Reborn as a Hated Noble Family, We Start an Industrial Revolution-Chapter 92: The Youngest’s Strategy
Bunker Sector B – 15 Meters Beneath the Market District.
The atmosphere within Bunker Sector B was traditionally a triumph of engineering—a sanctuary of cool, recycled air maintained by the sophisticated mana-circulation systems Rianor Sudrath had meticulously designed. But tonight, that sanctuary had been violated. The air had turned stagnant, heavy with the suffocating stench of thousands of panicked civilians and the sharp, metallic tang of oxidized iron. The rhythmic thrum of the life-support systems was now a background noise to a far more primal sound: the collective heartbeat of a city waiting for its end.
KRIIIIEEETTT—BOOM!
The reinforced concrete wall at the far end of the eastern corridor didn’t just crack; it disintegrated under a tectonic pressure. A monolithic boring machine, five meters in diameter and covered in jagged, rusted teeth, tore through the barrier with a sound that felt like it was grinding the very souls of those present. Concrete dust exploded into the air, creating a gray, choking haze that obscured the nightmare emerging from the hole.
"RETRAT! EVERYONE BACK TO THE MEDICAL ZONE! DO NOT LOOK BACK!" screamed a boy whose voice cracked under the weight of an authority he was never meant to wield so soon.
This was Raphael Sudrath. At a mere fourteen years of age, he was supposed to be in the safety of the Royal Academy, debating theories of governance and the history of noble lineages. Instead, those theories were being baptized in a rain of blood and debris. Beside him, Vance and Lily were pale, their hands trembling as they gripped their crystal pagers and the drainage maps of the bunker. They were children playing a game of gods, and the gods were currently demanding a sacrifice.
From the yawning maw of the breach, a titan of steam and iron emerged. This was Yaeger. His armor was not like the shimmering, elegant plate of the Aethelgard knights; it was a grotesque accumulation of crude iron slabs, interconnected by hissing hydraulic pipes and grinding gears. The machine roared with every movement, venting superheated steam from its shoulders like a dragon preparing to incinerate its prey. In his massive, gauntleted hand, Yaeger clutched a steam-driven battle-axe whose blades never stopped spinning.
"So, these are the rats that infest our ancestral lands?" Yaeger’s voice was a distorted vibration, filtered through the iron grill of his helmet. "Slaughtering you won’t even satisfy the hunger of our steam, but it will be a decent start."
Without a hint of warning, Yaeger lunged. It wasn’t a movement of martial grace, but a brutal, horizontal sweep of his rotating axe. He targeted the nearest cluster of civilians—a group too paralyzed by shock to even scream.
KRASSH! SZZZTT!
The sound of jagged metal rending human flesh mingled with the horrific hiss of steam. Screams were cut short as the first line of refugees—a family trying to shield one another—was disintegrated into unrecognizable fragments of bone and gristle. Fresh blood sprayed across the superheated pipes of Yaeger’s armor, evaporating instantly into a sickening red mist that smelled of copper and sudden death.
Yaeger did not stop. He strode forward, his massive iron boots pulverizing whatever—and whoever—lay beneath them. He lifted a foot and brought it down upon a middle-aged man who was attempting to crawl away, crushing his spine with a wet, nauseating crack that echoed through the silent corridor.
"Weak. Pathetic. A waste of oxygen," Yaeger growled. He didn’t even use his weapon for the next kill; he simply allowed the high-pressure steam valves on his pauldrons to vent toward a group of teenagers cornered against the wall. The scalding vapor charred their skin instantly, silening their screams before they could even draw breath.
The sight was a visceral horror that turned the air in the bunker into a stagnant pool of despair. This wasn’t a battle between soldiers; it was a slaughterhouse where the cattle were being processed by a machine that lacked even a spark of mercy.
Raphael felt the bile rise in his throat, a primal instinct to vomit fighting against the cold rage beginning to solidify in his chest. The fear that had momentarily paralyzed him was now being transmuted into adrenaline. He realized a fundamental truth: if he remained a spectator for even one more second, every person behind him would end as a pile of meat beneath Yaeger’s iron tread.
Yaeger gestured with a massive hand, and dozens of Iron Empire mechanical infantry—clad in smaller but equally brutal versions of his armor—swarmed into the breach, ready to continue their commander’s grisly feast.
"Raphael... there are too many of them," Vance whispered, his voice shaking as blood began to pool around their boots.
"Vance, Lily... the sequence. Now!" Raphael commanded, his voice suddenly dropping an octave into a cold, absolute register.
Raphael did not draw a sword to charge into a suicidal melee. Instead, he lunged for a manual lever concealed behind a network of steam pipes.
KLAK!
The lighting system in the corridor died instantly, plunging the area into an abyssal darkness. The Iron Empire infantry, heavily dependent on their crude, light-sensitive optical sensors, were rendered blind. The panic of the citizens intensified in the dark, but for Raphael, the darkness was his first line of defense.
"Sudrath Strategy: Exploitation of Technological Dependency!" Raphael’s voice boomed, cutting through the chaos like a blade.
