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The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 64 - 63: The Border That Does Not Bend
Time Remaining: 35 Days, 22 Hours. (Status: 200 Miles North-West of Sector 5. Crossing the Threshold.) Location: The Iron Gate (Outer Perimeter of Ferro).
The transition from the Wastes to the Empire wasn’t a gradient. It was an amputation.
For the last ten hours, the Iron Horse had been fighting the world. It had clawed its way out of the salt flats, crunched over petrified jagged rock, and slid through dunes of loose grey ash. The suspension was groaning under the abuse, the axles screaming with every impact, and the cabin rattled like a tin can in a hurricane.
Then, Thump.
The noise stopped. The violent vibration in the chassis vanished instantly. The tires went from crunching gravel to a deep, smooth, hypnotic hum.
Arthur leaned forward, wiping a layer of grey dust from the interior of the windshield. He squinted against the glare of the setting sun, which was currently being strangled by a wall of smog. Beneath them, the chaotic, broken ground of the Ash Wastes had been replaced by Macadam. It wasn’t the cracked, pot-holed cobblestones of the Trade Kingdoms. This was military-grade road surfacing—crushed stone bound with hot tar and rolled flat by massive machines. It was black, fresh, and perfectly leveled.
"It’s... smooth," Zack whispered, his hands loosening their death grip on the steering wheel. "I can’t feel the road. It feels like we’re floating."
"It’s too smooth," Vivian murmured, staring out the passenger window. She watched the petrified trees flash by. "Nature isn’t this straight. Look at the drainage ditches. They are perfect concrete trenches. Not a single weed."
"Nature didn’t build this," Arthur said, his voice quiet. He reached for the dashboard and adjusted the fuel mixture. The high-grade Coke they had scavenged was burning hot and clean, purring in the firebox. "We just hit the Imperial Highway. We are technically inside Sector 9."
Ahead of them, the horizon was swallowed by a wall of yellow-grey smog. It wasn’t a natural storm system. It was the exhaust breath of a million smokestacks, a heavy blanket of sulfur and lignite that trapped the heat against the ground. And rising out of that fog, dwarfing the mountains behind it, was the Iron Wall.
It was a monstrosity of engineering. Riveted steel plating, rusted to the color of dried blood, standing ten stories tall. It stretched from the eastern cliffs to the western canyon, blocking the entire valley. There was no way around it. It was a dam, holding back the chaos of the world. 𝘧𝑟𝑒𝑒𝘸𝘦𝘣𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝓁.𝘤𝘰𝓂
Behind it, the city of Ferro groaned. It sounded like a beast in pain. The rhythmic thud-thud-thud of massive steam hammers echoed through the bedrock, vibrating the water in their canteens. It was a low-frequency assault that you didn’t hear with your ears—you felt it in your teeth.
"Stop the car," Julian wheezed from the back seat.
Zack slammed the brakes. The Iron Horse pitched forward, tires screeching on the blacktop. "What? Are you gonna throw up? We just got the upholstery clean!"
Julian wasn’t sick. He was terrified. The Mage, usually composed and elegant in his robes, was curled into a fetal ball. His hands were clamped over his ears, his eyes squeezed shut, veins bulging in his neck. "The noise," Julian gasped, his voice thin and strained. "Make it stop. It’s... it’s crushing me."
"I don’t hear anything," Zack said, rolling down the window. "Just the wind and the steam vents."
"Not with your ears," Arthur unbuckled his seatbelt and leaned over the dashboard. He tapped the brass glass of the Mana-Meter. "With your nerves."
The needle on the gauge, which usually drifted lazily depending on the local magic density, was acting strange. It wasn’t pointing at ’High’ or ’Low’. It was vibrating violently in the exact center of the dial. It looked like it was trapped in a vice.
"It’s a Suppression Field," Arthur realized, his eyes narrowing as he scanned the top of the distant wall. He saw them—massive copper coils, humming with blue sparks. "They have magnetic induction coils running through the bedrock. They aren’t just blocking magic. They are regulating it."
"Regulating?" Vivian asked, handing Julian a canteen of water.
"Wild mana creates random frequencies," Arthur explained, watching the needle buzz. "It flows like water. This field forces every particle of ambient mana to vibrate at a specific, artificial frequency. 50 Hertz. It turns the atmosphere into a rigid grid."
"It feels like... like drowning in quicksand," Julian choked out, trying to summon a small light spell on his finger. A spark fizzled, turned grey, and died instantly. "I can’t reach the Aether. It’s too heavy. The air fights me."
"That’s the point," Arthur shifted the transmission back into gear. "In Osgard, magic is an art form. Here? It’s just another fuel source to be burned in a furnace. And they don’t like fuel they can’t control."
