Chapter 170: A Frustration That Reshaped the World
Christian spoke first, his voice calmer now that the contract was signed, though his tone still carried the weight of responsibility.
“You should speak with your faculty and with the people in metallurgy,” he said. “They must inspect the weapons personally. Given the blueprints you are providing, I doubt the Company will risk supplying low-quality arms—but it is better to be cautious. Once the crates reach New Granada, you will not be there to judge their condition. And by the time complaints return across the ocean, they may already be producing your designs in their own factories.”
Francisco nodded seriously.
“Thank you, Director,” he said. “I know I would never have reached this agreement without your support. I will dedicate myself even more fully to the encyclopedia. And I promise you—if I return to New Granada in victory—I will send a complete copy of the Royal Botanical Expedition of Mutis.”
At that, Christian’s eyes lit up with a brightness no pound or peso could buy.
“That is my student,” he said proudly. “You have no idea how valuable such a work would be here.”
Then, curiosity overtook him. “And when do you intend to return?”
Francisco stared at him, momentarily speechless. Finally, he muttered, “Sir… this is my first year in Göttingen. At least five more remain.”
Christian laughed awkwardly. His obsession with knowledge was well known, and Francisco took no offense. For men like Christian, knowledge outweighed fortune, titles, even nations.
They took a carriage back toward Göttingen, the wheels creaking over frost-hardened roads. November had already settled in fully. The countryside lay gray and bare beneath a low sky, the fields stripped and waiting. Breath fogged the air inside the carriage, mingling with the faint smell of leather and oil.
During the journey, Francisco heard news from home for the first time in months—news carried not by letters, but by French pamphlets and translated gazettes. The French, eager to humiliate Spain, had published reports of chaos in Antioquia. According to them, a group of Jesuits—expelled by the Crown in 1767 and exiled to Italy—had somehow returned to New Granada with armed followers. Even now, King Carlos IV and his ministers could not explain how such a force had appeared so suddenly.
Rumors pointed to Urabá, a notorious smuggling port where Spanish control had long been weak. But there was no proof. Only confusion.
Across Europe, Spain had become an object of ridicule. An empire that could not account for an army within its own colonies was an empire in decay.
The reports claimed the Jesuits had seized Medellín—then contradicted themselves, stating they had been driven back by the “mighty armies of Spain.” The truth was impossible to discern. What unsettled Francisco most was what was not mentioned.
There was no word of his family.
That absence gnawed at him. Either his family had avoided the conflict—which he doubted—or they had fought and survived, or they had fought and fallen. Some reports implied Spanish troops had been rushed to Medellín. Others suggested local militias had held the city themselves.
He did not know which possibility frightened him more.
There was no information about his grandfather either. No mention of the valleys he knew so well. Only silence.
Catalina noticed his tension at once. She was worried too—about his grandmother, about little Isabella. The news offered no comfort. Independence had begun too early, forced into motion by the Jesuits rather than planned carefully by the Creole elite.
There was, at least, one small relief. Spain and Britain had sent troops to Toulon. For now, they appeared to be winning. As long as that front demanded attention, Spain could not spare forces to crush New Granada outright.
But Francisco knew how fragile that hope was. If Spain decided that avenging a Bourbon cousin mattered less than securing its colonies, the troops would sail west. Everything depended on calculations made in distant courts by men who had never seen the land they ruled.
At last, some good news arrived.
The shipment of arms Francisco had purchased from the East India Company was ready to depart. The only problem was that it was still in London. That meant he would have to go there himself—along with a small group of students from the faculties of philosophy and metallurgy—to inspect the weapons personally and ensure they were not second-hand castoffs from colonial stockpiles.
With the conflict already raging in New Granada, there could be no compromises.
“We’re going to London,” Francisco said firmly. “We must review the weapons ourselves. We need to be certain of their quality.”
Catalina nodded, though she seemed distracted.
“I know,” she said quietly. Then, after a pause, “Do you still have your visions? Do you know how this war will end?”
Francisco frowned. He lowered his gaze before answering.
“I don’t,” he admitted. “As I told you before, my visions only appeared two years ago, and the future I once saw has changed because of my presence. This war was never there. I don’t know how the world will unfold from now on.”
Catalina sighed, frustration slipping through despite her restraint. Seeing the look on Francisco’s face, she immediately softened.
“I’m sorry,” she said, forcing a small smile. “I know this must be even harder for you. Everything feels… unstable right now. It’s difficult to think clearly.”
She stepped forward and embraced him, her apology carried more in the gesture than in words.
