if he ever decided to stop
humiliating the students and elected to teach. And even at his worst, he was
teaching valuable things to his students. Though he knows it not. Though he intends
it not. It was a cruel, cold world out there, a
world singularly lacking in first-chair jobs in fine symphony orchestras and
prestigious traveling ensembles, recording contracts, solo tours, and praise --
and full of cruel critics and low-end positions teaching in schools or playing
in little city orchestras under conductors who themselves had failed to make
the cut for a high-end professional musical career. Trial-by-Parisian might
harden some of them to the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. The
students at Julliard were fairly well equipped to deal with professional
rivalry and even sabotage from other students, but they weren't ready for the
real world of real people and the fact that most of them were doomed to eke out
a living playing in the Tacoma Sousa Band. Or playing harps in hotel lobbies,
pianos in cocktail bars, clarinets at weddings, and yes, flutes at RenFaires.
Anything that Levoisier can throw at them isn't half of the abuse they'll get
out there. Or, in the dark of the night, what they'll give themselves. What had triggered today's attack, he
suspected -- given that Levoisier had first gone after Midori, then him -- was
the results of the placement auditions for the summer-session orchestra. Eric
(and Midori) had been placed in second chair. Now, Eric hadn't heard Midori's audition,
but there was something that no one, including the Audition Committee, knew
about Eric's. He would never get first chair, because all during his
audition, he had been sending out a thread of Bardic magic. No matter how good I am, you won't give
me first chair, the magic had whispered, carried along on the wings of
Debussy. I don't need the experience, and you should give it to someone
else. In fact, at the end of the audition, one of
the committee had taken him aside, apologetically, and had said, "Banyon,
you deserved first chair, but frankly, we can't give it to you. You
don't need--" "--the experience," Eric
finished, with a grin and a toss of his long chestnut hair. "No worries,
Doctor Selkirk. Frankly, what I need is a lot more experience in backing
and supporting another flautist. They also serve, and all that." Doctor Selkirk had sighed with relief and
shook Eric's hand. "I knew we hadn't made any mistakes in readmitting you,
Banyon. If running around in tights and floppy shirts on weekends would give
our students that kind of maturity, I'd assign it as a course." Eric grinned to himself again. It's not
as if I need experience in front of an audience. I rather doubt that I'm ever
going to face a more hostile audience than a flock of Nightflyers, or a pickier
one than an Elven Bard and Magus Major. And it's not fair to the kids to make
them compete with me for something I don't need or want. The New York streets simmered with summer
heat, and the kind of glare found when the only thing to take the sun's rays is
stone, and glass, and more stone. His local friends told him that August would
be even worse -- if they got a really hot spell, even the blacktopped streets
would go soft underfoot. He hadn't believed it at the time, but now Eric was
just as glad that he'd spent the time last winter setting up bomb-proof spells
on all his apartment windows: now, when he opened them into muggy July heat, he
got arid January cold. It was a more elegant solution than nursing a power hog
a/c along with Guardian House's cranky electrical system. His computer and
stereo systems were already major power hogs, not to mention his pet microwave;
he'd learned he had to shut down every other appliance in the place when he
vacuumed. An air conditioner would have been the final straw. When Guardian
House had been built back in the first decade of the 20th century, all those
appliances hadn't even been distant dreams. He was looking forward to getting home,
opening all the windows, and maybe coaxing Greystone down into joining him for
a glass of something cold. It wasn't likely anybody would miss the gargoyle if
he deserted his post -- not in a sweltering afternoon in July. All he had to do was make it through the
subway alive. Though most of the cars were air-conditioned to pneumonia levels,
only some of the stations had any pretense to climate-control at all.
