Book 3: Chapter 62: Beer Goggles
Guildmaster Monk was nothing at all like Guildmaster Malt. Thankfully she was also nothing like Guildmaster Browning. She was severe, yes, and domineering, but she wasnât demeaning or sarcastic. She was Guildmaster, and we were Guild members whoâd been naughty, and that was all there was to it.
It still stung when she arched an eyebrow at us like we were petulant children.
âMaster Brewer Schist!â Her voice was wrinkly with age, and had the cultured tones of an Academy graduate. âWhat concerns me the most in all of this is your behaviour. I expected something like this to happen eventually, the Administration has been carelessly flaunting our traditions and craft such that it was inevitable, but I never wouldâve imagined that it would be you standing in front of me. Master Stein, would you please list the Guild Ordinances these two breweries broke?â
An extremely short black-haired dwarf went to the front of the room and began writing Ordinances down on the board as he read them out. There were⦠quite a lot of them.
âSale of unapproved brew.â
âUsing unsanctioned brewing techniques.â
âInciting a riot via promotion of excess consumption.â
âSacred Brew not meeting Guild standards.â
âUnsanctioned use of Guild property.â
âLack of regulation onion attire.â
Iâd read the Guild Ordinances a dozen times by now, so none of the listed violations were a surprise to me. The bigger surprise was that nothing had been done about us until now. Many of those Ordinances could apply to everyone in the brewing contest.
The Guildmaster stared at us impassively as the violations were listed off, then drummed her fingers on the table in the following silence.
After an awkward minute of coughs and shuffling, she spoke. âIn total, fifty businesses, one major thoroughfare, and â at minimum â ten thousand gold worth of city infrastructure was damaged. Over one hundred injured, requiring over twenty hours of time from the [Healers]. What do you two have to say for yourself?â
She asked it in the general sense, but her gaze was firmly locked on Schist.
âMariaâ¦â Schist began.
âDonât you Maria me! You will refer to me as Guildmaster Monk!â The Guildmaster snapped back with the venom of a woman scorned.
Oh. Ohhhhhhhhh.
I stepped back and tried to blend into the wall. Beside me, Annie did much the same.
Schist coughed and tried again. âGuildmaster Monk. Weâre all aware of the ongoing tension between the Administration and guilds. As a long-standing Master of the Brewerâs Guild, Iâm thankful the Guild has not chosen to take the same tack as the Blacksmithâs Guild in this matter.â
The Guildmaster scoffed. âThose fools are playing right into the Administrationâs hands. We can see the runes on the wall, itâs clear that these âOctamillenial Eventsâ are an attack on the guildsâ power and prestige. Weâve been content to let it pass us by before taking any action.â
She nodded at Malt before continuing. âAdditionally, information provided to us from Guildmaster Malt has kept the touch of the Guild light on the newcomers from Minnova. However, your actions have forced our hand! We cannot allow such incidents to continue without throwing the guild into chaos! No less than five Master Brewers handed in a request for your resignation as a Master Brewer, Schist!â
Now it was Schistâs turn to scoff. âAre any of them in the room right now? Would they care to make such a request to my face!? Not one year ago I proved myself the best damn Brewer in Kinshasa!I was brewing for centuries before any of you even thought of churning Ancestral Seed! â He turned a baleful glare on the assembled Master Brewers, and they quailed back.
There was another moment of tense silence, but nobody spoke.
The Guildmaster slumped back into her seat with a sigh. âYou see? Even we are divided. Fractious and stuffed full from a life of indulgence and fattened by our own brews. Too cowardly to be more than boats on a river, content to be swept away down Darkwater.â
One of the Master Brewers, a portly dwarf with a blonde dovetail beard, squeaked hotly, âGuildmaster â !â
âBe SILENT, Master Faucet!â Monk smashed a fist on the table. âIf you are unable to stand up for your own convictions, I WILL NOT DO IT FOR YOU!â
The dwarf shrank back into his seat, his face red and puffy. Those seated next to him scooted their chairs away slightly, trying to distance themselves from him with literal distance.
âWe cannot deny the allegations.â Schist began. Annie flinched, and I held back a groan. Our defence! âHowever, everything we did, we did for the good of the Brew! So much has changed in Crack since the First Brewer brewed. There are more gnomes! The East is now fully settled! The dungeons have become little more than ancient storehouses of the Gods ripe for us to loot. I can go out, right now, and have my leg lopped off and replaced with a working limb of metal and magic. And yet, in all that time, our craft has not improved one iota!â
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âIt has no need for improvement!â Master Faucet scoffed. âThe Sacred Brew is perfect! Blessed by Barck himself and kept pure by generations of our Ancestors!â
âBarck is the God of Innovation you DAFT FOOL!â Schist spat. âIf you think heâs truly happy with it, youâre welcome to wait a few years and get his opinion from a [Prophet]! If heâs even willing to answer, you know how he is!â
Another Master held up their hand, and Guildmaster Monk pointed at them. This time it was a red-haired dwarfess with an Eastern accent.
âMaster Schist, we all appreciate the hard work youâve done as a Brewer. Can you tell us why
you decided to throw it all away on what appears to be a whim?â She asked, pointing vaguely in my direction. âAnd not even for a Feud! Just a simple wager against someone who isnât even a Master Brewer??â Her voice was terse and full of confusion.
