The Lower Ward

The
name of this ward come from the many portals leading to the Lower
Planes that are found here. This portals caused smoke, cinders and steam
fill the air more than in the other ward. The Lower Ward is the source of most
of the industrial smog and sulphurous gas that choke the city.
Staying too long outside in the ward often causes cutters throats to get raw
and their eyes teary; a sickly pallor is visible on the faces of sods that have
absorbed the foul miasma for too long, and sometimes pustules and boils dot
their skin.
Some Cagers have named the different types of smogs: coffinsmoke (better named
"coughin'", is the stench of very cheap pipeweed), ironfumes (is the
smoke from smelters and smithies), eyesting (are the fumes from alchemists'
laboratories), meatsmoke (is the smoke from curing houses).
Every surface of the Lower Ward is covered by the grime and sulphur of the fires.
Most statues and roof tiles will be completely eaten away in 40 or 50 years,
so statues must be enchanted against corrosion.
The
center of the Lower Ward is the Great
Foundry (the Godsmen
headquarters), perhaps the main cause of the almost unbreathable air of the
ward. Lightless warehouses, smoky mills, ringing forges and a host of other
workshops fill the area around it.
The ruins of the Temple of Aoskar are a distinctive mark of the ward and a memento
of the power and rage of The Lady of Pain: eons ago, the power Aoskar dared
to challenge The Lady, now it's presumed dead and drifting on the Astral Plane.
The Athar, who say all gods
are frauds, set up their headquarters in the ruins of the temple, that now is
called the Shattered Temple.
Many folks of the Lower Ward are secretive and stubborn and craftsmen seem to
have got mysterious trade secrets, so they are always peery of their customers.
The back alleys of the ward are haunted by fiends and populated by the sods
who slip out of the Hive by night. Few are the Harmonium
patrols, and not very strong, and most of the citizens think they have to take
care of themselves.