©NovelBuddy
The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 92 - 91: The Royal Walk
Time Remaining: [N/A]
(Status: Operational. Revenue Strategy.)
Location: The Silver River Bridge.
The morning after the bridge opened, the valley sounded different.
For ten years, the sound of the Silver River crossing had been a specific, miserable cacophony: the cracking of whips, the terrified lowing of oxen chest-deep in water, and the colorful swearing of drivers stuck in the mud.
Today, the sound was rhythmic.
Rumble-thud. Rumble-thud.
It was the deep, hollow percussion of iron-rimmed wheels rolling over oak planks.
It was the sound of money moving.
Arthur stood at the midpoint of the span, leaning over the new railing. He held a wrench in one hand and a notebook in the other.
He wasn’t admiring the view. He was counting axles.
A heavy timber wagon from the Deep Woods rolled past him. Four axles. Heavy load.
Behind it, a Trade Federation caravan with six wagons.
Behind that, a line of local farmers.
"Four hundred and twenty," Arthur muttered, checking his watch. "And it’s only noon."
"The ford used to handle fifty a day," Vivian said, walking up behind him. She was wearing a light riding coat, looking less like a Princess and more like a site manager. "Where did they all come from?"
"Latent demand," Arthur said, marking the page. "They didn’t travel before because the river was a gamble. Now that the risk is zero, the volume spikes."
He watched a merchant wagon rumble past, the driver looking bored instead of terrified.
"We didn’t just replace a bridge, Viv. We opened a valve."
Zack jogged onto the bridge from the North Bank.
"Dust cloud on the ridge, Boss," Zack reported. "Royal Standard. He brought the heavy cavalry."
Arthur put the wrench in his pocket. He didn’t rush to clean the grease from his hands. 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝒆𝔀𝒆𝙗𝓷𝒐𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝓶
"Let them come," Arthur said. "The deck is clean."
Ten minutes later, the Royal procession arrived.
It wasn’t a parade. It was an audit.
King Roland rode a white charger, flanked by four Royal Guards. Behind him rode Lord Marston, the Royal Surveyor, looking at the steel truss with the expression of a man who had found a fly in his wine.
The King halted his horse at the North Abutment.
He looked at the massive concrete block. He looked at the black steel truss soaring over the water.
He dismounted.
"Hold the horses," the King ordered. "We walk."
Arthur met them at the entrance. He bowed, brief and professional.
"Your Majesty," Arthur said. "Welcome to the crossing."
"Arthur," the King nodded, tapping his riding crop against the steel railing. "You built a monster."
"I built a truss, Sire."
Lord Marston stepped forward. He tapped the steel beam with a skeptical fingernail.
"It looks hollow," Marston sniffed. "A stone bridge is solid. This is... air."
"Stone is heavy," Arthur countered calmly, falling into step beside the King as they walked onto the timber deck. "A stone arch fights gravity by being massive. This bridge fights gravity by being smart. It uses geometry to carry the load, not bulk."
"And the load rating?" Marston pressed. "If I march a regiment across this, will it buckle?"
"Twenty tons," Arthur said. "You can march the regiment, the supply wagons, and the field artillery. It won’t move."
The King stopped in the middle of the span. He bounced on his heels.
The bridge felt dead solid.
"It feels like the ground," the King admitted.
"Lateral bracing," Arthur pointed to the ’X’ patterns underneath the deck. "It locks the frame. The wind can’t twist it."
Marston looked at the river flowing freely underneath.
"And the flood season?"
"The truss is elevated twelve feet above the high-water mark," Arthur said. "The river can rage all it wants. It won’t touch the structure."
Marston frowned. The math was visible. The bridge was standing.
"It breaks tradition," Marston grumbled. "The Guild has built stone arches for five hundred years."
"So do mud roads," Arthur said.
It wasn’t hostile. It was just a fact.
"We’ve had mud roads for a thousand years, Lord Marston. They last forever. But they don’t work."
The King coughed to cover a smile.
A court official looked up from his scroll.
"The engineering is impressive," the official admitted. "But the paperwork is irregular. The permit was for a ’temporary survey structure’. This is clearly permanent."
He looked at Arthur.
"Was this design authorized by the Crown, or by the Duchy of Pendelton?"
It was a trap.
Vivian spoke from the railing. She didn’t turn around.
"The Crown authorized the outcome," Vivian said.
The scribe froze.
Vivian turned. She stood next to Arthur.
"My father asked for a bridge that wouldn’t wash away," she said simply. "Arthur provided it. The details of the rivets are a matter for engineers, not scribes."
The King nodded slowly.
"My daughter is correct," the King said. "I authorized a solution. I am standing on the solution."
...
The King reached the South Bank. He looked back across the glittering steel span.
"It’s magnificent, Arthur," the King said. "But Imperial Steel is not cheap. And neither is concrete."
He turned to Arthur.
"How much did this cost you?"
"Five thousand gold crowns," Arthur answered instantly. "Materials, transport, and labor."
The court officials gasped. That was the entire Royal Road Maintenance budget for the season.