Fortunately, the Lincoln Center stop was one of them. Can't let the
aesthetes and yuppies fry, after all. Eric joined the stream of humanity
descending the steps into the subway, whistling a Bach gigue to purge his brain
of any remaining taint of irritation with Professor Levoisier. There was
nothing like Bach to rev up the old right brain and let logic take over from
emotion. He let the flow of traffic take him along
towards the turnstiles. Hey, it's Friday. I've got a whole weekend in front
of me, the sun is shining, nobody wants to kill me, and there's not a single
crisis Underhill or Overhill that needs sorting out. That thought put a
bounce in his step. Maeve had been born and Kory and Beth were planning to
bring her for a visit. If the weather held, maybe they could make a run up Long
Island and see how the other half lived. And if it didn't, well, if you couldn't
find something to do in New York on a weekend, you were in pretty sad
shape. And when they go back Underhill, if Ria
isn't up to her sculpted eyebrows in Bizness, I might even get her to go out
with me to some New-York-Magazine-Approved event. So maybe I ought to have a
look for something she might not ordinarily go to. Not that Ria's actually a
party animal at the best of times. How could someone who looks like she looks
be such a grind? It's one of Life's Great Mysteries. He turned his mind back to the question of
finding something fun he could tease her into attending. Anything musical was a
good bet, but it would have to be both competent and something she wouldn't
have thought of for her-- Something teased his ears as he passed the
turnstile. A string instrument-- Banjo? And a very, very familiar tune. 'Tis a gift to be simple, tis a gift to
be free, tis a gift to come 'round where we ought to be--' Someone was playing a banjo in the subway. That wasn't all that unusual. Eric had
heard everything from bagpipes to string quartets to old-fashioned One Man
Bands playing on subway platforms throughout the city. Busking was permitted in
the New York subway system and on the city streets as well, but it was a
peculiar form of busking. You had to have a license, and you only got the license
by passing an audition. It was a pretty good system, actually. The
ears of the public weren't assaulted by talentless musicians, licensing kept
down the territory-wars for the best spot, and the beat and transit cops
weren't put on the spot by having to bust a player who was doing the public a
favor by being there. Eric didn't know all of the licensed buskers --
New York was a bit bigger than any Faire pitch he'd ever worked -- but he
thought he was familiar with most of the ones who set up near Lincoln Center on
a regular basis and he was sure that none of them played a banjo. The pleasantly
jangling notes ricocheted off the echoing tile walls of the subway, the echoes
providing a depth and richness to the music that was the reason so many
musicians -- including Eric -- liked to play here. Something else teased his
inner ear as well, as he approached the platform. Magic. Nothing overwhelming, just a gentle little
lilt, a Bardic lilt to the tune, something to tease a little money from
the pockets of the passers-by, but only by those who had it to spare. More of a
reminder, really, to be courteous. If you like what you hear, and can spare
the money, drop a coin or two -- if not, pass on, pass on. . .. And no one with a New York City
busking license was a Bard. Except, of course, him. A sense of urgency hit Eric in the gut: not
only did he want to catch this unknown Bard and find out who he was, he wanted
to get to him before he was busted! He hurried towards the platform. The
transit cops, who were supposed to enforce the busking licenses, could be along
at any moment. Some of them were inclined to turn a blind eye towards the
occasional violator, if, he was good, if the cop in question
liked that particular kind of music. So how many of them like bluegrass?
