by Bill Tiepelman
Hoppy Hour Hideaway
The Gnome, the Beer, and the Basement of Broken Dreams There are gnomes, and then there's Stigmund Ferndingleβa retired mischief-maker turned full-time beer philosopher. While most garden gnomes settle for standing around birdbaths and silently judging your lack of weeding, Stig had different aspirations. He was done with the ceramic life. He wanted hops. He wanted barley. He wanted to forget the Great Hedge Trimmer Massacre of β98, one Heineken at a time. He set up shop in what used to be the damp, haunted corner of an old farmhouse basementβnow lovingly renamed βThe Hideaway.β With cracked plaster walls and a cooler older than most midlife crises, it was everything he never dreamed of and settled for anyway. He even had a sign, crudely etched in bark, that read: "No Elves, No Fairies, No Bullshit." Stigmund wasnβt picky, just jaded. Life had smacked him with one too many acorns. He didnβt trust anyone under four feet tall or sober enough to recite a riddle. His days were spent squatting by the cooler, sipping warm beer because the electricity had been shut off ever since he tried to wire the fridge using copper from a neighborβs wind chime. βIt hummed,β heβd say. βThatβs technical enough.β One Tuesdayβthough it couldβve been a Thursday, timeβs a blur when you're drunk and immortalβStig cracked open his last bottle of Heineken. He tilted it toward the gods of barley with a solemn toast: βTo broken promises, expired coupons, and the complete absence of meaningful tax reform.β Then, from the shadows, came a voice. Gravelly, thick with regret and sausage grease. βThat better be the cold one you owe me, Ferndingle.β Stig didnβt look up. He knew that voice. Heβd hoped it had choked on a chicken bone and floated off into the realm of forgotten side characters. But no. Throg the Drunken Troll had found him again. βJesus, Throg. I thought you were banned from every basement in the county after the 'Incident with the Flamethrower and the Garden Salsa.'β βI got a pardon. Said it was an art installation gone wrong. You know, cultural expression and all that crap.β Stig rolled his eyes so hard he nearly sprained a socket. He took another sip of his beer, the last precious drop of liquid sanity in a world gone mad with elves trying to unionize and hobbits opening artisanal bakeries. βWell,β he said with a burp that rattled the paint chips off the wall, βif youβre here to drink, bring your own bottle. This oneβs mine, and Iβm too old to share or care.β Throg grunted, dropped a cooler that clanked suspiciously, and pulled out a mysterious green bottle labeled simply βExperimental β Do Not Consumeβ. Stig stared at it, then slowly grinned. β...Pour me a glass, you ugly bastard.β Experimental Brews and Unforgivable Flatulence Throg poured the liquid, which fizzed like it had opinions and regrets. The smell hit firstβlike fermented onions wrapped in gym socks and betrayal. Stig took a whiff and immediately questioned every decision that led him here, starting with the one where he *trusted a troll with a chemistry hobby.* βWhat the hellβs in this?β he croaked, holding the glass like it might bite. βBit of this, bit of that,β Throg shrugged. βMostly swamp hops, fermented fairy tears, and something I scraped off the underside of a koboldβs armpit.β βSo... brunch?β They clinked glasses, a sound not unlike two gravestones making out, and drank. The reaction was instantaneous. Stigβs beard twitched. Throgβs left eye started vibrating. Somewhere in the room, the wallpaper peeled itself off and whispered, βNope.β βHot DAMN,β Stig choked, eyes watering. βThat tastes like regret with a lemon twist.β βYouβll get used to it,β said Throg, just before he hiccuped and briefly turned invisible, only to reappear halfway through the floorboards. βSide effect. Temporarily phased into the ethereal plane. Donβt worry, itβs mostly boring in there.