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A Land of Plenty



There was a bump in the road. The stagecoach jumped, rocked on ironclad wheels. Inside, Ewan lolled, snapped awake. He straightened from his dozy slump, rubbed his eyes.

"Morning" said a wheezy voice.

Across from Ewan, a woman with scarred hands lounged on the purple upholstery. A fat backpack sat beside her, bounced with every rock in the road. Ewan's own pack was on the floor. There, a sidesword clattered in its scabbard. 

"Morning Row" grumbled Ewan, scratched his beard. He sniffed. "Shite. What's that smell?"

"Just passed the crematory. Edge of town."

Ewan's eyes widened. "You mean we're here already?"

"Shouldn't have had that laudanum cocktail, mate. Ye've been asleep the whole way." *

With clumsy fingers, Ewan pulled away the curtains of the coach's window. "Blimey" he muttered. Rowan looked as well.

Outside, a clutter of wood-fronted buildings and spindly trees pressed at a choked and dusty street. 

An eclectic throng bustled there. Just beside the coach, a dozen or more mice clung to a scaffold atop a donkey's back. Each wore red buff jackets and knives. Ahead of them, on a porch, a blood-soaked group in maille was attempting to sell the gory trophy of some bullet-headed beast to a woman in a top hat. Beyond that, a man with a bundle of polearms was hawking pikes to passersby. Far ahead, a fellow in steel plate was forcibly ejected from a bar by a bouncer with thorns on his face. In the branches above, a black-eyed girl waved, disappeared into the leaves.

Ewan gawked. All about, an armed and eccentric allsorts of cutters was making its uncouth way. "So this is Draum." 

"Aye. Parnock, specifically."

"Row, look. There's a clockwork man."

"Aye. They pop up time to time."

"And that chap's selling explosives."

"Useful" said Rowan, massaging her squeaking knuckles. **

"And her. What's she selling, buckets?"

"Full of chum. For monsters."

"Shite."

Rowan grinned. "Look at ye. Ewan: Act like a big tough cutter half the time, turn into a kid when shown the genuine item."

"Aw, Row. You know how to show your love."

"Oi, shove it" said Rowan. She leaned out the other window. "Driver" she hollered. "Consortium, up ahead, thank ye." 

She returned to her seat, nodded to the window. "Get a looksee at this one." 

Ewan did. At the lane's end sat a rotund, circular edifice of brick. A crush of folk crowded the exterior, queued on ramps and steps. Even a hundred meters away, a clamour of voices and clinking coin could be heard pouring from the open doors. 

"Biggest bank I've ever seen" said an awed Ewan, pulling back into the coach.

"Few like it exist. The Tiber and Fellowes*** desk alone hands out a hundred crowns an hour."

At the edge of the consortium crowd, the coach rocked to a stop. The cutters seized their packs, clambered out. Rowan tossed a gold coin to the driver. He cracked a switch, rambled off. Dust rose behind.

"Come on." 

Rowan started through the throng, making ample employ of elbows. Ewan kept close behind. He picked his way with care, wary of the crowd's prolific collection open blades. Something touched his leg. He looked down. A mouse looked up, flicked him a rude gesture. Ewan kept going.

"Oi!" shouted Rowan, waved up the steps at a bank official wearing a Tiber and Fellowes pin. "Standing five, here. Standing five!" 

The official pushed through. "Licenses?" she asked, loud above the hubbub. Doxbells fled from a lit cigarette tucked in her lip. Ewan and Rowan proffered leather folds. The official checked them both, waved them forward through a rope barricade. "Very good. Tiber and Fellowes welcomes you. Please come ahead."

As they cut the crowd, Ewan earned sour glances. A bunch of spotty cutters with rude pikes, likely no older than sixteen, watched him hop the barrier with disdain. A bearded fellow with a bandaged head mumbled to his companion, a brown mouse, pointed at Ewan. Though their exchange was lost to the voluminous crowd, the word "standing" was easily read on the man's lips.

Rowan's wheezy voice cut through. "Don't be dawdling." She tugged on his sleeve. The T&B official lead them to one of three sets of high, open doors.

They stepped into the consortium floor. Ewan was again bedazzled. A hundred or more cutters and armored bank staff ferried incredible treasure about the many-pillared gape of the place. Piles of ancient coin graced scales and worn counters. Pallets of relics and salvaged materials, all gold, lapis, and ivory, were carted in through rear doors by teamsters. Cutters clutching fat coin purses emerged from the bustle, set off happy for inns and bathhouses. Though the occasional moaning stretcher or dot of blood showed on the brick floor, nothing dulled the buzz of incredible wealth.

A crooked smile split Rowan's face. 

"Welcome, Ewan my lad" she said. "To the venture rush."


Gold Fever

In recent years, a peculiar ague has struck the Coast. Its symptoms appear in the young, the different, and the restless. It has them fleeing civilization en massetempted by some sweet possibility in the dreadful wilds. This possibility, while fatally illusive, is no illusion. The cause of this fever is entirely real: Ancient gold.

