Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Book 4: Chapter 3: Elven Wine from Beers and Beards: A Cozy Dwarf Tale, a Fantasy novel by Jollyjupiter.

Thankfully, the embassy of the elven Kingdom of Awedinand was located a short hop and a skip down the way from City Hall, so it wasn’t a long trip. I dropped by to make sure Penelope was doing well – she’d cornered the goat minder and was forcing him to give her extra snacks – then sauntered down the road.

I added my new quest to the queue. I had quite a lot of them now. Most were the various influence quests, but I had a few other odds and ends as well.

More Brews Part 4/5

More! MORE!

Invent sixty-four new drinks. Mixes don’t count.

Drinks Invented: 8/64

Rewards: Increased Personal Mana

A Magical World Part 3/10

Now that you’ve got so magic, try learning so!

Spells Learned: ⅜

Rewards: Increased Mana Pool

What’s all the Fuss About?

What’s the deal with elven wine? Find out for yourself!

Wine Drunk: 0/1

Rewards: You Get To Drink Elven Wine

Dwarven Influencer Part 8/10

The dwarves need your help. Influence 2,000,000 dwarves with your otherworldly alcohol knowledge.

Dwarves Influenced: 1,562,150/2,000,000

Rewards: 1 x Deific Revelation

Gnomish Influencer Part 8/10!

The gnos need your help. Influence 2,000,000 gnos with your otherworldly alcohol knowledge.

Gnos influenced: 673,124/2,000,000

Rewards: [Tools of the Trade]

Elven Influencer 1/10

Dunno how well this gonna go with just beer, to be honest.

Maybe so wine?

Elves Influenced: 1,834/2,500

Rewards: [Adjust Taste]

Human Influencer 3/10

Giants have giant tastes, and I’m looking forward to a beer that can satisfy them!

Humans Influenced: 3,125/5,000

Rewards: 0.5 Charisma, 0.5 Dexterity

Fisherdwarf 1/10

Shouldn’t you be brewing?

Catch 16 Fish

Fish Caught: 4/16

Rewards: 0.2 Dexterity, 0.2 Vitality

Deadly Ambush Part 2/2

Find the bastards that dared to try and kill you. Make them pay!

Attacker Unmasked: 1/1

Attacker Slain: 0/1

Rewards: [Perceive Ambush]

Publicly Traded Part 2/3

Why stop with one? Take control! Own 51 percent of a company!

Percentage of Shares Owned: 50/51

Rewards: 0.4 Charisma, 0.2 Intelligence

True Love

In another lifeti you found and lost what many can only dream of. Can you do it again?

True Love Found: 0/1

Rewards: [Access to the Karma Store]

The Ambassador Part 1/3

Beco the brew ambassador to Awdinand!

Accept Schist’s Offer: 0/1

Rewards: Charisma 1

The quests seed to co at random, but there was a definite pattern to them. If I was going to be doing sothing especially difficult, dangerous, or involved, there was often a quest involved. Harmsson made ntion once that I should really be forcing myself into those kinds of situations to farm quests, but it just didn’t really interest . ṙ

So of the quests were dead in the water at this point. For example, I’d likely never get a shot at killing Ambermine, since he was in prison. Ah well, they’d cancel themselves eventually.

I pulled up my sheet and gave it a perusal.

Status: Provided by the Firmant

Na: Peter Roughtuff

Age: 51 (Birthday is the 15th day of the 5th month)

Conditions:

Race: Dwarf

Blessings: [Flesh of Stone], [Flash of Insight x 2], [Strength of All: Held], [Regeneration], [Map], [Refine Brew], [Lesser Crafter’s Eye], [Lesser Arcane Crafting]

Title: [Otherworldly Brewer]

Milestones: [Power Pick], [Basic Slash], [White Lie], [ntal Maths], [Big Money], [Thick Skin], [Friend: Gnos], [Pete’s Miniature Rembrance], [Long Stride],[Sense Poison],[Spot Clean], [Unbending], [Rapid Aging], [Lucky Break], [Pete’s Lucky Brew], [Wayfinder]

Strength: 20.8

Vitality: 22

Agility: 14.7

Dexterity: 15.4

Wisdom: 15.4

Intelligence: 19.9

Perception: 18.4

Charisma: 21.5

An eight was the average for a teenager and every four was a 1.5 tis increase. That put just over 2-3 tis better than a teenager at just about everything. It wasn’t too noticeable; I just didn’t really get tired anymore, and I could take a serious beating during bar fights.

The newest additions were [Pete’s Lucky Brew] and [Wayfinder], one of which I’d gotten for winning the Octamillenial competition, and the other for completing More Brews level 3. It didn’t really fit the rest of my brewing and administration Ability kit, but it would co in handy if I ever got lost in a sewer again.

You might be reading a stolen copy. Visit Royal Road for the authentic version.

[Wayfinder] - You can set a waypoint to any place you have physically been. Setting a waypoint removes any previously set waypoints. You always know the direction and distance to your waypoint.

