Post-Apocalyptic
published

The Switchkeeper's Promise

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Fog and machines braid the fate of a small junction where Rae Calder keeps rails intact by skill and stubbornness. When deliberate sabotage threatens a vital supply train that carries both a repair part and lifesaving medicine, Rae must use tool, timing and trust to split a moving consist and steer both needs to safety.

post-apocalyptic
tradesperson
railcraft
community
repair
survival
mentor-apprentice

Night Shift at Crosscut

Chapter 1Page 1 of 47

Story Content

The night at Crosscut was the sort that wore its age like a coat: patched, slightly singed at the cuff, smelled faintly of coal and sweet bean paste. Rae Calder liked it that way. The junction lived on small certainties—how long a wheel took to cool after a stop, the exact way the levers snapped under a firm palm, which track sang when a freight rolled over a loose spike. Rae walked those certainties like a ritual, palms finding familiar ridges on iron and wood, ears tuning to the tiny dialects of the junction’s bones.

A low fog had slid from the valley and settled into the railbed, making the lamplight smear into halos. Rain had threatened all evening but hadn’t quite made the effort; the town called that weather “the half-tide,” a polite thing that came to mend fences and annoy shoe leather more than to do real damage. People made a tea from preserved loquats and grit-sweetened milk to chase the half-tide away; Rae kept a dented thermos of it against the points box, stashed there like a talisman against the cold. It was not the sort of tradition you read about in grander places—Crosscut had cuisines born of necessity, not ceremony—but it tasted like home to those who had learned to like hard things.

Rae bent to the points, chest close to the weathered timber, and ran gloved fingers over the mechanism. Oil had been good to this junction when there was oil to be had; now grease came in measured tins and improvisation. Rae loosened the protective plate and listened: a faint metallic rasp, a whisper of something that did not belong. The lever’s throw felt sluggish, as if the points had woken on the wrong side of the rail. Rae hooked a pry bar under a stubborn plate, braced heels against the gravel, and strained with the practiced economy of someone who had learned to muscle old iron rather than replace it.

A couple of sparks flew from a corroded bolt; Rae swore under breath, a private, efficient curse and not one meant for poetry. The switch made a sound like a slow cough when it finally gave. There was a ridiculous satisfaction in that small victory—like wrenching open a jar of preserved pears with fingers that had forgotten the exact shape of spring—but the satisfaction was short. The control wire that ran from the points to the signal box lay severed, frayed at the end as if bitten. Someone had taken a deliberate cut at the cable and then, awkwardly, tried to hide it under silt and grit. Someone had also loosened the main retention bolt with fingers that had left bright marks in the mud.

Rae’s first move was practical: light the lamp, sweep the immediate track, check the starboard insulators. Hands worked without drama, tightening and testing, retying a splice with cordage kept for such sins. That’s the part of Rae’s job that comforted them—an active mind paired with a stubborn body. The junction liked people who could move things back into order.

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