A Cold Day In Hell
12 December 1951
A slight drizzle of snow falls upon the German countryside, covering the landscape in a thin white blanket. Slowly, a convoy of trucks makes it's way through the unperturbed snow, carefully crossing the neglected and broken roads. Fifty years ago, this has been a quarry. For 3 decades gypsum was carved from the hill leaving behind a monumental network of empty tunnels, oft likened to the lair of a mighty wyrm. When the Holy Roman Empire needed a place to build their war-ending weaponry, a place save from bombardment and save from spies, these were the facilities they chose. Dug underground, invisible, untouchable, and unassailable.
These days, it is one of the last places where the banner of the banner of the HRE still flies, tattered and defaced. Barbed wire, minefields, flags with skulls all remain in place around the hill, too much of an effort to remove, and the hill itself too much of a danger to risk freeing.
Here, sealed beneath concrete and steel lies the Empire's greatest weapon, a massive facility built to orchestrate the end of the world, one which never contributed a single weapon to the war yet killed thousands.
Here, deep within the mountain, rests the Wyrm's heart, the last and largest full-scale graphite reactor mankind ever constructed, and here the Free Workers of the World step into hell as they aim to figure out just what the nuclear enterprise meant.
August 1944
Devastating news reaches Imperial High command. The Americans, it seems, have the bomb. The tactical calculus changes, old plans are discarded, new plans are drafted.
The old strategy, a rush-construction and deployment of 8 nuclear warheads to force simultaneous breakthroughs on every allied front is now rendered unfeasible. American bombs can be crafted at the same or greater rates than those of the Empire, any exchange will just invite a counter-deployment, utterly negating whatever military advantage could be found.
Rather than a weapon of shock, the bomb is re-imagined as the ultimate evolution of strategic bombardment. Small, long-range will deploy them across the enemy home industries, achieving in one attack what a hundred raids can not, and breaking the enemy morale once and for all. To win this exchange requires but two things. More planes than the enemy, and more bombs.
Construction on the Wyrm's Heart, officially known as the Saint George Repeater Factory, commences a week later. Rushed construction, forced labor, and collapsing supply will cost the lives of hundreds of prisoners of war and other laborers before it is complete.
May 1945
Construction on the reactor core proceeds apace. The scale of the assembly is hard to comprehend. A massive array of graphite bricks towers over the workers growing by the day. As projection of the war worsen, the planned reactor complex is expanded. More bricks and fuel channels are added to the side, extending the reactor in length, and width and height, excavating more of the tunnels as needed. Instability of the tunnel material prompts minor collapses, but reinforcements prevent any major cave-in. Already now, the site has lost one of it's main goals, if it ever were to be bombarded, the weakened ceiling would surely collapse.
But little attention is directed to such military engineering when the reactor physics are far more troubling. In order to be effectively transmuted into useable weapons material, uranium must first be bred into plutonium. To achieve this, slugs of uranium will be pushed through the fuel channels at a steady rate, falling out of the reactor only when they have been sufficiently transmuted. By operating the reactor in this manner, it can be kept at constant operational power while allowing refueling operations, avoiding troublesome and time-consuming cold refueling operations.
September 1945
The reactor reaches criticality for the first time, revealing a host of severe design flaws. Having been expanded several times during the construction phase, the original water cooling system has long since become inadequate for the total reactor power. Further cooling is provided by fans engaging the whole system in a forced draft, while the total thermal load of the reactor is limited by only operating a limited amount of reactor sections at full power at a time. Production is below expectations, and all efforts are made to increase it.
It is in this time too that the first radiation deaths make themselves known. The slugs, which are supposed to fall into a channel filled with water after their journey through the core, often over or undershoot the catchment basin. Workers have to stand guard and quickly push the shattered fragments into the basement using long sticks. Unbeknownst to them, small particles soon suffuse the area of the complex, and cases of radiation sickness slowly make themselves known. Rotating out workers helps somewhat in reducing the number of directly attributable deaths, at the cost of spreading radioactive contamination into the neighboring complexes.
December 1945
With the plant nearing full operational status, and the endless war worsening an already crippling lack of experienced personnel, shifts and staffs at the reactor complex are cut dramatically to free up personnel for refining and warhead assembly. Staffing of the reactor complex reaches historical lows around Christmas time, when a tired worker fails to increase coolant flow in accordance with the power schedule. Section 17 of the reactor operates at full power and minimum cooling for 3 hours before the mistake is rectified. By this point, the uranium slugs have melted, and parts of the assembly are smoldering.
A day later, 7 fuel channels are jammed, and the rods used to push the slugs along are withdrawn with white hot, molten ends. Aiming to retain productivity in the other sections, the decision is made to simply seal the affected fuel channels and let them choke themselves out. No more slugs are injected, entrance and exit holes are sealed with metal plugs, and cooling water supply is redirected to others parts of the reactor to make up for the production shortfall.
The attempt was successful, with the fire dying out over the coming days, though section 17 was judged too damaged to be recovered, and was not used again.
The end of the World, 1946
Located far away from major urban centers, the plant survived the nuclear exchange without any notable damage. In fact, the atmosphere fallout of nearby detonations did not even trigger any of the plant's radiation sensors, which had been calibrated to unusually high levels to avoid "undue" alarm over the contaminated environment within the facility. Of greater consequence was the enactment of the second strike plan. Production at the facility was ordered to be stepped up considerably in attempt to win "the tonnage war", to deploy a greater number of nuclear devices against the USA and it's allies than had been deployed against them.
WIth only months to spare before a predicted second wave of US nuclear projectiles, all available means were thrown into the action. This included the condemned section 17. Many of the tubes were judged to have survived the fire intact, while the damaged tubes were fully sealed and disconnected from the coolant system. Three days after section 17 was returned to full power operation, a thermal anomaly was once again noted. Pyrophoric uranium, formed during the last fire, spontanously ignited, restarting the fire. Within hours, the weakened graphite channels cracked under the thermal stresses, and water from the cooling circuit made direct contact with the molten uranium. A series of small steam explosions followed, further damaging the containment and filling the reactor chamber with toxic gasses and lethal amount of radiation.
With further intervention impossible, the fire raged out of control, damaging power wiring, control circuitry and finally breaking the main water line providing cooling to the rest of the facility.
With many sections of the reactor lacking cooling, lightning, power and ventilation, many of the workers attempted to flee the plant even in advanced of the official evacuation. Many were left behind or killed in the crush, and the facility itself would not be opened again for 5 years.
The true events of would eventually be deciphered based on physical evidence , diaries and remaining records. Managing personnel at the site either professed complete ignorance, or died in the aftermath of the imperial collapse (execution, suicide, death by bombing, lynched by their own men) ...
Low level personnel could have provided essential information, but by the time an official inquiry was arranged, none of them were still alive.