Suddenly, small, pinpricks of light ignited in the dark. These were portable Mana-Lasers, a design by Raveena that Raphael had modified for localized guerrilla warfare. Raphael didn’t aim for the thick, iron plating of the enemy’s chests. He aimed for the glowing heat-signatures of their steam-tanks.
DUM! DUM! DUM!
A series of rapid-fire explosions rippled through the dark. The steam tanks, pierced by the concentrated mana-beams, erupted outward. The soldiers inside were basted in their own pressurized steam, their screams of agony muffled by their helmets as they were cooked alive within their iron coffins. The enemy formation collapsed into a mess of steam and static.
Yaeger let out a roar of frustration, swinging his axe blindly in the dark. The impact against the stone floor created a shower of sparks that momentarily illuminated Raphael’s small, defiant form.
"Cheap tricks, boy! This technology was forged in blood, not on academy exam papers!"
But as Yaeger raised his axe to crush the boy, a voice—cold, level, and carrying the weight of an incoming storm—echoed from the bunker’s primary entrance, silencing the cacophony.
"Put your weapon down, you rusted piece of scrap."
Bunker Entrance – Sector B.
Rianor Sudrath stood there. His research attire was shredded, and his face was still stained with the dried, dark crimson of Elara’s blood. In his arms, he cradled Elara’s limp form with a terrifying tenderness, as if she were a piece of porcelain that would shatter if the wind blew too hard.
The aura surrounding Rianor was no longer that of a friendly scientist or a curious innovator. It was the aura of a man who had looked into the abyss and realized it was empty. He was a man who had lost his light and was now prepared to become the dark.
"Hektor, take Elara. Deliver her to Elena. If a single hair on her head is harmed while she is under your watch, I will ensure the Needle Tower’s reactor detonates with you inside it," Rianor said, never taking his eyes off Yaeger.
Count Hektor, his hands trembling, accepted Elara’s weight and sprinted toward the inner medical sanctum, his boots splashing through the blood on the floor.
Rianor now stood alone, facing the titan of the Iron Empire. He reached for a device at his hip—a mechanical gauntlet etched with glowing red mana-circuits that thrummed with a dangerous, unstable frequency.
"Raphael, withdraw," Rianor commanded quietly.
"But Brother Rianor, he’s their leader—"
"I said withdraw," Rianor’s voice rose slightly, a tone of absolute, chilling authority that brook no argument.
Yaeger burst into a guttural, metallic laugh. "Another Sudrath noble come to die? You don’t even hold a blade, you pathetic little scholar!"
Yaeger surged forward, his steam-axe whirring at maximum velocity. But Rianor didn’t flinch. He didn’t even reach for a weapon. He simply shifted his footing by a single inch. With a precision that was nothing short of horrific, he caught the handle of the red-hot steam-axe with his gauntleted left hand.
TZZZZZZZT!
A massive mana-discharge exploded at zero range. Yaeger’s axe jammed instantly, the back-pressure of the steam reversing into the machine’s own chest and spraying scalding vapor directly into Yaeger’s visor.
"Your technology is a rotting relic of a forgotten age," Rianor whispered, his face inches from Yaeger’s helmet. "And relics... belong in the furnace."
Medical Bay – Deep Within Sector B.
Dr. Elena was already submerged in a sea of casualties when Hektor arrived with Elara. Her face went deathly pale at the sight of her sister-in-law bleeding from every sensory orifice.
"Get her on the table! Now!" Elena barked, her maternal instincts replaced by the cold precision of a surgeon. She reached for her Magitech instruments. "This is a Level 5 Mana-Collapse. If her heart stops one more time, she isn’t coming back."
Outside the room, Raphael watched through the glass as his brother, Rianor, fought like a man possessed. Rianor wasn’t using elegant tactics; he was using his intimate knowledge of mechanical weak points to tear the enemy’s armor apart with his bare, gauntleted hands. It was a surgical dismantling performed with the rage of a demon.
The Shoreline – Mid-Battle.
At the beach, through a crackling, static-choked radio, Sir Riven heard the reports of the bunker breach. 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂
"Riven! Do not return!" Lucian’s voice boomed over the frequency, steady despite the chaos. "Raphael and Rianor have the bunker under control. Focus on the fleet! If you retreat now, the perimeter falls and ten thousand more drills will follow!"
Riven clenched his fist until his iron gauntlets groaned under the pressure. "Father... Elena is in there. My siblings are in there."
"And you are their General!" Lucian shouted back. "Trust them, Riven. House Sudrath did not raise weak children! Hold your ground!"
Riven looked back toward the horizon. The Iron Empire’s fleet was moving again after the hiatus of the Railgun strike. This time, they weren’t firing lasers; they were launching thousands of landing craft filled with fanatical infantry.
The real war had only just begun. And in the darkness of the bunker, Raphael Sudrath had just realized that to protect his family, he had to become more than a knight—he had to become a monster of strategy, just like his brothers.
Command Center.
"Lucian," Aurelia called out softly, her hand resting on his. "Will we survive this night?"
Lucian remained silent for a long moment, staring at his own reflection in the darkened monitors. "On Earth, I learned that the most resilient corporations are the ones that survive the worst crises. House Sudrath is more than just a family, Aurelia. We are an empire in its infancy. And empires... are always baptized in blood."







