Such Harmonious Madness Summer 89 512 AV The glow of the lights of Montaine Redsun’s local bar, the Councillor’s Head, were a very welcome sight after the long day he had suffered through. Both Mory and Banden, his co-workers, had been struck down by whatever contagion it was that had been slowly spreading across the city throughout the summer. Their prognosis was good but that didn’t stop them from taking the opportunity to have a few days off work. Fogle’s parents had become increasingly wary of letting their precious son go into the city proper of late and though he had managed to escape for work in the morning Compton, his family’s loyal if privately disrespectful butler, had come to retrieve him come midday. As such he and old Calbert had been the sole workers in the shop all afternoon. The boss’ company was pleasant enough, in moderation. Across any great length of time, however, his manner tended to grate and the increased personal workload caused by his colleague’s absence just served to make the man nigh intolerable. Nevertheless, work was work and he needed to get paid if he wanted to eat, and he needed to eat if he wanted to work. It was the unhappy fact that his life essentially boiled down to this simple cycle, but at the very least he could yet afford to drink to his fellows’ health, and his own. The bar was not as full as often it was, sickness and fear of sickness confining many to their homes, but enough were present to make it feel like home. He sat down at the bar and nodded to Gadger. The giant bartender looked miserable. No doubt the talk of blights and plagues brought his sales down. Or perhaps it was because, as Montaine noticed looking around the place, old Gertrude was sitting in the far corner, nursing a pint that before her squat stature looked frankly enormous and with a set of panpipes lying on the table next to it. The woman’s inability to play any instrument was infamous amongst the regular patrons of the Head, if unmentioned, for fear of calling down her formidable wrath. Gertrude’s presence, as opposed to her veritable virtuoso of a daughter, suggested she had it in her mind to attempt a performance. Monty didn’t mind. Her cacophonous caterwauling was humorous enough for a time. He dropped a few coins onto the bar and slid them across. There was no need to make a request for any particular beverage. It was kelp beer. It was always kelp beer. Green and foul smelling and arguably not legitimately portable it was the alcoholic drink of choice in Zeltiva simply because it was usually the only alcoholic drink in Zeltiva. The glassworker sniffed it, gagged, and drank as much as he could without retching too badly. He spluttered a bit, but didn’t care all that much. It did its job, after all. It got you drunk. |