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The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 74 - 73: The Question That Matters
Time Remaining: 32 Days, 00 Hours. (Status: Summoned to Citadel. Technical Review In Progress.) Location: The Apex Tower - Director Kael’s Strategy Room.
The Strategy Room smelled of ozone, floor wax, and stale tobacco.
It was not a throne room; it was a bunker buried in the center of the tower. The walls were lined with banks of clicking relay cabinets and pneumatic tube terminals. There were no windows to offer a view of the empire. The only light came from green-shaded electric lamps hanging over a massive, slate-topped surface in the center of the room.
Arthur stood on one side, wiping grease from his hands with a rag. Director Kael stood on the other. Between them lay the evidence: two strips of graph paper torn from the seismic recorders in Sector 4 and 5.
One strip showed a jagged, violent scrawl that ended in a flat-line drop (Sector 5 Failure). The other showed a smooth, rolling wave (Sector 4 Stabilization).
Overseer Silas hovered by the heavy iron door, clutching his briefcase like a shield. Vivian stood near Arthur, arms crossed, watching the Director’s hands rather than his face.
"The data has been audited," Kael stated, his voice dry. He wasn’t studying Arthur; he was examining the paper strips through a heavy brass magnifying lens. "My engineers confirmed the timestamp. You predicted the seizure of the Sector 5 turbine three hours before it occurred."
"It wasn’t a prophecy," Arthur replied. "It was a stress calculation."
Kael set the magnifying lens down with a sharp clack. "You have proven that your ’Passive Flow’ method works in isolation. You have proven that a flexible system survives stress better than a rigid one. These are engineering facts."
He looked up. His eyes were pale blue and completely unreadable. "But you are not here to discuss engineering, Consultant. You are here to discuss economics."
Kael moved to a large map of the continent pinned to the slate. He picked up a pair of brass dividers. "This city is not just a habitat. It is a factory. We supply steel to the Southern Kingdoms. We supply coal to the Trade Federation. We power the entire western hemisphere."
Kael stabbed the dividers into the map. "I do not ask if your fix works. I ask: What is the cost?"
Arthur stepped forward. He didn’t use dramatic pauses. He spoke like a contractor giving a quote. "It costs you 18%."
Silas flinched in the corner. Kael remained motionless. "Explain."
Arthur picked up a stick of chalk. He drew a sharp, spiked wave on the black slate. "This is your current operation. You are forcing the magma intake to cycle at 50 Hertz to match your electrical grid. You are pulling the heat faster than the rock can bleed it. That creates the friction."
He drew a second line. Slower. Deeper. "This is the natural frequency of the First Era foundation. 42 Hertz. It is slower. It breathes."
Arthur looked up from the drawing. "To stop the liquefaction event, you have to throttle the main turbines down to 42 Hertz. You have to sync with the earth, not force the earth to sync with you."
"A frequency reduction," Kael calculated instantly. "Which results in a drop in turbine RPM. Which results in a drop in torque. Which results in a voltage drop across the main grid."
"18%," Arthur repeated. "Roughly one-fifth of your total production capacity."
The number hung in the air. The pneumatic tubes clicked in the background—thump-hiss—delivering reports that Kael ignored.
"If we drop output by that margin," Kael said, his voice void of emotion, "the outer sectors go dark. The foundries in District 9 shut down. We miss our trade quotas with the South. The currency devalues."
"Yes."
"And if we do not?"
"Then the output drops by 100%," Arthur stated. "Because the intake shafts collapse, the magma floods the lower levels, and the city sinks into the mantle."
Arthur pointed to the jagged graph line of Sector 5. "Sector 5 lost everything yesterday because it refused to slow down. That is your micro-model. Now apply it to the macro."
Kael walked to the wall of instruments. He studied a Phosphor Oscilloscope—a round glass screen displaying a glowing green line. It was jittery. Unstable. "You speak of the Grid as if it has a will," Kael murmured. "As if it makes demands."
"It does," Arthur countered. "It demands balance. You have been running an energy overdraft for two hundred years. The bill is due in 32 days."
Kael turned back to the central table. He opened a heavy leather ledger. "My advisors tell me that we can reinforce the shafts," the Director said, reading a column of numbers. "Pour more Adamant-concrete. Add hydraulic bracing. Fight the vibration with mass."