The comfort only deepened Francisco’s unease.
This war should not exist. Its very presence meant history itself had shifted. If events here had changed, then what else would unravel? Would the man future generations called the Little General still rise in Europe? Would the mustached tyrant in Germany ever come to power? Would Britain fall—or endure? Would the United States rise again?
He had no answers.
For now, Europe might remain familiar for a few years. But beyond that, the future was becoming something entirely unpredictable.
That night, exhaustion finally claimed them both. They slept deeply, the kind of sleep born not of peace but of complete depletion. The next morning, Francisco convinced Catalina to accompany him to London. In her current state, remaining near wounded soldiers would be dangerous—distraction could cost lives. She agreed without argument.
They traveled north by carriage toward Hamburg, the cold biting through wool coats, the roads stiff with frost. From there, they boarded a ship bound for London. Several of Francisco’s classmates followed as well, drawn by curiosity, duty, and the generous salary he offered.
The sea was restless. Gray waves struck the hull with dull force, and salt spray crusted the rails. The air smelled of tar, coal smoke, and damp rope. The sky hung low and colorless, pressing down on the world.
Catalina slept in Francisco’s arms during the voyage. Neither of them had rested properly in days. Dark circles shadowed her eyes, and her breathing was shallow but steady. Watching her, Francisco clenched his fists.
For the first time, he truly grasped how vital technology was—not merely for profit or progress, but for connection. If only he could speak across oceans. If only he could fly, as Leonardo had once imagined. If he could reach New Granada faster—or at least know whether his family lived—the uncertainty would ease.
The uncertainty was the worst part.
So he wrote.
By candlelight, by lantern, by the dim glow of the ship’s lamps, he filled page after page with frantic sketches and calculations. Most were useless. Steam engines were still too weak, too heavy. But he could not stop.
“If steam can move a piston,” he whispered into the darkness of the cabin, “why could it not carry a voice—or a man?”
He sketched a Pneumatic Courier System: iron pipes stretching impossibly across the Atlantic, letters propelled through vacuum at the speed of thought. The mathematics betrayed him. Friction, leakage, imperfect seals—it was a fantasy.
Then he drew a Steam-Powered Glider: canvas wings, brass gears, coal-fed ascent. He named it The Andean Condor. As he calculated the fuel required, the ink smeared beneath his trembling hand.
Throughout the journey, he wrote relentlessly, trying to suffocate his anxiety with ink. Most ideas collapsed under scrutiny. Steam engines, at least for now, simply were not powerful enough.
Late one night, he muttered to himself, “Why do those machines work in the future? Is it better steam… or something else entirely?”
The answer came with painful clarity: it did not matter. He was still too inexperienced. Knowledge alone was not enough.
Catalina watched him silently. The floor was littered with discarded sketches. One drawing caught her attention—a half-forgotten design of a steam piston pushing a flat wooden platform on rollers, meant to move heavy stone.
Catalina, seeing the frustration etched on Francisco’s face and the hundreds of scattered sketches, paused and studied them more carefully. Then something caught her attention.
It was a discarded drawing, half-hidden beneath an overturned inkwell—a rough sketch of a steam piston connected to a flat wooden platform mounted on rollers, clearly intended to move heavy stone blocks.
She gently placed her hand over the paper, her fingers following the drawn path of the wheels.
“Francisco,” she whispered, her voice cutting through the frantic scratch of his pen. “You are trying to conquer the sky and the silence… but you are forgetting the ground beneath us.”
She pointed at the crude figure sketched atop the platform, a man standing over the heart of the engine. “If the engine were more efficient—if it didn’t have to fight the wind or the waves—this wouldn’t be madness. Look. Instead of a boat on water, why not a boat… on a road of iron? If the path is fixed, the machine only has to do one thing: move forward.”
Francisco stopped writing.
He stared at the drawing again, but this time through her eyes. In his visions, he had seen the sleek, silver bullets of the future rushing across the land—but Catalina was showing him the skeleton beneath the dream. She wasn’t imagining a train; she was imagining a land-ship that did not need the sea.
“A road of iron…” he murmured.
In his mind, the image of the future machine aligned with a simpler form: a small wagon, bound to rails, pulled not by horses but by steam. The realization struck him so suddenly that he sprang to his feet, scattering papers across the floor.
He took Catalina’s face in his hands and kissed her, breathless with excitement.
