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The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 66 - 65: The Grid from the Outside
Time Remaining: 35 Days, 14 Hours. (Status: Provisional Asset. Inspection in Progress.) Location: District 4 - The Deep Foundries.
The air in District 4 tasted like chewing on a penny.
For four hours, the Iron Horse had descended into the bowels of Ferro, navigating a spiral ramp that cut through the city’s geological layers. The sky was gone, replaced by a ceiling of rusted catwalks and dripping coolant pipes that hung just feet above the truck’s roof. It was hot. Not the dry heat of the desert, but a wet, suffocating heat that made clothes stick to skin.
THUD. HISS. THUD.
The rhythm was inescapable. Every four seconds, a ten-ton drop-hammer slammed down in the darkness nearby. The ground jumped. The water in their canteens rippled. The rivets in the Iron Horse’s dashboard buzzed like angry wasps.
"Turn left," Arthur said, his voice flat. He didn’t look up from the blueprints spread on his knees. "There’s a service junction behind that stamping press."
Zack fought the wheel. The truck groaned as it navigated a narrow gap between two mountainous boilers. Behind them, the four Iron-Hulks followed. They didn’t march; they lurched. Their hydraulic legs hissed—PISH-CLANK, PISH-CLANK—a jagged, mechanical noise that grated against the rhythmic thud of the factory.
"They’re slow," Vivian noted, watching the side mirror. "Heavy."
"They aren’t built for speed," Arthur muttered, tracing a pipe-line on the paper with a grease-stained finger. "They’re built to crush dissidents. Stop here."
Zack stomped the brake. The Iron Horse skidded to a halt in a cloud of coal dust. They were parked in front of a junction box the size of a small house. It was a mess of brass valves and black iron pipes, vibrating so hard the bolts were slowly unscrewing themselves.
Arthur hopped out. He didn’t bring a weapon. He brought a heavy brass stethoscope and a wrench. He approached the junction labeled GEO-THERMAL INTAKE 04. Steam spat from a blown gasket, scalding the air. The floor was slick with a mixture of oil and condensation.
Arthur ignored the new pipes. He knelt in the muck, placing the bell of the stethoscope against the foundation stones. These stones weren’t iron. They were grey basalt, seamless and ancient. First Era Masonry.
He closed his eyes. "Zack, kill the light. I need to focus."
Zack clicked the flashlight off. The darkness rushed in, lit only by the distant orange glow of a blast furnace. Arthur listened. Beneath the screaming whines of the Imperial pumps, beneath the thudding hammers, there was a pulse in the rock. Thrum... pause... Thrum... pause.
"Passive intake," Arthur whispered. "The foundation breathes. It draws mana only when the ley-line swells."
He moved the stethoscope up to the black iron pipe bolted into the stone. SCREEEEEE. It sounded like a dying animal. The pipe was vibrating at a frantic, desperate pitch.
"They’re forcing a vacuum," Arthur said, standing up and wiping sludge from his knees. "The Empire hooked a high-pressure pump to a gravity-fed well. They’re sucking the mana out faster than the rock can bleed it."
"What happens when you suck too hard?" Vivian asked, looking at the vibrating bolts.
"Cavitation," Arthur said. "The flow separates. You get air bubbles in the line. When those bubbles collapse, they hit with the force of a hammer." He tapped the iron pipe. "This pipe isn’t shaking because of the engine. It’s shaking because the earth is trying to kick it off."
"Move along," a voice boomed.
Arthur turned. The lead Iron-Hulk loomed over them, its sensor-cluster glowing a dull, hostile red in the smog. "Inspection window closed. Proceed to Sector 5. Quota efficiency is dropping."
"Engine overheated," Arthur lied smoothly, pointing to the Iron Horse. "We need ten minutes to cool the manifold." He didn’t wait for permission. He walked past the Hulk toward a group of workers huddled near a slag bucket.
"Consultant—" the Hulk started, taking a heavy step forward.
"Let him work," Vivian stepped in the Hulk’s path. She didn’t draw her weapon. She just crossed her arms and stared at the vision slit. "Unless you want to explain to the Director why his Consultant was crushed by a door guard."
Arthur reached the workers. There were a dozen of them, sitting on overturned crates, eating grey nutrient paste from tin cans. They were covered in soot, their eyes rimmed with red irritation. But they weren’t talking. They weren’t moving. They were ticking.
A young man held a spoon. His hand jerked. Up. Down. Up. Down. It matched the drop-hammer perfectly. Thud. Thud.
Arthur grabbed the man’s wrist. The skin was hot and dry, like parchment paper. The pulse wasn’t a biological rhythm. It was a hard, erratic flutter.
"Synched," Arthur realized. "The Suppression Field. It’s overriding their autonomic nervous system."
The worker looked up. His eyes were glassy, the pupils dilated to pinpricks. "The hum," the worker whispered. "It’s loud today."
Arthur looked at the man’s gums. They were bleeding. Not red blood, but a dark, viscous fluid that smelled like copper. Heavy Metal Toxicity.
"You’re dissolving," Arthur said softly. "The mana radiation is ionizing the iron in your blood."
The worker didn’t panic. He just nodded, spooning more grey paste into his mouth. "Quota," he mumbled. "Must meet quota." 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖
Arthur let go of the wrist. He looked at the others. They were all the same. Organic gears grinding themselves down until they broke.
Arthur walked back to the truck. His face was hard. "Well?" Zack asked.
"It’s terminal," Arthur said, climbing into the cab. "The vacuum pumps are destabilizing the foundation. The vibration is liquefying the workers’ internal organs. If we do nothing, the main artery ruptures in 35 days."
"So we tell Silas?" Zack asked.
"Silas is a bureaucrat," Arthur slammed the door. "He needs a graphs, numbers. If I tell him ’people are dying,’ he’ll check his spreadsheet and say ’production is up’."
"So what do we do?" Vivian asked, climbing in.
"We make the problem loud," Arthur opened the blueprint and stabbed a finger at the center of the map. Sector 9-Alpha: The Magma-Gate.
"This is the throat," Arthur said. "The main pressure valve for the entire sector. If the grid is unstable, this is where the stress will show first."
"You want to sabotage it?" Zack asked, eyeing the Hulks in the mirror.
"No," Arthur grinned. It was a sharp, dangerous grin. "I want to tune it."
"Tune it?"
"Resonance," Arthur said. "We find the natural frequency of that gate. We hit it with a hammer until it sings. If the system is stable, nothing happens. If the system is under stress..."
"It shatters," Vivian finished.
"It sings the song of its own destruction," Arthur corrected. "And the Director will have to listen."
"Drive," Arthur ordered. "Take us to the volcano."
End of Chapter 65







