Tryggvi, Tea Bringer
by Lord Wolf Egilsson
and Lady Douglass Petryewood
IN HIS YOUNGER days, which none
now alive can remember, Tryggvi Halftrollsonwilltravel was a famous wanderer.
No country was too far, no passage so perilous, no scenic route too out
of the way that he would not attempt it. Once he even traveled to a magical
land as hot as Greenland is cold where there were strange plants with sharp
spines and the very stars spoke to him. His chief pleasure was to see as
much as he could along the way. No standing stone was too boring, no merchant's
stall too tawdry, no village too small, no saint's relic too obscure--Tryggvi
would see it all lest he miss any of the wonders around him.
One fine morning, in a faraway land, Tryggvi was in
search of his breakfast. It had been a long journey as usual and there
was nothing like a long journey to whet the appetite. As he came round
a hill, he spied a most unusual inn. It was built entirely of large bricks
as blue as robin's eggs. Upon the bright blue walls, in colors hotter than
a blacksmith's fire, were depictions of extraordinary people and beasts.
There was even one that looked like a serpent with feathers.
"If the inhabitants of this land know how to build
such a colorful inn," thought Tryggvi, "who knows what other
secrets there might be that a traveler could learn to his advantage? I
must stop here for breakfast."
Inside the inn, some of the local people were enjoying
a leisurely meal. Tryggvi noticed that everyone seemed to be eating the
same thing--a reddish brown soup streaked with yellow. Being in the mood
for more substantial cuisine, he ordered something else, but when it arrived
it was a reddish brown soup streaked with yellow. Wanting to be on his
best behavior in a new land, and being quite hungry by now, he decided
to eat what he was given.
He tasted his food and was immediately overcome with
respect for the inhabitants of the land. "By Balder's hairy breeches!"
he exclaimed. "Such fare must be meant for the table of Valhalla,
so fine it is!" He spotted a small bowl of curiously shaped green
pickles and helped himself to a handful. As the tears ran down his cheeks,
he dabbed at his eyes with the sleeve of his tunic, and tried to take in
more of the details of his surroundings.
In the far corner, an old man wearing a strange conical
hat sat alone in serious contemplation of a small vessel of some amber
colored liquid. The hat was shaped like a mead horn that had been straightened
but was decorated with little pink bunnies. As Tryggvi watched, the solemn
man lifted the tiny vessel of golden fluid on high as if pondering hidden
mysteries beyond the ken of mere mortals. Then he licked his left hand,
drained the cup in one mighty draft, sucked on a piece of some green fruit,
then blew upon a whistle that unrolled and had a feather on the end of
it.
Tryggvi was consumed with curiousity. What could that
cup contain that would inspire such reverence? Never in all his travels
to exotic lands to imbibe in exotic substances, had he seen such masterful
finesse and delicacy devoted to drinking. Being a gregarious sort, he could
not restrain himself from approaching the old man.
"What sort of mead have you there, Master, that
gives you such cause for contemplation?"
"It is called 'tea-killah,' stranger. Properly
appreciated and judiciously administered, it opens the eyes of young women
to older men's charms like nothing else can. But you must revere it's power
and properly observe the three sacraments, for, if used incorrectly, it
casts a spell to make all women seem beautiful--even those with too much
facial hair."
Tryggvi reached across the table, grasped the old man
by his serape, and respectfully lifted him several feet off the floor.
"TEACH ME THIS MAGIC, MASTER!!" he bellowed courteously.
The old master got all choked up over his new student's
enthusiasm and readily agreed to immediate lessons. He placed another vessel
in front of Tryggvi and poured tea-killah into it.
"First you must show respect by covering your head
with a ceremonial hat," the old man handed Tryggvi another conical
hat made of a strange, lightweight material which shone like metal although
it was not. It was decorated with rows of bright yellow duckies and came
to a point much more quickly than this saga.
"Then you must apologize to this fruit, called
a 'lime,' before you slice it up," said the old man as he deftly quartered
the lime into small wedges with a delicately-wrought knife. He gave Tryggvi
a second lime.
Wanting to impress the master, Tryggvi whipped out an
ancient, much-used scramasax that had a patina of hard useage overlying
many stains of mysterious origins, and delt savagely with the fruit which
was reduced to many ragged chunks and blobs of pulp.
"Well done!" the wise master said, noticing
the size of his knife. "Now for the salt!" Using the tip of his
tongue, the master skillfully traced a line of moisture between the thumb
and forefinger of his left hand, then lightly sprinkled salt thereon. He
passed the salt to Tryggvi.
Grabbing the salt cellar in one meaty paw, Tryggvi applied
the same technique. With a tongue the size of a Jarl's portion of raw bear
liver, he liberally drenched his other hand, leaving a gritty trail of
saliva, mucous, and a variety of unknown substances. Yellow streaks of
his previous meal were apparent. Gracefully tipping the salt cellar, he
created a small mountain range of salt.
The master retched appreciatively, and proceeded. In
one smooth, flowing motion, he licked the salt, knocked back the shooter,
and sucked on a wedge of lime, then blew upon the whistle.
Haltingly, but with a heretofore undiscovered talent,
Tryggvi adroitly thrusts a gob of lime up his right nostril, bites the
top off one of the mountains of salt, and swills the tea-killah down in
one heroic gulp.
The golden elixer passed his lips and was halfway down
his throat when Tryggvi gasped, choked, and spewed it back out, spraying
the master with the liquid as spindrift blows before a storm.
"You catch on quickly, my student," the master
said.
Grateful tears streaming down his face, Tryggvi thanked
the master and called for another round of lessons.
AFTER SEVERAL more lessons, Tryggvi
rose to leave and staggered for the door. The master, from his vantage
point on the floor, called out, "Remember! The Celts must never know
of this ceremony!"
And to this day, Tryggvi, perpetually followed by the
tender sighs of bearded ladies, continues to bring the culture and enlightenment
of the tea ceremony to his less fortunate shield brothers in the Lemming
Warband.
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