Chapter 54: Chapter 53: The Canyon of Screams
Time Remaining: 37 Days, 10 Hours. Location: The Borderlands (10 Miles West of Capital).
The Iron Horse didn’t drive. It convulsed.
Ten miles of off-road travel had turned the interior of the vehicle into a convection oven mixed with a paint shaker. The suspension—stiff Mithril leaf-springs designed for hauling cargo, not people—slammed into every rock, sending a jolt straight up Arthur’s spine and rattling his teeth in his skull.
The cabin temperature was pushing 40°C. It smelled of hot oil, ozone, and unwashed teenagers.
“I’m going to throw up,” Julian groaned from the sniper nest, a small padded cage welded near the roof hatch. “I am a noble. My inner ear is calibrated for smooth carriages, not… this washing machine.”
“Swallow it,” Arthur shouted over the deafening roar of the engine. He didn’t take his eyes off the terrain. “Vomit is acidic. It’ll corrode the leather upholstery, and I don’t have spare cows to fix it.”
Arthur wrestled the steering wheel. It wasn’t power steering; it was a direct chain-drive to the axle, meaning he felt every pebble. His arms burned. The massive rubber tires were chewing up the loose gravel, kicking up a cloud of orange dust that coated the windshield, but the engine temperature was climbing into the red.
[Engine Temp: 115°C]
[Consultant Note: Air intake is clogged with particulate matter. You are losing 15% torque. If the boiler cracks, you will be boiled alive. Just a heads up.]
Arthur wiped a smear of grease and sweat from his forehead. “Zack!” he yelled, his voice cracking from the dry air. “Where is the canyon? The radiator is screaming. We need smooth ground, or the gaskets are going to blow.”
Zack was in the back, strapped into a bucket seat that looked too big for him. He was bouncing around like a loose coin in a dryer, clutching the Nav-Station with white knuckles.
The Nav-Station wasn’t a sleek computer. It was a heavy steel table bolted to the floor, covered in rolling maps, magnetic compasses, and raw mana-readings. “One mile! Straight ahead!” Zack yelled, fighting to keep his glasses on his face. “The magnetic signature is spiking! It’s huge!”
…..
They crested a ridge, and the world dropped away.
The Canyon of Screams wasn’t a poetic name. It was literal. The wind tore through the jagged, rusted rock formations—remnants of ancient mining towers that had collapsed centuries ago. The air was forced through millions of tiny holes in the rusted metal, creating a high-pitched, wailing whistle that sounded like a thousand dying tea kettles.
It was a sound that made your teeth ache.
“Audio dampeners!” Arthur ordered, flipping a heavy toggle switch on the dash. Thick felt pads slammed down over the window slits. The screaming dulled to a low, vibrating thrum that they felt in their chests rather than heard.
Arthur slammed the brakes. The Iron Horse skidded to a halt at the edge of the precipice, gravel spraying over the side.
He grabbed his heavy binoculars. The lenses were scratched but functional. The canyon floor was a mess of orange dust and long, jagged shadows. But running right down the middle, half-buried in the shifting sand, was a pair of parallel lines.
“There,” Arthur pointed, his finger tracing the line. “Standard Imperial Gauge. 1,435 mm width. Rusted, heavily oxidized, but continuous.”
“They’re buried,” Vivian noted, peering through the gunner scope. She adjusted the focus ring on the periscope. “And… Arthur, the ground is moving.”
Arthur squinted. The shadows in the canyon weren’t just shadows. They were shifting. Shapes made of jagged metal and wire were skittering over the sand.
[System Scan: Hostile Lifeforms Detected.]
[Species: Rust-Stalkers.]
[Biology: Scavenger crabs. They secrete an acid that softens metal, then they attach scrap to their bodies as armor.]
[Threat Level: Swarm.]
“Crabs,” Arthur muttered, lowering the binoculars. “Armored crabs that eat cars. Great.”
He turned to the team. The adrenaline was starting to sharpen his focus. “Here’s the plan. It’s a kinetic puzzle. We drive down the slope—it’s a 30-degree grade, so brakes are useless. We hit the canyon floor moving at 40 mph. I have to align the wheels with the track while we are moving.”
“And the crabs?” Vivian asked, her hand resting on the firing trigger.
“If we stop, they eat the tires,” Arthur said flatly. “If they eat the tires, we can’t hit the rails. If we can’t hit the rails, we die of thirst.”
“And if we miss the alignment?” Julian asked, climbing down from the nest, his face pale green.