"That increases rigidity," Arthur argued. "If you brace a vibrating structure, you just move the failure point. Instead of the pipes breaking, the bedrock breaks. That accelerates the collapse."
Kael closed the ledger. Thump. He shifted his gaze to Vivian. "Your guard is quiet."
"She is observing."
"And what does she see?" Kael asked her directly.
Vivian unfolded her arms. She didn’t bow. "I see a man who is doing the math," she said plainly. "You didn’t bring us here to ask if you should do it. You brought us here to find out if you can survive doing it."
Kael stared at her for a long moment. Then he nodded. A micro-movement of the chin. "Rational."
He turned his attention back to Arthur. "If I authorize this... ’tuning’. If I allow you to throttle the Core down to 42 Hertz... does it guarantee survival?"
Arthur paused. The room was quiet. The hum of the ventilation fans seemed loud. "No."
Silas looked up, alarmed.
"It buys time," Arthur clarified. "The damage to the foundation is already severe. The rock is saturated with heat. Throttling the engine stops the active damage, but it doesn’t heal the cracks that are already there."
Arthur leaned over the slate. "It moves the deadline from 32 days to... maybe ten years. Maybe twenty. It stops the immediate collapse. It gives you time to reinforce the foundation properly. But it is not a cure. It is a remission."
Kael walked back to the map. He picked up the piece of chalk. He stared at the two waves Arthur had drawn. The sharp Imperial spike. The rolling Ancient wave. He drew a line through the Imperial wave.
"18%," Kael whispered. "The Board will call it ruin." He glanced at Arthur. "Very well."
He circled a point on the map. The Central Junction. "I authorize the trial. But not for the whole city. Not yet."
"You will have access to the Primary Throttle," the Director ordered. "You will ramp down the frequency of the Core Intake by 2 Hertz per hour. We will monitor the stability."
"If the vibration drops, we continue. If the output drops below 20%... we abort. I will not starve the city to save it."
"Agreed," Arthur said.
"And," Kael added, his voice hardening. "You do not touch the controls. You tell my engineers what to do. They touch the controls. You are a Consultant, Arthur. Not a Commander."
"I don’t want the chair. I just want the noise to stop."
Kael pressed a button on the table console. A pneumatic tube hissed. A document cylinder rattled out. He signed the paper inside with a steel pen.
"This grants you Level 1 Access," Kael said, sliding the paper across the slate. "You will be escorted to the Core Control Room immediately."
He pointed to the collar on Arthur’s neck. "The device remains active. The range is set to the Core Control Room. If you try to leave that zone without authorization... if you try to sabotage the throttle... if you try to negotiate with my staff..." Kael didn’t finish the sentence. He didn’t have to.
"Understood," Arthur said, picking up the permit.
"One more thing." Kael studied Arthur with a strange expression. Not respect. Recognition. "You are a Noble of Osgard," Kael said, his voice dripping with class disdain. "You are Highborn. You are used to magic solving your problems. You are used to waving a jeweled wand and rewriting reality."
Kael leaned in, his face hard. "Down there, in the Core, there is no magic. There is only pressure and heat. The machine does not care about your bloodline. If you are wrong about the frequency... if 42 Hertz is not the number... the backlash will not just break the machine." "It will liquefy you."
"I checked the math," Arthur said calmly. "Physics treats Kings and peasants the same."
"Then go," Kael said, turning his back to watch the oscilloscope. "And try not to bankrupt my Empire."
Arthur walked out of the Strategy Room. He didn’t look back. Silas followed him, wiping sweat from his upper lip. "18%," the Overseer muttered as they walked down the corridor toward the heavy freight elevators. "The Director actually agreed to the cut. The Trade Lords will demand his resignation."
"Better a resignation than a funeral," Arthur said.
They entered the elevator. It was a heavy industrial cage, smelling of grease and old steel. Arthur pulled the gate shut. He checked the date on his watch. 32 Days.
"We have the permit," Vivian said softly. "Now we just have to do the heavy lifting." 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝓮𝒘𝙚𝙗𝒏𝙤𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝒐𝙢
"It’s not lifting," Arthur said, watching the depth gauge start to drop. "It’s conducting."
He visualized the schematics in his mind. The Core wasn’t just a machine. It was the point where the arrogance of the Iron Empire met the stubbornness of the planet. Arthur wasn’t going down there to win a fight. He was going down there to negotiate a surrender.
End of Chapter 74







