Book 2: Chapter 58: The Fellowship of the Brew
It took some finagling on my and Aquaâs part to get the party back up. Experience said that a round of Liquid Gold would do the trick, and it did indeed. Soon everyone was back to merry chatter.
Richter had absconded to the back office with Annie and his father to discuss. I kept wanting to go listen in, but my mature mind told me that they would come talk to me when they were ready.
They did eventually return, and Otto shook my hand to introduce himself, then disappeared back into the night as suddenly as heâd arrived. He left behind a shell-shocked Richter, who was staring at the floor and blinking.
I went and punched him in the shoulder. âHey! How did it go? Do I need to go tell Penelope to give him a running goodbye?â
Richterâs voice was uncharacteristically unsure as he shook his head. âNo, itâs fine.â
âWant to talk about it?â I passed him a tankard of Liquid Gold and he took it in shaking hands. He drained half the glass in a single chug, before coming back up for air.
âI tâink⦠I tâink I might, Pete. Thankee.â
We pulled into one of the booths that the crew had set aside for members of the Thirsty Goat. The only current occupant was an ornery Penelope. Her little drink bowl lay forgotten on the floor where sheâd dragged it after the umpteenth partygoer denied her a beer. She was in the middle of eating Aquaâs satchel and that needed to stop before she did something weâd all regret.
âNo! Bad goat, Penelope! Shoo!â I waved her away.
*Beeeeeeehh*! [Translated From Primma Donna Goat] âWhat a knave, to interrupt a princess while she dines! Hmph!â She flicked her tail and absconded, but not before taking a pair of napkins to eat as she went.
The pair of us clambered into the small knot of silence that was the booth, surrounded by raucous drinking and partying.
âIs da Princess stayinâ or going?â Richter asked, pointing after Penelope. âDatâll be a hard decision ta make.â
I sighed. âThatâs going to be up to Annie. I suspect sheâll come with, to help grant the new brewpub some legitimacy.â
âAye⦠legitimacy.â Richter frowned again, and sipped at his beer. The tall black-skinned dwarf did brooding better than anyone Iâd ever seen.
I gave him a few minutes before broaching the subject. He spent them drinking his beer in silence and occasionally asking for another. âSo, whatâs up?â
âYou know how me da left tha brewery, aye?â
âHe wanted to earn more money than Jeremiah could get him, to pay for your schooling.â
Richter took another chug of liquid gold. âI kept turninâ him down. He âasnât been âround tha goat in a decade.â
âYou don't see him at home?â
Richter waved a hand. âI moved out. Family dinners are⦠awkward.â
âWhat brings him around now? Did he just want to congratulate you?â I had no real frame of personal reference; I was never estranged from my parents. We always got along just fine, even into my adult years. Oh sure, I never got into the hobbies dad really wanted me to get into, but we still had things to chat about at thanksgiving and christmas. Some of my adult friends however. Hooooeee.
âSee, da got hired into Faultless Brewery.â Richter glanced askance at some of the apprentice brewers from other breweries that had somehow made it into our family party. Friends of Annie or Johnsson I supposed.
I whistled. âI thought you had to be a Fault to get into that place.â
Richter nodded. âAye, or have a family based Specialisation. Me da was a [Clan Brewer], while Jeremiah was an [Ancestral Brewer].â
âHe couldnât have been brewing for that long, and he Specialized already? Once or twice?â
âJust tha once. He was already an [Alchemist] when he arrived, though.â
I gave another whistle. For a dwarf to get a Specialization like that in under a century was pretty amazing. I could count on both hands the number of Specialised people Iâd met so far. No wonder the Faults had wanted him! âSo, what brought him back?â
Richter looked like he wanted to hit something. âHe⦠he did somethinâ real stupid. When they found out we won and you lot were headed to Kinshasa, he contacted the University in the Capital by commstone. Theyâre tha biggest University in Crack, and itâs hard to get into! I dunno how he did it, but I - I have a letter of acceptance, and tuition covered. I just need ta show up in Kinshasa and the spot is mine!â
He was shivering now, though if it was from stress, joy, or anger I couldnât tell.
âAre you⦠happy?â I asked, cautiously.
âI dunno what ta feel! He shouldnât âave done somethinâ that big without askinâ! Usually only nobles or rich merchants get in there!â
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âDo you not want it?â
âI DO! But! But! After allâo these years, I thought heâd accepted my no. Why is he here again!?â
âOh, I can answer that one. Itâs because weâre allied with Fault Brewery right now.â I nodded vigorously. âWe owe them, and with the money theyâre going to be making soon, they owe us. He probably saw it as an opportunity to try and reconnect.â
âAnnie said da same tâing.â Richter groaned. âI wasnât sure I was coming witâ you before. Getting into Minnova University was ma dream. But nowâ¦â
âBut is Kinshasa University what you want? Listen, Richter, as parents we often make choices that we think are necessary for our children. The best we can do is teach the hard lessons we learned and hope our children donât make the same mistakes. But the most important lesson every parent needs ta learn is when to let go. I know some parents never really get used to the loss of control and things can get⦠well, ugly would be a polite way of puttinâ it.â
âOne way of puttinâ itâ¦â Richter glowered into his beer.
