âI have completed looking into Brazen Bull Brewing, and I have to sayâ¦â Johnsson began as the meeting floor opened. âThis feels a bit anti-climactic. Theyâre more an engineering company that makes beer than a brewing company.â
âI agree.â Richter nodded. âWe shoulda been against Riverside for âde finals, not âde semis.â
âSeems a waste.â Aqua sighed. âAnd we used up all our good ideas already too.â
âSpeak for yourself!â Johnsson tapped his head. âIâve got so many good ideas in here!â
Aqua snorted. âOh yeah! Name one!â
Johnsson waggled his eyebrows. âREALLY strong beer!â
âHAH!â Aqua shrieked with laughter.
âCan we be a bit more serious.â Annie pulled the roomâs attention to her. âI know weâre all coming down from an adrenaline high after the events of the last month, but we really do need some ideas.â
Everyone looked my way and I shrugged. âI have lots of beers we could make, but I donât really know how to tie them to the theme. You lot have lived in Crack for decades, so what would be a beer that represents it?â
Johnsson was the first to speak. âSomething dark?â
âOoh, and wet!â Aqua added.
âAnd stinky.â Richter nodded.
Annie frowned as the room devolved back into laughter. âDid you really not come up with anything yesterday?â
I heaved a breath. âHonestly? I didnât really think about work at all yesterday.â
âThatâs right! He was on a date with Tourmaline!â Aqua giggled. âGood for him!â
âIt wasnât a date!â I protested. âIt was just two friends hanging out.â
âIs that why you came back so late?â Balin asked, wrapping an arm around Annieâs shoulders. She snuggled into him. âJust hanginâ witâ a friend?â
âNo.â My voice grew serious. âWe managed to cure her mother. The Heir Apparent of the Duke of the West is back, and sheâs really, really
angry.â
I was met with blank stares.
Johnsson was the first to speak. âYouâre serious? Really!?â
I nodded. âSheâs speaking to the Council of Greybeards right now. She claims she knows who poisoned her.â
Johnsson whistled. âShe has a lot of allies amongst the high nobility. And the ear of the King. He dotes on her, and there was suspicion that the Council might name her the next ruler of Crack when he dies.â
âLong live the King.â Balin muttered.
âLong live the Kingâ¦.â we all repeated. Weâd all had enough political upheaval for one year, thank you!
âWell, good for you!â Annie patted me on the back, then pulled me into a hug. âAnd thank you so much for helping her. I never heard the full story back at the mine, but I knew something was eating her up inside. Does Opal know?â
I shrugged. âWith the noise Lady Barnes is making in Whitewall? She mustâve heard by now. I decided to keep my distance given⦠everything.â
âThatâs all fine and dandy.â Kirk jumped in. âBut we still have a contest to win.â
âWhat about a beer made from local ingredients like the Kinshasa brew, but made using ingredients from Crack?â Aqua asked, then flushed. âWhich is what we usually do. Never mind!â
âSomethinâ old?â Richter asked. âLike ancient tree bark from Greentree or somesuch?â
âWhat about a beer using an ingredient from every major dungeon or city?â Kirk put in. âThereâs a lot of variety there.â
âThatâs a good idea.â Annie mused, writing it down on the office chalkboard. âWe could talk to Bran about pairing it with a special national menu.â
âHeâs busy with his own work right now.â Aqua said. âHe threatened to bake me into a pretzel if I bothered him again.â
âItâs not fair,â I groaned. âHe got such a good contest all neatly wrapped in a bow too. âErdrootâ, now thatâs a theme! And against the biggest restaurant in Kinshasa too, The Smug Snapper.â
Annie scribbled a little fish on the board. âHe has an advantage, since theyâre a fish restaurant. They may struggle with a starch based meal.â
Johnsson shook his head. âTheir chefâs a five times Specialized [BarckâsGreat Gourmand]. Itâll be a hard fight.â
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âBut a delicious one!â Kirk smiled, patting his belly. We all nodded in pleased agreement. We could all see the days of experimental delicacies stretching out before us. My mouth watered, and Aqua gulped.
âI can see weâre all hungry. So letâs try and wrap this up.â Annieâs shoulders slumped. âDo we really have nothing? Balin? Youâre probably the most patriotic of us.â
Balin looked up at the ceiling in thought. âI see it all, as an adventurer. And one thing Iâve noticed since cominâ to Kinshasa, is how much there is in Crack bubblinâ beneath the surface, just like the Sacred Brew we all love. Weâre a mixed people, with gnomes, dwarves, elves, and humans all livinâ our lives together as best we can. Itâs not perfect, but I hear in the human lands, the beastfolk are not more than slaves. In the great forests, the elves hold dominion by virtue of their long lives. In tha south, the tribes are all separated. Only here in Crack do we all live together in relative peace.â
âI can think of some gnomes who would disagree with that.â Johnsson muttered.
Balin shrugged. âAye. But weâre tryinâ. Tha gnomes are drinkinâ beer now, and Copperpotâs about to release a new sour. Schist is screaminâ about that Great Charter of Harmssons at City Hall every day to anyone thatâll listen, and mebbe somethinâ will come of it. I think a beer that represents Crack would be a beer thatâs made for everybody.â
We all blinked, and then Richter began to clap. I joined in, and soon the gentle patter of hands meeting hands filled the room.
