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The Andes Dream-Chapter 251: The Yoruba and the Machine
As they marched, the silence was broken only by the steady clink of the guards’ equipment and the old man’s uneven breathing.
Krugger moved with quiet focus, his attention fixed on the terrain. To any observer, he seemed merely alert—but in truth, his mind was working continuously, measuring distances, calculating lines of sight, imagining where artillery might be placed and how fire could be directed across the land.
After a time, recalling something, he spoke:
"Do you know of a place where a group of soldiers could enter this region without attracting the attention of the authorities in Mompox?"
The old man did not answer immediately. He continued walking for a few steps before speaking.
"You are looking for the Brazo de Loba," he said at last, his voice low, as if the jungle itself might be listening.
"The Spanish focus on the Brazo de Mompox. That is where trade flows, where their attention is fixed. But the Loba..." He shook his head slightly. "That is a ghost’s path."
He pointed ahead, though there was little to see beyond dense vegetation.
"There is a hidden creek near the mouth of the Cesar River. It is choked with water lilies, and the currents are slow. The caimanes gather there. We call it the Caño de las Ánimas."
Krugger frowned.
"And the Spanish do not patrol this place? We may wish to avoid their attention—but not at the cost of unnecessary risk."
"It is both dangerous and ignored," the old man replied with a shrug.
"The vegetation is thick, the waters uncertain. The Spanish have long believed the area to be unnavigable—that no one could pass through it in any meaningful way."
He glanced briefly at Krugger.
"Some here have tried to tell them otherwise. But we are rarely taken seriously."
Krugger nodded, though inwardly he remained unconvinced.
The reasoning was sound... but reliance on Spanish negligence alone was never wise. He would send scouts regardless—men to observe Mompox directly and confirm the situation for themselves.
They continued for hours.
And as they advanced, Krugger’s expression grew more severe.
The distance was greater than he had anticipated. The logistics alone would prove difficult—transporting men, supplies, and artillery through such terrain would demand precision, coordination, and, above all, time.
Without the support of the indigenous, the effort would become significantly more complicated.
The thought lingered long enough for him to speak again.
"This region is far more remote than I expected," he said. "Do you know who controls these lands?"
The old man looked at him with visible surprise.
"You do not know?"
He let out a faint breath.
"This is the territory of the Chimila. They have never accepted Spanish rule—not truly. They have driven them out time and again."
He hesitated slightly, then added:
"I do not know your intentions, nor do I wish to. For my own safety, it is better that I remain ignorant. But I will tell you this..."
His voice lowered.
"Whatever you plan, you cannot carry it out without their consent. Not here. Not if you intend to bring soldiers."
A brief pause.
"They are not to be taken lightly. They know this land better than anyone. In the jungle, they are... something else entirely."
Krugger’s frown deepened.
The existence of such autonomy—an indigenous "nation" beyond Spanish control—spoke of strength. Of resilience. Of a force that could not simply be ignored or displaced.
For a moment, his thoughts turned to Carlos’s envoys.
If they succeeded, the campaign might proceed as planned.
If they failed...
He said nothing further.
At last, the terrain began to change.
The dense tangle of vines slowly gave way, the ground beneath their feet shifting from soft, treacherous mud to something firmer—strangely solid, almost unnatural in its consistency.
The trees thinned.
Before them, a wide, level stretch of land revealed itself, hidden between two ridges of the sierra.
Krugger stopped.
He knelt without hesitation and drove his knife into the earth.
It resisted.
"Tierras firmes," the old man whispered.
"The waters from the marsh stop at the ridge. Even during the great rains of October, this place remains dry."
He looked around, almost with quiet pride.
"Not even the Magistrate’s horses could reach this place without being heard from a league away."
Krugger rose slowly, his gaze sweeping across the open expanse.
In his mind, the place was already transformed.
He could see it—rows of tents aligned with precision, hidden forges where Carlos’s steel would be shaped in secrecy, and heavy artillery positioned with care, their barrels aimed toward the unseen river beyond the horizon.
"This is it," Krugger muttered in German, almost to himself, before returning to his imperfect Spanish. "Tell your men to begin marking the perimeter. This is no longer a clearing."
He paused, his expression hardening.
"It is Fortress Pailitas."
The guards nodded without hesitation and began moving, spreading out across the plateau with practiced coordination.
Meanwhile, Krugger advanced toward the eastern edge of the terrain.