Eric shoved his way towards the cluster of
people around the source of the music, and shouldered his way into the magic
circle, ignoring the indignant looks of the two he squeezed in between. 'When
true simplicity is gained, to bow and to bend we shall not be ashamed --'
his mind supplied the words to the tune. The busker was a tall young man, built like
a linebacker. Eric took it all in with a single glance. Blond. Longish hair,
jeans, faded blue work shirt -- and that indefinable something that said 'not
from around here' to city-trained eyes. He had an open, friendly face and
piercing blue eyes, which held a promise of friendship out to the entire world,
if only the world was wise enough to accept it. His banjo-case was open at his
feet, money in it, as he ran leisurely fingers through the intricate patterns
of the old song. An old Army surplus duffle bag rested at his heels. And the banjo-- The banjo -- glowed. Not that anyone other than Eric or an
Elf would have seen the glow. The strings were a network of silver-fire, and
blue after-images danced along the pattern of the busker's darting fingers. An enchanted banjo? There were legends of enchanted instruments
in the ancient days. The traditional songs were full of examples. Flutes made
from a Bard's bones. A harp strung with the hair of a murdered girl-- No,
that's a bit too grisly. Nothing like that here. More like . . . an enchanted
sword, forged for a paladin. I didn't know there was anyone left Overhill who
could do work like that. Not that he knew, yet, that the banjo had
been made here. But if it were elvenwork, he would have sensed that, and Eric's
Bard-trained senses caught no trace of Otherworldly craftsmanship here, just
innate human magic. A stir caught his attention -- the glimpse
of a uniform hat down by the turnstile. The transit cops. The busker finished his song and coins and
a couple of bills dropped into his banjo case, accompanying a spatter of
applause. And in the pause, Eric pulled out his busking license and propped it
in the side of the banjo case, very visibly, then got out his flute. He
opened the flute case and put it behind the banjo case, and began fitting his
instrument together as he stepped to the side of the very surprised
banjo-player. "You need a license to play down here,
friend -- I've got one, and you just became my partner," Eric muttered
under his breath just as the transit cops reached them. "So, 'Unquiet
Grave'?" he said, louder, as if he and the stranger had been duetting for
some time. The stranger nodded, and they both began --
quite as if they had been duetting for some time. Mind, "Unquiet Grave" wasn't
Eric's tune of choice, but it was the only Appalachian piece he had been able
to think of on the spur of the moment. Plaintive and just a little on the
spooky side, it wasn't one calculated to haul in the cash. But that was all
right; it made some of the audience clear off, giving the transit cops a good
look at the two buskers -- and Eric's license. And giving Eric a good look at them, just as
he nodded to the banjo player to wrap it up. He sighed with relief; it was
people he knew, who weren't going to quibble that his license was for himself
alone and not with a partner. "Top o' the marnin' t'ye,
constable," he said in his best "Faire-Irish" accent. Officer
Zielazinski laughed. "More like afternoon, isn't it,
O'Banyon?" the transit cop jibed good- naturedly. "Who's your
partner?" The banjo-player answered before Eric could
fumble. "Hosea Songmaker, sir, at your service," he said in slow syllables
sweetened with the honey-accent of the hills and deep with respect. Eric could
sense the touch of Bard-magic here, too:
I am no threat to you; I will cause no trouble. . .. He supposed
a man as big and physically intimidating as Hosea Songmaker'd had plenty of use
for that particular charm more than a few times in his life, and it made him
like his new partner all the more. Zee laughed, responding unconsciously to
the touch of the benevolent magic. "Not from around here, are you! Well,
you stick with Banyon; he'll show you the ropes. He's pretty
street-smart." The two transit-cops moved on, back to
business; there were more important matters to claim their attention in the
subway than a couple of licensed buskers. When they'd gone, Hosea gave Eric a
sidelong glance, followed by a slow smile. "Reckon I owe you one," he
said. Eric laughed. "Just want to keep a good musician out
of trouble," he replied easily. "How were you to know you need a
license? Listen, let's collect a take while the collecting's good, and I'll
tell you all about what you need to know afterwards." Hosea nodded, and combed back the long
blond hair that flopped down into his eyes back with a set of strong, brown
fingers. "Old standard?" he suggested, and played the first few notes
of "Foggy Mountain Breakdown." Eric nodded. Everybody knew that one -- the
Lester Flat and Earl Scruggs classic had been the theme song to the movie Bonnie
and Clyde. And while it was written for banjo and fiddle, there was no
reason he couldn't take the fiddle part. "Then -- how about we follow straight
into 'Devil Came Down to Georgia' and 'Mama Tried'?" Eric countered. There.
I'm not just a Celtic purist, you know. "Right."
