I Built a Safe Zone in the Dead World

Chapter 161: Kinetic Rail

I Built a Safe Zone in the Dead World

Chapter 161: Kinetic Rail

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Chapter 161: Kinetic Rail

The flight deck of the Goliath felt less like a naval vessel and more like the inside of a gargantuan, hollow iron mountain.

Outside, the Atlantic winter was howling, throwing frozen sleet against the massive, armored hangar doors with the sound of continuous gunfire. Inside, the air was a freezing fog of oil mist, ozone, and the frantic breath of two hundred engineers working under the glare of portable amber floodlights.

Suspended from the central ceiling gantry by thick steel cables was a monstrous piece of old-world ordnance: a sixty-foot magnetic launch casing, painted a dull, non-reflective military gray. It was hollowed out, its interior stripped of its original explosive payload to make room for a single, desperate passenger.

The Obsidian was wedged directly into the throat of the slug.

[LAUNCH COUPLING: ENGAGED]

[KINETIC CAPACITORS: CHARGING (42%)]

[TRAJECTORY VECTOR: FIXED (SECTOR 04 - THE GREAT SEAM)]

Arata stood beneath the massive underbelly of the rail-launcher, his hands shoved deep into his wool coat pockets to keep his fingers from locking up in the bitter cold. The silver crescent scar on his palm didn’t hum, but the massive, low-frequency vibration of the carrier’s magnetic coils was rattling the fillings in his teeth.

"It’s a linear induction motor," Arata said, his voice straining over the mechanical shriek of the pneumatic wrenches above them. He looked at Vesper, who was standing on a scaffolding platform, checking the hydraulic seal on the Obsidian’s primary hatch. "The rail runs the entire three-hundred-meter length of the flagship’s hull. When those capacitors discharge, the acceleration will pull seven gravities in the first three seconds."

Vesper climbed down the iron ladder, her heavy naval wool coat unbuttoned at the collar, her platinum hair catching the harsh amber glare of the floods. Her violet eyes were bloodshot, but the terrified vulnerability she had shown after the core collapse had been buried beneath a thick layer of cold, military focus.

"I’ve run the simulations three times, Architect," she said, her smoky voice sharp and professional. "The carbon-fiber hull of the Obsidian can handle the structural stress. The real variable is the deceleration at the other end. We don’t have a receiving rail in Sector 04. We’re going to hit their atmospheric shelf at Mach 3 and use the emergency gravitic dampeners to turn the ship into a giant skipping stone."

"And if the dampeners fail?"

Vesper looked up at the massive gray slug, a tiny, humorless smirk touching her lips. "Then we become a very expensive piece of scrap metal buried forty feet deep in a canyon of frozen corn."

"We won’t fail," Airi’s voice cut through the industrial din.

She walked out from the shadow of the carrier’s structural ribbing, her heavy leather cloak replaced by a tight, reinforced tactical harness that held her plasma rifle flat against her spine. She carried two heavy wooden crates of Akari’s preserved tallow-rations under her arms as if they weighed nothing, setting them firmly into the Obsidian’s lower cargo bay. Her silver-streaked hair was braided tight against her skull, her jaw set like flint.

Vesper looked at Airi, her smirk softening into an expression of quiet, lingering respect. "You don’t have to be on this boat, sister. If Arata and I burn up in the upper atmosphere, the island is going to need a commander who knows how to hold a perimeter."

"The perimeter isn’t on the beach anymore," Airi said, not looking up as she buckled the cargo straps. "If that automated harvester clears Sector 04, the system will cycle. When the system cycles, the island goes with it. I’m not sitting by a cold hearth waiting for the sky to turn white again."

She stood up straight, turning her fierce, uncompromising gaze onto the captain. "Besides, somebody needs to make sure you don’t drop my fisherman into the ocean."

Vesper let out a short, genuine laugh, the tension between the two women finally settling into a functional, lethal partnership. "Fair enough, soldier. Get inside. The magnetic coils are beginning to pool."

[KINETIC CAPACITORS: CHARGING (89%)]

[WARNING: THERMAL RADIATION DISCHARGE IMMINENT]

[CLEAR THE LAUNCH TIER]

The klaxons began to wail throughout the carrier— a deep, pneumatic roar that signaled the isolation of the lower decks. The civilian engineers began to scramble down the scaffolding, clearing the launch tier as the massive magnetic housing of the rail began to glow with a dull, cherry-red heat.

Arata, Airi, and Vesper climbed through the narrow hatch of the Obsidian, sealing the pressurized doors behind them.

The cockpit was claustrophobic, the red tactical lighting casting long, jagged shadows across their faces. There were no chairs for passengers; Arata and Airi were buckled into heavy, reinforced acceleration frames mounted directly to the structural bulkheads behind the pilot’s station.

Vesper threw herself into the captain’s chair, her fingers flying across the projected terminal planes. The violet light of her displays reflected in her eyes, wild and brilliant against the dark.

"Locking down the baseline profiles," Vesper announced, her voice echoing through their internal comms. "Arata, link your interface to the secondary navigation matrix. I don’t need your Architect code, but I need your spatial awareness if the friction tears our radar arrays off the nose."

"Linked," Arata said, his scarred palm flattening against the cold console beside his frame. The silver crescent didn’t flare, but a clean, steady stream of atmospheric telemetry began to scroll across his vision.

Outside, the massive iron hangar doors of the Goliath began to split apart, revealing a narrow, vertical slice of the black, screaming winter night. The ocean below them was a chaotic mess of freezing foam, the flagship rolling heavily as it aligned its bow with the precise trajectory of the Great Seam.

"Attention, Obsidian," the voice of the flagship’s first officer rattled through the comms speaker, faint with static. "The rail is locked. The horizon is clear. May the wind find your sails, Captain."

"Launch on my mark," Vesper said, her hand hovering over a physical, heavy iron lever that had been retrofitted into the carbon console. She looked back over her shoulder, her violet eyes locking onto Arata, then shifting to Airi. "Hold onto your teeth, boys and girls."

The countdown didn’t use a digital clock. It was a physical drop in the ship’s ambient power—the red cockpit lights dimming to a faint, purple thread as the carrier siphoned every watt of energy from its primary reactor into the magnetic rails.

"Mark!" Vesper roared, slamming the lever forward.

The world didn’t explode; it flattened.

The sound of the launch was a single, deafening *Crack* that sounded like a mountain splitting in half. The acceleration hit Arata’s chest like a falling boulder, the air instantly driven from his lungs as his vision blurred into a gray, featureless tunnel. The seven gravities of force pinned them to their frames, the carbon-fiber hull of the Obsidian shrieking as it slid down the three-hundred-meter rail in a fraction of a second.

Through the forward viewport, the black winter night didn’t approach— it erupted into view. The flagship vanished behind them instantly, turned into a tiny, distant spark on a dark sea as the slug cleared the bow and ignited its solid-fuel booster ring.

They weren’t sailing. They were a five-ton bullet screaming across the curvature of a dead planet, burning a trail of bright white static through the freezing sky toward a valley of corn they had never seen.

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