Beware, my child, the good folks' song, the music in the glen,
For if ye dance in Faeryland, ye'll ne're be seen again.
Take no sup and drink no wine the good folk offer ye,
For if ye dine in Faeryland, they'll ne'er set ye free.
Trust no word the good folk speak, the truth can still deceive,
For if you're fooled in Faeryland, you're ne'er going to leave.
The good folks' gifts and favors given, ye always must repay,
For if ye've debt in Faeryland, ye'll ne're get away.
The good folks' pride and honor, must ne're be brought low,
For if you're rude in Faeryland, they'll ne'er let ye go.
The queer ways of the good folk, are nae for us to ken,
But if ye dance in Faeryland, ye'll ne're be seen again.
Once upon a time, there was a girl called Alessandra who studied theater at her university. Alessandra loved the theater. She loved the costumes and the lights and the pageantry. She especially loved the drama. Compared to the stories that unfolded on the stage, real life always seemed dull and colorless to her.
Alessandra loved the theater so much that one summer, rather than go home to her Mom and her Gran, she stayed at school to take extra classes. After leaving class one day she saw a flyer for the local Renaissance Faire tacked to a bulletin board.
When she was just a little girl, Alessandra's mother took her to Renaissance Faires and Festivals every summer. They would drive from state to state to wander through mocked-up medieval villages, see the costumes and the characters, and watch the jugglers and acrobats and storytellers. But when she was thirteen, Alessandra's mother got promoted from teacher to assistant principal, and they stopped going to Renaissance Faires because her mother had to work all summer.
Alessandra missed those days. Going to Faires and Fests was like living inside of a giant theater production. She was so excited to see the flyer that she immediately called her boyfriend Greg on her cell phone.
"We need to go to the Renn Faire!" she told him. "Please, please, please can we go?"
Greg had never been to a Renaissance Faire, but Alessandra made it sound like so much fun he agreed. It was a long way from the university though, and neither Alessandra nor Greg owned a car. Fortunately, Greg studied business at the university and he was very good at managing paradigms to maximize outcomes with minimal inputs.
What does that mean? Why it means that he knew how to get something for nothing.
Greg's roommate, John, studied engineering and liked to read those sword & sorcery novels, so Greg thought John would enjoy the Renn Faire too. John didn't own a car either, but he was dating a girl named Leslie, and she owned a car. So Greg asked John and Leslie to go to the Faire as a double date.
Leslie invited her roommate, Quinn.
Alessandra knew Quinn because Quinn was a dance major in the school of Performing Arts and they had been in Theatrical Management class together. Alessandra would never admit it, but she was jealous of Quinn's long, long hair. Poor Alessandra could never get her hair to grow longer than a short, boyish bob, which made it easy to wear wigs on stage, but it wasn't very dramatic in real life.
"That's too many people," Alessandra complained to Greg. She really didn't want Quinn to go. "We'll never be able to agree on where to go or what to do."
"It'll be fine," Greg assured her. "You and I can always split off on our own and meet the others later if we want to." Then he went back to playing video games with John and ignored her until they were done.
And so on Midsummer's Day, they all squeezed into Leslie's little red hatchback and drove out to the Renaissance Faire. Leslie parked with all the other cars in a big, grassy field on the edge of a forest. Above the treeline, they could see a mocked-up castle on top of a hill and they could hear festive minstrel music playing over loudspeakers, beckoning the crowd towards the woods.
Alessandra was so excited she skipped through the parking field ahead of the others.
"Alessandra, wait up!" Quinn called.
"Walk faster!" Alessandra shouted back over her shoulder.
They had all printed tickets from the Renn Faire web site, so Alessandra skipped right past the ticket line and up to the gate. The ticket-taker, in his velvet doublet, colorful pantaloons, and floppy hat, greeted each guest in turn.
"Welcome back, Alice!" he said brightly to Alessandra.
Her mood immediately soured.
"Why would you call me 'Alice'?" she scowled. "'Alice' is a stupid, boring, dreary name."
"I'm sorry," the ticket-taker in the velvet doublet apologized, taken aback by her venom. "I like to make up names for all of the guests. It makes a dull job a little more fun."
"Oh," Alessandra accepted the apology as she took the map of the village he offered. "Alright then."
By this time, her friends had caught up to her.
"Well met, Rapunzel!" the ticket-taker in the velvet doublet greeted Quinn, who tossed her long, long hair with a smile.
"Enjoy thyself, Leonardo," he told John. "Enter and be merry, Penelope," he said to Leslie. "Hail and welcome, Marco," he greeted Greg.
Alessandra and her friends filtered into the crowd that flowed under the open portcullis into a village square. Two broad avenues led deeper into the wood, flanked on either side by colorful half-timbered and jettied facades. Sign boards advertised "Her Majesty's Jeweler" and "Fantastical Fancies" and "Ye Olde Whitler's Shoppe."
Mixed in with all of the visitors wearing shorts and T-shirts were men in kilts or hose or leather breeches, women in corsets and chemise blouses and summery gowns, children dressed as pirates or knights or princesses. There were cosplayers in capes and cloaks, bracers and boots, elf ears and goblin fangs.
In the cool of the morning, the atmosphere crackled with creativity and wonder, and Alessandra felt invigorated by the spectacle.
"Look!" she pointed to a whimsically ramshackle store front. "They rent costumes! We should totally do that!" Alessandra believed that everything was more fun in a costume.
"I don't know," Leslie demurred looking up from her map. "It sounds expensive."
"C'mon, it'll be fun," Quinn prodded her roommate. "I'll pay for your costume," she offered with a mischievous smirk, "if you let me pick it out."