âAlright Balin, give me your hand.â
âUgh, how arenât ya tired yet Pete?â
âEasy, my vitality is seventeen.â
âThatâs disgustinâ, how?â
âIâll tell you later. Focus on climbing.â I pulled and yanked Balin up on the boulder with me. I turned around to look at our goal. Only another hundred meters or so to go.
Weâd found a section of road that had gone around a large⦠hill was the correct word, but mountain felt more appropriate now. Weâd figured that a climb over the âhillâ would save us several hours of travel.
Dumb, dumb, dumb.
âWatch it!â A rock slipped as I walked and bounced towards Balinâs head. He swore and ducked underneath it.
âBarckâs beard, Pete! This was a terrible plan!â
âYou agreed to it!â
âIt looked easy from down below.â Balin muttered, as he struggled to draw in breath. Balinâs vitality wasnât nearly as high as mine. An increase of five worked out to be roughly a one and a half increase of the lower value. That meant the climbing was hard, but without several bags of ore the actual effort was pretty much a cakewalk. For me, anyway.
âAye, but think of the view weâll get from the top!â I trudged upwards, while this time I ensured that my feet were on steady stone before I took each step.
I waited for Balin at the top and we crested the hill together. The âhorizonâ stretched before us; we were even higher than the ridge at the mining camp. This hill was about halfway to Minnova, but most importantly⦠the main highway lay directly beneath us.
A few other travelers and carts were on the road, even this far off from the city. We were high enough that they looked like ants from here. I shuddered slightly at the thought of ants and turned to Balin.
âDo you need to rest for a bit?â
âAye. Gimme a moment. I need a drink.â
He grabbed his flask and took a deep drag.
âYou know, water would probably be better in this case.â
âDid ya bring any?â
âEh⦠no.â
âMe neither.â Balin groaned. âWe do have lots of beer though. Nice of Bran ta do that fer us.â
âAlcohol isnât that great for dehydration, itâs a diuretic.â
Balin sighed as he took the flask away from his lips.
âPete, if you want ta keep a low profile, ya shouldnât be usinâ words like âdiureticâ.â
âHmmm⦠thatâs a good point.â
âWhatâs it mean? Alcohol gives ya tha shits?â
I chuckled.
âNo, it means that your body uses a lot of water to flush out the alcohol. Do you know anything about the liver?â
âAye, it tastes good when ya spread it on bread.â
âUgh. Your liver is the organ responsible for removing toxins from your body.â
Balinâs face pinched up. âPete, I know ya donât like beer, but callinâ it toxic is a bit much.â
âOh hush. Doc Opal was a good enough doctor that I have little doubt dwarves are aware alcohol is bad for you.â I wagged a finger as I spoke,
âIâve heard thatâs true fer humans.â Balin nodded, âBut itâs not too bad fer us unless ya completely ignore raisinâ yer vitality.â
âReally?â I considered what heâd said. Vitality gave stamina, but it also provided resistance to disease and poisons. Dwarves had a naturally higher vitality, which made them more resistant to alcohol. That made the fact they were total lightweights even weirder. Maybe more of the alcohol crossed the brain barrier than normal? Then why hadnât I been affected by dwarven alcohol even when my vitality was still around twelve? A mystery. I gave up thinking about it after a moment and continued the biology lesson.
âYour liver metabolizes the alcohol into something your body can handle before it gets dumped into your urine. What little alcohol thatâs left goes stays in your blood, but a lot of it also aerates through your lungs. All of this requires water though, which means alcohol makes you thirsty.â
âMah lungs!?â Balin held his hand up to his mouth and breathed out before smelling. âIs that why yer breath smells bad after beer?â
âNo⦠thatâs because nobody brushes properly. I donât know why we donât have massive cavities.â n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âWhatâs brushin yer beard got ta do with it?â
âAnd you call me a dirty goat.â
We chuckled together for a moment before I continued.
âThereâs ways to test how much alcohol is being removed from your body. In my world there are machines called breathalyzers that can detect the amount of alcohol coming out of yer lungs.â
âNeat! They tell ya how drunk you are?â
âYes, kind of.â
âSo youâd know how much more before ya pass out?! You could party all night with that!â
âThatâs⦠not⦠sure. Yes, you could use it to party all night.â I pulled out my own canteen and took a drink. âHere, drink some of mine, itâs got a way lower ABV.â
âWhatâs ABV?â He took my tankard and looked at it suspiciously.
âIt stands for Alcohol By Volume. My radler has almost half as much alcohol as yours since itâs watered down.â
âThat makes sense.â He took a couple of deep drinks and then exhaled with pleasure while he wiped his beard with his arm. âNow that yer not hidinâ it, yer full of neat info!â
Dwarven ale had a very low ABV, close to two percent, while most earth beers were closer to six or seven percent. That was one of the things I hoped Iâd be able to change when we got to Annieâs brewery. With my higher vitality, I could barely get drunk on regular dwarven ale.
âAlright letâs try and hit the main highway before we take another break. Are you better now?â
âFresh as a dwarven househusband.â He waggled his eyebrows at me.
âPlease tell me thatâs not a real saying.â
âI wonât lie to ya Pete.â
â
The trip down the hill was fairly uneventful. The main highway was nearly ten meters wide and paved with some kind of rough granite. It intersected several paths to other mining camps, and we slowly met up with more travelers as we walked. It was usually other miners or mine personnel, but the occasional company of armored guards marched by on patrol, their armor clattering as they marched. Balin called them the âHighwatchâ and it was their job to keep the roads clear of bandits and monsters. We chatted with some of them, though most were either in too much of a hurry or too tired to make good company.
