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The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 65 - 64: Terms of Entry
Time Remaining: 35 Days, 18 Hours. (Status: Detained. Processing Center 9. Asset Status: Pending.) Location: The Intake Facility, City of Ferro.
The hospitality of the Iron Empire tasted like lye soap and smelled like wet wool.
Arthur sat on a cold steel bench bolted to a cold steel floor. The room was a windowless cube of riveted iron, lit by a single gas-mantle lamp that hissed softly in the corner, casting a sickly yellow light. The air was recycled, pumped in through a vibrating vent near the ceiling, carrying the distinct, metallic tang of the city outside—a mix of ozone and rust.
They had been separated at the gate. Zack and Vivian were in the holding cell next door. Arthur could hear the faint sound of Vivian pacing--three steps, clank, turn, three steps, clank. Every fourth turn, she kicked the wall with her steel-toed boot, testing the welds. Julian was somewhere else. The Medical Wing. The Suppression Field had hit the Mage hard; he had passed out shortly after they drove through the main gates, his body unable to cope with the forced 50-Hertz synchronization of his internal mana.
Arthur wasn’t pacing. He was sitting perfectly still, counting. Drip. Drip. Drip. A condensation pipe in the corner was leaking black fluid onto the floor. Thud. Thud. Thud. The distant rhythm of a massive steam hammer in the foundry district vibrated through the soles of his boots. It wasn’t a random noise; it was a heartbeat. And it was skipping.
The door opened. It didn’t slide smoothly; it swung inward on heavy, greased hinges with a groan of metal on metal. Two guards stepped in. They wore the standard brass-and-leather armor of the Border Watch, their faces hidden behind gas masks that made them look like insects. Between them walked a man who wasn’t a soldier.
He was thin, balding, and wore a grey woolen suit that had seen better decades. His fingers were stained permanently black with ink and coal dust. He didn’t carry a weapon; he carried a thick manila file folder stuffed with papers.
He sat down across from Arthur at the bolted table. He opened the file. He adjusted his wire-rimmed spectacles. He didn’t look at Arthur. He looked at the paperwork, running a stained finger down a column of numbers.
"Name: Arthur von Pendelton," the man read. His voice was dry, scratching like rust flaking off iron. "Origin: Osgard. Occupation: Unlisted." He looked up. His eyes were grey, tired, and completely devoid of joy. "I am Overseer Silas. I manage the Technical Bureau of Sector 9. Do you know why you are not currently shoveling slag in Labor Camp 4?"
"Because I know why your coffee is vibrating," Arthur said, nodding at the tin mug Silas had placed on the table.
Silas glanced at the mug. The black liquid inside wasn’t still. Tiny ripples were forming on the surface. Concentric circles, pulsing rapidly. "Vibration is a byproduct of industry," Silas said dismissively. "We run heavy machinery."
"Not at this frequency," Arthur countered. He leaned forward, the iron handcuffs clinking against the table. "That’s a 12-Hertz shudder. That’s not a piston firing. That’s a turbine wobbling off-axis. Specifically, the main bearing of your Geothermal Intake Pump is grinding."
Silas froze. He slowly closed the file. "You are the one who spoke to the Gate Captain," Silas said. "The ’Consultant’."
"I’m an engineer," Arthur corrected. "And I’m the only person in this room who knows that your city is about five weeks away from becoming a very large, very flat crater."
....
Silas stared at him. He didn’t laugh. In the Iron Empire, jokes were inefficient. "Explain," Silas said. He pulled a fountain pen from his pocket. "And be precise. If you waste my time, I will have you processed as biomass."
Arthur took a breath. This was it. The pitch. He didn’t use rhetoric or charisma. In Osgard, you wooed the court with poetry. In the Iron Empire, you wooed them with thermodynamics.
"Your energy model is based on Magma-Thermal Extraction," Arthur began, recalling the lore of the First Era. "You drill down to the mantle, pump water in, get superheated steam out, and run the turbines."
"It has powered Ferro for two hundred years," Silas noted.
"And for two hundred years, you’ve been dumping the waste heat back into the bedrock," Arthur said. "You’re using the earth as a heatsink. But rock has a saturation point."
Arthur pointed to the leaking pipe in the corner. "The ground isn’t absorbing the heat anymore, Overseer. It’s reflecting it. The temperature gradient in your boreholes is inverting. You aren’t pulling heat up; the heat is pushing back."
Silas’s pen hovered over the paper. "That is... a theory," Silas said carefully. "Our sensors show stable output."
"Your sensors are calibrated to read steam pressure, not ground stability," Arthur snapped. "Why do you think the Ash Waste is dead? Why are the trees petrified? You’re cooking the roots from below. The groundwater is boiling in the aquifer."
Arthur tapped the metal table with his fingernail. Click. Click. Click. "The ’Hum’ that sickened my friend? That’s not just the Suppression Field. That’s the magnetic scream of a Core that is about to undergo Thermal Runaway. Once the temperature hits critical, the mana in the bedrock will ignite. It won’t be an explosion. It will be a liquefaction event."
Arthur leaned back, staring into the grey eyes of the bureaucrat. "The entire sector will simply sink into a lake of molten glass. I estimate you have 35 days. Maybe 30, if you keep running the Night Shift."
Silas stared at Arthur. The pen touched the paper. A small blot of ink spread, staining the page. Silas looked at the mug of coffee. The ripples were still there. 12 Hertz. Persistent. Warning.
"You speak with a great deal of confidence for a prisoner," Silas whispered. "This data... it mirrors the anomalies we have been tracking in the Deep Shafts. Anomalies we classed as sensor errors."
