forest gnome romance

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The Ale and the Argument

by Bill Tiepelman

The Ale and the Argument

It started, as most disasters do, with a pint too many and pants too few. Old Fernbeard β€” retired mushroom forager, self-declared β€œAlethlete,” and wearer of suspiciously tight suspenders β€” was three steins deep into his celebratory "It's Tuesday" routine when trouble stomped into the clearing in the form of his wife, Beryl. Beryl Toadflinger wasn’t just any gnome wife. No, she was a capital-W Wife. The kind who could sew lace with one hand while hurling a shoe with the other. She had cheeks like winter apples, a gaze that could sterilize moss, and a voice known to shatter acorns at fifty paces. Her flower-crowned hat wobbled with every stomp, like a dainty warning flare. β€œFernbeard!” she shrieked, sending a nearby butterfly into cardiac arrest. β€œWhat in the fungus-sucking hell are you doing?! I told you to fix the roof, not fix your blood-alcohol content!” β€œBeryl, my sweet portobello,” Fernbeard slurred, grinning around his foam-flecked beard. β€œI’m maintaining hydration. You want me dehydrated on a roof? What if I fainted mid-shingle?” β€œYou fainted into a ditch last week after drinking elderberry schnapps and trying to pole dance with a cattail!” β€œI was honoring tradition!” he cried, puffing up like a drunk squirrel. β€œThe Summer Solstice requires movement and moisture. I brought both.” β€œYou brought shame and a rash. We’re still not allowed back in the fern glade!” As Beryl launched into a fiery monologue about β€œmature responsibilities” and β€œdecades of lawn flamingo trauma,” Fernbeard, still smiling, tried to sneak a swig of his fourth pint. It didn’t work. Her hand shot out like a hawk snatching a vole, snatched the mug, and flung it β€” foam first β€” into a mushroom with a wet *thwap*. β€œThat was my last barrel of Beardbanger Brew!” Fernbeard howled. β€œDo you know what I had to do to trade for that?! I danced for a badger. A badger, Beryl!” β€œThen maybe that badger can help you regrout the mushroom toilet!” Gnomes from neighboring stumps began peeking from behind mossy curtains, watching with the kind of interest usually reserved for lightning storms and nude trolls. Word was already spreading that β€œToadflinger’s hit DEFCON Daisy.” Fernbeard’s eyes narrowed. β€œYou know what, Beryl? Maybe I’d get things done if I weren’t being nagged more than a squirrel at nut tax season!” Beryl blinked. Slowly. Like a predator processing its next move. β€œWell maybe I wouldn’t nag if I had a husband who could tell the difference between a wrench and a garden gnome’s left nut!” β€œOne time, Beryl! One time I fixed the wheelbarrow with a reproductive artifact and suddenly I’m banned from Gnome Depot!” The shouting crescendoed, their floral hats vibrating with rage. A squirrel passed out from stress. Somewhere, a pixie took notes for a future stage play. And then, silence. Pregnant, awkward silence. The kind that only occurs when two people simultaneously realize: they're standing in the woods, shouting about nuts and badgers, wearing floral crowns like angry garden center mascots. Fernbeard scratched his beard. Beryl rubbed her temples. A single beer burp escaped into the air like a fragile dove of peace. β€œSo…” he began, β€œDinner?” β€œNot unless you want it served with a side of shovel.” Beryl stormed off, trailing flower petals and rage like a floral hurricane. Fernbeard stood in the clearing for a moment, swaying in existential dread and ale-induced vertigo. He muttered something about β€œemotional terrorism via tulips” and kicked a pinecone with the gusto of a tipsy toddler in boots. Back at their stump-home, Beryl was elbow-deep in passive-aggressive rearranging. She flung Fernbeard’s β€œlucky bark chunk” out the window, relocated his novelty spoon collection to the privy, and scribbled a grocery list that included β€œeggs, milk, and a new husband.” Meanwhile, Fernbeard had retreated to his Thinking Log β€” a mossy perch by the creek where he often solved important problems, like β€œWhat if worms are just noodles with anxiety?” and β€œCan I ferment dandelions without another explosion?” He needed a plan. A big one. Bigger than the time he tried to build her a spa and accidentally