The trickle of travelers turned into a flood, and soon we were simply one of dozens traveling towards the city. There were miners carrying picks and shovels, merchants on their carts laden with food and goods, and adventurers. Oh, the adventurers, now there was something out of pure fantasy. I saw a few dwarves in basic leathers, their bandoliers full of throwing axes and hammers. There were gnomish mages decked out in robes and magical accouterments, their eyes crackling with magic. Plate-clad warriors carried axes and swords bigger than they were, alongside every other kind of weapon you could imagine. They all radiated power and menace, and everyone gave them a wide berth. I even saw a single elderly bearded human dressed as a mage go by in a cart. He was traveling with several dwarves and they passed us by in an instant.
I turned my head to watch them go. âAre there a lot of humans in Minnova?â
âNah, just a few oddballs. Thereâs more of âem in tha capital.â
What surprised me the most though, was the sheer variety of bodies on display. Yes, they were mostly gnomes and dwarves, but they were nearly as varied as humans back on earth.
There were black and brown skinned dwarves, and some with pink or green hair. I saw one black-skinned warrior with a massive broadsword walk by who had a freaking afro
for a beard. He met up with his party and high-fived a gnome who looked like the evil wizard from a kung-fu movie, complete with east Asian features and a fu-manchu. There were tall dwarves, short dwarves, dwarves in armor, dwarves in robes, and dwarves that were nearly naked. A dwarf had passed by wearing nothing but a loincloth and an incredible series of tattoos. I think he caught me staring, because he winked and wiggled his butt as he walked away.
âBalin,â I pitched my voice low and asked the burning question on my mind. âWhy were all the dwarves in the mining camp white?â Iâd gotten used to the basic whitebread beard combo from the mine, but Iâd been sorely mistaken thinking that dwarves all looked like that.
Balin shrugged, âCrackian dwarves are mostly pale skinned with dark hair. The city has all sorts though.â
âWhy would dwarves have dark skin when they live underground?â I watched the afro-bearded dwarf as he walked off into the distance.
âTheyâre from South Erden, near tha equator. Down there they actually live on top oâ tha mountains, and it gets hot. Theyâre mostly here for tha dungeon. Greentree is a good dungeon fer new adventurers.â
I thought back to Opalâs lessons.
âThere are three inhabited continents, right? North Erden, South Erden, and Drakken?â
âAye, though only dragons live on Drakken.â
âWe focused on North Erden in my lessons... South Erden is mostly savannah, right?â
Balin nodded, âand full oâ some of tha scariest animals in tha world! Some of those beasties can even kill monsters!â
âAre there lions? A big yellow cat with a giant fuzzy mane?â I asked excitedly. I loved lions, and they took second place on my âcoolest animalâ list to the all powerful moose.
âSort of. Thereâs pinsirs, which look like big mountain cats. They got six legs, stripes, and a mohawk.â
âWhew, sounds nasty.â It wasnât a lion, but it might do.
Balin clapped me on the back. âWeâve faced a stoneant swarm! Ya wonât find anythinâ nastier outside of a dungeon!â
We eventually hitched a ride from a passing cart full of faintly rotting cabbages. It was driven by a crotchety gnome named Gimbletack, no wonder he was crotchety, and he had been willing to give us a ride into town for a couple of coppers. Balin said it would be nice to walk, but I was itching to enter the city Iâd only seen at a distance. Minnova was still a fair ways away, through gullies and over small hills, and I just didnât want to be stuck walking all day. I enticed him with the prospect of seeing Annie even a few hours sooner.
Gimbletack was a terrible conversationalist. I tried coaxing some smalltalk out of him, but it always ended in disaster.
âHow long have you been a cabbage farmer?â
[Translated from angry toothless gnome] âI have been cabbaging longer than you prime specimens of dwarven youth have been alive.â
âWow. Is it fun?â
[Translated from angry toothless gnome] âIt is about as fun as this conversation, you handsome and intelligent dwarf.â
âDo you take cabbages to any other cities, or just Minnova?â
[Translated from angry toothless gnome] âIf you ask me any more questions I will most certainly make you walk.â
That was about the gist of any conversation, except with a lot more gummy swearing. Thankfully, the cart ate up the kilometers, and we arrived at the outskirts of Minnova well before evening. Balin fell asleep partway through, but I was barely even tired and I was too excited. We went up a small rise, and there it was: the city of Minnova.
Even from over a kilometer away, the walls rose up into the sky. They stretched for several kilometers to either side, and I could see hundreds of plumes of smoke from cook fires and forges. The center of the cavern was several hundred meters above us, and an enormous purple crystal embedded in it poured light into the cavern. A few clock towers and several steeples peeked over the wall; the bustling sounds of the city were audible even from this far away. I took a deep breath and inhaled the scent of civilization; it was glorious.
I shook Balin, who was gently snoring; he awoke with a yawn. âHey, you, youâre finally awake! Look, weâre here!â I quipped.
âAye, we made it, Pete.â Balin sat up and looked around. He smiled as his eyes fell on the approaching walls. âThere it is, our new home. Tha city of Minnova.â
[Translated from angry toothless gnome] âYou will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy.â