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MillionNovel > Beers and Beards > Book 3: Chapter 29: Bentley - But Not The Car

Book 3: Chapter 29: Bentley - But Not The Car

    <h4>Book 3: Chapter 29: Bentley - But Not The Car</h4>


    It was official. The best part about Erd was that hangovers were practically non-existent with a high enough Vitality. I still took longer to get drunk than the average dwarf, too. I still wasn’t quite sure <i>why</i> that was, but who cared! I could consider it a secret cheat from Barck.


    I <i>would </i>have to do something nice for Aishablue. The lovable south-Erden gnomess had been our designated ride home after the party, and she’d done her work admirably. I woke up snug as a bug in a rug in my bed, and then toddered up to breakf–lunch. I ate some very salty soup with very salty erdroot biscuits, then went to saltily do daily chores in the brewroom. Aqua, Kirk, and Richter did <i>not</i> have my Vitality, so they would be a while. Balin probably had me beat for Vitality, but hadn’t bothered toe out of the hole he was holed up in with Annie.


    I took all of the above to mean that not much work was going to be done today.


    And that suited me just fine. I had a lot to think about.


    Or rather, I had a lot to talk about. With specific people. And today was just as good as any to do it, what with all the zombies groaning about the house.


    When the chores were done, I grabbed a coffee from next door, then holed up in the office and began doing what every business owner <i>loved </i>doing most.


    <i>Scheduling</i>.


    Well, <i>I tried </i>to do scheduling. As was inevitable with scheduling, something kepting up.


    *baaaah…* [Trante from Prima Donna Goat] “Forsooth, why do the things we love cause us such pain??”


    I gave an amused nce at our resident prima donna. “You think a love of beer is painful, you should try having <i>children</i>.”


    *bleee*ehhh….* *glug* *glug*


    One of the elementals was dutifully pouring water into her mouth while shey sprawled on the floor of the office. How on Erd she’d managed tomunicate that need was beyond me. I was just happy she’d made it back with us.


    The problem was that every time I nced away, she gave piteous moans until I paid attention to her again.


    I eventually bowed to the inevitable and sat down beside her, gently kneading her favourite spot around her horn while I brainstormed. She bleated happily, then groaned again.


    <i>First </i>I was going to talk to Opal and see if there was any way for us to get into Whitewall. Once we had a way in, we’d need to n some epic heist  Ocean’s 11 or Need for Speed Seventeen or whatever it was on now.


    Next person on my list was Berry. It was past time for us to use her more seriously as our celebrity endorsement. She was now famous in Kinshasa in her own right, and was even doing presentations on music-magic to Archis Academy. However, considering what I’d just learned, I was bing loath to link ourselves to her too tightly. <i>Especially</i> when I was nearly positive there were other Chosen running around the city. I was going to need to warn her that any and all old and powerful ns that approached her should be suspect.


    Finally, I had a Pot to hang on a wall. While somehow not getting instantly murdered by whatever shadowy ninjas he had guarding his back. And wasn’t his whole-hearted embrace of Raspberrysyrup suspect now too! GodsDAMMIT!


    But first, Opal. I’d leave the fugging ninjas forst. Or <i>never</i>.


    —


    Opal wasn’t too hard to find. I simply strong-armed Bran into bringing me into ckwall to meet her at her n’s residence. He had a pass that granted him entry, and it came with a plus-one by default.


    The trip would be almost two hours by foot, less for me with [Long Stride] but Bran didn’t have it, so we went down to the rental stables and took out some goats. Taxis weren’t really a thing here. Instead, most people rented goats at stables located within each district, and then dropped the goats off at another stable. It made it easy to travel around the city, and was paid for by our sizeable taxes. Of course, anyone caught mistreating one of the city unigoats would find that the long arm of thew had nothing on the outraged weaponry of their neighbours. It was my first time traveling by goat-back and it was an enlightening and butt-puckering experience. At least I only screamed louder than the goat once. Okay, twice.


    It took over an hour to reach the monolithic obsidian sheet of ckwall, which shone with inner magic. The guards here were much more alert, showcasing a hard-bitten veteran attitudeparable to the Highwatch. They all wore dark ck armor that matched the general <i>motif</i>. We were required to drop the unigoats off at the gate, where a uniformed city official whisked them away to their stables.


    The guards inspected Bran’s card, swept me over with Abilities, and then let us in with a warning not to wander into restricted areas.


    “How do we know what’s restricted?” I whispered to Bran as we walked away from the gate.


    “When someone stabs ya.” Bran grunted back.


    “Hah! Wait, you’re serious!?”


    “Only a little.” Bran smirked.


    I admit I gawked as we walked, but there was a <i>lot</i> to gawk at.


    The tale has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the vition.


    The best way to describe it was as such:


    The atmosphere in Yellowwall was of desperation and decay.


    The atmosphere in Greywall was of hustle and bustle.


    The atmosphere in Redwall was of business and pleasure.


    The atmosphere in <i>ckwall </i>was of pomp and circumstance.


    It had that tasteful minimalism I’de to associate with wine snobs. Not to denigrate wine-snobs, of course! They were some of my best customers, and I was a bit of one myself. But you know the type; a single painting on an entire wall, a lone tree in a field, a firece with exactly two evenly spaced candlesticks on the pristinely clean mantle, a perfectly mowedwn with nothing but a ‘don’t walk on thewn’ sign on it.


