Author: Angel
E-mail: valarltd@hotmail.com
URL: http://www.oocities.org/lady_aethelynde
Rating: PG, for alcohol use
Summary: Hobbie's tale
Type:humor
Series: Rec Room, part 3
Disclaimer: yadda, yadda, yadda, Lucasfilm, yadda, yadda
Acknowledgements: The marvelous
Irish joke I pirated for this.
It really does sound a lot
better when I tell it on my husband.
Warning: Underage (by American
standards) alcohol use. If this offends you,
leave now.
Note: unbeta'd.
Feedback: I crave it. It
makes the bunnies breed.
***
Rite of Passage
2000 Angelia Sparrow
***
"Not too bad tonight, Hobbie,"
Luke commented, sipping the concoction
the pilot was dispensing
from the tiny synth.
Dak made a face and handed the cup back. Wedge picked it up.
"No sense letting good, or
in this case pourable, booze go
to waste, Dak." He
stiff-armed it and gasped. "What'd you
put in that stuff, Hobbie?"
Han sampled it. "Potent, but drinkable. Then again--"
"C'mon, Solo. We all
know Corellians drink anything that
flows downhill." Hobbie
settled back, and crossed his
boots on the table.
"In fact, did I ever tell you I come from
a long line of brewers and
distillers?"
"That's right, it is your
turn tonight, isn't it?" said
Jansen quietly.
In my clan, when a boy turns
14, (Hobbie began)
he is required to spend
the year preparing for his
test of manhood. On
my fourteenth birthday,
my father, my older brothers
and my uncle, who is the head of our
clan, came to me.
They explained with great solemnity,
that if I wanted to be worthy
to wear the family name, I
must, over the next year,
perfect a distillation to call my very own.
How I worked over that year!
I perfected my distilling technique and began
testing recipes. Nothing
was unique. I tried using three kinds
of fruit, picked only at
the full moon. My second cousin
did it ten years before.
I tried using berries, picked by hand and
stomped by green-eyed virgins.
My great-grandfather four times removed
had done it. Finally,
at wits end, I started brewing with the odd, three
leaved groundcover from
my back yard. I found the little white
chevons on the leaves made
it bitter, and altered the recipe.
Finally, my fifteenth birthday
arrived. I stood before
the entire clan, and presented
my uncle with the bottle.
He poured it out. Now,
Rogues, what came out of that bottle was green.
Not the pale green of my
aunt's mead made with frooberry honey,
but bright screaming grass
green, a couple shades lighter than
your average Rodian.
My uncle held it to the light,
sipped it, and kept his face stern
for a couple moments.
Then he smiled!
"Today, you are a man!" he
announced. "Scribe your recipe for
the archives, and brew enough
for the Festival of Pauf." I was surrounded
by cheering relatives.
My uncle let everyone taste, and they all
approved.
Later that evening, we got
a call from my aunt. My uncle had
sampled all I had left,
and requested I bring more
for further judging.
She seemed most distressed about the
fact he wanted to market
it at the concession booth of his new zoo.
"Zoo?" I asked, confused.
"He is seeing so many animals
as a result of your drink,
he's put a sign in the front
yard 'Follen's Zoo.' Come over,
and bring enough that he
can drink himself past this."
So, what could I do?
I went over to my uncle's with a couple bottles
of the brew. Sure
enough, there stood the sign "Follen's Zoo,
admission two credits."
"Uncle?"
"Ah, Hobbie! Come in,
come in. You should see the banthas!
And Flitdancers from Iugin.
And furballs from Kimanan."
"Easy, uncle. Have a drink, and you can show them to me."
Anyway, we had a drink.
And then another. And sometime later that
evening, as my aunt tells
it, I staggered into the house
and announced the problem
was solved.
"Sall right, auntie. He shold me da banthash!"
Hobbie unzipped his flight
suit and showed a checkered imprint on
his shoulder.
"And this is where she hit me with the waffle iron."