Any given countryside will host its share of ruins. These are small pickings. They have long ago been plucked clean or deemed unworthy of attention. 

A land of plenty is another matter. A wilderness rife with tombs and ancient complexes draws the attention of banks, who in turn lure settlers and veritable armies of cutters to delve the earth. Once gold begins to flow,††† rumors of profit draw a crowd. A nowhere settlement becomes a venturing town. A town becomes a destination. A venture rush begins. 

Draum

To many, the "venture rush" is synonymous with a particular frontier: The rolling wilderland of Draum.  This vast and knobbly plain, spotted with odd copses, granite outcroppings, and weird bogs, was once the heartland of an ancient race of humanity.

Draum is a land rich in ruin. Every square mile of mundane scrub holds antiquity in abundance. Any old hill may be a barrow. Any standing boulder a portal tomb. Any hollow oak a hidden climb, a  deep gate into passages unknown for ages.

Many a ruin is yet alive, despite the mortal ages. The sorcerers who once ruled Draum, the ancient Idrans, were both awful and ingenious in their art. Kept functional by churning gut-engines and hundreds of generations of purpose-made beast-men, Idran complexes are still guarded and alive. 

These non-ruins, still stuffed with dead sorcerers' wealth, are as valuable as they are fortified. A veritable army of cutters is often required to breach and clear the larger complexes‡‡ Only by the quick and fatal employment turnover generated by these large-scale raids can banks accept the massive, daily influx of cutters to Draumic venturing towns.

Parnock

Chiefest among the venturing settlements of Draum is the wild and notorious town of Parnock. While most such towns are humble affairs, rarely expanding beyond a single street, Parnock has grown to considerable size. Situated in the thickest heart of ancient Idra, Parnock is amidst a veritable wash of nearby ruins.

Every day, dozens of ventures are launched from its gigantic consortium, bound for targets near and far. Given the sheer bulk of Idran construction within their reach, the banks present at Parnock are unlikely to declare the place a dry town within this decade. 

The traffic to Parnock is immense. Every day, stage coaches deliver a flock of new arrivals, both green and experienced, to join the rush. ‡‡‡ To facilitate such a mercenary bulk, Parnock is no usual town. Its dusty, tree-lined streets are near-devoid of personal housing, instead feature the variety of establishment conducive to the venturing professional. Inns, bars, and bathhouses are never empty. § Armorers, smiths, and weaponsmiths make booming trade. Surgeons, barbers, and cunning-people even more so. Establishments in service to killing, healing, and carousing are a cutter's bread and butter. These, however, are not the town's greatest industry, save venturing.

Of all the trades plied in Parnock, the most prolific is the least regarded. Just out of town, largely unnoticed, save for the smell and the spindly stacks, are countless crematoria. § For travelers to Parnock, these are their first sight of the town. To any reasonable traveller, they should be an omen. For would-be cutters, though, gold fever erases all regard for this first and final destination.


Author's Note

I'm currently running a venture set in the land of Draum. When it concludes, I'll hack my notes into something resembling an adventure document and make it available to patrons.

Necessarily, I'll write on topics related to Draum in the future. Sorcery, chimeras, Idra; the like.

Footnotes


* Laudanum is a popular substance of abuse amongst cutters, especially those of high standing. Though it is oft-romanticized, venturing is a profession of many horrors. Many a cutter requires balm for a disquiet mind.
** Practical magicianry often involves the replacement of hand bones with special surrogates made of ivory, metal, or glass. These are sometimes audible.
*** T&B is an old Firlish bank.

† High standing with banks may earn cutters a variety of benefits. These benefits are apt to draw jealousy from novice cutters.
†† Tombs with a capital T. These are rarely burial places. They are places to be forgotten, filled with things to be forgotten. In the language of the coast, place of burial are often regarded this way.
††† Blood will necessarily flow, as well. Venturing is a ludicrously dangerous mode of employ.

‡ Sorcery is an art chiefly concerned with the recombination of flesh. Different ages of sorcerers manifested the art in different forms. The sorcerers of old Draum were partial to organic engines and human-animal chimeras. These expressions of sorcery are especially hard-wearing, and many are yet active some two thousand years later.
‡‡ Such large-scale ventures are known as raids. They are, even for cutters, an especially fatal form of employ. Only the temptation of profit shares inflated by massive casualties can tempt a cutter to sign onto a raid.
‡‡‡ Notably, vastly more folk enter the place than leave. The employment found at Parnock is often of a terminal variety.

§ Patronizing such establishments is a major activity in a usual cutter's life. A craving for utmost luxury and fine service strikes hard after a bloody venture.
§§ It is necessary to burn the dead, to prevent plague. If Parnock is ever to die before the tombs run dry, it will be by plague outbreak due to mishandled corpses.


This post first appeared on Incunabuli, please read the originial post: here

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A Land of Plenty

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