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The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 69 - 68: The Seven-Day Window
Time Remaining: 35 Days, 06 Hours. (Status: Conditional Asset. Compliance Collar Active.) Location: Sector 7-Bravo - The Waste Reclamation Unit.
Sector 7-Bravo was not a place where people lived. It was a place where the city flushed its mistakes.
The Iron Horse rumbled down a steep, slick ramp into the underbelly of Ferro. The air here was heavy, wet, and smelled violently of ammonia and rot.
Above them, the city stacked layer upon layer of steel, blocking out the sun completely. The only light came from flickering, yellow gas-lamps and the occasional spark shower from a faulty transformer.
"This place," Vivian muttered, holding a scented handkerchief to her nose, "smells like a corpse that has been left in the sun."
"It’s worse," Arthur said, reading the dashboard sensors. "It’s chemical runoff. This is the kidney of the city. All the toxic sludge from the upper foundries drains down here to be filtered."
They rolled to a stop in front of the facility. Unit 7-B. It was a fortress of rusted pipes and hissing tanks. The main gate hung off its hinges. A sign reading DANGER: HIGH PRESSURE was half-buried in a pile of black sludge. The facility was technically "offline," according to Kael’s file. But in the Iron Empire, "offline" just meant "abandoned and leaking."
The four Iron-Hulks clanked to a halt behind them. Overseer Silas stepped out of his own vehicle—a small, armored scout car. He looked terrified. He was checking a Geiger counter every five seconds.
"You have seven days," Silas shouted over the roar of a nearby steam vent. "The Director expects results. If this facility is not processing waste at 90% efficiency by the deadline... the collar activates."
Arthur touched the cold metal ring around his neck. "I know the terms, Silas. Tell your walking tanks to guard the perimeter. I don’t want scavengers stealing my tools."
Arthur kicked the door of the Iron Horse open. He grabbed his tool belt, a roll of blank schematics, and a heavy brass lantern. "Zack, bring the Analyzer. Vivian, watch for rats. And by rats, I mean anything with teeth."
They entered the main hall of the facility. It was a cavernous space filled with massive cylindrical tanks, each three stories tall. They were connected by a web of pipes that looked like the intestines of a giant metal beast. The floor was flooded with three inches of oily water.
Arthur waded in. He didn’t care about the muck. He cared about the machine. He walked to the central control cluster—a mess of brass gauges, levers, and valve wheels. Most of the glass faces on the gauges were cracked. The needles were pinned to zero.
"Okay," Arthur said, wiping sludge off a pressure dial. "Let’s see why you died."
He closed his eyes. He triggered his Heaven-Defying Understanding. The rust and the grime faded away in his mind’s eye. He saw the geometry of the system. He saw the flow dynamics. He saw the intent of the original design, and the brutality of the Imperial modifications.
"It’s not broken," Arthur whispered, opening his eyes. "It’s choked."
"Choked on what?" Zack asked, setting up the mana-analyzer on a dry crate.
"On order," Arthur said.
He walked to the three main components of the system. He pulled a stick of chalk from his pocket and marked a giant X on each one.
Mechanism 1: The Vacuum Intake Arthur pointed to a massive black pump bolted to the floor. It was silent now, but the casing was cracked, as if it had exploded from the inside.
"This is the Forced Draft. The Ancients used gravity to filter waste. The Empire installed this pump to suck the sludge through faster. They increased the flow rate by 300%."
"But?" Zack prompted.
"But sludge isn’t water," Arthur said. "It’s thick. If you pull it too fast, it creates a vacuum bubble. The bubble collapses, and the shockwave shatters the pipe. They tried to force a solid to act like a liquid."
Mechanism 2: The Frequency Locker Arthur waded to a bank of copper coils wrapped around the main tank. They were humming faintly, even though the power was off.
"This," Arthur tapped a coil, "is the Resonance Lock. It forces the mana inside the waste to vibrate at exactly 50 Hertz. The Empire wants the energy to be uniform."
