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The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 51 - 50: The Arithmetic of Godhood (Season 1 End)
The wind on the Pinnacle didn’t just blow; it screamed. It tore at the loose flaps of their sanitation overalls and stung their faces with ozone and static.
In the center of the roofless observatory, Arch-Mage Valerius van Thorne floated ten feet above the stone floor. He was surrounded by a vortex of blinding white light—liquid mana being ripped violently from the atmosphere.
"Ten minutes!" Arthur shouted over the gale, checking the red numbers flashing on his iScroll. "The readings spiked an hour ago! You accelerated the drain!"
Valerius looked down. His eyes were no longer human; they were glowing orbs of pure power.
"Observation correct," Valerius’s voice boomed, echoing from the sky itself. "I calculated a safe extraction over twenty-five days. But then someone flushed the pipes."
He glared at Julian.
"You ruined the efficiency, boy. You unclogged the Undercity and destabilized the flow. I had to initiate the Rapid Harvest Protocol. Instead of sipping the Ley Lines... I am drinking them dry."
"You’re killing the planet!" Vivian screamed, planting her feet against the wind. "If you drain the grid this fast, the core will collapse!"
"The planet is already dead!" Valerius roared. "The meltdown is inevitable! I am simply saving the energy before it dissipates! I am building an Ark!"
He pointed to the glowing white shield surrounding the tower.
"Inside this field, the worthy will survive. Outside? Chaos. But that is the price of evolution."
"That’s not evolution," Julian stepped forward, the heavy Sun-Lance Rifle leveled at his father’s chest. "That’s theft."
Valerius looked at the rifle in Julian’s hands and sneered.
"Put down the toy, Julian. Do you really think a metal tube can challenge a god?"
"It’s not a toy," Julian said, his voice steady. "It’s a focusing array."
"It is a crutch!" Valerius spat. "A true mage shapes reality with his will. You? You pour your noble blood into a machine because you lack the discipline to cast. You have reduced yourself to a battery. You are no better than a Squib."
Julian didn’t flinch. He didn’t look ashamed.
"I used to spend ten seconds chanting a Fireball spell, Father," Julian shouted. "I used to recite poetry while the enemy charged me. This rifle fires in 0.1 seconds."
Julian clicked the safety off.
"You call it lazy. I call it optimization."
He pulled the trigger.
ZAP.
The red beam cut through the storm. It hit Valerius’s personal shield with the force of a cannonball.
HISSS.
The shield rippled, turning orange where the laser hit, but it held.
"Light?" Valerius laughed, sweeping his hand through the air. "I control the spectrum! Gravity Crush!"
A massive, invisible hand slammed into the group.
Arthur, Vivian, and Zack were flattened instantly. They hit the stone floor hard, pinned by ten times their own body weight. Arthur felt his ribs creak. He tried to lift his head, but it felt like a boulder was sitting on his neck.
Only Julian remained standing.
His knees buckled, shaking violently, but he didn’t fall. The metal struts of the Exo-Brace built into his sanitation suit locked with a mechanical CLUNK, holding him upright against the crushing force.
"You stand?" Valerius looked genuinely surprised. "Stubborn."
"Arthur!" Julian grunted, sweat pouring down his face as he fought to keep the rifle aimed. "Plan B!"
Arthur, cheek pressed against the cold stone, couldn’t reach his belt.
"Zack!" Arthur wheezed. "The... Reflector!"
Zack, flattened next to him, managed to wiggle his hand into his pocket. He pulled out the simple silver mirror they had used in the museum.
"Now!"
Zack flicked his wrist, throwing the mirror into the air above them.
Valerius saw the movement. He fired a bolt of lightning at Julian to finish him.
The bolt hit the mirror midair.
[Law of Reflection: Angle of Incidence = Angle of Reflection.]
The lightning bounced. It didn’t hit Valerius. It hit the massive iron Weather Vane mounted on the tower spire directly behind him.
CLANG.
The electrified vane bent. It touched the spinning vortex of the Siphon.
"Grounding!" Arthur yelled into the floor.
The lightning bolt acted as a bridge. For a split second, the Arch-Mage’s personal mana was connected to the chaotic, raw storm of the Siphon.
[Feedback Loop Detected.]
Valerius convulsed. The massive energy he was hoarding backfired, shocking him with the power of a thousand thunderstorms.
The Gravity spell broke.
Valerius dropped out of the air, slamming onto the stone floor. He rolled, his robes smoking, looking furious.
"Enough tricks!" Valerius screamed, scrambling to his feet.
He raised both hands high. The air turned black. A sphere of pure void formed between his palms. It wasn’t elemental magic; it was Destruction Magic. Matter erasure.
"Oblivion Sphere!"
"Arthur," Julian whispered, backing up. "We can’t block that. The shield won’t hold."
"We don’t block it," Arthur said, reaching into his heavy engineer’s coat. He pulled out a small, ugly grey box with a copper antenna. "We mute it."