“Then we derail,” Arthur said. “We flip. The boiler explodes. And the crabs eat us warm. Any other questions?”
Silence.
“Good. Vivian, spin up the barrels.”
Arthur grabbed the heavy iron gear lever. He didn’t shift gently; he slammed it into ’Low Gear’ with a metallic crunch. “Hang on!”
The Iron Horse tipped over the edge of the slope. Gravity took over. They slid down the canyon wall in a controlled avalanche of dust and noise. The huge tires fought for traction on the loose shale. The brakes screeched, the pads glowing red hot within seconds.
SCREEEECH-THUD.
They hit the canyon floor with a bone-jarring impact that knocked the wind out of everyone. A pressure gauge on the dashboard shattered, spraying steam.
The impact woke the hive.
The piles of scrap exploded. Dozens of Rust-Stalkers—crabs the size of large dogs, with shells made of old gears and rebar—surged forward. Their pincers were hydraulic cutters, snapping with enough force to shear bone.
“Contact!” Vivian yelled. “They’re fast! Spinning up!”
She slammed the foot pedal for the roof turret. WHIRRRRRRR. THUMP-THUMP-THUMP-THUMP.
The Rotary Spike Cannon roared. It didn’t sound like a clean machine gun. It sounded like a steam hammer hitting an anvil. Railroad spikes, launched at Mach 1 by compressed steam, tore into the swarm. A spike hit a stalker, punching through its license-plate shell and pinning it to the ground in a spray of blue ichor.
“Get some!” Vivian cackled, swinging the turret traverse wheel. “Eat iron, you bottom-feeders!”
“Zack! Guide me in!” Arthur yelled, fighting the wheel. The sand was loose, acting like a fluid. The Iron Horse was drifting sideways, sliding toward a pile of jagged girders.
“Left! Hard Left!” Zack screamed. He was staring at the Periscope Screen embedded in the dashboard. Arthur had built it using a quartz lens mounted on the rear bumper, connected by a bundle of polished glass-fiber cables. It projected a grainy, slightly distorted, green-tinted image of the rear wheels onto a frosted glass plate.
“You’re drifting!” Zack yelled, tapping the glass. “Two degrees off parallel! I can see the tracks in the reflection! Align the guide-laser!”
Arthur cranked the wheel, his muscles straining. The rear tires spun, kicking up a sandstorm that blinded the crabs behind them. A Rust-Stalker leaped from a rock, landing on the hood with a heavy CLANG. Its pincers snapped at the windshield glass, gouging deep scratches into the reinforced quartz.
CRACK.
“It’s scratching the paint!” Arthur snarled, ducking as a pincer slammed into the glass right in front of his face.
ZAP. A beam of concentrated sunlight—purple and hot—pierced the crab’s head. It melted instantly, collapsing into a pile of slag. “Target down,” Julian called from the nest, reloading his staff. “Stop swerving. It ruins my aim.”
They were running parallel to the tracks now, bouncing over the dunes at 40 mph. The swarm was keeping pace, a tide of clicking metal snapping at the rubber tires.
“Aligning!” Arthur shouted, glancing at the periscope screen. Through the grain and the static, he saw the ghostly image of the rusted rails lining up with the chassis. It was a threading-the-needle shot.
“Zack, confirm spacing!”
“You’re over the rails! Drop it! Drop it now!”
Arthur hit the red button on the dash: [Deploy Rail-Gear].
Under the chassis, the hydraulic pumps screamed. The heavy steel train wheels slammed down. They hit the rusted rails with a deafening CLANG that shook the entire frame. Sparks showered out from the undercarriage as steel bit into steel.
“Retracting tires!” Arthur pulled the second lever. The hydraulics hissed again, and the massive rubber tires lifted up, clearing the ground by six inches.
For a second, there was silence. No friction. No gravel. No bouncing. Just the smooth, singing vibration of metal on metal.
“We have rail contact!” Arthur grinned. It was a manic, sweat-drenched grin. “Engage the Boiler!”
He opened the throttle valve all the way. The V4 Hybrid Engine stopped fighting the drag of the sand. Now, all that torque went straight into the rails with zero resistance.
CHOO-CHOO, MOTHER—
The Iron Horse surged. 40 mph. 60 mph. 80 mph.
The Rust-Stalkers tried to keep up, their legs scrabbling in the sand, but they were biological. The train was mechanical. Within seconds, the swarm was falling behind, reduced to angry specks in the distance.
…..