Hosea's eyes lit up slyly, and Eric suspected he was about to be given a run
for his money. Hosea surged into the opening bars of the Breakdown, his fingers
blurring on the strings. Eric barely made his entrance in time to take the melody
away from the banjo and carry it. Hosea, like many an Irish player at the
Faires, had a wicked sense of humor and liked to accelerate the pace of an
already fast piece with each successive pass. But Eric was ready for him -- not
that it was all that difficult for a Bard to figure out what another Bard was
going to do next. By the time they segued into 'Devil Went Down To Georgia,'
they'd hit lightspeed. The crowd around them was thicker than before, and
people were grinning and tapping their toes to the Charlie Daniels standard. He'd had the joy of working with another
Bard only Underhill, with his mentor Dharniel. That was always fun -- if you
could really use that word for anything to do with Master Dharniel -- but it
was nothing, nothing like working with another human Bard! There was a
level of spontaneity and creative spark here that just wasn't present when he
made music with the Elves, and it made all the difference. Eric closed his eyes
and gave himself over to the purest pleasure he'd ever felt outside of sex --
and it certainly lasted a whole lot longer than even the most athletic sexual
adventure he'd ever had! It wasn't until he opened his eyes as he
played the last flourish of 'Mama Tried' that he realized they were surrounded
six-deep by a gaping, grinning, toe-tapping human audience of people who should
have been getting back to their jobs (or on to their lunches). The very moment
they finished, money actually began to snow, rain, and hail into the banjo
case, a veritable Hurricane Andrew of coins and small bills. Money that missed
the case was scooped up and dumped into it by helpful hands, which was a small
miracle in and of itself, as applause followed on the monetary accolade. "Got enough to hold you for the next
day or so?" Eric muttered sotto voce with a nod at the case. Hosea grinned and nodded, his hair flopping
into his eyes again. "That'll get me vittles and a bunk at the Y for a
couple days, while I study on what I've got to do next," he replied.
"Let's give these nice folk something to play 'em out on." His
fingers began to move on the strings again. Of all the tunes that Eric would have
suspected Hosea would chose, this would not have been one. He listened as the
banjo-Bard's clever fingers picked out the deceptively lazy little "pink-a
pink-a pink-a pink-a pink (pause) pink-a pink-a pink-a pink-a pink (pause)."
Eric recognized it immediately, and knew
the tune so well that his flute was at his lips and the soft notes spilling out
at exactly the right moment after that second pause. "The Rainbow
Connection" from the very first Muppet movie -- how had Hosea known how
much he liked that tune? And where had an Appalachian mountain boy learned it? I guess that only proves that we live in a
globally connected world, when an Appalachian mountain-boy and a Julliard
student can recognize the same tune and play it like a couple of old buddies. Simple tunes are deceptive things;
superficially easy to play, they are the very devil to play well. But in
the hands of not one, but two Bards, the very simplicity allows the heart and
soul to shine. When they finished, this time the reward
was smiles as well as applause. Eric bowed with a flourish, Hosea with a kind
of foot-shuffling modesty. Eric was pretty sure that though Hosea was a
practiced musician, he hadn't been playing for money for very long -- at least
not as a street musician. "Ladies and gents, you need to
get back to your jobs, I'm sure--" Eric announced with practiced
Faire-patter. Groans, and a chorus of "aaawwww!" -- surely the
greatest music to a musician's ears, greeted this announcement. "--so in the interest of making sure
you don't get in trouble, my friend Hosea and I will be taking a break now for
a few hours. Thank you all, and we'll be here off and on for the rest of the
week!" With no display of hurry, but with the
efficiency of any busker who has sometimes seen his "take" vanish
along with the rear end of a petty thief, Eric shoved the banjo case over
behind Hosea's legs with his foot while he scooped up his flute case and began
taking his instrument apart and cleaning it. The crowd dispersed -- with a few
generous souls lobbing a couple more handfuls of change at the case for good
measure as they left. "This is have yours," Hosea said,
from a bent-over position, preparatory to doing something about the
"take." "Oh, just pull out enough for some
lunch for both of us and I'll call it quits," Eric replied absently.
"Fifteen bucks should do it; that'll leave you enough for bus-fare to get
to the Y and a street and subway map." Hosea looked up at him doubtfully, but
seemed to sense that Eric was in earnest. He just shoved most of the
"take" into the duffle he'd had behind him, keeping out a handful of
bills that he crammed into his pocket. He placed the banjo lovingly back into
his case, and handed Eric his busking license back. He moved very gracefully for such a big
fellow; shortly he stood up with duffle and case slung over opposite shoulders,
looking very much at ease and entirely out of place. "So -- your name's Banyon," he
said, giving Eric a slow and considering once-over with those piercing blue eyes.
