Thursday 4 May 2017

The Mouth of Darkness

vintage mine pics | Old Mine Tunnel | Flickr - Photo Sharing!:

There is a saying among the slaves that the Wicked City is a beast with three mouths, all of them insatiably hungry for human lives. Its first mouth, which is full of water, is the city's irrigation network, upon which slaves labour endlessly in the pitiless sun, digging channels and aqueducts to bring water to the fields. Its second mouth, which is full of fire, is the foundry district, in which scorched and ragged work-gangs toil amid choking smoke to feed the flames of the city's industries. But worst of all is the third mouth, which is full of darkness: the coal mines beyond the city, where luckless multitudes sweat and perish beneath the earth, far from the holy light of the sun. Better to die by fire or by water than to endure the living burial of labour in the mines.

The Wicked City stands just thirty miles from some of the richest coal mines in the known world. It is because of these mines that clockworking technology and heavy industry first flourished in the city, and continue to do so even now that it is in its current ruinous condition: fuel is so very, very cheap, there, so cheap that its makes industrialists in other nations grind their teeth in envy, and prompts them to secretly wonder whether relocating their furnaces to an unholy police state in the middle of the desert might actually be worthwhile after all. Trains of camels and donkeys march in an endless rotation through the three-day round trip from city to mine and back again, bringing load after load of coal to feed the city's ravenous demand for fuel. And at the bottom of it all are the mine slaves, labouring down in the darkness, hacking coal from the coalface and dreaming their secret dreams of freedom and revenge.

The old mining tunnels.. nope im wayy to claustrophobic for that shit:

The Ministry of Industry would very much like the city's mines to function as a simple machine, in which slaves are fed in, coal is brought out, and as little thought as possible is given to what happens in the middle. Indeed, they would very much like to replace the slaves with simple machines, as clockwork automata who only know how to dig would obviously be far less troublesome to manage. But the logistical challenges involved have so far defeated them: their clockwork miners keep falling down holes, or blithely continuing to mine while their tunnels collapse around them, and the costs of keeping all that delicate clockwork machinery repaired and maintained in the inaccessible, rough-and-tumble mineshaft environment resulted in an unacceptable decrease in their profit margins. Clockwork diggers are still used in the mines, and in great numbers, but the complete replacement of human miners has proven impractical, or at least unprofitable: and so the slaves keep coming, and the Mouth of Darkness continues to devour its human prey.

High-intensity mining has been carried out in these hills for over a hundred years. As a result, the entire area is now riddled with worked-out mineshafts, most of which are just boarded up and forgotten about; the more remote of these have become hideouts for gangs of bandits, escaped slaves, and malfunctioning clockwork automata. Some escaped slaves with knowledge of clockworking have even upgraded the broken automata they scavenge with rough-and-ready machine intelligences, giving rise to a weird 'clockwork confederacy' of upgraded automata who lurk in the very deepest of the abandoned shafts, cutting coal from the walls to feed their autowinders and occasionally launching raids on mine teams with the objective of snatching any robotic diggers they may be using and 'liberating' them by upgrading their clockwork brains into sentience. New shafts are constantly mining their way accidentally into the sides of old ones, creating new opportunities for slave escapes, raids, and rebellions. The overseers who command the work gangs maintain order through sheer brutality, and are hated bitterly for it. Day after day, the mine slaves look for only two things: opportunities to escape, and opportunities to 'accidentally' maim their overseers in the most extravagant ways possible.

Seventeenth-century Chinese coal mine.
Coal isn't valuable enough to be worth stealing except in enormous quantities, so PCs who come to the mines are probably doing so because they're looking to start a slave rebellion, or to make contact with slaves who have already escaped. (Then again, 'you're a gang of slaves working down a coal-mine when suddenly you mine your way into an old, abandoned shaft, and have maybe ten minutes to make a run for it before your overseer realises you're gone' might not be a bad way to start a campaign...) Going into a working mine would obviously be a terrible idea - there are guards and overseers everywhere - so they'll need to navigate by stealth through the abandoned tunnel networks, instead. Quick scenarios can be created using the following table:

What's living in that abandoned mineshaft? (roll 1d10)

  1. A nest of brass-snout rats
  2. Escaped slaves, hiding and fearful, waiting for a good opportunity to make a run from their bolt-hole and flee into the surrounding countryside. They've been living off rats and vermin, and know they need to make their move soon or they'll end up starving to death.
  3. Escaped slaves, vengeful and highly-motivated. They have fortified this mineshaft with rockfall traps and mantraps made from the jaws of brass-snout rats; they've stolen enough food to last them for months, and have no intention of leaving until they've found a way to free the friends who they weren't able to take with them when they first escaped. 
  4. Bandits, who use the place as a hideout in between raiding the local countryside and waylaying travellers on the roads. They have concealed lookouts posted, and a decent amount of treasure stashed away in a hidden cache.
  5. No-one, but some now-vanished gang of thieves or escaped slaves rigged the place with dozens of traps, and it wasn't exactly safe to begin with. A wary group could turn this into an excellent hideout, capable of being held against greatly superior numbers. An unwary group will probably all get crushed to death in a rockfall half-way in.
  6. Malfunctioning clockwork automata, cutting tunnels through the rock at random. Roll 1d3 for their reactions to PCs: 1 = ignore them completely, 2 = mistake them for supervisors and request orders, 3 = mistake them for coal-faces and try to carve them up. Reroll reactions every 1d6 hours until they are properly repaired. 
  7. Intelligent, reprogrammed clockwork automata from the Clockwork Confederacy, who maintain a makeshift workshop down here, scavenging any metal they can find with which to make the cogwheels they need to upgrade the brains of their 'rescued' mining automata into sentience. Highly suspicious of all non-mechanical creatures except escaped mine slaves, who they regard as being part of the same struggle. View non-upgraded automata as poor, crippled things, and speak soothingly to them of how they will fix their brains as soon as possible. 
  8. Starving farmers hiding from the Wicked City's tax collectors. Currently debating whether to try to return to their homes once the soldiers have gone, or flee into the desert and take their chances as bandits, instead. (They'd be terrible bandits.)
  9. A lair of pig-men, who have been raiding the camel-trains in order to eat their camels. (The coal they just throw away.) 2d6 captive camel drivers languish, filthy and miserable, at the bottom of their shaft. 
  10. The angry ghosts of all the men who died during a particularly catastrophic cave-in, which left them entombed alive in the depths of the mine. Symptoms of the haunting include sudden feelings of terrible fear, hunger, and claustrophobia, lights going out, and pale figures scrabbling frantically at the walls with bleeding fingers. The ghosts are desperate to see the sun again, and will attempt to possess anyone who comes too close to where their bones now rest. The haunting could be ended, and the mine reopened, if their bodies were dug out and given a proper burial.
Image result for early modern coal mines

2 comments:

  1. Good news: 'you're a gang of slaves working down a coal-mine when suddenly you mine your way into an old, abandoned shaft, and have maybe ten minutes to make a run for it before your overseer realises you're gone' is in fact a GREAT way to start a campaign.

    Real life got in the way after a couple of sessions, but I'm genuinely thinking of rebooting the campaign with the exact same setup. It's a great way to assemble a party of PCs that a) know each-other, b) don't have a ton of established relationships and can work them out through play, c) have no equipment and need to desperately scavenge for a bit so their first set of warm clothing feels like a magic item, and d) have a very, very good reason to see the entire establishment burn to the ground.

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    1. Nice - glad to hear it worked! I'm a great believer in keeping initial hooks as minimalistic as possible. Character development through actual play is always more effective than any amount of pre-written backstory!

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