Midnight at the Golden Chalice
The Golden Chalice Pub was already sweating by ten.
Gold jerseys everywhere. Sleeves rolled up. Pints half-finished. Laughter bouncing off the wood-paneled walls like it had been training all year for this moment. The Golden Bros had claimed the long table by the bar, and the PDUs were stacked three deep behind them, moving like a unit even off duty.
Wells had his back to the bar, one boot hooked on the rung, shoulders loose, drink resting easy in his hand. He wasnât trying to lead the roomâbut the room kept orienting around him anyway. Alpha gravity. Easy confidence. The kind of presence that didnât need volume.
Alton 77 leaned in beside him, raising his pint. âYou know,â he said, âevery year I tell myself Iâll take it easy.â
Wells smirked. âAnd every year you lie to yourself.â
Across the table, Gabe 75 was already loud, already flushed, already telling Kasper 90 a story with way too much arm movement. Kasper laughed and shook his head, letting it bounce off him like he always did. Leander 88 stood close, calm and observant, posture relaxed but ready, someone who didnât speak often, but when he did, it landed.
PDU-767, somehow still composed, scanned the room out of habit before finally allowing himself a drink.
âCrowd density increasing,â he noted.
Wells clinked his glass against 767âs. âRelax. If anything goes wrong, weâll just flex at it.â
That got a laugh. Even 767 cracked a smile.
As the night rolled on, jackets came off. Ties loosened. Then someone, no one ever admitted it, decided shirts were optional.
Gold fabric hit the backs of chairs. Shirts were waved overhead like flags of surrender. The air got warmer, thicker. Someone found a bag of ridiculous New Yearâs party hats, plastic crowns, shiny top hats, things that definitely werenât regulationâand suddenly they were everywhere.
Gabe ended up with a cone hat tilted sideways, blowing a noise maker directly into Kasperâs ear.
âEasy,â Kasper laughed. âYou keep that up and someoneâs losing control.â
âWouldnât be the first time tonight,â Gabe shot back.
Alton flicked a strand of metallic streamer across Wellsâ shoulder. âCareful,â he said. âPlace is getting slick.â
Wells glanced downâcondensation on the table, sweat on skin, bodies packed closer now. Shirtless bros. Gold catching the light. Noise makers squealing every time someone leaned too close.
âSlippery environments reveal a lot,â PDU-767 observed dryly, adjusting his party hat like it was standard issue.
Leanderâs mouth twitched. âDepends who knows how to keep their footing.â
Wells leaned back, arms stretched along the bench, heat rolling off him like heâd planned it. He lifted a noise maker, blew it onceâslow, deliberateâthen grinned.
âRelax,â he said. âIf anyone falls⌠weâll just make sure they land somewhere soft.â
By eleven fifty-eight, no one was sitting anymore.
Shirts gone. Party hats crooked or crushed. The table barely existed under empty glasses, streamers, and gold fabric that hadnât stayed put. The music cut just enough to hear the countdown start.
âTHREE!â
Leander called it like a command. Instinctively, shoulders pressed closer.
âTWO!â
Gabe climbed halfway onto the bench, noise maker raised like a trophy. Kasper triedâand failedâto steady him.
âONE!â
The pub erupted.
Cheers. Horns. Drinks up. Someone nearly took out a stool. Wells clinked glasses with Alton first, firm, deliberate, then Gabe, Kasper, Leander, and finally PDU-767, who accepted the toast with a single nod.
âNew year,â Wells said, loud enough to carry. âSame crew. Same standards.â
A beat.
âHigher tolerance.â
The roar that followed rattled the windows.
The music got louder after midnight. Heavier. The kind that made it impossible to stand still even if you wanted to. Bodies moved closer nowâtoo close to pretend it was accidental. Gold everywhere. Heat everywhere.
Someone shouted that the floor was slippery.
âYeah,â Alton laughed, steadying himself on Wellsâ shoulder. âThatâs been the theme all night.â
âOnly if you donât know how to handle it,â Wells shot back, not moving an inch.
When the air inside got too thick, they spilled out backâshirts over shoulders, breath fogging, laughter echoing off brick walls. Steam rose from skin like the cold couldnât touch them fast enough.
PDU-767 scanned the alley, then relaxed. âEnvironmental reset achieved.â
âTranslation,â Gabe said, grinning, âhe needed a breather.â
âEveryone does,â Wells replied. âEventually.â
They ended the night crowded around a hot-dog cart, that was set up in the pub, gold jerseys half-worn, party hats still inexplicably intact. Grease, laughter, the low hum that comes after the peak.
Kasper leaned back, stretching. âFor a night that started âcasual,â this escalated fast.â
Wells took a bite, unbothered. âThatâs what happens when you pack too much energy into one place.â
Leander nodded. âOr donât release it properly.â
Alton laughed into his food. âYou guys hear yourselves?â
Wells just smiled, watching the crewâtired, flushed, still golden.
âNew year,â he said again, softer this time. âPlenty of time to work it off.â
No one argued.
They didnât need to.
Still standing. Still solid.
Still golden.
Ready to join the Team? All you need to do is contact our recruiters: @polo-drone-001, @franco-gold94, @polo-drone-166 or @polo-drone-125â
Featuring: @alton-gold77, @polo-drone-075, @pdu-090, @polo-drone-767, @leander-gold-88