The screaming wind faded as they cleared the canyon and entered the open flatlands of the Wastes. The orange haze stretched out for miles, broken only by the occasional ruin of a First Era factory.
The ride smoothed out instantly. No more violent shaking. Just the rhythmic, hypnotic clack-clack… clack-clack of the wheels crossing the rail joints.
Arthur leaned back, wiping a layer of grime from his face. His hands were shaking slightly from the adrenaline.
[System Notification: Transport Mode Active.]
[Fuel Efficiency: Increased by 400%.]
[Suspension Stress: Minimal.]
[Current Speed: 92 mph.]
“Status report,” Arthur said, his voice calm again, though his heart was still hammering against his ribs.
“Turret cooling,” Vivian said. She patted the smoking gun barrel with a rag. “I used 15% of the ammo. But I think I got about twenty of them.”
“Heart rate… critical,” Zack squeaked from the floor, clutching his chest. “I think I died. I think I’m a ghost.”
“I am… surprisingly comfortable,” Julian admitted. He climbed down from the nest, dusting off his robes. “The swaying is rhythmic. It’s like a cradle. Much better than the gravel.”
Arthur tapped the dashboard gauge. The needle was steady.
Speed: 90 mph.
Destination:The Iron Empire.
“We just bought ourselves time,” Arthur said. “Zack, set a course. We run the engine hot tonight. I want to clear the first sector by dawn.”
He looked out the reinforced window. The tracks stretched out endlessly into the orange haze, a straight line cutting through the end of the world.
“Welcome to the express line,” Arthur muttered, reaching for his cold coffee. “Next stop: Hell.”
End of Chapter 53
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 138 137: The Cost of Visibility
- Chapter 137 - 136: After the Variable
- Chapter 136 135: This Time, Not Interrupted
- Chapter 135 - 134: Closer Than Intended
- Chapter 134 - 133: Not Part of the System
- Chapter 133 - 132: When It Returns
- Chapter 132 - 131: When It’s Missing
- Chapter 131 - 130: Almost Said
- Chapter 130 - 129: When It Changes
- Chapter 129 - 128: The Space Between Work
- Chapter 128 - 127: A Reason to Return
- Chapter 127 - 126: Staying Longer Than Necessary
- Chapter 126 - 125: The People Who Stay
- Chapter 125 - 124: The Human Variable
- Chapter 124 - 123: The One Thing You Didn’t Build
- Chapter 123 - 122: A Perfect Delivery Day
- Chapter 122 - 121: The Cost of Doubt
- Chapter 121 - 120: The Invisible Delay
- Chapter 120 - 119: The Speed Problem
- Chapter 119 - 118: Too Many Wagons
- Chapter 118 - 117: Where the Road Breaks
- Chapter 117 - 116: The Hidden Weakness
- Chapter 116 115: The First Snow
- Chapter 115 - 114: Messages Move Too Slowly
- Chapter 114 - 113: The Mountain Bottleneck
- Chapter 113 - 112: The Freight Convoys
- Chapter 112 - 111: The Shape of Cargo
- Chapter 111 - 110: The Weight of Silver
- Chapter 110 - 109: The Warehouse Economy
- Chapter 109 - 108: The First Logistics Hub
- Chapter 108 - 107: The Logistics Problem
- Chapter 107 - 106: The Road Changes Everything
- Chapter 106 - 105 — Momentum
- Chapter 105 - 104: The Price of Passage
- Chapter 104 - 103: The Inspection
- Chapter 103 - 102: Silent Countermeasures
- Chapter 102 - 101: The Night the Mountain Moved
- Chapter 101 - 100: The Quiet Between Calculations
- Chapter 100 - 99: Terms of Adaptation
- Chapter 99 - 98: Cracks in Stone
- Chapter 98 - 97: Market Day Without Mud
- Chapter 97 - 96: The First Defection
- Chapter 96 - 95: Breaking the Swamp
- Chapter 95 - 94: The Squeeze
- Chapter 94 - 93: The Office of Flow
- Chapter 93 - 92: The Toll Problem
- Chapter 92 - 91: The Royal Walk