“It won’t reach New Granada,” he said, almost laughing, “but with something like this… the land itself could be shortened.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 292: Garganta del Diablo
- Chapter 291: Twelve Shadows In Boqueron
- Chapter 290: A New Order In The West
- Chapter 289 289: Carlos Worry
- Chapter 288 288: Carlos Fury
- Chapter 287 287: Isabella in the City
- Chapter 286: The Shape of a Nation
- Chapter 285: A Name for a Nation
- Chapter 284: A Calculated Sacrifice
- Chapter 283: Abandoning Bogotá
- Chapter 282 282: 1795: A Year Of Change
- Chapter 281: Opportunity in Danger
- Chapter 280: Rumors And War
- Chapter 279: Princess Vorontsova-Dashkova
- Chapter 278: American Dream
- Chapter 277 277: An Irish State
- Chapter 276 276: New World: Killian Vance
- Chapter 275: The Council Takes Command
- Chapter 274: Bucaramanga: The Key to the Northeast
- Chapter 273: Dividing The Elites
- Chapter 272 272: The Four Kings Of New Granada
- Chapter 271 271: Baltasar de Zúñiga
- Chapter 270: Traitors In Mompox
- Chapter 269: The Elites’ Fright
- Chapter 268 268: Preparations for Independence
- Chapter 267: A Failure In Mompox
- Chapter 266: The Russian Empire Enters The Game
- Chapter 265 265: The Spanish And The british Agents
- Chapter 264: An Outing With Catalina II
- Chapter 263: An Outing With Catalina
- Chapter 262: Interval of Restoration
- Chapter 261: El Censo de Guirior
- Chapter 260: On a New Inquiry
- Chapter 259 259: Of Foederati and Bergregal”
- Chapter 258: The Burden of Decision
- Chapter 257: A Matter of Civilization
- Chapter 256: The Chimila Demand
- Chapter 255: A European War in America
- Chapter 254: Pedro Mendinueta y Múzquiz
- Chapter 253: Soli Victores de Honore
- Chapter 252: The Decendant Of The Borgia
- Chapter 251: The Yoruba and the Machine
- Chapter 250: The Flawed Merchant
- Chapter 249: Las Pailitas
- Chapter 248: Plan Mompox
- Chapter 247: The Maracaibo Campaign: First Movements
- Chapter 246: Carlos Backstory
- Chapter 245: The Aburra River Taint
- Chapter 244: Unraveling the Knot
- Chapter 243: A Daughter’s Company
- Chapter 242: Honor thy father and thy mother.
- Chapter 241: Ottoman Method
- Chapter 240: The Magic Of Pure Alcohol
- Chapter 239: Johann Friedrich Blumenbach
- Chapter 238: A Visit Around The Women Laboratory
- Chapter 237: Women Advancement
- Chapter 236: Optic Telegraph
- Chapter 235: The Controversial Laboratory
- Chapter 234: The Duke’s Last Drink
- Chapter 233: The King Confronts the Lerma Household
- Chapter 232: A Rare Day of Rest for the Gomez–Krugger Family
- Chapter 231: A Date With Amelia
- Chapter 230: The Krugger–Isabella Strategy
- Chapter 229: A Conflict of Cultures
- Chapter 228: The New Medellin
- Chapter 227: Krugger And His King’s Manual
- Chapter 226: Isabella Plan
- Chapter 225: A Grandfather Lesson
- Chapter 224: Isabella The Troublemaker
- Chapter 223: The Fatal Price of Arrogance
- Chapter 222: Conflict in the plaza
- Chapter 221: The Spectators of Power
- Chapter 220: María Gertrudis Sanz
- Chapter 219: The Cost of Corruption in Faith
- Chapter 218: Between Crown and Liberty
- Chapter 217: Manuel Godoy y Álvarez de Faria
- Chapter 216: The Bourbon Blood
- Chapter 215: The Meaning of a Nation
- Chapter 214: Los Motilones-Bari
- Chapter 213: What Is Liberty?