"They aren’t errors," Arthur said softly. "They are the fire alarm."
Silas stood up. He walked to the wall and pulled a heavy iron lever. Clank-Rattle. A heavy shutter rolled up, revealing a view of the city below.
Ferro was a nightmare of industry. Towers of black iron rose into the smog, connected by bridges of grating and pipe. Sparks rained down from welding gantries like confetti. It was ugly, brutal, and undeniably powerful.
"Director Kael," Silas said, staring at the smokestacks, "believes that the Iron Empire is invincible. He believes that steel solves all problems. He executed the last Chief Engineer for suggesting we reduce output."
Silas turned back to Arthur. "If I bring him this report... if I tell him that his Great Engine is flawed... he will execute me for defeatism."
"He won’t," Arthur said. "Not if you have a solution."
"And you have one?"
"I have the blueprints," Arthur lied smoothly. (He didn’t have them yet, but he felt the Heaven-Defying Understanding itching at the back of his brain. He just needed to see the machine to fix it). "I can fix the heat exchangers. I can vent the pressure without shutting down the grid. But I need access."
Silas sat back down. The fear in his eyes was gone, replaced by the cold calculation of a bureaucrat trying to survive. "If I release you," Silas said, "and you are a spy, I will be shot." "If I keep you, and the city explodes, I will be dead."
He tapped the file. "What are your terms? Do you want money? Steel? Safe passage back to Osgard?"
"I don’t want to leave," Arthur said. "And I don’t want your money."
Arthur leaned forward. "I want Observation Access."
Silas blinked, confused. "Excuse me?"
"I want a Level 4 Clearance Badge," Arthur said. "I want access to the Foundries, the Boiler Rooms, and the Scrap Yards. I want to see the machine work. I want to inspect the failure points myself."
"You want to tour the facility?" Silas asked, skeptical. "That is... highly irregular. Spies usually ask for maps, not maintenance logs."
"I am an engineer," Arthur said, channeling every ounce of professional arrogance he could muster. "I don’t trust your maps. I trust my eyes. Let me inspect the grid. If I’m wrong, you can throw me in the furnace. If I’m right... I fix it."
Silas looked at Arthur for a long, agonizing minute. He was weighing the risk. The vibrating coffee mug seemed to make the decision for him. The ripple was getting stronger.
"You will not have control," Silas said sharply. "You will not touch a valve, a lever, or a switch without written authorization. You will be shadowed by a squad of Iron-Hulks—Heavy Guards in hydraulic armor. They are ordered to crush you if you deviate from the path by a single meter."
"Agreed," Arthur said.
"And your crew?"
"The Driver and the Warrior come with me," Arthur said. "They are my labor. The Mage... keep him in the hospital. He’s safer there. The Suppression Field is killing him."
Silas nodded. He pulled a heavy rubber stamp from his pocket. He inked it on a pad. TH-THUMP. He stamped the file in red ink: PROVISIONAL ASSET.
"You have 48 hours to prove your theory, Consultant," Silas said, closing the folder. "If the vibration doesn’t stop, or if you try to run... the Watchers will dismantle you."
....
Ten minutes later, the cell doors buzzed open with a heavy clack. Vivian stepped out, looking furious. She was holding a heavy iron nut in her hand. "I was almost through," she muttered, glaring at the guard. "Another ten minutes and I would have had the bench off the wall."
"Put it back, Vivian," Arthur said, rubbing his wrists where the cuffs had been. "Change of plans. We aren’t prisoners anymore."
"We’re free?" Zack asked, stepping out of his cell. He looked pale, wiping grease from his cheek. "That doctor measured my skull with calipers."
"We aren’t free," Arthur corrected, pinning a heavy iron badge to his coat. It was stamped with a gear and the number 04. "We are Consultants. Which is basically a prisoner with a job."
They were led down a long, echoing corridor of corrugated metal. The air grew hotter as they descended. They emerged into a massive hangar bay. The Iron Horse was parked in the center, surrounded by mechanics in grey jumpsuits who were scratching their heads at the design.
"They didn’t scrap it," Zack sighed in relief, running to the truck. "Hello, beautiful. Did they touch you?"
"Load up," Arthur ordered. "We have a job to do."
"What job?" Vivian asked, climbing onto the running board and stowing her hammer. "Are we fighting?"
"We have to inspect the Foundries," Arthur said, climbing into the driver’s seat. "We have to find the source of the heat leak."
"And then?" Vivian asked.
Arthur checked the rearview mirror.
Out of the shadows of the hangar, four massive shapes stepped forward. They weren’t robots. They were men, but they were encased in bulk. Iron-Hulks. Seven-foot-tall suits of crude, rivet-studded armor powered by hissing steam pistons. A smokestack on the back of each suit vented exhaust. The guards inside looked through thick vision slits. They carried massive, hydraulic-assisted halberds. They didn’t move with the grace of a machine; they stomped with the heavy, clumsy weight of a man wearing a tank.
"And then," Arthur whispered, "we steal enough steel to upgrade this truck into a tank." 𝘧𝘳𝘦ℯ𝓌𝘦𝒷𝘯𝑜𝑣𝘦𝓁.𝒸𝘰𝓂
He started the engine. The Iron Horse roared to life, the sound echoing off the hangar walls. The mechanics jumped back. The hangar doors groaned open, revealing the smog-choked streets of Ferro.
"Drive slow, Zack," Arthur whispered as the Watchers clanked into formation behind them. "We’re on a leash."
End of Chapter 64