"What happens if it isn’t?" Vivian asked.
"Waste mana is chaotic," Arthur explained. "It’s wild. It vibrates at all frequencies. When you force wild mana into a 50 Hertz cage, it generates heat. Massive heat. This tank didn’t leak; it boiled over."
Mechanism 3: The Thermal Injection Arthur pointed to a pipe running down into the floor, disappearing into the dark water. "And this is the killer. The Feedback Loop. Instead of venting the excess heat, they pump it back down into the bedrock to ’save energy’. They are trying to recycle an explosion."
Arthur stood back. "They built a pressure cooker, welded the lid shut, and turned the heat up to maximum."
"So we rip it out," Vivian said, hefting her hammer. "We smash the pumps. We cut the coils."
"If we do that," Arthur said, "the efficiency drops to zero. Kael wants the plant running, not gutted. We have to make it work, but we have to make it work safely."
Arthur turned to Silas, who was hovering by the entrance, trying not to get his boots wet. "Silas!" Arthur shouted. "Get on the radio."
Silas waded over, looking unhappy. "What is it?"
"To fix this," Arthur pointed to the main tank, "I need to depressurize the main feed line coming from the city. I need you to shut down the waste flow from Sector 6 and Sector 7 for twelve hours."
Silas went pale. "Shut down the flow?"
"Yes. I need to cut the pipe, install a relief valve, and bypass the vacuum pump. I can’t cut a pipe that is full of pressurized toxic sludge."
Silas pulled out his speaking tube. He stepped away, whispering frantically. Arthur waited. He checked his watch. Five minutes later, Silas returned. He looked even paler.
"Denied," Silas said.
"Denied?" Arthur stared at him. "Silas, I cannot weld a pipe that is spewing acid."
"The Director says: Zero Downtime," Silas recited, his voice shaking. "Shutting down the waste flow would cause a backup in the upper city. It would disrupt the factories. Efficiency cannot be compromised."
"If I cut that line while it’s live," Arthur said slowly, "it will spray high-pressure toxicity everywhere. It will kill us."
"Then do not die," Silas said unhelpfully. "Those are the terms. Fix the machine while it runs. Or the collar detonates."
...
Arthur looked at the pipes. He looked at the trembling bureaucrat. He looked at the deadly collar around his neck. "He wants a miracle," Zack muttered. "You can’t change a tire on a moving car."
"Yes, you can," Arthur said. His eyes narrowed. "You just need a second wheel."
He grabbed the blueprint. He flipped it over to the blank side. He started drawing furiously. "We don’t shut it down," Arthur said, sketching a complex series of tubes. "We Shunt it."
"A shunt?"
"We build a bypass," Arthur explained. "A temporary vein. We weld a new pipe onto the outside of the main line. We attach a valve. Then we drill through the open valve into the live pipe. Once the hole is drilled, we open the shunt and divert the flow."
"That’s... risky," Zack noted. "Drilling into a live pipe? If the drill slips, you get a sludge shower."
"It’s the only way," Arthur said. He turned to Silas. "Tell the Director I accept the terms. No shutdown. I will perform a Live-Fire Bypass."
"But," Arthur held up a finger, "I need parts. I don’t need Imperial pumps. I need trash."
"Trash?" Silas asked.
"I need access to the Scrapyard," Arthur said. "I need old, First Era copper pipes. I need flexible rubber hoses. And I need a giant magnetic coil from a decommissioned train."
"Why?"
"Because I’m not going to force the mana," Arthur said, looking at the humming coils. "I’m going to talk to it. I’m going to build a Harmonic Dampener. It won’t force the frequency; it will absorb the excess noise. It’s like putting a muffler on a gun."
Silas looked confused. "That is not standard protocol."
"Standard protocol is why this building is a ruin," Arthur snapped. "Get me the clearance for the Scrapyard. And get me ten laborers who aren’t afraid of getting dirty."
