The "v221115" expansion had just opened up the new northern pass—a stretch of land so steep it made most engineers turn back. Elias spent weeks laying narrow-gauge track, hammering spikes into the frost-hardened ground. He learned that if his grade was even half a percent too steep, his locomotive would lose its grip, sending tons of timber screaming back down the mountain in a chaotic "unplanned derailment."
Elias didn't follow the ghost. He knew the limits of his steel and the geometry of his curves. Instead, he pulled the throttle back, letting the Iron Embers dig in. He reached the sawmill just as the first snowflakes began to fall, his contract fulfilled and his payroll secured. File: RAILROADS.Online.v221115.zip ...
Elias had arrived with nothing but a handful of credits and a contract from the Pine Valley Logging Co. The goal was simple: bridge the gap between the high timber camps and the sawmills at the valley floor. But simple is a word the mountains don't understand. The "v221115" expansion had just opened up the