smallnscrappy
Oddly enough
The Grand Experiment (1920-1933)
Prohibition that’s the name,
Prohibition drives me insane.
I’m so thirsty, soon I’ll die.
I’m simply goin’ to ‘vaporate, I’m just that dry.
I wouldn’t mind to live forever in a trench,
Just if my daily thirst they only let me quench.
And not with Bevo or Gingerale.
I want real stuff by the pail.
Prohibition that’s the name,
Prohibition drives me insane.
I’m so thirsty, soon I’ll die.
I’m simply goin’ to ‘vaporate, I’m just that dry.
I wouldn’t mind to live forever in a trench,
Just if my daily thirst they only let me quench.
And not with Bevo or Gingerale.
I want real stuff by the pail.
Out of tremendous violence and sorrow the map of the world was redrawn. Many clerics, paladins, and keepers of the gods teachings prophesied that the end had come. Drenched in blood, fueled by the narcissism of invention and political bravado a single action of rebellion in an otherwise insignificant country sparked a chain of war that encompassed the entire globe. Treaties and economies crumbled, dragging with them the moral compasses of the living.
However it was not the end of time, nor the end of life as proclaimed by the keepers of the old pantheon. The first Great War was the violent, spiteful mother of a new and great age. From her ruin earth shattering destruction people persisted. Tempered by the forge of war they formed a new world, one of mechanical wonders that stripped away the necessity of magic, giving further assurance to those who dared to step away from the gods of ancient tomes and rites. A bright new future of factories, virgin soil,, and dazzling lights called people from the old lands to the distant shore of a fledgling nation. The Great Territories, a nation forged by a war of its own emerged the victor of the First War. Surrounded by allies of wealth and repute, the nation opened its doors wide to the harried masses of the war torn world.
The New Colossus
Not like the brazen giants of granite, braziers aflame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
Our mighty goddess with a torch, whose flame Is the imprisoned lightning,
and her name Mother of Exiles.
From her beacon-hand Glows world-wide welcome;her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
“Keep ancient lands, your storied pomp!” cries she
With silent lips. “Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”
The sparkling shore of the Great Territories proclaimed safe harbor and good fortune to any who should seek it. The ancient ones were dead, and from the ashes of their temples and overgrown tombs rose a new era of education, craftsmanship, and scientific advancement. Humans, dwarves, elves, gnomes, and others crossed by land and sea, abandoning the tatters of their nations for a bright future on distant shores.
The arcane, magic, and its mystical arts gave way to the inventions and discoveries of tinkerers, inventors, scholars, and chemists. Railways, cars, electricity and telephones wore away the selective knowledge of mages and wizards, the medical crafts of witches and healers dissipated, driven from smokey huts and marble convents into the sterile white walls of hospitals and rice paper pages of medical texts. Magic, once available to all who sought it’s secrets withdrew behind the closed doors of Universities, classrooms, and lecture halls. Its practicality was not entirely lost however as some families carried with them the inherent knowledge of their race and wrote down the spells, incantations, and knowledge of their forefathers, cherishing those gentler magics as heirlooms for future generations.
However the golden promises of the Territories was not all they had proclaimed. Many found hardship and resentment where there had been assurance of wholehearted integration and acceptance. Such was the realization of Marcel Bastian. In this new world, he had discovered that he was truly a child of no nation, belonging only to his tribe and their nomadic ways. Even here, in the sprawling metropolis of New Gate, there was no room for Romansche. Austragaria, Germania, Prussia, Slovenia, there was no border his people had not traveled over without rejection and reviled whispers. Accusations flew no matter where they drew their wagons. The curses of the old pantheon lingered, though his goddess and her teachings were far older, even she, the mother of earth and sky held no reverence in the books of clerics, paladins or mages. Gypsy, thief, vagabond, liar, cheat, dark-friend! The names slid from his skin like oil meeting water, but the sweat rolling down his back made his shirt cling uncomfortably to his body. Trapped in the scorching heat of the foundry, Marcel pressed deep into the shadows as his eyes darted in all directions, searching for escape. Scrap metal lay in large heaps throughout the factory, but in the red hot light of the billowing forges they were transformed into all sorts of monstrous shapes and demonic forms.
He swore one of the piles moved, but his mind was running wild with fear, egged on by the sharp, snarls and sneers of men and the piteous wails of their victim. The unfortunate soul cried out in agony but the wretched piercing scream cut off abruptly. Afterwards the factory was strangely quiet. The howling shrieks and repentant pleading had ceased, no longer echoing through the factory. The forge grew quiet except for the dull thrum of machinery and the clank of chains. It was very late, or perhaps very early. Outside the sky was dark, New Gate did not sleep, especially the industrial quarter. Perched at the base of the river, close to the sea, the overcrowded streets were rancid with waste and drowned in an excess of noise. Rattling carts, clattering machines, crying animals from slaughter-houses, the blast of barge horns and the constant loading and unloading of trucks drowned out the horrific sounds of murder. Still the din of the outside world as not enough to calm the thunderous beating of Marcel’s panicked heart.
Cautiously he leaned from his hiding place, dark eyes searching the eerie, burning light for the assailant. Seeing no one, he crept forward, sneaking toward the scene of the crime with the utmost care. His dark-vision was confused by the blazing inferno of the forges and liquid smelt, but he was Romasche, and a Tiefling at that. He was particularly talented at avoiding unwanted eyes. The scrape of a boot on concrete stopped him in his tracks. Marcel dropped behind a mound of scrap metal and peered through the gaps. On the main floor of the foundry a tall, lean figure stood over the mangled corpse of a dwarf. The cherry of the man's cigarette glowed hot between the silhouette his fingers as he exhaled a cloud of smoke then turned away from the body with chilling nonchalance. Marcel’s mouth went dry. He huddled frozen in fear, listening to the man’s retreating footsteps. The forge door opened and closed...Marcel fled through the back doors, looking over his shoulder all the way home.
When he returned to the factory the floor was a hive of uniformed officers, photographers, and clamoring reporters...
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