...
They drove forward. They had no choice. The highway was a funnel, leading them inevitably toward the maw of the beast.
The road ended at Gate 9. It was a fortress built to withstand the end of the world. The gate itself wasn’t wood; it was a slab of black iron bars, each as thick as a tree trunk, suspended on hydraulic chains that dripped grease onto the pavement. Floodlights—harsh, sizzling Carbon-Arc Lamps—snapped on, cutting through the smog and blinding them with brilliant white fire.
"KILL THE ENGINE."
The voice came from a massive Acoustic Trumpet bolted to the wall—a ten-foot wide brass horn used to amplify a human voice mechanically. The sound was tinny, hollow, and incredibly loud, echoing like a giant shouting into a metal barrel.
"VENT STEAM. EXIT THE VEHICLE. HANDS VISIBLE."
Zack looked at Arthur, sweat beading on his forehead. "Do we have a plan B? Can we reverse?"
"Reverse into what?" Arthur pointed to the ramparts. "Look up."
Mounted on the wall were not elegant ballistas or magical wards. They were Steam-Cannons. Massive, brass-barreled howitzers connected to high-pressure reservoirs on the wall. They swiveled with the groan of heavy, un-oiled gears, tracking the Iron Horse. "Those are 300mm Siege Guns," Arthur noted calmly. "They fire explosive cast-iron shells the size of a beer keg. They don’t need to be accurate. They just need to hit the close space."
"Plan C it is," Zack muttered, killing the ignition. Hiss. The Iron Horse settled onto its suspension as the steam pressure vented. The silence that followed was heavy, broken only by the distant industrial thudding of the city.
A side door in the massive wall opened with a scream of heavy hinges. A squad of soldiers marched out. They didn’t look like the Royal Guard of Osgard. They looked like deep-sea divers who had drowned and kept walking.
They wore heavy, oil-stained leather trench coats that fell to their ankles. Their heads were encased in brass helmets, and their faces were completely hidden behind gas masks with round, thick green glass lenses. Their weapons were crude, brutal, and effective: Pile-Bunkers (pneumatic spikes mounted on spear-shafts) and heavy bolt-action rifles with bayonets that looked more like pry-bars.
They marched in perfect unison—Clomp. Clomp. Clomp.—their heavy boots striking the asphalt in a rhythm that matched the city’s mechanical heartbeat. There was no individuality. No variation in stride. They were cogs.
A soldier with gold piping on his coat—the Officer—broke formation. He walked up to the driver’s side window. He didn’t speak immediately. He held up a Phosphor-Lantern, shining the chemical green light into the cab to inspect them like livestock. He tapped the glass with the barrel of his heavy sidearm. Clink. Clink.
Arthur rolled down the window. The smell hit him instantly. It was a physical blow—a mixture of sulfur, burning coal dust, unwashed bodies, and the metallic tang of ozone. "Name," the Officer demanded. His voice was muffled by the mask, sounding hollow and flat.
"Arthur."
The Officer didn’t write it down. He looked at the train. He walked slowly around the vehicle, running a gloved hand over the rivets of the armor. He stopped at the exhaust pipe, sniffing the air. "No soot," the Officer muttered. "Clean burn." He pulled a metal clipboard from his coat.
"Unregistered Vehicle," the Officer recited, checking boxes with a grease pencil. "Non-standard boiler configuration. Unauthorized usage of Military-Grade Coke. Suspicion of smuggling."
He peered into the back window, staring at Julian, who was still shivering and clutching his staff. "And you are transporting a rogue Mage in a Restricted Zone without a suppression collar."
The Officer snapped his gloved fingers. Clack-Clack. Twelve rifles leveled at the windshield. The pile-bunkers hissed as the air tanks pressurized.
"Seize the vehicle," the Officer ordered, his voice devoid of emotion. "Send the chassis to the Central Foundry for reverse-engineering. Process the crew as Foreign Technical Assets."
"Assets?" Vivian bristled. She kicked her door open, the heavy metal slamming against the stop. Her hand drifted to the hammer on her back. "I am not an asset. I am a warrior. Touch this truck and I’ll turn your helmet into a bowl."
"Vivian," Arthur said sharply. "Stand down."
"He called us spare parts, Arthur!"
"We are spare parts to them," Arthur said calmly. "Look at them. They don’t see people. They see labor."
"Correct," the Officer said coldly. "The Empire does not waste. We have quotas to fill. Labor Battalion 4 needs coal-shovelers. The Mage will be sent to the Battery Farms for extraction."
Arthur opened his door. He stepped out onto the asphalt. He smoothed his dusty coat. He adjusted his goggles. He didn’t raise his hands. He didn’t look at the rifles pointed at his chest. He looked up. High above the gate, a row of Carbon-Arc streetlights buzzed. They were flickering. A rhythmic pulse. Dim. Bright. Dim. Bright.