flooded the mole parliament. He pondered. He farted. He pondered again. β€œRight,” he muttered. β€œWe need the three R’s: Romance, Regret… and Ridiculousness.” First stop? The forbidden glade. The one they were technically banned from after Fernbeard tried to impress Beryl with interpretive gnome ballet. He’d landed in a bush, exposed himself to a hedgehog, and traumatized three ladybugs into therapy. But today, it was the site of Operation: Make-Up Or Die Trying. He set the scene: fairy lights made from fireflies (consensually borrowed), a blanket made from repurposed moth capes, and a feast of Beryl’s favorite things β€” acorn bread, candied snail curls, and that weird cheese she always pretended not to like but devoured at 3 a.m. To top it off, he brought out the Secret Weapon: a hand-carved mug inscribed with β€œTo My Wife: You’re Hotter Than Troll Sweat” surrounded by tiny hearts and a questionable drawing of a mushroom. Inside? Beardbanger Brew, aged one week in a haunted thimble. Fernbeard stood there waiting, nervous as a pixie in a knitting shop, until Beryl finally arrived β€” arms crossed, eyebrow cocked so high it nearly snagged a cloud. β€œYou dragged me out here to what? Beg?” she asked, eyeing the setup. β€œBegging? Nah. Pleading? Maybe. Offering emotional vulnerability disguised as cheese and beer? Definitely.” She tried to stay annoyed, but her nose twitched at the scent of the candied snail curls. β€œThis better not be another trap like the time you β€˜surprised’ me with a romantic tunnel and it turned out to be a badger den.” β€œThat was a navigational error,” he said solemnly. β€œAnd they loved us. Invited us to their solstice orgy.” β€œWhich we left in five minutes flat.” β€œBecause you were allergic to the scented moss! I made that call for your safety!” Beryl snorted. But her arms dropped. And her foot stopped tapping. A good sign. β€œYou made all this?” she asked, poking the moth-cape blanket. β€œAnd you used the mug. The... mushroom mug.” β€œEvery gnome needs a little shame to grow strong,” Fernbeard replied, gently pushing the mug toward her. β€œLike fertilizer, but for your soul.” She took it. Sipped. Licked the foam from her lip in a way that made his beard quiver. β€œYou’re an idiot,” she said softly. β€œA drunken, mushroom-brained, bark-snoring idiot.” β€œBut I’m your idiot.” She sighed. Sat. Tore a piece of acorn bread like it had personally wronged her. Then, without ceremony, leaned against him. They sat there in the glow of stolen fireflies, sipping bad beer and better silence. He reached out, unsure, and laced his fingers through hers. She let him. β€œWe’re not right, you and me,” she murmured, β€œbut we’re just wrong enough to fit.” β€œLike moss and mold,” he agreed, a bit too proudly. β€œDon’t push it.” The glade, formerly the site of great scandal and one accidental gnome streaking incident, witnessed something far rarer that night: a truce between two wonderfully wild creatures who fought hard, loved harder, and forgave with the same passion they yelled about roof shingles and fermented socks. Later, when they stumbled home slightly tipsy and totally reconciled, Fernbeard grinned at Beryl in the moonlight. β€œSo… about that pole dancing cattail?” β€œTry it again,” she said, smirking, β€œand I’ll shove it so far up your compost chute, you’ll sneeze pollen through autumn.” And just like that, the love story of The Ale and the Argument brewed another batch of chaos, crass affection, and one very lucky gnome who always knew the best arguments ended with dessert and a bruised ego. Β  Β  Love the riotous romance of Fernbeard and Beryl? Keep their tale alive with artful keepsakes from our Captured Tales collection β€” perfect for those who believe that love is loud, laughter is messy, and every argument deserves a second round (of beer or kisses, your call). Frame the chaos with a vibrant framed print or metal print, and let these gnomes grace your walls with woodland wit. Puzzle out their problems β€” literally β€” with a charming jigsaw puzzle, or send a cheeky greeting card to the mushroom in your life who puts up with your nonsense. Explore more chaotic love and gnome-grown giggles at shop.unfocussed.com β€” because some tales are too weird not to frame.

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