Arthur pressed the button.
HUMMMMM.
A low, vibrating thrum filled the air. It wasn’t loud, but it made their teeth ache.
[Project: SILENCE.] [Technique: Destructive Wave Interference.]
In magic, every spell has a frequency—a vibration of mana. Arthur’s device was broadcasting the exact inverse frequency of the ambient mana field.
The black sphere in Valerius’s hands flickered. It wobbled like a destabilized spinning top.
"What?" Valerius stared at his hands. "My mana... I can’t hold the shape!"
The spell fizzled out into harmless grey smoke.
"You can’t cast," Arthur said, walking forward with the box. "Because I just turned off the signal."
"Blasphemy!" Valerius shouted. He tried to cast a wind blade. A gentle breeze blew. He tried to conjure fire. A spark died instantly.
"It’s Physics," Arthur stopped five feet away. "You are just a man now, Valerius. An old man in a robe."
Valerius snarled. He pulled a jagged ceremonial dagger from his belt.
"I don’t need magic to kill a traitor!"
He lunged at Arthur.
Arthur didn’t move. He didn’t have to.
Julian stepped in.
He didn’t use a spell. He didn’t use the rifle. He didn’t use the tech.
He used the Right Hook Vivian had taught him in the gym.
CRACK.
Julian’s fist connected with his father’s jaw.
Valerius crumpled. He fell backward, sliding across the wet stone. He lay there, dazed, blood trickling from his lip, staring up at the son he had called a failure.
Julian stood over him, shaking his bruised hand.
"That," Julian said coldly, "was for the camping trip."
The Arch-Mage was down. But the Siphon was still screaming.
The vortex above them was spinning faster, turning a violent, unstable violet. The sky was cracking open.
[Time Remaining: 00 Days, 00 Hours, 01 Minute.]
"We have to shut it down!" Vivian yelled, shielding her eyes from the glare.
"The console!" Arthur ran to the pedestal. He smashed the glass cover. "It’s bio-locked! Only Valerius’s fingerprint can stop it!"
"Cut his finger off!" Vivian suggested, drawing her dagger.
"No time!" Arthur yelled. "If we stop the flow abruptly, the pressure backfires. It wipes the Capital off the map. We need to vent it!"
"Vent it where?" Julian shouted. "The ground is full! The air is saturated!"
Arthur looked up. He saw the dark night sky through the eye of the storm.
"Space," Arthur said.
"What?"
"We turn the Siphon into a cannon," Arthur grabbed the massive crystal Focusing Lens mounted on the platform. "We don’t stop the beam. We aim it up."
"Arthur," Julian warned. "Aiming a terawatt mana-laser at the moon seems... unwise."
"Better the moon than us!"
"Everyone! Grab the mount!"
They grabbed the heavy brass frame of the lens.
"Heave!"
They pushed. The heavy crystal tilted upward, aligning with the vertical beam of the Siphon.
[Time Remaining: 00:00:00]
The Siphon fired.
Instead of exploding outward into the city, the massive column of white light was caught by the lens. It was focused into a tight beam that shot straight up.
It pierced the clouds. It pierced the atmosphere. It traveled 238,000 miles in a second.
For a moment, the world turned blindingly white.
Then... silence.
The storm vanished. The clouds parted.
Arthur collapsed onto the floor, gasping for air. The pressure in his head cleared instantly.
He looked up.
The sky was clear. And hanging in the night sky, the moon had a new, glowing blue crater on its surface.
"Oops," Arthur whispered. "Sorry, Moon."
...
Sirens wailed in the city below. The Royal Guard was storming the stairwell.
Valerius lay unconscious, bound in Mana-Dampening Cuffs Arthur had slapped on him.
Julian walked to the edge of the tower. He looked down at Neo Osgard. The lights were flickering back on. The city was safe.
"We did it," Julian said, sounding surprised. "We actually fixed it."
"We patched it," Arthur corrected, joining him. He pulled out his iScroll. "We vented the pressure. But the system is still old. And look."
He pointed to the Global Map.
Far to the East, red warning lights were blinking.
[Alert: Sector 9 (The Iron Empire) - Grid Destabilized.] [Alert: Sector 12 (Elven Forests) - Biological Contamination.]
"The blockage here caused damage everywhere else," Arthur said grimly. "The Capital is safe. But the rest of the world just got a lot more dangerous."
Julian looked at the map. Then he looked at Arthur.
"So," Julian smiled—a tired, dirty, but genuine smile. "Where do we go next?"
Arthur looked at the horizon.
"We need better steel," Arthur said. "And I hear the Iron Empire has a steam engine problem."
Arthur turned to his team—Vivian cleaning her sword, Zack hugging his iScroll, and Julian standing tall.
"Pack your bags," Arthur announced. "The Tutorial is over. Now... the real game begins."
End of Chapter 50







