©Novel Buddy
The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 81 - 80: Back To The Road
Time Remaining: [N/A]
(Status: Post-Crisis Operations. Routine Maintenance.)
Location: District 7 Transport Yard - The Iron Empire.
The Iron Horse looked like it had been chewed on by a rock crusher and then spit out.
It sat in the corner of the Imperial maintenance yard, surrounded by pristine, uniform steam-haulers and black lacquered staff cars. By comparison, Arthur’s vehicle was a scarred beast. The mudguards were dented from the rocky descent into the Core. The paint was scorched from the heat of the lower shafts. The front axle listed slightly to the left, a souvenir from a pothole in District 9.
Arthur stood in front of it, wiping his hands on a rag.
He wasn’t despairing. He was assessing.
"It holds together," an Imperial mechanic said, standing a safe distance away. He was a young man in a grease-stained grey uniform, looking at the vehicle with a mixture of horror and professional curiosity. "But the suspension geometry is... unconventional."
"It’s improvised," Arthur corrected, kicking the front tire. Thud. "And it’s tired."
Arthur walked around the side. He opened the engine cowling.
Inside, the mana-combustion array was still warm. The copper piping he had scavenged weeks ago was green with oxidation. The leather seals were cracked.
But the heart—the core crystal housing—was intact.
"The Empire builds for longevity," Arthur muttered to himself, running a hand over a snapped bolt. "I built this for a sprint. Now I need it to run a marathon."
He turned to the mechanic.
"I have a requisition order signed by Overseer Silas. I need four heavy-duty leaf springs from a Class-4 Hauler, a spool of high-temp gasket rubber, and access to the pneumatic lift."
The mechanic blinked. "You want to put Class-4 springs on... that?"
"I want to drive back to Osgard without my spine disintegrating," Arthur said. "Open the bay."
For the first time in months, Arthur wasn’t working to save a city. He was just working on a truck.
It was the most relaxing afternoon of his life.
The Imperial workshop was a paradise of organization. The tools were sorted by size and weight. The pneumatic lift hissed smoothly, raising the Iron Horse into the air with a gentle shudder. The air smelled of clean oil and milled steel, not the desperate, sulfurous stench of the Core.
Vivian sat on a crate nearby, sharpening her dagger. She watched Arthur work.
He wasn’t frantic. He didn’t have that tight, hunted look in his eyes. He was whistling. A tuneless, low whistle that matched the rhythm of his wrench.
"You’re enjoying this," Vivian noted.
"I have the right parts," Arthur said from under the chassis. "Do you know how rare that is? Usually, I’m trying to fit a square peg into a round hole with a hammer. Here..."
He slid a heavy steel bolt into the new suspension arm. It fit perfectly. Click.
"Here, the peg is actually round."
He tightened the nut.
"The roads between here and Osgard are terrible," Arthur explained, his voice echoing from under the truck. "Cobblestones. Mud ruts. The original suspension was too stiff. It bounced over the bumps. These Imperial springs are progressive. They soak up the small hits and stiffen up for the big ones."
"So a smoother ride?"
"A faster ride," Arthur corrected, sliding out on the creeper. He wiped a smudge of grease from his cheek. "Smooth is fast. If the wheels spend more time on the ground and less time in the air, we get better traction. We cut the travel time by three hours."
He stood up and walked to the engine bay.
He stripped out the old, corroded copper lines. He replaced them with the new, industrial-grade tubing he had "negotiated" from Kael.
He re-routed the mana flow. Instead of a direct injection, he added a small expansion chamber—a simple steel box welded to the intake.
"What’s that box?" Vivian asked, pointing with her knife.
"Buffer," Arthur said. "The mana from the crystals isn’t always steady. Sometimes it surges. This box catches the surge and feeds it into the engine evenly. No more sputtering."
He closed the hood. Clang.
It sounded solid. Heavy.
"It’s not pretty," Arthur admitted, patting the scorched metal. "But it’s enough to get back on the road."
An hour later, they pulled up to the Imperial Medical Ward in District 3.
It was a grim, brick building, but clean.
Arthur left the engine idling. It purred—a low, throaty rumble, distinct from the hiss of steam engines.
He walked into the ward.
Julian was sitting on the edge of his bed, fully dressed. He was wearing his Osgardian nobility clothes, which had been washed and pressed by the hospital staff. He looked pale, and his arm was in a sling, but his eyes were bright.
He was currently lecturing a nurse about the inefficiency of their bandage-wrapping technique.
"You’re supposed to cross-wrap for tension," Julian was saying. "If you just spiral it, it slips."
"Julian," Arthur said from the doorway.
Julian looked up. He grinned.
"Ah. The man of the hour. I hear you stopped an earthquake."
"I slowed it down," Arthur said, walking over. "How’s the shoulder?"
"Stiff," Julian said, hopping off the bed. He winced slightly but hid it well. "They gave me some Imperial painkillers. Strong stuff. I think I could punch a wall and not feel it until Tuesday."
He looked at Arthur.
"So, are we prisoners? Heroes? Or just tourists?"
"We’re contractors," Arthur said, picking up Julian’s bag. "Let’s go. The meter is running."
They walked out to the truck.
Julian stopped when he saw the Iron Horse.
"You changed the suspension," Julian noted instantly. "It sits higher."
"Imperial leaf springs," Arthur said, opening the door. "And I re-tuned the intake."