"You’re running hot," Arthur said.
The Officer paused. The green lenses of his gas mask tilted slightly. "Excuse me?"
"Your grid," Arthur pointed a grease-stained finger at the massive pylon tower looming over the gate. "The hum is wrong. You’re trying to hold a 50 Hertz frequency to maintain the Suppression Field, but you’re drifting. 48... 52... 48."
Arthur took a step toward the Officer. The soldiers tensed, fingers tightening on triggers. Arthur ignored them. He acted like he owned the pavement.
"That’s why the lights are flickering," Arthur continued, his voice calm, arrogant, and precise. "That’s why that steam valve on the wall is hissing every forty seconds to dump excess pressure. And that’s why you’re arresting strangers for spare parts—because your efficiency ratings are dropping, and you need free labor to make up the difference."
Arthur stopped inches from the Officer’s face mask. He could hear the man’s breathing through the filter—ragged and shallow.
"You aren’t regulating the power anymore, Captain," Arthur said softly. "You’re just trying to keep the pipes from bursting."
The Officer went rigid. This wasn’t a guess. It was a diagnosis. "State operational data is classified," the Officer hissed, his hand hovering over his gun. "Discussion of Grid instability is Treason under Order 77."
"It’s not a secret when the ground is shaking," Arthur countered, leaning in. "Your Central Core is overheating. You’re bleeding excess mana into the groundwater to cool it because your heat-exchangers are calcified. That’s why the Ash Waste is dead. You’re poisoning your own water table to buy time."
The soldiers glanced at each other. The rifles lowered slightly. This stranger wasn’t pleading for his life. He was critiquing their infrastructure. He spoke the language of the machine better than they did.
"Who are you?" the Officer asked. The boredom was gone from his voice, replaced by fear. "Are you a spy?"
Arthur smiled. It wasn’t a hero’s smile. It was the tired, arrogant smile of a Senior Engineer looking at a project manager who had missed a deadline.
"My name is Arthur von Pendelton," Arthur said, his voice carrying over the hum of the machinery. He pointed a thumb back toward the west, toward the distant memory of Osgard. "I am the one who fixed the Capital’s grid while you were busy rusting out here."
He stepped back, crossing his arms. "And I am here to prevent your Empire from collapsing first."
The silence that followed was heavy. The only sound was the hiss-clank of the steam vent on the wall, punctuating Arthur’s sentence exactly as predicted.
The Officer looked at Arthur. He looked at the custom train—which, despite the dust, was running cleaner and quieter than his own gate mechanisms. He looked at the flickering streetlights overhead. He knew. Every man on this wall knew the city was dying. They just weren’t allowed to say it. To report the flaw was to be executed for incompetence. But to ignore it was suicide.
Arthur had just offered him a lifeline.
The Officer lowered his hand from his gun. He pulled a Speaking-Tube from his belt—a flexible hose connected to the guard station network. He blew into it to clear the line.
"Central Control," the Officer spoke into the mouthpiece, his voice shaking slightly. "This is Gate 9. We have a... Situation." He paused, listening to the muffled voice echoing back through the tube. "No. Not a spy. A Consultant. He identified the Core variance without tools."
A long pause. "Yes, sir. He claims he can stabilize the pressure."
The Officer nodded. "Understood, Director."
He coiled the tube back onto his belt. He looked at Arthur. The hostility was gone, replaced by a desperate, weary respect. "Stand down!" the Officer shouted to his men. "Lower weapons!"
The rifles clicked as they were lowered. The soldiers stepped back, reforming their line.
"Open the main gate," the Officer ordered. "Clear the lane! Priority One! Notify the Inner Circle that the external asset has arrived."
GROAN. The massive chains of the inner gate began to move. Rust flaked off in sheets as the iron bars lifted, revealing the path ahead. Through the gap, Arthur could see the city of Ferro. It was a nightmare of smoke, fire, and verticality—a canyon of steel and glass where the sun never truly shone.
"The Director has been informed," the Officer said, stepping aside and giving a mechanic’s nod. "Welcome to hell, Engineer. Try to fix it before it kills us all."
Arthur climbed back into the driver’s seat. He looked at Zack, who was staring at him with his mouth open. "Told you," Arthur said, putting on his goggles. "Plan C."
"You terrified him," Julian whispered, peering out from between his fingers. "With math."
"Math is terrifying when you’re wrong," Arthur said.
The Iron Horse rolled forward, crossing the line that divided the living world from the machine, and disappeared into the smog of the Iron Empire.
End of Chapter 63







