Entry tags:
closed | jam session.
WHO: Ellie, Tony, Byerly, Bastien
WHAT: A recording session
WHEN: Vaguely now
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: As planned and promised.
WHAT: A recording session
WHEN: Vaguely now
WHERE: Kirkwall
NOTES: As planned and promised.


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Tony only narrowly avoids being told to stop stalling.
And the song, when it begins, is not what Bastien expected. Tony's earlier unspoken epiphany was largely correct: Thedas' popular songs are most frequently narratives. Their love songs are most often from first to third person or about two third-person characters entirely, with the romance wrapped safely in a story. The emotion is held at a polite distance.
Here, it isn't. Simple feelings, promises made by the singer directly to someone who it feels ought to be sitting right in front of him, looking him in the eye.
Bastien might squirm, if it weren't so damn compelling.
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It's soft, loving, and maybe Ellie imagines the heartbreak wrapped up in the words along with the promise.
Darling, so it goes.
Discreetly, she reaches up, wipes her nose with her sleeve.
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"This," Byerly murmurs to Bastien, "is the horniest thing I've ever heard in my life."
(By is, it must be noted, frequently quite a bit less sentimental than his beloved is.)
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There are, of course, hornier songs provided by earth than a croony beachy love song from sixty years ago, but the stripped back sentimentality of it is not shied away from save that Tony checking his audience only affords fleeting eye contact. Byerly provides a reprieve with shit-eating grin, honestly.
It's a short song. Take my hand, take my whole life too, and the last chorus. Odder arrangement of chords aside, Tony lets the lute do its pretty lute thing right up to the last frilly flourish. And, because he can't help himself,
"Thank you very much," spoken quickly, where the crystal will most certainly pick it up too.