"Is that a first name or a last?" "Last. Eric Banyon, former RenFaire
player, current Julliard student, at your service," Eric replied, making a
little bow that mocked his status as "Julliard student." But Hosea's slow smile wouldn't accept the
mocking attitude. "Figured you had to be from around there," he said.
"Some feller told me it was up that-a-way--" he waved vaguely at the
ceiling "--and I reckoned anybody could play like you was probably from
there. Well, Eric Banyon, the cop said I was to stick by you, so where do we
find lunch?" # Central Park on a July day was as good a
substitute for countryside as you were likely to find within fifty miles, and a
lot cooler under the trees than the city streets were. The park was a lot
bigger, and had more secluded places, than anyone but a native New Yorker would
be likely to guess -- a lot of them avoided the Park anyway, fearing gangs and
muggers. There had been a suggestion, a couple of years back, that wolves
should be reintroduced -- a suggestion that wasn't entirely a silly idea.
Wolves would do very well here if they could be kept in isolation, but it was
inevitable that they'd crossbreed with feral dogs, which in a few generations
would only mean that there would be a resident pack of slightly-more-lupine
feral dogs in the remoter places of the place. Probably not the best idea in
the world, given the unpredictable nature of lupine-canine crossbreeds. It was
bad enough that coyotes had made their way here and had a thriving pack up by
the Reservoir: no garbage-can -- or stray poodle -- was safe. Eric and Hosea gathered hot-dogs and drinks
from one of the Sabrette's carts outside the Park, and Eric led his fellow Bard
into one of those quieter spots more familiar to the bird- watchers than to the
Frisbee throwers. There was, in fact, one of the bird-feeders that the
bird-watchers maintained in this little bit of half-tame wilderness, and when
they finished their food, Eric watched some sort of tiny little birds flitting
to and from it. Hosea had clearly not eaten today, but he
hadn't wolfed down the four (!) hotdogs he'd gotten for himself from the
vendor. He'd eaten neatly and precisely, with not a crumb wasted or a bit of
mustard smeared. He finished his soda, folded up all the paper neatly, and
stuck it and the can into his duffle with the rest of his gear. No littering
for this lad, evidently. "So," Hosea said at last,
breaking the silence. "Where do I get me one of them licenses so I can
play for the folks without getting myself in trouble with the law?" Eric explained the whole process while
Hosea listened carefully. "The next audition isn't for another three
weeks, though," Eric concluded, and as Hosea's face began to fall, he
added quickly, "But don't worry -- you can busk in the Park without one,
and you can busk with me in the subway." "Ain't you got classes?" Hosea
asked doubtfully. "I can work around them," Eric
replied, then chuckled. "Besides, look what we did in half an hour
together! There's probably about a hundred bucks there -- figure we hit the
lunch crowd and the commuters going home, we'll take in more than enough to
cover your expenses until you can get a license for yourself. And you
will," he added, with certainty. Of course you
will. You're a Bard, how can you not, if you put your mind and magic to it? Hosea's earnest gaze met his steadfastly.
"You've been helping me because. . ." there was a long pause, and for
the first time Eric saw Hosea hesitate, as if he weren't quite sure how to put
the thought into words. "Because of the Music Magic. You've got the shine,
too. Right?" Eric hadn't expected him to put it quite so
bluntly, though after the first few notes he'd been pretty sure that Hosea knew
his own gift, and recognized Eric for a kindred soul. "Well -- yeah," Eric admitted a
little sheepishly. "Where I come from, we're called Bards." "Bards." Hosea rolled the flavor
of the word over in his mouth and thoughts. "Like -- back in the Druid
times?" He grinned at Eric's raised eyebrows. "You reckon I'm right
out of the hills, but we got libraries there, too. And the Internet." Eric laughed, a
little ashamed of himself for assuming Hosea was as simple as he looked. It
wasn't precisely an act, Eric was coming to realize, but more of another
defense against frightening people. Hosea was almost painfully courteous.
"No offense meant," he said. "None taken. So, I ain't never met
another Bard before, except my Grandma. She had the shine, right enough.