âYour father probably never intended to become a Brewer when he moved here, but he threw himself into it when the opportunity presented itself. I can respect that, and I know that you do too. Youâre too logical to not see it.â
Richter frowned, and began to speak, but I held up a hand to interrupt him.
âBUT! Heâs absolutely in the wrong here! He shouldnât have done this in a way that essentially forces you to make a choice. And itâs a choice youâre going to need to make, one way or the other. All I can say is that if you donât come to Kinshasa with me and especially Berry, you will almost definitely regret it. So donât go to Kinshasa for him, do it for us. He just threw a welcoming gift in it for you.â I smacked the table with my palms for emphasis.
Richter stared at me for a long while before he spoke. âYou going to tell me your story soon?â
I blushed into my beard. âAye. I plan on telling everyone on the trip to Kinshasa. Thereâs stuff everyone will need to know. If you decide to stay, Iâll tell you before we leave.â
RIchter gave a broad white smile. âYou say I won tha bet?â
I winked and he chuckled.
I stood and stretched. âTime to go socialize, Richter. You coming?â
Richter settled back into the booth seat. âI tâink Iâll stay a while longer. Youâve given me plenty ta tâink about.â
â
The rest of the night was a blur. There were so many new faces and names that even my burgeoning Intelligence couldnât handle it all. There were Titles to remember, various clan connections to tap dance around, and tossed dwarves and tankards to dodge.
All in all, it was lower key than the launch party, and much more intimate, but still definitely dwarven. The Liquid Gold started running out fairly quickly, and I was set to task using [Bottomless Barrel] as much as possible. A couple other attendees also had the Ability, so we never actually ran out of beer; the perks of a [Brewer] party. Good thing too, as the few dwarves that tried the gnomish wheat-based barista brew ran screaming for the bathrooms.
I ended the evening with my beard done up in bows, several fresh scars, and Emerelda draped over my shoulder. We had all gathered around the bar as Annie hoisted herself up and called for attention. Penelope was front and center of the crowd, shoving her little beer dish around and getting angrier and angrier as everyone ignored her.
âThank you so much for coming to our clan gathering! Iâd like to make a toast!â Annie raised her tankard. âFirst, to Johnsson! Congratulations on your Blessing!â
âTO JOHNSSON!â We cried. His father, John Sr was literally crying.
âAnd finally to our beloved home! For Crack and Minnova!â
âFER CRACK AND ANNIE!â Came the joyful reply.
âGODS DAMN YOU ALL!â She roared back, crimson, and we all laughed.
After a few seconds of ranting, Annie schooled herself and launched into her speech. At this point most of the crowd were drunk or blitzed, so it was a bit long winded in my opinion. Could have used some more jokes and puns. She thanked everyone for their support, yada yada, many centuries, blah blah.
Then she got to the important part!
âWeâve just received the final word of who will be coming with us to Kinshasa!!!â
The crowd grew silent. Heck, even I didnât know what was coming!
âJohnsson, Richter, Aqua, and myself will form the core of the crew!â Annie announced proudly. âWeâve been working together since we were moustached, and I canât imagine a group Iâd rather work with!â
There was general applause and merrymaking. I spotted Richter and he was happily accepting fistbumps. I had to assume heâd made his decision and spoken to Annie at some point during the party. Well, good for him! Iâd have to ask Berry to tutor him on some music magic on the trip to Kinshasa.
âNext, weâll be joined by the Roughtuff clan! You probably better know them as Brewer Peter and my fiance, Knight Balin of Goldenlight!â
Now it was my turn to face congratulatory applause, backslapping, and head-bonking. I accepted it all with good grace. Balin was behind the bar guarding Annie, lucky bastard, and only had to deal with shouting.
âNext! Iâm very pleased to announce that we plan to open a similar establishment to what we have here, complete with food cooked by the one and only number one chef in Minnova! Bran Hurler! Heâll be joined by his fiance Doctor Opal, who will be using up some of her years of vacation leave!â
âNO!â I heard Beatbox scream before he was drowned out by similar applause and congratulations. Bran looked pleased as punch, and Opal looked⦠resigned, but happy.
I was of course over the moon! I gripped Emerelda in a big, headlocking, WWE style hug and chortled. She kneed me in the stomach in response.
âAnd of course, the easiest to miss will be the one person you canât miss walking in our doors! Kirk Manly, action adventurer!â
This time the screams of ânoâ definitely had a more feminine tone to them. Well, alto, at least.
Kirk waved happily. Nobody threw tankards at his head I noted.
The noise in the Thirsty Goat was reaching a fever pitch, and Annie was going to need to do something to let it off soon, or the place would blow.
Instead, she made a grand sweeping gesture, and announced, âAnd I am announcing today, that the star of the Thirsty Goatâs move to Kinshasa will be the one, the only â â
The crowd hung on her every word as she drew it out. I was impressed. She must have been going to see wrestling with Balin on the sly.
âPENELOPE!â Annie finished, pointing down at the goat.
âBEEEEHHHHR!!??â [Translated from Primma Donna Goat] âBEER!!??â At her name being shouted, the antsy, angry, and hangry goat launched herself at Annie.
And then the party blew up.