My current waypoint was, of course, set to ho. My room in the Thirsty Goat manor house to be more specific. To be even more specific, it was set to my private little hidey hole in my room where I went to sit in the dark and contemplate my life choices.

The other ability was a bit more interesting. Both because it was a Personalized Ability, and just in general.

[Pete’s Lucky Brew] - Your brews are lucky. Anything you brew is less likely to be dropped or broken, less likely to go bad, and more likely to be purchased at random.

This Ability is always active.

Now see, with a na like that I’d assud it would be sothing like the gem brew that our good friends the Herders had made. We dodged out of the way of an out-of-control goat cart as I chuckled at the thought. Poor Ironbellows Herder had gotten in quite a bit of trouble with the local gem rchants when his Lucky Brew had tanked the value of local gemstones.

The Ability was interesting, in that it was the only Ability I really had no control over. Anything I brewed was just… lucky. That was it. Ironbellows and I tested it one afternoon by dropping bottles of Assblaster and bottles of Herder beer off the bar. My bottles had shattered on the floor at a ratio of 3:2, while his always broke into a million tiny shards.

That’d continued for a while until Rosie had co and boxed our ears. Which hadn’t been entirely fair – I’d been keeping everything clean with [Spot Clean]. Ah, such good mories.

And now it was ti to make new ones, as I arrived at the entrance of the Awedinand Embassy.

Embassy Row was eclectic, even for the Redwall district of Kinshasa. Most architecture in Kinshasa was fairly uniform, of either dwarven or gnomish style. Lots of stone and tal or lots of wood and glass. You could definitely spot the different styles as tastes changed over the centuries, but there were certain constants. Buildings were usually one storey, maybe two, with deep basents.

The embassies were completely different. Tall pagodas, European style mansions, literal holes in the ground. They ran the gamut, and really drove ho how little I’d really seen of this world. I couldn’t help myself from gawping as I stumbled around like a tourist, gawping.

The elven embassies were sothing else. A massive copse of hundreds of trees, each about five storeys tall sat in the middle of the street. Paths wound between their trunks both on the ground in and in the air, stretching between huts that’d seemingly been grown right out of the bark.

I held back a little squee. It was exactly what I’d imagined elvish architecture would look like.

The elves themselves…

To start with, they were, as a rule, short; about the sa height as a dwarf. There were a few taller outliers here and there, but none of them ca close to Joseph’s towering level. Plus, the elves took the form of other races, so there were green dwarves, green gnos, green beastfolk, and green humans. I even spotted soone who looked identical to the Jolly Green Giant.

They did all have pointy ears and lithe bodies, but that’s where the Tolkeinesque resemblance ended. Since they were plants, every elf had light green skin and dark red bark-coloured hair, and looked nothing like Liv Tyler in Lord of the Rings.

What a waste.

I made my way up to the maze of trees and set a [Waypoint], just in case. Then I brushed past a pair of gnomish-looking female elves. Or was that elvesses? Gnoss, dwarfess, so… elfess? What about humans? Humaness? Wo-man? Words were weird. Give sothing simple like reading specific gravities instead.

The signage was quite clear, and I soon found myself standing at the door to the Awedinand embassy.

Awedinand was the Kingdom of the elves, but it wasn’t the only elvish Kingdom. There were several elven Kingdoms scattered through the various forests of the continents of North and South Erden. Many of them even had embassies within this pop-up forest. Awedinand was just the biggest, by far, and bridged the two continents. That made it a major trade thoroughfare as well as a center of culture and knowledge.

A mithril armoured elven guard stood at the door. He took a look at my ID, studied with a few Abiltiies, then passed through.

The inside of the treehouse was more spacious than I’d expected, but still cramped. The front entryway had a simple front desk manned (elfed?) by a dashing looking dwelf (dwarf/elf? words are weird)

“Can I help you?” The elf asked, smiling brightly. His beard was the sa ruddy red as his hair, and had the look of knotted wood.

“Aye. I’m here ta see Ambassador Stanndard? Peter Roughtuff.”

“Hm? [Appointnt Schedule].” He activated an Ability and his eyes flicked through an invisible screen. After a few seconds he gave a sad look. “I’m afraid I don’t have you in the schedule sir. Are you sure it was for today?”

I shuffled uncomfortably. “Erm. Duke Schist sent ?”

The elf’s face visibly brightened and he stood up. “Oh my goodness! Are you the one recomnded by the Duke? Please, co in, co in! You don’t have an appointnt, but I have standing orders to bring you in to et the Ambassador.”

He walked over to a small round door carved into the wall, and knocked. A cultured voice ca muffled through the door. “Co in.” The clerk opened the door and waved through with a bow. I had a mont to admire the ‘architecture’ before my attention was caught by the room’s sole inhabitant.