β After the third glass, they were both feeling bold. Stig attempted to do a dance called the βRoot Stomp of the Ancientsβ, which mostly involved him tripping over a nail and blaming it on a cursed floorboard. Throg, ever the artist, tried to juggle beer bottles while reciting a poem about dwarven plumbing. It ended, as these things often do, in shattered glass and someone farting loud enough to scare off a raccoon in the vents. Hours passed. The cooler emptied. The air filled with tales of failed love affairs with mushroom witches, unsuccessful startups involving enchanted bidets, and a half-formed business idea called βBrew & Doomββa tavern that doubled as a survival obstacle course. Eventually, as twilight crept through the basement grates and the hangover fairies circled overhead like tiny, winged harbingers of doom, Stig leaned back against the cooler and sighed. βYou know, Throg... for a smelly, emotionally-stunted, swamp-dwelling ex-conβI donβt entirely hate drinking with you.β Throg, now half-asleep and softly humming the troll anthem (which was mostly guttural noises and the phrase βDonβt Touch My Meatβ), gave a lazy thumbs-up. βRight back atcha, ya old piss goblin.β And thus, the night ended like most nights in the Hoppy Hour Hideawayβboozy, weird, and just shy of a fire hazard. But if you listen closely on lonely nights, past the creak of old pipes and the occasional beer burp echo, you might still hear the toast: βTo broken dreams, bad decisions, and the brew that made it all tolerable.β Β Β Epilogue: The Morning After and Other Catastrophes When Stigmund awoke, he was spooning the cooler. Not romanticallyβmore like clinging to it for emotional support as one might do with a trusted bucket during a three-day ale bender. His hat had migrated halfway across the room, and somehow his beard had acquired a mysterious braid with a tiny rubber duck tied into it. His pants were intact, but his dignity had clearly fled during the second bottle of βExperimental.β Throg was upside down in a flowerpot, snoring through one nostril while the other whistled a haunting tune. There was a crude tattoo on his belly that read βTAP THATβ with an arrow pointing downward. Whether it was ink, soot, or regret was unclear. On the wall, in green Sharpie and misspelled Old Elvish, someone had scrawled: βHere Drank Legends. And They Were... Meh.β The hangover was biblical. The kind of headache that made you question your life choices, your gods, and whether fermented fairy tears should really be FDA-approved. Stig muttered dark gnomish curses under his breath and reached for his last piece of bread, which turned out to be a coaster. He ate it anyway. Eventually, Throg stirred, farted without apology, and sat up with the grace of a walrus falling down stairs. βYou got any eggs?β he croaked. βDo I look like a breakfast buffet?β Stig snapped, scratching under his beard where something small and possibly sentient had taken refuge. βGet out of my hideaway. Iβve got three days of silence scheduled and I intend to use all of them to forget last night.β Throg grinned, wiped beer foam from his eyebrow, and stood. βYou say that now, but Iβll be back Friday. Youβre the only gnome I know who can hold their booze and insult my mother with such poetic flair.β βDamn right,β Stig muttered, already rooting around for a clean glass and a less cursed bottle. And so the cycle would begin againβone gnome, one troll, and the questionable sanctity of the Hoppy Hour Hideaway, where the beer is warm, the insults fly freely, and magic doesnβt stand a damn chance against fermented stupidity. Β Β Take the Hideaway Home Want to bring the beer-soaked brilliance of Stig and Throg into your own questionable life choices? We've got you coveredβwhether you're sobering up, blacking out, or just need to explain why your tote bag smells like hops and regret. Wood Print β Rustic, sturdy, and perfect for hanging above your bar... or over that hole you punched in the drywall during karaoke. Framed Print β Add a touch of class to your chaos. Guaranteed to start conversations, or at least halt them awkwardly. Tote Bag β Holds groceries, spellbooks, or six cans of questionable troll brew. Durable and judgment-free. Spiral Notebook β Jot down beer recipes, bad ideas, or angry letters to the HOA. Gnome-tested, troll-approved. Beach Towel β For when you pass out poolside, beer in hand, and need something soft to cushion the shame. Disclaimer: No actual trolls were harmed in the production of these fine goods. Emotionally? Maybe. But theyβll get over it.