©NovelBuddy
The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 112 - 111: The Shape of Cargo
The Silver River Hub stirred with morning activity.
Merchants shouted orders. Wagons creaked under loads. Workers hurried between warehouses and loading docks.
But something was wrong.
Arthur paused at the edge of the transfer yard and watched.
A grain merchant struggled to lift loose sacks onto a wagon bed. The sacks bulged unevenly. They wouldn’t stack properly. Three sacks took up space meant for five.
Next to him, timber bundles jutted past the wagon rails. Ropes barely held them in place. The load shifted every time the driver adjusted the harness.
Further down, iron ingots lay scattered across a wagon floor like dropped bricks. No order. No pattern. Just random metal chunks taking up random space.
Arthur said nothing. He watched.
---
Zack appeared beside him, holding a loading manifest.
"Forty wagons today," Zack reported. "Should be sixty by capacity. But cargo’s too slow."
Arthur nodded toward the yard.
"Look at the space."
Zack followed his gaze.
A wool merchant had stacked bales unevenly. Half his wagon bed sat empty because the bales wouldn’t fit side by side. The remaining wool sat on the dock, waiting for a second trip.
"That’s stupid," Zack muttered.
"That’s current logistics," Arthur replied calmly.
---
They walked through the transfer zone.
Everywhere, the same problem repeated.
A wagon carrying grain sacks had to stop twice—once to rearrange falling sacks, once because a wheel strained under uneven weight distribution.
A timber wagon took forty minutes to load because workers had to tie each bundle separately.
A metal trader abandoned his position entirely. His irregular iron bars couldn’t fit with anyone else’s cargo. He needed his own wagon, his own trip, his own time.
Arthur stopped near a half-loaded cart.
He lifted one corner of a grain sack. Felt its shifting weight. Watched it sag against the sack beside it.
"Cargo has no shape," he said quietly.
Zack frowned. "What?"
"Cargo has no shape. So transport wastes space."
---
Arthur returned to the command pavilion.
He pulled out a fresh sheet of paper and began drawing.
Vivian watched from her seat. "Problem at the docks?"
"Cargo problem."
She raised an eyebrow. "Cargo moves fine."
"Cargo moves slowly." Arthur continued drawing. "Wagons leave half empty because goods don’t stack. Loading takes too long because every piece is different."
Vivian stood and walked to his table.
Arthur showed her the sketch.
A simple wooden crate. Straight edges. Flat top. Reinforced corners.
"Same size," he explained. "Every time."
---
He calculated quickly on the paper’s edge.
"Eight crates fit a standard wagon exactly. Stack two high in the warehouse. Four workers can carry one. No wasted space."
Vivian studied the design.
"Merchants pack their own goods."
"They will pack into these first."
"Change is difficult," she said carefully.
Arthur looked up. "Inefficiency is difficult too."
---
That afternoon, Arthur summoned the master carpenter.
The man examined the drawing with skeptical eyes.
"You want crates? We have crates."
"Not like these," Arthur said. "Same length. Same width. Same height. Every board is cut to the same measurement."
The carpenter scratched his beard.
"Wood warps. Measurements shift."
"Then measure again. And again." Arthur’s voice stayed flat. "Make one. Show me tomorrow."
The carpenter nodded slowly and left.
---
Morning came.
Arthur stood in the carpentry yard with Zack and the master carpenter.
Four identical crates sat in a row.
Arthur checked each one. Ran his hand along the edges. Measured the corners.
"Good," he said.
Then he gestured to the testing area.
Four workers lifted the first crate easily. Carried it twenty paces. Set it down.
Arthur pointed to a wagon bed.
"Load them."
---
The workers stacked the first crate near the front. Then the second beside it. The third is on top of the first. The fourth is on top of the second.
Perfect fit.
No gaps. No shifting. No wasted inches.
Zack’s eyes widened.
"That’s... that’s clean."
Arthur gestured to the second wagon nearby.
"Same result. Every wagon, every time."
The master carpenter stared at his own work. "Eight crates fill it exactly?"
"Eight crates fill it exactly."
---
News spread through the hub quickly.
By afternoon, merchants gathered near the carpentry yard, watching the demonstration.
Arthur let them observe. Let them calculate.
A grain merchant stepped forward first.
"How much?"
"Price of lumber. Nothing more."
The merchant frowned. "And my sacks? They go inside?"
"Inside. Stacked. Sealed."
Another merchant pushed forward. "What about wool? Bales are bigger."
Arthur shook his head. "Bales become crates. Same size. Same shape. Same stack."
"Impossible," the wool merchant scoffed. "You can’t fit a season’s wool in those little boxes."
"You can fit forty pounds per crate. Stacked sixteen high in storage. Count your bales. Do the math."
The wool merchant fell silent.
---
Three days later, the first freight yard took shape.
Arthur had marked the zone near the hub’s main entrance. Five open yards, each with a purpose.
Grain yard: Sacks emptied into standard crates, weighed, sealed, stacked.