This room was quite a bit smaller than the front entrance, with walls the sa cheery walnut as the rest of the building. There were bookshelves made of wall, not cut in, but instead sculpted from the living wood that ford the walls. Solstones dotted the ceiling here and there, their warm light giving the space a hoy feel. There was a distinct lack of fireplaces or weaponry.

A single picture of a majestic elf wearing a crown sat on the wall over a large leather-topped desk. The elf was of human form, and had a regal bearing that spoke of power and thousands of years of life. That had to be the king.

The elf sitting beneath it was not as royal, but still impressive in his own right. Joseph Stanndard, Ambassador of Awedinand and a business associate who’d been instruntal in helping spread brewing to the masses. Even now his Greybough Consortium was selling my yeast cultivation and brewing books as fast as they could print them. His desk was neatly laid out, with a few papers atop it and a pair of glass goblets. He finished stamping a set of docunts, then stood and reached over the desk to bump fists.

“Welco, Pete! I’m sorry about the tight space.” He gave an apologetic smile.

In the tiny room the tall elf lood sowhat, but he quickly sat back down and gestured for to take a seat on the only other chair in the room.

I squeezed into it, and gave a friendly return smile. “No problem. I suspect it’ll be spinnin’ soon enough.”

“Hah!” Joseph chuckled. “Since you made it past my clerk, I’m guessing that you accepted the Duke’s request?”

“Mmm… let’s call it probationary. He said I should talk to you first.”

Joseph placed his elbows on the table and tented his hands. “So, are you interested?”

I hesitated. “‘Interested’ is a strong term. Intrigued? Giving you a single chance before I shoot you down?”

“I’ll take intrigued. It brought you this far. But first,” Joseph reached under his desk and fiddled with sothing. There was a *click* and the sound of a door opening and closing, and he hefted a dark black bottle onto the desktop. “I believe I owe you congratulations!”

I grinned, my eyes glued to the bottle. It was plain and unadorned, save for a single symbol - a stylized ‘R’ on the front etched with gold.

“I’m takin’ this is the famous elven wine I was promised fer winnin’? What does the ‘R’ stand for?” I asked, pointing at the label.

“It stands for ‘Roro’, the original creator of wine. He owns the winery.”

I shook my head. “I still can’t parse that. The only winery.” According to what I knew, both from Joseph and Barck, Wine still fell under an old Ability called [Copyright] which prevented anyone but the original creator from making any.

Joseph nodded. “Yes. That’s partly the reason I wanted soone to co and get a brewing industry running in Awedinand. I think our people should see that brewing alcohol can be for more than just a single person.”

WIth that he popped the cork.

The heady scent of wine imdiately filled the small space, potent and intoxicating. It was a sll that’d defined my entire existence for over a decade, and I shivered. I felt the hairs on my arms and legs raising, and goosebumps forming. It slled of heavy alcohol, dark fruit, and darker promises. There were hints of vanilla and a touch of… roses?

It was the thickest, headiest wine I’d slled in my life. Either life.

Joseph watched with amusent.

“It’s a strong sll,” he comnted.

“Aye, that it is.” I gulped. “But how’s it taste?”

He poured a small amount into each glass, and I almost stumbled forward out of my chair as I leaned forward to peer into the ruby liquid. It was completely clear and sparkled, like the cleanest water of the clearest stream, while retaining the reddish sheen of a good red wine. I’d never seen anything quite like it. It looked like a polished wine, but the sll and colour had more in common with a full-bodied rich wine.

“It’s so… clear.” I whispered. “Brilliant, even.” After years of piss-poor dwarven beer, it was shocking to see such a high clarity alcohol.

Joseph passed the glass and I took it almost reverentially. I took a deep sniff, which was practically unnecessary given how totally the scent had perated the room. I could literally feel the vapours rising from the surface, possibly the alcohol evaporating as it made contact with the air. A statent which, on its face, was utterly ridiculous. This stuff was strong!

“To a long business relationship!” Joseph toasted, then winked. “And hopefully to your acceptance of our offer.”

I toasted and then took a deep full mouthful of the wine. I probably should’ve taken a small sip, just enough of a mouthful to appreciate the taste, but dammit I wanted to enjoy it, not engage in foreplay with it.

Since I’d arrived on Erd, I’d been continually surprised by the dwarven reaction to new alcohols. How they went absolutely crazy, or totally ape-shit, or turned into weird beer zombies. I’d always been immune, and chalked it up to my otherworldly soul or a quirk of biology.

It turned out I just hadn’t been trying the right alcohol.

Because the mont I took my first sip of elven wine and swallowed…

The room went sideways.

You are reading Beers and Beards: A Cozy Dwarf Tale Book 4: Chapter 3: Elven Wine on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Same genre

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

MILF Paradise System cover
Trending now

MILF Paradise System

BeingOtaku ·Fantasy

[Warning:MatureContentR-18]LotsofMelons.OnlyNTRNetori-NoNetorare.Alexwasnineteen,acollegestudent,andapparentlytheuniversedecidedtocursehim…withasys...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.