Julian climbed into the passenger seat, wincing as he settled his arm.
"You know," Julian said as Arthur got behind the wheel. "I spent the last week staring at a ceiling, wondering if the roof was going to collapse on me. Every time the floor shook, I thought: ’Arthur is probably doing something incredibly dangerous right now.’"
"It wasn’t that dangerous," Arthur lied, putting the truck in gear.
"Uh-huh," Julian looked at the new, heavy-duty bolts on the dashboard. "And did we get anything for our trouble? Or just a pat on the head from the Director?"
Arthur tapped his pocket, where the signed contract sat.
"We got the hardware store, Julian. We got the steel."
Julian smiled. It was the smile of a conspirator.
"Good. Because I have some ideas for a new loom design, but I couldn’t build it with Osgard iron. It’s too brittle."
"We can build it now," Arthur said.
...
Driving out of Ferro was different than driving in.
When they had arrived, they were desperate, hunted, and running on fumes. The city had felt like a fortress designed to crush them.
Now, as they drove down the main thoroughfare toward the Western Gate, the city just felt... busy.
The smog was lighter. The noise was lower—the frantic 50-Hertz scream was gone, replaced by the deep, 42-Hertz thrum of a stabilized grid.
Imperial soldiers at the checkpoints didn’t aim their rifles. They saw the Consultant’s flag on the fender and waved them through.
Arthur didn’t wave back. He just drove.
"Look at the road," Arthur said, pointing through the windshield.
The road was paved with perfectly fitted basalt blocks. It was smooth, flat, and drained well.
"Standardized width," Arthur noted. "Twelve feet. Enough for two carriages to pass. Curbs to prevent erosion."
"It’s just a road, Arthur," Vivian said from the back seat, cleaning her nails.
"It’s a network," Arthur corrected. "Good roads mean fast trade. Fast trade means fresh food, cheaper materials, and better communication. The Empire isn’t strong because of the Citadel. It’s strong because of the pavement."
He gripped the steering wheel. The new suspension soaked up a transition seam without a jolt.
"Osgard is choked by mud," Arthur murmured. "We spend half our energy just trying to move things from A to B. If we want to grow, we don’t need more magic towers. We need gravel."
Julian pulled a small notebook from his pocket with his good hand.
"Roads," Julian muttered, writing it down. "Add it to the list."
They passed the final checkpoint. The heavy iron gates of the Empire swung open.
Ahead lay the pass—the winding, treacherous mountain road that led back to the green valleys of Osgard.
Arthur shifted gears. The engine roared, the expansion box catching the mana surge and turning it into torque. The truck surged forward, climbing the incline with a power it hadn’t possessed before.
Behind them, the smoke of the Iron Empire faded into a grey smudge against the sky.
Arthur checked the rearview mirror.
He wasn’t looking at what he was leaving. He was checking the load in the bed.
Crates of steel. Spools of wire. Tools.
Seeds.
"You’re not going to miss it?" Julian asked, watching the factories disappear. "The precision? The order?"
"I’m taking the best parts with me," Arthur said.
.....
Four hours later, the landscape changed.
The grey rock gave way to green grass. The air grew sweeter, smelling of pine and loam instead of coal.
They crested the final ridge.
Below them lay Osgard.
It was beautiful. The white stone towers of the nobility rose from the mist. The river glittered in the afternoon sun.
But Arthur didn’t look at the towers.
He looked at the sprawl.
The chaotic, winding streets. The wooden shacks leaning against each other. The mud tracks that served as roads, currently churned into a brown soup by recent rains.
He saw a cart stuck in a rut, the driver shouting at an ox.
He saw a water wheel turning sluggishly in the river, inefficient and moss-covered.
"It looks... small," Vivian said softly.
"It looks messy," Julian added.
Arthur stopped the truck at the overlook. He turned off the engine.
The silence of the valley was different from the silence of the Core. It was organic. Birds singing. Wind in the trees.
But to Arthur’s eyes, it was also silent in a bad way. It was the silence of stagnation.
"It’s not messy," Arthur said, leaning on the steering wheel. "It’s a rough draft."
He looked at the stuck cart.
In his mind, he didn’t see a problem. He saw a project.
Grade the road. Dig drainage ditches. Lay a gravel base. Cap it with crushed stone.
He looked at the water wheel.
Re-balance the paddles. Install a reduction gear. Connect it to a driveshaft. Power a sawmill.
He looked at the city walls.
Reinforce the mortar. Install watchtowers with optical relays. Standardize the guard rotation.
The Iron Empire had been a patient on an operating table—critical, dangerous, and demanding.
Osgard was a canvas. And for the first time, Arthur had the paint.
"We have a lot of work to do," Arthur said.
"Where do we start?" Vivian asked. "The Palace? The Guilds?"
Arthur shook his head. He started the engine.
"We start with the garage," Arthur said. "We unload the steel. We set up the shop. And then..."
He put the truck in gear and began the descent into the valley.
"...then we pave the driveway."
The Iron Horse rolled down the hill, its suspension absorbing the bumps, its engine humming a new, efficient tune. It was an alien machine in a magical land, but it didn’t look out of place anymore.
It looked like the future coming home.
End of Chapter 80
[System Note: Transition to Season 3 Complete. Narrative focus shifted from "Stabilization" to "Construction".]