- Chapter 91 - 90: The First Crossing
- Chapter 90 - 89: The Shape of Strength
- Chapter 89 - 88: Steel Day
- Chapter 88 - 87: The Southern Problem
- Chapter 87 - 86: The Pour
- Chapter 86 - 85: The Mix
- Chapter 85 - 84: Survey Day
- Chapter 84 - 83: The King and the Bridge
- Chapter 83 - 82: A Seat at the Table
- Chapter 82 - 81: Coming Home (Season 3)
- Chapter 81 - 80: Back To The Road
- Chapter 80 - 79: Terms of Exchange
- Chapter 79 - 78: The Switch
- Chapter 78 - 77: The Weight of the Crown
- Chapter 77 - 76: The Capital Node
- Chapter 76: The Point of No Return
- Chapter 75 - 74: Scaling Pressure
- Chapter 74 - 73: The Question That Matters
- Chapter 73 - 72: Comparative Failure
- Chapter 72 - 71: Resistance Inside the Machine
- Chapter 71 - 70: What the Grid Wants
- Chapter 70 - 69: The Trial Node
- Chapter 69 - 68: The Seven-Day Window
- Chapter 68 - 67: Audience Without Trust
- Chapter 67 - 66: The First Prediction
- Chapter 66 - 65: The Grid from the Outside
- Chapter 65 - 64: Terms of Entry
- Chapter 64 - 63: The Border That Does Not Bend
- Chapter 63 - 62: The White Void
- Chapter 62 - 61: The Black Gold Rush
- Chapter 61 - 60: The Glass Ocean
- Chapter 60 - 59: The City in the Sky
- Chapter 59 - 58: The Mirror World
- Chapter 58 - 57: The Chladni Run
- Chapter 57 - 56: The Belly of the Beast
- Chapter 56 - 55: The Serpent’s Throat
- Chapter 55 - 54: The Night Shift
- Chapter 54 - 53: The Canyon of Screams
- Chapter 53 - 52: The Iron Horse
- Chapter 52 - 51: The Sunrise Audit ( Season 2 )
- Chapter 51 - 50: The Arithmetic of Godhood (Season 1 End)
- Chapter 50 - 49: The Torque of War
- Chapter 49 - 48: The Son’s Duty
- Chapter 48 - 47: The clogged Artery
- Chapter 47 - 46: The City of Ghosts
- Chapter 46 - 45: The Invisible Class
- Chapter 45 - 44: The City Beneath the City
- Chapter 44 - 43: The Lonely Sentinel
- Chapter 43 - 42: The Ferrous Jungle
- Chapter 42 - 41: The Dead Zone
- Chapter 41 - 40: The Hamburger Protocol
- Chapter 40 - 39: The Thermodynamics of Trust
- Chapter 39 - 38: The Geometry of a Cliff
- Chapter 38 - 37: The Valedictorian of Chaos
- Chapter 37 - 36: The Iron Skin
- Chapter 36 - 35: The Interpreter
- Chapter 35 - 34: The Iron Spider
- Chapter 34 - 33: The Cassandra Protocol
- Chapter 33 - 32: The Infinite Reflection
- Chapter 32 - 31: The Auditor’s Shadow
- Chapter 31 - 30: The Sophomore Slump (Time Skip Begins)
- Chapter 30 - 29: The Portable Archive
- Chapter 29 - 28: The Global Diagnostic
- Chapter 28 - 27: The Unholy Trinity
- Chapter 27 - 26: The Human Generator
- Chapter 26 - 25: The Sub-Basement
- Chapter 25 - 24: The Taser Doctrine
- Chapter 24 - 23: The Variable of Arrogance
- Chapter 23 - 22: The Capacitor
- Chapter 22 - 21: The Architecture of Comfort
- Chapter 21 - 20: The Theorem of Fire
- Chapter 20 - 19: The Ivory Tower
- Chapter 19 - 18: The Laws of Bounce
- Chapter 18 - 17: The Viscoelastic Paradox
- Chapter 17 - 16: The Princess and the Density
- Chapter 16 - 15: The Law of Elasticity
- Chapter 15 - 14: The King’s Curiosity
- Chapter 14 - 13: The Screaming Wagon
- Chapter 13 - 12: The Heart of the Beast
- Chapter 12 - 11: The Bessemer Blast
- Chapter 11 - 10: The Supply Chain Crisis
- Chapter 10 - 9: The Psychology of Halitosis
- Chapter 9 - 8: The Crystal Box
- Chapter 8 - 7: The Ink and The Iron
- Chapter 7 - 6: The Bankruptcy Simulator
- Chapter 6 - 5: The Porcelain Throne
- Chapter 5 - 4: The Logistics of Mud
- Chapter 4 - 3: The ROI of Ruthlessness
- Chapter 3 - 2: The Thermodynamics of Bathtime
- Chapter 2 - 1: The Young Master’s Grievance
- Chapter 1: Introduction