âThat was lovely dear.â Annie pecked him on the cheek. âAnd you may have something. Wasnât that the whole reason for that Umqubothi, Pete? Youâve always wanted to make a beer for everyone.â
âEh, youâll never make a beer everybody likes.âI nodded slowly. âBuuuut, Iâm now able to magically isolate the gluten proteins in barley and replace them with pork proteins about 95% of the time. So we could make a barley beer, which may be more palatable for humans and gnomes in general while not causing dwarves to bloat up like balloons.â
Richter held his face in his hands. âPlease tell me ya didnât make a spell ta turn barley inta bacon.â
I gave him a brilliant smile. âSure did.â
âEveryone is gonna think I taught you to be like âdat.â He huffed.
âNot a problem so long as we win.â Annie patted him on the back. âI like that idea. Anyone else?â
âAre we doing anything fancy again, like smoking beer?â Johnsson asked, looking at the distraught Richter.
âNO!â Was the immediate reply from the entire room.
â
A few hours later and only Johnsson and Richter and I were left, hard at work putting the finishing touches on the fermentation tanks.
I waved over the tank with my wand, carefully drawing the required sigil. Richter leaned over my shoulder, his eyes intense, and I swore as the Sigil winked out. âLunaraâs Lace! Would you stop doinâ that Richter! I cannae concentrate with you hanginâ over my shoulder like that.â
âIâm just âmirin my studentâs work.â Richter said.
âNever, ever say that word again.â I grumped, starting the sigil again. I could feel my Mana reserves tightening, so Iâd need to take a break soon.
âWhat, âstudentâ? Ya can't deny it Pete!â
âNo, âmirin. I have nightmares about that word.â
âIf you say so.â
I finished the sigil, and it flowed into the fermentation tank in a scintillating blue stream of mana.
âAnd that does it.â I said, rising to my feet and dry-washing my hands. âNow we just let it ferment, and weâre done.â
âWhat did you call it again?â Johnsson asked, as he inspected the tanks, ensuring there was no bubbling or anything blocking the seals. An improper seal on a fermentation tank could be explosive, and we wanted to avoid that.
âItâs an IPA.â
Johnssons gave a curious grunt. âIPA?â
I grinned. âMost of us do, especially after a beer!â
âShaddup. Howâs it taste?â
âItâs hard to describe. IPA is short for India Pale Ale, and itâs famous for being the hoppiest beer around.â
Johnsson hopped down from his stool and moved to the next tank. âBut why that one in particular? Why not just a regular Sacred Brew with barley?â
âIt has to do with what an IPA is and why it exists. Back on Earth, India was half a world away and across the ocean from where beer was most popular, a continent called Europe. At the time, a European Country called Great Britain had conquered India and was plundering its riches to send back home. The problem was, the British sailors needed beer to survive the grueling conditions of the British Navy. But trips could take months.â
âThe beer went bad.â Richter hypothesized.
âIt did.â I nodded. âThe solution was in the bittering agent used for beer at the time: hops. This little plant,â I held up a piece of hops fruit, âalso serves as a preservative. By waiting just a little longer to insure most of the sugars have been fermented, and then massively hopping the beer, the ale could survive being shipped to India. Hence, India Pale Ale. Weâll probably need to call it Crack Pale Ale, or CPA for short, then hope the local Accountantâs Guild doesnât go after us. Nyuck!â
âWhy would they do that?â Johnsson asked.
â*Sigh* Never mind.â
Richter stared at the tanks. âWill it even taste good? Those hops are nice mixed witâ Annieâs bitters, but âdeyâre real different.â
I clicked my tongue. âWe wonât know until we try, but honestly⦠I think itâll turn away a lot of customers. Itâll taste quite a bit different â a lot drier and more bitterâ but it will last as far as we can send it. To each corner of Crack and even to the human lands and the south. No rare Teleportation Abilities or expensive alchemical components required, just good old goat-driven wagon and time.â
âIt certainly meets the theme.â Johnsson nodded. âItâll be the only beer I know of that any dwarf in Crack or on the surface will be able to drink. Eventually.â
âEventually.â I nodded. âIt is a risk.â
âBut a good one.â Johnsson patted me on the shoulder. âI think we have the right idea. Even if we lose the contest because people donât like the taste, weâll have made a beer that we think represents our country, and more importantly, one that anyone can drink.â
âYou do realize that weâre going to be locked in here for another month brewing, right?â I complained. âWith that stupid requirement that we provide half of the beer for the drinking contest, Iâm going to need to sit here and cast Barley to Bacon and [Rapid Aging] nonstop.
âAnd we all appreciate yer sacrifice.â Johnsson grinned. âJust think of all youâll be able to do when we win and you become a Lord.â
I shook my head. âLetâs spend the time with our heads down. Between everything Schistâs been doing, and now all the kerfuffle around Lady Barnes, weâre a bit too visible politically. I say we focus on being a cozy inn for a change.â
There was general consensus, and we went our separate ways. With the tavern so packed, we were all working around the clock, and there wasnât time to waste. Two weeks until the IPAs were ready, and thenâ¦
Showtime.