"Five thousand crowns," Marston choked. "For a single crossing?"
"It’s an investment," Arthur said.
"It’s a fortune," the King corrected. "You said this was a donation, Arthur. But the House of Pendelton is not a charity. You don’t spend five thousand crowns just to keep your boots dry."
Arthur smiled.
This was the pivot. He stopped being an engineer. He became a CFO.
"No, Sire," Arthur said. "I don’t."
He pulled a folded document from his coat.
"I am not asking for reimbursement. I am asking for a Charter."
Arthur handed the document to the King.
"The bridge is free for foot traffic," Arthur proposed. "It is free for the King’s messengers and the Royal Army."
He pointed to a heavy merchant caravan rolling across. It bore the crest of the Southern Silk Guild.
"But for commercial traffic, there is a fee."
"A toll," Marston scoffed. "Robber baron tactics."
"A Time Tax," Arthur corrected. "Lord Marston, how long does the detour take when the ford is washed out?"
"Two days," Marston admitted.
"And what does it cost a merchant caravan to sit idle for two days?" Arthur asked. "Guards, food, spoiled goods, missed markets? About ten gold crowns."
Arthur tapped his document.
"I charge them five silvers. Half a crown."
He looked at the King.
"They save nine and a half crowns. I make half a crown. Everyone wins."
"And the volume?" the King asked, reading the paper.
"We are tracking five hundred crossings a day," Arthur said. "Three hundred are commercial."
He did the math aloud, sharp and fast.
"Three hundred wagons at five silvers each. That’s one hundred and fifty gold crowns per day."
The King’s eyebrows shot up.
"A hundred and fifty a day?"
"Gross revenue," Arthur said. "Annualized, that’s fifty-four thousand crowns a year."
Silence. Absolute silence.
Marston looked like he was going to faint. The King looked at the bridge with new eyes. It wasn’t steel anymore. It was gold.
"But," Arthur continued, "I am taking the liability. I will maintain the steel. I will pave the three miles of approach road so the volume can increase. I will pay the guards."
He looked the King in the eye.
"I recover my five thousand investment in four months. After that, it’s profit."
"And you want the Crown to give you this money?" the King asked.
"I want a split," Arthur said. "I keep 70% for maintenance and expansion. The Crown gets 30% for doing absolutely nothing but signing this paper."
Arthur smiled.
"Thirty percent of fifty thousand is fifteen thousand crowns a year, Sire. That’s triple your current road tax revenue from this entire province."
The King looked at the paper. He looked at the mud on the road that Arthur had promised to pave.
He realized what Arthur was offering.
He wasn’t asking for gold. He was offering a silent partnership in a money-printing machine.
"You pave the approach road?" the King verified. "At your own cost?"
"Standardized grade. Macadam surface. All-weather," Arthur promised.
"And if the bridge fails?"
"Pendelton pays."
The King handed the document to his scribe.
"Draft the Charter," the King ordered. "Five-year term. Renewable upon review."
He looked at Arthur.
"You didn’t just cross the river," the King murmured, half-amused, half-terrified. "You monetized the water."
.....
The King mounted his horse and rode back across the bridge to cheers from the farmers.
Traffic resumed.
A massive timber wagon from the Deep Woods rolled up to the toll booth Zack had built.
The driver stopped.
"Five silvers?" the driver grumbled. "That’s steep."
"The ford is free," Zack said, pointing to the muddy, empty riverbank. "You can take the swim if you want."
The driver looked at the steep, muddy bank. He looked at his heavy load.
He dug into his pouch and slapped five silver coins onto the barrel.
"Keep the change," the driver said, rolling onto the smooth timber deck. "I’m late for dinner."
The Royal entourage disappeared over the ridge.
Arthur stood by the South Abutment.
Clink. Clink. Clink.
The coins were dropping into the strongbox.
It was a steady, rhythmic sound.
Vivian leaned against the steel truss.
"You pushed him," she said. "30 percent is low for a Royal Tax."
"He took it because he doesn’t have to manage it," Arthur said. "The King hates potholes. I just bought his peace of mind."
"You could have just built it," Vivian said softly. "You have the family gold. You didn’t need the toll."
Arthur looked at the strongbox.
"Family gold runs out, Viv. Systems don’t."
He picked up a silver coin.
"This bridge pays for the next one. And the next one."
He turned to look at the road leading south—the muddy, winding track that slowed down every shipment, every letter, every traveler.
"This is only one crossing," Arthur said, his eyes tracing the path of the road into the distance. "The valley has six bottlenecks. The swamp at the East Bend. The steep grade at Miller’s Ridge. The narrow gate at the market."
He looked at Vivian.
"I’m going to fix them all. And the toll from this bridge is going to buy the asphalt for the next ten miles."
Vivian studied him. She didn’t look worried. She looked impressed by the engine inside him.
"Well," she said, pushing off the truss. "If you’re going to pave the kingdom, Arthur, don’t forget lunch."
Arthur smiled.
He pocketed the silver coin.
"Let’s go to the quarry," he said. "We have a road to buy."
End of Chapter 91