- Chapter 212: Blueprints from Göttinga
- Chapter 211: Krugger’s Lesson
- Chapter 210: The Rebuilding of Medellín
- Chapter 209: The Father-in-Law’s Judgment
- Chapter 208: A Victory That Tasted of Defeat
- Chapter 207: Two Faces of Liberty
- Chapter 206: The Quiet Murder of a General
- Chapter 205: Giuseppe’s Silent Plan
- Chapter 204: Assault on Santa Fe de Antioquia
- Chapter 203: A Crack in the Bishop Vision
- Chapter 202: An Outrageous Idea
- Chapter 201: New Wounds
- Chapter 200: The Peril of Göttingen
- Chapter 199: Unrest in Göttingen
- Chapter 198: Karl Worries
- Chapter 197: The Night Of Escape
- Chapter 196: Catalina’s Fury
- Chapter 195: Georg von Scheither
- Chapter 194: Abduction in Göttingen
- Chapter 193: A New Industrial Revolution
- Chapter 192: Hydraulic Warfare
- Chapter 191: For God, for Country, and for the King
- Chapter 190: The Tonusco River
- Chapter 189: General Giuseppe Lechi
- Chapter 188: Peace In Medellin
- Chapter 187: A Mountain Falls
- Chapter 186: Ambush in Boquerón
- Chapter 185: The Broken Covenant
- Chapter 184: Blood Bath In San Jeronimo
- Chapter 183: The Fanatics Attack
- Chapter 182: Steel-pointed Tool
- Chapter 181: The Spanish Envoy
- Chapter 180: Rumors Can Kill Loyalty
- Chapter 179: The Loyalists of Antioquia
- Chapter 178: The Valley of Urabá
- Chapter 177: A Silent Killer
- Chapter 176: The Real King Of The Jungle
- Chapter 175: The Jaibana
- Chapter 174: An Encounter With The Emberá-Katío
- Chapter 173: Mal De La Cordillera
- Chapter 172: Vigía del Fuerte
- Chapter 171: A Curious Encounter In London
- Chapter 170: A Frustration That Reshaped the World
- Chapter 169: Merchants Of Blood
- Chapter 168: A Fight In Two Fronts
- Chapter 167: Jesuits
- Chapter 166: Medellin In Siege
- Chapter 165: A Christmas In Antioquia
- Chapter 164: A Christmas in Göttingen
- Chapter 163: The Church Faction
- Chapter 162: An Attack In Santa Fe De Antioquia
- Chapter 161: Dragoon of New Granada
- Chapter 160: Bad News From Antioquia
- Chapter 159: Thomas O’Neill
- Chapter 158: From the Storm to San Andres
- Chapter 157: The Stand-Off in the Pacific
- Chapter 156: Amelia Confession
- Chapter 155: A Woman Determination
- Chapter 154: Sudden Attack
- Chapter 153: Internal Conflict
- Chapter 152: Confrontation
- Chapter 151: Ezequiel Gomez de Castro Blackmail
- Chapter 150: School Conspiracy
- Chapter 149: A Report Concerning the Immigrant Population
- Chapter 148: Curious Isabella
- Chapter 147: The Weight on Carlos’ Shoulders
- Chapter 146: Enemies Arent Only Numbers
- Chapter 145 145: Reevaluating Inez And Spain
- Chapter 144: A Good Idea
- Chapter 143: Faculty of Law, And Romani
- Chapter 142: Partnership with Göttingen University
- Chapter 141: Making Money in Hanover
- Chapter 140: Francisco’s Efforts
- Chapter 139: Tension in Hanover
- Chapter 138: Oscar: In God’s Hands
- Chapter 137: Oscar: The Royal Warehouse
- Chapter 136: Oscar: Preparations
- Chapter 135: Oscar: The Book Of Rotations
- Chapter 134: Oscar: The Making of a Devil
- Chapter 133: Oscar: A Clear Trap
- Chapter 132: Oscar: Caracas
- Chapter 131: Harz Mountain Range
- Chapter 130: Isabella First Infusion
- Chapter 129: A Division Among the Liberals
- Chapter 128: Christian Gottlob Heyne
- Chapter 127: A Father Pain
- Chapter 126: The Taste of Two Worlds
- Chapter 125: The Pain of Training
- Chapter 124: A Deep Talk With His Grandfather
- Chapter 123: First Impressions of Göttingen
- Chapter 122: On the Road to Hanover
- Chapter 121: The Old Captain
- Chapter 120: Inés Gómez de Zúñiga y Valencia
- Chapter 119: Prince Of Wales And A Tense Talk With The Spanish Embassador
- Chapter 118: King George III
- Chapter 117: Courting Great Britain
- Chapter 116: Prime Minister William Pitt "The Younger"
- Chapter 115: Between Old and New
- Chapter 114: A Conference That Changed The World
- Chapter 113: The Threat Behind The Steam
- Chapter 112: The Shocked Embassador
- Chapter 111: Going To NewCastle
- Chapter 110: The Embassador Plan
- Chapter 109: A Walk Trough London
- Chapter 108: A Talk With The Spanish Embassador
- Chapter 107: The Spanish Embassy
- Chapter 106: First Night In London
- Chapter 105: Mists Over the Thames
- Chapter 104: A Far-Reaching Decision
- Chapter 103: A Girls Day II
- Chapter 102: A Girls Day
- Chapter 101: An Unforeseen Storm
- Chapter 100: A Deep Talk
- Chapter 99: Carlos’s Resolve
- Chapter 98: A Walk Around Jamaica
- Chapter 97: A Tense Encounter
- Chapter 96: Winds Toward Jamaica
- Chapter 95: Farewell
- Chapter 94: The Viceroy’s Conspiracy
- Chapter 93: A Talk With The British Agent
- Chapter 92: An Unexpected Situation
- Chapter 91: Conspiracy, And A Father Worry
- Chapter 90: A Tense Dinner
- Chapter 89: A Dinner With the Vicerroy II
- Chapter 88: A Dinner With the Viceroy
- Chapter 87: The Viceroy’s Invitation
- Chapter 86: Warning of Carlos
- Chapter 85: An Audience with the Viceroy II
- Chapter 84: An Audience with the Viceroy !
