Accessed through “A Short History of Bad Decisions.”There’s a particular shelf in the Library that most guests overlook. Between The Decline of Polite Society and A Short History of Bad Decisions sits a spine that doesn’t quite belong.
Pull it, and a small mechanical sigh escapes the wood. The latch clicks, the air cools, and the scent of paper gives way to oak smoke and amber.
Welcome to The Whiski Room — the estate’s worst-kept secret and its most beloved refuge. A dim, conspiratorial sanctuary where time loosens its grip and laughter gains tenure.
Here, cigars smolder lazily in cut crystal trays. Decanters catch the firelight, engraved with questions no one intends to answer. The dartboard on the far wall was stolen from a pub in Edinburgh — or so the story goes.
In the corner stands the snooker table, its legs sunk an inch into the old floorboards, as though the house itself has grown around it. No one remembers how it was brought in, and no one’s ever found a way to move it.
The windows are the real puzzle — tall, leaded panes that pour honeyed light into the room by day, yet from the gardens outside, they cannot be found. It’s as if the Whiski Room exists slightly out of step with the rest of the house, appearing only to those who’ve already crossed a line they don’t regret.
But it isn’t just the whisky that draws you in; it’s the company. The clink of glass punctuating an old story retold, the shared silence of friends who don’t need to fill it, the joy of knowing the world outside can wait.
This is not a room for perfection. It’s for fellowship, for gentle ruin, for the pleasure of being gloriously human.A place to let one’s guard down, laugh too loud, and pour one more — in honor of friendship and terrible decisions worth making twice.
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