Â
Lord of the Dance
Â
I Danced In The Morning
They
gather in their masses as he looks on from a nearby rooftop, restringing his
violin and letting his bare feet dangle precariously over the edge to the
packed streets below. Soon he will take his place at the head of the crowd and
strike a tune, leading them on a merry procession through the city streets. For
now, he appears content to watch the throng assemble in the main square, a
panoply of masked and costumed partygoers, ready for a day of fun.
As he stares down at them, one of them looks back and
points up excitedly, nudging two of her friends and waving up at him from far
below. He allows himself a polite wave and a bow, his fiddle flashing in the
bright light of the morning sun. Then he withdraws from the edge to a small
sack which contains his patchwork partywear and begins to climb into the
voluminous robe.
On with the motley.
***
“I swear to you, that’s him, look!” Sandra shielded her
eyes against the sun and squinted back up at the figure on the rooftop.
Removing his mask, a serious young man next to her tried to match her line of
sight.
“I can’t see anything. Are you
sure?”
“He’s gone now, but he was
there, I swear! That must be a good omen, to see him early! He even bowed at
me!” Her companion side-eyed her skeptically then nudged the third of their
group.
“Looks like the heat’s got to Sandra already! Seeing
things in the heat haze." He wiped matted black hair from his brow. “I’m going to keep my mask off until we start. It’s way too
hot to be wearing it already.”
“That’s bad luck.” Sandra frowned, then looked dejectedly
back at the roof.
“Y’know, I did see something. Maybe it
was him. I’ve only seen a picture of him in the brochure though and whoever
that was up there was wearing something quite different. But still…” Toby, the
third of their party, craned his head again. Sandra smiled at him, glad to have
a co-conspirator, even a half-hearted one. He snapped his neck back. “Anyone
fancy a beer? There’s a little bar on the plaza a
couple of roads over, we could chill there in the shade rather than sweat
ourselves to death here.”
“I told Libby we’d meet her here.” Marcus looked around
and shrugged. “Not that she’d be able to spot us in this madness at any rate.”
Sandra didn’t dwell on why Libby
and Marcus hadn’t arrived together but did exchange a meaningful glance with
Toby. I hope everything’s OK between
them. Toby shrugged in response. I
just wish he’d lighten up; it’s supposed to be a party
for goodness’ sake. “I’ll text her. Come on. Let’s
see if there are still places to sit down, there’ll be plenty of time to stand
up later.”
***
Dance, then,
wherever you may be
His fingers were ever straying and
impatient to be playing.
What lives have these people led? How empty must those
lives be that they flock to this one particular place
on this one particular day just to ‘have fun’? Can merriment not be sought in
other places, at other times? If people felt it necessary to have a season to
be jolly, what did that say about their temperaments the rest of the time?
He knew this to be the case even as he rosined up his
bow. He knew the indignities mankind inflicted on one another, hour after hour,
day after day. It wasn’t a surprise when you had been watching them, in one
guise or another, for millennia.
Today he would lead them all away from this. Let them
lose themselves in little moments of joy and ecstasy. Take them back to those
rare and precious times, often in their childhood, when ignorance was bliss.
It wasn’t that they deserved it,
far from it. It was just what he did.
He opened up his case and said, “I’ll start this show.”
***
Sandra took one look at Libby as she approached and
sighed audibly. Libby wound her way across the crowded plaza where the others sat
at one of the trestle tables set up earlier that morning, under the shade of a
giant yellow umbrella proudly emblazoned with the name of a beer none of them
had ever heard of and were unlikely to drink if there weren’t free samples
given out to all the festival goers.
Libby tripped over four or five times on her way to them,
each time cursing the ground she walked on, her shoes, nearby patrons, whatever
seemed appropriate. Sandra wondered whether she was incredibly hung over or
still drunk and guessed this had been the source of the sourness she had
detected with Marcus earlier. Whichever it was, it was going to cast a shadow
over their whole day.
Libby waved hello as she spotted them and drew nearer.
Her eyes were hidden behind mirrored sunglasses and
the rest of her face was hidden in the shade of a wide brimmed bright yellow
sun hat from the rear of which protruded a few stray blonde strands. She blew a
kiss at a nearby waiter as she grabbed one of the promotional beers from the
tray and sat down next to Marcus. As Libby lit a cigarette and began to speak,
Sandra could smell the tequila lingering on her breath from the night before.
“You left us early last night, Marcus! You missed the
best bit of the party!”
Marcus squirmed his hand away as Libby attempted to grab
it. Having failed, her limp wrist was left dangling
over the side of the table, a golden bracelet flashing in the midday sun.
“Ooh, what happened?” Sandra was in no mood for this
bullshit. Calling Libby out now was the best way to shut her up and a sullen,
pouty Libby would be a better companion than the full-tilt party girl persona
Libby liked to put on for an audience.
“Well, er, lots of stuff.” Sandra smiled inside; as she
thought, Libby had been too out of it to know. Probably still was. “Some of the musicians from the carnival joined us late, must
have been about three in the morning. They played all night. All night,
Marcus!” One last attempt at attention. It failed. Marcus had already withdrawn
into the text of the festival brochure.
Libby downed her beer in one and then signaled for
another. Sandra, after a moment’s thought, did the same. If you can’t beat them, join them.
***
I'll lead you all in the Dance
The procession snaked endlessly down Main Street, ebbing
and flowing with the mass of sweaty flesh. He crooked his neck, just once, to
check they were following him and flash them a knowing smile from beneath his
quartered red and yellow mask. He pulled the strings across the bow and it gave
an evil hiss. As it did, barely discernible wisps of yellow smoke began to
issue from it and waft their way behind him into the madding crowd.
It
hadn’t always been the violin he’d used as an instrument of temptation, far
from it. Hundreds of years ago, the flute was the instrument of jollity he’d
used to draw a crowd. He still carried that at his side; not in case the fiddle
failed to enthrall - it never had - but as a reminder of the power he had once wielded,
and the lessons humanity had yet to learn:
Always
pay the piper.
Always
give the devil his due.
Otherwise,
all hell will break loose.