Guess I got it from her. I'm right glad you came to my rescue, Eric Banyon."
Hosea's friendliness was as infectious as his grin. "Right glad I did, too--" How
could he not respond? There was something about Hosea that not only
exuded trustfulness, but trustworthiness. He could no more have walked away
from the guy than kicked a puppy in the face. Besides, it isn't as if I need the
money. Eric's needs were met -- and more -- by Elven magic. He'd gotten his
busking license as much to help out some of the kids at Guardian House as to
line his own pockets -- or, admittedly, for the joy of playing for a live and
mostly uncritical audience. His last assist had been to one of the dancers who
lived on his floor -- Amity was between dancing jobs and desperate to find
something to pay her bills besides waitressing or cleaning houses. Eric had
suggested that she bring a small square of 'floor' with her down to the subway
with him. He'd played, she'd danced, and together they made enough to pay her
bills until the next job came along. "Well, reckon you can find me the
YMCA?" Hosea continued. "Friend of mine back home told me that was
the place to stay when I got here; told me the rooms was cheap -- at least,
cheap as anything is here in the big city -- and pretty safe. Not that I've got
too much to worry about. Folks just take a look at me and just naturally think
twice about making trouble, I guess." Eric grinned. Most people would leave a
Bard alone, even if they weren't sure why. And a Bard who was six-four and
looked like he juggled pianos in his spare time was even less likely to attract
undesirable attention. He quickly thought about all the things
he'd most needed when he first moved to New York. Bonnie and Kit had been there
to get him settled in, but he'd still spent most of the first month getting
lost every time he ventured out of his own neighborhood. "First, we get you a street map, a
bus-route map, and a subway map," Eric decided. "That'll help you
find your way around. Come on." A quick stop at a newsstand took care of
those immediate needs, and for good measure, Eric picked up a guidebook that
would give Hosea a lot of reference points -- not just the tourist attractions,
but the important buildings, the schools and libraries and other major
landmarks. After that, it was no great effort to get Hosea planted firmly in
front of the nearest YMCA. Once inside, and only then, Hosea dug the day's haul
out of the duffle and counted it -- he might not be street-smart, but he had a
lot more common sense than a lot of people Eric knew. They'd done better than Eric had thought.
There was almost $200 there, even if half of it was in quarters and dollar
coins, and a lot of subway tokens. "I'm good for a week--" Hosea
said, tentatively. He raised his eyebrows questioningly, offering Eric his
share again as he paid for his room and took the key. Hosea didn't have a
credit card -- no ID of any kind but a driver's license and a library card,
both from someplace in West Virginia -- so the room clerk had asked for cash in
advance. Hosea had paid for three days, after being assured he could extend his
stay if he wished. "No worries," Eric assured him.
"Look -- here's my phone number and address, but I'll come and meet you
back here -- Sunday night, say. That's day after tomorrow. We can run through
some numbers and set up a play-list. Then at noon break on Monday, wait for me
at the main entrance to the school and we'll do a lunch-gig." He coughed,
a little embarrassed. "I'd gig with you the rest of this weekend, but I've
got friends coming in--" "Reckon friends got to come before
strangers," Hosea countered, with a grin. "You said that it's okay to
play in the Park, right? So I'll play in the Park. I'll do all right. Don't you
worry none about me, Eric Banyon. I'm a big boy and I can take care of myself.
You go on and be with your friends." Relieved, Eric clapped him on the back --
and had to reach a bit to do it. "One of these days -- and soon -- they'll
be your friends too, if I don't miss my guess. Okay, Hosea, I'll be out
here Sunday night -- about six. We'll get something delivered for dinner, talk
some music, and see what happens." "I'll be looking forward to it,"
Hosea said genially, then hauled his duffle up onto his back again as if it
weighed nothing and headed for the elevator, his room key jingling in his hand. Eric just shook his head, watching Hosea
go. He tried to imagine all the trouble this guileless country-boy could have
gotten himself into with thirty seconds of arriving in the city, and couldn't
even calculate it. If he wasn't a Bard . . . . Well, he is a Bard, and he'll be fine.
And I need to get home and start cleaning before Bethie gets there and has a
fit!
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