    The buildings here were all single storey affairs, solidly built of a dark grey stone, and the streets were paved with smoother gstones than the rest of the city. Every surface that wasn’t polished was gilded or silvered. Even the freaking <i>gutters</i> were spick and span.


    The few dwarves, and it was <i>only</i> dwarves, that we saw walking the streets had an aloof and je-ne-sais-quois air to them. At least half were escorted by guards or trailed after by minions. And it was so quiet that I felt subconscious of the sound of my heels clicking on the cobblestones.


    “I have to ask,” I whispered, “what <i>is</i> Opal’s n? How do they live here? I know her dad is a lord, or something, and her mum is a royal pain.”


    “Her n is the Bentleys. They’re one of the fore-runner ns that settled Minnova, and their current head is Torim Bentley. Opal is his oldest child, but they haven’t given her the heir’s name yet. She’s still Opal <i>Sifsdotter.</i>” Bran frowned, showing his displeasure at the insult.


    In most dwarven ns it was customary to give the heir of the family the n name, and they would be <i>the</i> Goldstone, or <i>the</i> Malt when it came time for them to inherit. Most others were givenst names like ‘Jonesson’ or ‘Bannerdotter’ from one of their parents. They were still Goldstones, or whatever, but they used the n more as a secondst-name.


    Gnomes were the opposite, with their children all using thest noun of their first name, like Copper-<i>pot</i> and Whistle-<i>mop</i>.


    And then there were myriad families that <i>didn’t</i> follow the rules. Naming conventions were always kinda messy, even back on Earth.


    “Why’d they do that?” I asked, curiously. “Opal’s very proper, intelligent, and well-respected! She’d make an ideal noble in my most ‘umble of opinions.”


    “They didn’t like that she became a [Doctor]. It’s beneath a noble to be waitin’ on themon folk.” Bran spat into the gutter. The globule spattered onto the stone then kept sliding, whisking away down the stones and into a drain before my astonished eyes. That was some <i>nice</i> infrastructure!


    “But… I thought that she was gonna be a noble anyway, ‘cause of her hard work. Isn’t that why she was spendin’ all that time in tha mine?”


    “Aye. She definitely deserves it. But she’ll most likely get it because, one way or another, a Bentley is almost always made the Marquis of Central Crack. It’s not hereditary, it just <i>looks</i> that way, cause the Council of Greybeards scratches the nobles’ backs and they scratch back. And doesn’t that justb Opal’s moustache sideways.”


    “<i>Almost</i> always?”


    “Aye. Sometimes there’s a Bentley so loutish that tha Greybeards won’t hand out the title out of respect for their Ancestors. Always goes back in a generation or two, though.”


    I mulled on that as we walked the streets


    Everywhere I looked, it was clear that there was real <i>power</i> here.


    I felt like a child clomping mud into a house. It was <i>not</i> a good feeling, and was the first time I’d felt that way since bing a dwarf.


    And then we were at the Bentley Estate. I could tell because it had a big sign on the front that said <i>Bentley.</i> It was just as ostentatious as the car. A three-meter wall ran the length of the block, and then disappeared around a corner. There weren’t any guards or other identifying marks, and there wasn’t a soul in sight. It was downright <i>eerie</i>.


    I shivered and went to knock, but Bran stopped me.


    “They know we’re here. They’ll be sendin’ someone toe get us. Hold yer goat.”


    After a minute or two, the tall metal gate creaked open, revealing a wide courtyard and a perfectly manicured mosswn. Oh, hey! With a single flowering tree in the middle of it, and nothing else! I’d been right on the money!


    The dwarf that stood in the open gateway looked almost exactly like the [Butler] I’d met at Pot manor. Same ck uniform, same pursed lips like he’d smelt something horrid.


    “Ah, it is you, Artisan Hurler. What brings you today?” The butler said, in an ent that reminded me very much of Louis ckbeard. He poked his head out of the gate to look left and right down the street.


    Bran smiled. “Justin’ to talk to Opal. I wanted to share the new dishes I’m preparin’ for the Quarterfinals. This is Peter Roughtuff, the champion Brewer from Minnova. He’s a good friend of ours, and he was hoping to ask Opal for some advice.”


    “Of course!” The [Butler]’s face practically <i>transformed </i>into a beaming smile. Where had <i>that</i>e from!? “May I say that the household is very much enthralled with your cooking. We can’t wait to try what you make next. Chef Bronzebeard is worried you’ll take her job!”


    “Bah! Not likely. I got a contest to win and a restaurant to run!”


    The [Butler] turned his beaming smile on me and gave a quick headbob. “And any friend of Opal’s is a friend of the family.”


    The [Butler] and Bran seemed to be great friends, chatting merrily away as we walked the stone walkway to the sprawling manor house. If typical architecture held true, and whaty beneath was bigger than what the eye could see, this ce had to be <i>huge</i>! It was practically a <i>pce</i>!


    Heck, it actually reminded me of Versailles. Same little gardens and little statuettes ced here and there, and nothing to block line of sight for the guards walking the grounds.


    The [Butler], who I learned was named Urist – amon name, apparently – came from a long line of caretakers for local nobility. Their n name was even Mcbuttle.


    Urist Mcbuttle. It was certainly… a name. Whoever came up with it was clearly touched in the head.


    As we arrived at the front door, Urist swept his hand to take it all in. “Wee to Bentley Manor Brewer Roughtuff! I hope your visit is fruitful! May Solen shine upon your path!”


    And then we were in. First step down. Lots to go.
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