Arthur turned back to his team. "Zack, you’re on fabrication. I need you to build a ’Hot-Tap’ drill rig. Use parts from the Iron Horse if you have to." "Vivian, you’re on containment. If a pipe bursts while we’re drilling, you need to be ready to smash it shut with that hammer. Literally crimp it closed."
"And you?" Vivian asked.
Arthur looked at the massive, silent tank in the center of the room. "I’m going to climb inside that tank," Arthur said. "And I’m going to clean the filter manually."
"Inside?" Zack looked at the sludge markings on the side. "Arthur, that tank is full of concentrated mana-toxin. Even with a suit, the radiation..."
"The filter is the heart," Arthur said. "The Empire clogged it with their ’efficiency.’ If I don’t clear it, the shunt won’t matter. The pressure will just build up again until it explodes."
He buttoned his collar, covering the blinking red light. "We have seven days to turn this bomb into a functioning organ. Let’s get to work."
Day 1: The Scrapyard Raid
They spent the first twenty-four hours in the Sector 7 Scrapyard. It was a mountain of dead machines. Rusted golems, crushed trains, and twisted girders piled ten stories high. For Arthur, it was a candy store.
"Look at this," Arthur pulled a long, spiraled copper tube from a heap of junk. It was green with oxidation, but the metal was pure. "First Era Heat Exchanger. Hand-forged. This is worth more than gold."
They loaded the Iron Horse until the suspension groaned.
Twelve lengths of First Era Copper Pipe (for the bypass).
A massive rubber diaphragm from a steam-press (for the flexible seal).
A magnetic core from a broken locomotive (for the Dampener).
The Iron-Hulks watched them, confused. They were used to people stealing steel, not rubber and copper. "This is garbage," one guard grunted.
"One man’s garbage is another man’s life support system," Arthur said, throwing a rusted valve into the truck.
Day 2: Fabrication
Back at the plant, the real work began. The noise was deafening. Zack was welding the bypass rig, sparks flying in showers that lit up the dark cavern. Arthur was building the Dampener. He wasn’t building a rigid box; he was building a Spring. He wrapped the copper wire around the magnetic core, but he left gaps. He added rubber shock absorbers.
"It has to move," Arthur explained to the confused laborers Silas had sent. "When the mana pulses, the coil has to expand. If it stays rigid, it melts. We are building a lung, not a cage."
The laborers—gaunt men with shaking hands—nodded. They didn’t understand the theory, but they understood that Arthur wasn’t shouting at them. He was giving them water breaks. He was asking them to hold the light, not stand in the fire. For the first time in years, the shaking in their hands seemed to lessen. Not because the field was gone, but because the fear was gone.
Day 3: The Hot Tap
This was the dangerous part. They stood on a scaffold twenty feet in the air, right next to the main feed pipe. The pipe was vibrating. Inside, millions of gallons of pressurized waste were rushing past.
Zack bolted the "Hot-Tap" rig to the pipe. It was a sealed box with a drill bit inside. "Okay," Zack said, wiping sweat from his eyes. "Seal is tight. Drill is aligned."
"Do it," Arthur ordered.
Zack started the drill. WHIRRRRR. The bit bit into the iron pipe. The vibration shook the scaffold. SCREEECH.
"Steady," Arthur held the rig. "Don’t punch through too fast."
If the seal failed, the sludge would erupt under 500 PSI. It would cut them in half like a water jet. The Iron-Hulks retreated to the doorway and Silas was hiding behind them.
CRACK. The drill punched through. The rig jolted. A hiss of steam escaped the seal—then stopped. "We’re through," Zack gasped. "Pressure holding."
"Open the valve," Arthur said.
Zack turned the wheel on the bypass. WHOOSH. The black sludge rushed into the new copper pipe Arthur had built. It flowed smoothly. There was no hammering. No screaming metal. The copper expanded slightly, absorbing the pulse of the flow. The "Lung" was breathing.
"It works," Vivian cheered from the ground.
"That’s the easy part," Arthur looked at the main tank. "Now I have to go inside."
End of Chapter 68







