The West Canyon Campaign
The West Canyon
Chronicles
• Damian Mulholland (Paladin) – born in St. Louis, Damian began his career as a deputy but decided to pursue a more divine path and entered the seminary to become a priest. A man he had arrested several years before was released from prison and set fire to his house, killing his parents and younger brother. Damian tracked the man west, finally catching him in Mad Mesa.
• Jedediah “Jed” Smith (Barbarian) – a mountain man living along the edges of the canyon. He trades fur and meat to the ranch or in Mad Mesa for things he cannot make or acquire in the wilderness. He is the grandson of the famous frontiersman of the same name.
Last
spring, while working on a way to incorporate Boot Hill into my play-by-post
fantasy campaign, I started bouncing story ideas around for a crossover. I was also looking at tourist-y things to do
with my kids when they came out to visit for the summer and I learned that the
area I was living in was rife with possibilities for a mixed supernatural and historically-themed Wild West campaign with mystery and adventure around every bend. I used the basic geography of the region
(Spanish Fork Canyon) as the basis for the setting, converted the town of
Glister into Cactus Brush, and used the old Boot Hill modules Mad Mesa, Ballots
and Bullets, and Burned Bush Wells as a starting point.
As I began
to write, ideas literally flowed through me.
I wanted more than the standard Western setting that Boot Hill reflected
and began incorporating horror elements with a little bit of Deadlands and Fistful of Zombies thrown in for good measure. I
filled an entire single subject notebook in just over a month.
I decided
to go with D&D 3.5 (for compatibility with my ongoing campaign – I do not
want to devote the time or energy converting characters to 5th
edition) and used the standard classes from the Player’s Handbook but changed
weapon and armor proficiencies to reflect the time period. I picked up a baggie of those little plastic Cowboys
and Indians to use as minis and was ready to go. The game proven to be pretty entertaining so
far and I am considering both a pre- and sequel based on Colonial Gothic, Gangbusters, and Cthulhu by Gaslight
and another using that combines the Weird War II product line with Godlike – A World on Fire.
Background:
The
party members are all living on or near a modestly-sized horse ranch in the
Utah Territory in 1875 in West Canyon about 30 miles from the rough and tumble
railroad town of Mad Mesa and 75 miles from what will eventually become Salt
Lake City. The Black Hawk War ended five
years ago and a tentative peace has been established between the White settlers
and Native American tribes living in the area.
The remains of the town of Cactus Brush stand at the mouth of the canyon
20 miles north of the ranch. Cactus
Brush had been a railroad maintenance town and boasted smithies, water towers,
a roundhouse, switching station, and several sidings where trains could be
repaired off to the side of the main line.
It was abandoned after a landslide destroyed the tracks and several
buildings, prompting the Union Pacific to reroute to higher ground further
north and move its repair yard to Mad Mesa.
The
ranch, known as Frostborn, is operated by Ezekiel “Zeke” Kane. Zeke raises and sells horses and his buyers
include the railroad, cattle drivers, and the US Army/Utah militia. He is on cautiously-friendly terms with the
Timpanogos Utes and has more tentative relations with the Black Hawks.
Zeke
is a widower (his wife Beatrice died of consumption 12 years ago), is roughly
58 years old, and has deeply tanned and weathered skin. His once brown hair is almost completely gray
and worn short. He shaves once every
three or four days in the summer but not at all in the winter. He and his wife never had children of their
own but his brother Job's sons, Noah and John, came to live with him after the
Civil War and started working on the ranch.
Their habit of calling him Uncle Zeke soon spread to the other ranch
hands and their families. Zeke has never
been particularly religious believing that “folk should be allowed to believe
what they want to believe” but has little tolerance for “them polygamous
Mormons” after an incident with them (shortly before his wife passed a
traveling preacher suggested that Zeke could select a new wife from his
congregation). He has little tolerance
for government, which he admits is somewhat hypocritical considering the Army
buys over half of the horses he raises, and even less for banks as he is still
paying off the mortgage on the ranch.
Mule
deer, elk, coyotes, and wolves are frequent sights in the canyon and there are
always rumors of mountain lions and bears filtering in from neighboring cattle
and sheep ranches in the canyon. Still,
the rumor Zeke pays closest attention to is that of “Caballo Diablo”, a coal
black stallion who is said to live in the canyon's hidden gulches. Dozens of men have died trying to catch this
legendary horse and the Utes hold the beast in awe.
Characters:
•
Carter Blackburn (Rogue) – a would-be novelist from Philadelphia arrives in Mad
Mesa to gain life experience and learn about the “Frontier”. He has an inquisitive nature and a highly
romanticized vision of “Cowboy Life”.
•
“Croatoan” (Ranger) – Zeke's main ranch hand, half-White/half-Native American, responsible for tending the herd
and the training of the horses• Damian Mulholland (Paladin) – born in St. Louis, Damian began his career as a deputy but decided to pursue a more divine path and entered the seminary to become a priest. A man he had arrested several years before was released from prison and set fire to his house, killing his parents and younger brother. Damian tracked the man west, finally catching him in Mad Mesa.
• Jedediah “Jed” Smith (Barbarian) – a mountain man living along the edges of the canyon. He trades fur and meat to the ranch or in Mad Mesa for things he cannot make or acquire in the wilderness. He is the grandson of the famous frontiersman of the same name.
Note: To further
establish the setting in its time frame, reference famous works (books, music,
art, etc) as being “new releases” or landmarks that are under construction.
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