- Chapter 83: The Key of the Indies
- Chapter 82: The Legend of the Nun Hines
- Chapter 81: Union Before the Road
- Chapter 80: A Talk in The Night
- Chapter 79: Dinner by Candlelight
- Chapter 78: The Hunt
- Chapter 77: An Important Hunt
- Chapter 76: Mother of the Mountains and Forests
- Chapter 75: A Moment of Determination
- Chapter 74: There Is No Love in Selfishness
- Chapter 73: The Weight of Marriage
- Chapter 72: The Sad Story Of "La Llorona"
- Chapter 71: The Cry in the Darkness
- Chapter 70: A House in A Hill
- Chapter 69: A New Road Ahead
- Chapter 68: The Butterfly Wings Cannot Change Everything
- Chapter 67: History Has Changed
- Chapter 66: Tension in The Empire
- Chapter 65: Faith in The Forge
- Chapter 64: The Birth of The Aguardiente Festival
- Chapter 63: A Night in The Plaza
- Chapter 62: Medellín Is Changing.
- Chapter 61: The Mayor’s Dilemma
- Chapter 60: Distrust
- Chapter 59: Peste Catarral
- Chapter 58: The Orphan child
- Chapter 57: Father and Son
- Chapter 56: The Wisdom Of Ogundele
- Chapter 55: Alchemy Experiments
- Chapter 54: A Quiet Departure
- Chapter 53: Better Can Also Mean Deadly
- Chapter 52: Learning of steel
- Chapter 51: We need more servants
- Chapter 50: Cement rush
- Chapter 49: A body in the river
- Chapter 48: Smuggling immigrants
- Chapter 47: A Meeting with the smugglers
- Chapter 46: The Plaza Incident
- Chapter 45: Oscar: A Country That Wishes to Prosper
- Chapter 44: Oscar: From Antioquía to Honda
- Chapter 43: Oscar: River of Prey
- Chapter 42: The Aqueduct Bargain
- Chapter 41: Afternoon in the Savanna
- Chapter 40: The Truth About the Bloodline Policies
- Chapter 39: Roman Cement Foundations of Independence
- Chapter 38: Bread Before Ideals
- Chapter 37: Plaza Mayor de Bogotá
- Chapter 36: a deep talk with the "Sage"
- Chapter 35: the "Sage" Jose Celestino Mutis
- Chapter 34: Caiman
- Chapter 33: A Mutual Confession
- Chapter 32: A new journey
- Chapter 31: News from Europe
- Chapter 30: A letter across the ocean
- Chapter 29: Isabella, and elections
- Chapter 28: A Debt of the hearth
- Chapter 27: Roman cement
- Chapter 26: A new backer
- Chapter 25: Dance
- Chapter 24: The secret of vitruvio
- Chapter 23: Hiding Oscar
- Chapter 22: Ideas
- Chapter 21: Major Joaquin Tirado
- Chapter 20: Infraestructure
- Chapter 19: The Yoruba Ogundele Akinyemi
- Chapter 18: Forge and Wine
- Chapter 17: Punishment
- Chapter 16: A Night talk
- Chapter 15: Puma
- Chapter 14: A Moonligh Outing
- Chapter 13: Catalina
- Chapter 12: Future
- Chapter 11: Conspiracy
- Chapter 10: Oscar the liberal
- Chapter 9: Quilla
- Chapter 8: Slaves
- Chapter 7: Slave Merchant
- Chapter 6: The Restrepo Family
- Chapter 5: Duel
- Chapter 4: Gómez de castro
- Chapter 3: Villa of medellin
- Chapter 2: Memories
- Chapter 1: Reincarnation