There, the solid grey clay ended abruptly, giving way to a steep precipice. He stopped at its edge, looking down as the wind rose to meet him.
It was different here.
Sharper. Cooler.
It carried with it the scent of distant rain... and the heavy, muddy breath of the great river.
His eyes followed the curve of the Magdalena toward the northwest.
Far in the distance—barely more than a flicker—lay Mompox.
At this range, the so-called Pearl of the Magdalena was reduced to little more than a scattering of faint amber lights, like the last embers of a dying fire.
"So small," Krugger whispered again in German.
His hand rested on the brass telescope at his belt, tightening slightly.
"A city built on lace and tobacco... protected by nothing but its own arrogance."
A faint pause followed.
"But that may serve us well."
His gaze remained fixed.
"It seems the Spanish have not truly mastered this land—not completely. And that... gives us our opportunity."
With the site now chosen and the initial orders given, Krugger prepared to depart.
He would leave a small detachment behind—enough to secure the position and begin preliminary work. The location itself was ideal.
Yet one truth remained unchanged.
Without the permission of the Chimila, the place could not be used openly. Not without consequence.
Far from the jungle, within the growing structure of the steel mill in medellin, Ogundele stood in quiet inspection.
He ran a calloused hand across the surface of the imported German firebricks.
They were dense, cool, and heavy with alumina—each one stamped with the mark of a Ruhr Valley foundry. Among the finest in the world, they were designed to endure the extreme temperatures required for the production of Krupp-grade steel.
Yet as his eyes moved across the structure of the main blast furnace, he saw the first problem.
The flaw was not in the materials.
It was in the land itself.
"The mortar," Ogundele muttered, pointing toward the joints where local apprentices worked with careful but inexperienced hands.
"In Westphalia, the air is dry. The lime sets slowly, as it should. But here..." He gestured around them. "The humidity is a thief. It enters the mixture before it can cure properly."
He crouched slightly, pressing a finger against one of the joints.
"If we ignite the furnace now, the moisture trapped within will turn to steam. And when it does..." He glanced up. "It will shatter these bricks as if they were glass."
He rose to his full height and turned toward the head mason.
"We cannot simply build it—we must prepare it."
His tone became more precise, instructional.
"The entire structure must be pre-heated. Low, controlled fires—charcoal. Seventy-two hours at minimum."
He tapped the side of the furnace lightly.
"We dry it first. We dry its very soul... before we dare to give it a heart."
The mason nodded, understanding the gravity of the instruction.
Ogundele gave a small, satisfied nod of his own.
"Good. Then see it done."
He turned away
He made his way toward the water wheel, his boots sinking slightly into the red Antioquian mud with each step. Nearby, a set of technical blueprints—sent by Francisco from Göttingen—had been carefully pinned to a rough wooden table, their edges weighed down with small stones to keep them from curling in the damp air.
He stood there for a moment, studying both the design and the reality before him.
"Based on this," Ogundele muttered, tapping the paper with a calloused finger, "this wheel cannot function under these conditions."
His gaze shifted toward the intake channel.
Where there should have been a steady, controlled flow of water, there was instead a sluggish accumulation of mountain sediment—a thick, grey sludge that choked the movement before it could even begin.
The current was uneven. Interrupted.
Unreliable.
He exhaled slowly and turned back to the documents.
They were translations of metallurgical treatises from the University of Göttingen—dense, methodical, and precise. Francisco had marked several passages, but one in particular had been underlined repeatedly:
"...without a constant blast, the oxygen will not properly penetrate the furnace charge; the excess carbon will remain in the iron, rendering it brittle—like glass."
Ogundele read it once more, his expression tightening.
Without a stable air supply, the entire operation would fail.
The steel would be useless.
He looked again at the stalled water wheel.
Then back at the furnace.
The connection was immediate.
"It seems..." he said quietly, almost to himself, "that we will require those steam machines Francisco speaks of so often."
He paused, thinking.
"I recall he secured supplies from the British."
His eyes sharpened.
"If he was thorough—as he usually is—then perhaps..."
A faint, restrained spark of anticipation appeared in his expression.
"...perhaps the solution has already arrived."
Ogundele straightened, his mind already shifting from problem to action.
Francisco was not a man who overlooked fundamentals.
If steam power was necessary, then there was a strong chance it had already been accounted for.
And if that was the case—
Then the limitation was no longer theory.
It was simply a matter of finding the machine... and making it work in a land that resisted every certainty brought from Europe.