Schist looked in our direction, and a sad smile crossed his face before he turned back to the circle of Masters. âBefore I answer your question Master Mcgrist. How many of you have started using the bottling system presented by the Thirsty Goat earlier this year? And made changes to improve sanitation as recommended by Brewer Roughtuff?â
Most of the Master Brewers shouted âAyeâ, excepting Master Faucet and a few others.
Schist nodded. âMost of you. I can tell you why; it saves an incredible amount of time, itâs quite lucrative, and it results in better beer. Are there any objections to that? Or are you all lacking so much in the craft that you canât tell gold from pyrite?â
âNow see here Master Schist! Are you calling the Sacred Brew pyrite!â Master Faucet objected hotly.
âNo, you idiot! Iâm making a metaphor! The point is, youâve all already seen the positive in the changes proposed by the Thirsty Goat!â Schist cracked back. âThis contest was the first time, and perhaps the last, that I stretched my legs as a Master and saw where my skills could take me! Most of you havenât felt the need yet, but you will, just give it another couple centuries. Maria knows what Iâm talking about!â
âPfah! Mushy talk fer Mushfolk!!â Faucet sneered.
âYouâve got a head harder than diamond, Faucet!â
Schist and Faucet began to bicker, in slowly raising volume.
Several of the Masters had begun nodding along with Schist as he spoke, and I felt some weight come off my shoulders. Our hard work, and Guildmaster Maltâs hadnât been for nothing. The Guild was primed for change, and just needed a little push.
I glanced at Annie and gave a little waggle of my head. Her lips firmed and she nodded. It was time to make our pitch.
I held up a hand.
âBrewer Roughtuff, Iâll take your statements later.â The Guildmaster stated curtly over the din.
âI actually had a question?â
âThat was a question. But you are young, and it is the wont of youth to ask foolish questions, I will allow another.â
âIs what we made actually Sacred Brew?â
Monk gave me a curious look, and pulled at her beard. âBy the Guild Ordinances⦠It would be difficult to say. Did you use the Ancestral Seed provided in a direct line from the First Brewer to the Thirsty Goat Brewery?â
â... No?â
She gave me a blank look.
âI made my own.â
âYou⦠made your own Ancestral Seed.â
âAye.â
âYou made your own Ancestral Seed. The gift imparted by our Ancestors.â
âYes?â
She picked up the bottle of Dragonator beside her and sniffed it. She then took a small sip and shivered. âUgh, I canât get used to it. Letâs assume I accept your preposterous claim that you didnât use the proper Ancestral Seed, and Iâve read the reports on your brewing apparatus, you certainly didnât use the traditional Brewing techniques to make this. And the bittering agent is different as wellâ¦â
âShe invented tha bittering agent.â I pointed at Annie, who smiled nervously.
At this point several of the other Masters had caught on to the topic of our conversation and were listening in.
Annie and I had both agreed that springboarding off of Master Schist was going to be our best bet for getting the âItâs Not Sacred Brewâ plan to succeed. Especially after the Redlip Riot. Who cared if the Guild said we couldnât compete as Brewers anymore? If they did, theyâd have to nail Schist to the wall too, because heâd never let them censure us while he got off scot free. And Schist was the most popular Brewer in town â itâd be an even worse riot than Redlip.
The Guildmaster placed the bottle of Dragonator down with distaste. âThen tell me. If you didnât make Sacred Brew, then what did you make?â
Schist was eyeing me with a âwhat the hell are you doing?â look, but I ignored him and continued, raising my voice to address the crowd. âWhat Master Schist was sayinâ was true. The skills of the Master Brewers have stagnated. Of all tha crafts in Kinshasa, ours is the only one that only allows a single recipe. Fer all their faults, the Blacksmithâs guild allows their smiths ta create more than just a single sword. Can an [Alchemist] be considered a Master if they only ever make one potion? Can ya truly call yourselves Masters if youâve never actually contributed to tha growth of yer craft?â
âNow see here, Brewer!â Master Faucet shouted. âMy clan has been providing Sacred Brew to the dwarves of Kinshasa for millenia! If the guild Ordinances didnât allow it in this space, I would demand a Feud for your slander!â
âAnd Kinshasa no doubt thanks you fer yer service. But that was tha city. How have ya furthered the craft of Brewing? Have ya found a way to improve the carbonation? Ta reduce the failure rate? Since I arrived in Kinshasa Iâve invented several machines that Iâve shared willingly with you all, and that I know many of you use. Even the one piece of equipment I know fer certain every dwarf in here approves of â the Whistlemug â was invented by a gnome! Not a [Brewer], A gnomish [MERCHANT]! What have ya done fer Brewinâ that can match that!?â
Master Faucet flinched and collapsed back into his seat. The Master Brewers were similarly struck dumb, and I sent a silent thank you to Whistlemop. Iâd have to make things up to him soon.
Monk spun her hand in circles. âWhat is your point, Brewer Roughtuff?â
âMy point, Master Monk, is that perhaps these events are an opportunity fer tha Guild to grow. A King has no throne without a Kingdom and to be first means nothinâ if thereâs no second. The best way fer us ta respect our Traditions and the Ancestors would be to make the Sacred Brew one among many. What we made was not Sacred Brew, it was just beer, brewed by [Brewers].â
Everyone clapped.
Okay, actually, the room devolved into screaming and shouting and the axes came out. But a dwarf can dream.