Timber yard: Long boards bundled into crate-friendly lengths, ends squared, ropes replaced with nails.
Metal yard: Iron bars counted, arranged, and locked into crates with reinforced bottoms.
Textile yard: Wool and cloth folded precisely, compressed slightly, packed tight.
Dry goods yard: Everything else—spices, tools, pottery—sorted and crated by size.
Zack stood at the grain yard entrance, watching the first wave of merchants comply.
"Some still complain," he reported.
"Let them complain. Watch them switch."
---
By week’s end, the difference was visible.
Wagons arrived at the transfer docks already loaded with crates. Workers lifted them off in minutes. Forked tools slid underneath. Crates moved from the wagon to the warehouse without repacking.
One wagon that once took an hour now takes twelve minutes.
Another that required three trips is now made in one.
A timber merchant who resisted on day two appeared on day five with a wagon full of standardised bundles.
He said nothing. Just paid his fee and moved through.
Arthur watched from the pavilion.
"Progress looks like silence," Julian remarked beside him.
Arthur nodded.
---
The freight yard expanded.
Arthur ordered wooden rails laid between sorting zones. Workers pushed crate-laden carts along the rails instead of carrying every load. Movement sped up again.
He designed simple lifting tools—iron hooks on poles—that let two men lift what four once carried.
He marked stacking heights on warehouse walls. Painted numbers at five feet, ten feet, and fifteen feet. Workers loaded to the line, never guessing, never wasting vertical space.
Vivian walked through the yards one evening.
She stopped near the textile zone. Watched crate after crate move smoothly from wagon to warehouse.
"You’re building a machine," she said quietly.
Arthur stood beside her. "The hub is the machine. These are just parts."
"No." She turned to face him. "The bridge solved geography. The road solved the distance. The warehouses created markets."
She gestured at the organised yard.
"These crates solve the network itself. Goods can move from here to the capital without ever being touched. Same crate. Same stack. Same system."
Arthur considered this.
"Cargo should move once," he said finally. "Not ten times."
---
But some merchants still struggled.
A spice trader arrived with fifty small sacks—each a different size, each tied differently. His workers tried to fit them into crates. The sacks bulged. The lids wouldn’t close.
Arthur approached.
"Empty the sacks. Combine the spice."
The trader blinked. "But each sack is... a different spice."
"Then separate crates. Label them."
The trader hesitated. His workers waited.
Arthur pointed to the paint station nearby. "Write on the wood. Everyone reads wood now."
Twenty minutes later, three crates sat on the trader’s wagon. Each labelled in clear paint: Pepper. Cinnamon. Salt.
The trader stared at them.
Then he laughed softly and shook his head.
---
Julian appeared at Arthur’s side that evening.
They watched the final wagons roll through the yards before nightfall.
"Remember the old loading docks?" Julian asked.
"Chaos."
"Now look." Julian gestured across the organised space. "When everything has a place..."
Arthur finished quietly. "...movement becomes easy."
Julian smiled slightly. "You’re teaching them to think in boxes."
"I’m teaching them to think in efficiency."
"Is there a difference?"
Arthur didn’t answer.
---
Two weeks after the first crate was built, Arthur walked the freight yard at dawn.
Rows of identical crates stretched across the sorting zones. Workers moved between them with purpose. Wagons lined up in perfect formation. Loading times recorded on wooden boards.
Zack appeared with the morning reports.
"Grain movement up forty per cent. Timber up thirty. Textiles up fifty-five."
Arthur took the board and scanned it.
"Complaints?"
"Some. Mostly old merchants who don’t like change."
"Give them time."
Zack grinned. "They’ll change when their competitors move twice the goods."
Arthur handed back the board.
"Exactly."
---
Vivian found him at the command pavilion that afternoon.
She carried a small wooden box—a miniature version of the standard crate, perfectly crafted.
"A gift," she said, setting it on his table. "From the master carpenter. He said you’d appreciate it."
Arthur picked it up. Examined the corners. The lid fit flush. The sides were straight.
"It’s good work."
"It’s more than work," Vivian said. "Do you know what the merchants are calling these now?"
Arthur shook his head.
"Pendelton Crates." She smiled slightly. "You’ve named a box."
Arthur set the miniature down.
"Boxes don’t need names."
"They do when they change everything." Vivian sat across from him. "The road brought people here. The bridge connected us. The warehouses made trade possible."
She tapped the small crate.
"This makes trade predictable. That’s worth more than gold."
---
Evening settled over the Silver River Hub.
Arthur stood alone near the freight yard entrance.
Behind him, hundreds of identical crates sat stacked in perfect rows. Before him, wagons rolled steadily through the organised gates. Workers moved with quiet efficiency. Loading docks hummed with smooth activity.
A grain wagon passed. Eight crates, perfectly stacked. The driver didn’t even slow down.
Arthur watched until it disappeared into the corridor.
Goods had always travelled the kingdom.
But for the first time—
They all travelled the same way.
End of Chapter 111







