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The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 78 - 77: The Weight of the Crown
Time Remaining: 30 Days, 06 Hours. (Status: Core Frequency Stalled at 46 Hertz. Thermal Margin: 89 Hours.) Location: The Citadel - The High Council Chamber.
The High Council Chamber was designed to intimidate. It was a circular room at the very apex of the tower, walled in black granite and lit by a single, massive skylight. The table in the center was a ring of polished iron, large enough to seat the twelve Lords of the Ministry. Usually, this room echoed with the sounds of debate—trade tariffs, border disputes, coal allotments.
Today, it was silent.
Director Kael stood at the head of the table. He did not sit. Behind him, a large slate displayed the map of the Iron Empire. In front of him sat the twelve most powerful men and women in the western hemisphere. General Rylan of the Defense Ministry. High Treasurer Vane. The Lord of Coal. The Lady of Steel.
They were not looking at Kael. They were looking at the document he had placed in the center of the iron ring. Executive Order 74-Alpha: Strategic Desynchronization.
"This is not a proposal," Kael said. His voice was calm, carrying easily across the silence. "This is a notification of intent."
General Rylan, a man whose face was a map of old scars, tapped the document with a metal-gloved finger. "You are proposing to sever the connection between the Citadel and the Master Clock," Rylan said. "You are proposing to take the Automated Defense Grid offline. For how long?"
"Indefinitely," Kael replied.
A murmur ran through the room. Not panic—these people did not panic—but deep, calculating concern. "The Southern Kingdoms are watching our border," Rylan stated. "The Trade Federation has spies in every port. If the automated turrets stop tracking... if the surveillance lattice goes dark... they will know within the hour. They will see it as a collapse."
"They will see it as a transition," Kael corrected.
He walked to the window. The floor beneath his boots was vibrating—a low, sick throb that rattled the glass. The Council felt it too. They had been pretending to ignore it for days, attributing it to heavy machinery or atmospheric pressure. Kael decided to stop the pretense.
"Do you feel that?" Kael asked. He didn’t wait for an answer. "That is the sound of our architecture rejecting our ideology. The Consultant has proven the math. The 50 Hertz standard is incompatible with the geological foundation. If we persist, the Citadel falls. If we adapt, we survive."
"At the cost of our shield?" Treasurer Vane asked. He was a thin man with eyes like an abacus. "The automated defenses save us forty million credits annually in manpower. If we go manual, the payroll alone will bankrupt the surplus."
"The surplus is irrelevant if the vault is buried under molten rock," Kael said.
Kael turned back to the table. He signaled Silas. The Overseer stepped forward, placing a stack of thick files before the General.
"We do not leave the walls naked," Kael said. "We replace the machine with the man."
General Rylan opened the file. It was a mobilization order. "You want to reactivate the Reserve Guard," Rylan noted, reading the logistics. "Twenty thousand men. Muskets. Field cannons. Manual sighting."
"The automated turrets are fast," Kael acknowledged. "But they are rigid. They require the synchronization signal. A man with a rifle does not need a frequency. He needs only eyes and orders."
"It is a regression," the Lady of Steel sniffed. "We are the Iron Empire. We do not use peasant levies to guard the capital. It looks... desperate."
"It looks effective," Kael countered. "We shift the defense doctrine from ’Automated Static’ to ’Manual Mobile’. We flood the walls with soldiers. We make the border look so thick with iron and bodies that the Federation won’t dare test us."
He leaned over the table. "We hide the blindness of the machine behind the vigilance of the army."
The Treasurer was still reading the financial impact report. "And the industry?" Vane asked. "You are throttling the Core to 42 Hertz. That is an 18% drop in global output. The textile mills in District 9 run on synchronized motors. They will slow down."
"They will slow down," Kael agreed. "And they will stop breaking."
He pulled a second file from his coat. "This is the casualty report from Sector 5. The sector that refused to desynchronize."
He slid it across the iron table. "Total turbine seizure. Three hundred dead. Output reduced to zero for six weeks while repairs are effected."
He pointed to another file. "Sector 4. Desynchronized. Output down 18%. Casualties: Zero. Vibration: Negligible."
Kael let the silence settle. "I am not asking you to choose between profit and loss. I am asking you to choose between a manageable recession and a total liquidation."
The Treasurer looked at the Sector 5 report. He looked at the bottom line. He closed the folder. "18% is... survivable," Vane admitted quietly. "If we adjust the tariffs on coal exports to compensate."
General Rylan was not yet convinced. "The Federation," Rylan grunted. "They smell weakness like sharks smell blood. If the Master Clock stops... even with your peasant guards... they will test us. They will stage a border incursion just to see if the big guns fire."
"Then we must control the narrative," Kael said.
He walked to the head of the table. "We do not announce a repair. We announce an Evolution."
Kael looked at the assembled Lords. "We draft a proclamation. We state that the Iron Empire is transitioning to a ’New Era of Harmonic Efficiency’. We frame the manual mobilization not as a desperate measure, but as a massive military exercise. A show of force."
"We invite the Federation ambassadors to the Citadel," Kael continued. "We let them see the twenty thousand soldiers on the walls. We let them see the cannons manned by veteran gunners. We make the silence of the automated turrets look like arrogance, not failure." 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦
"A bluff," the Lady of Steel mused.
"Statecraft," Kael corrected.
Kael checked the large mechanical clock on the wall. The vibration in the floor was getting worse. The hands of the clock were shivering. Time Remaining: 30 Days. Thermal Margin: 86 Hours.
"I have verified the Consultant’s calculations independently," Kael said. "The Chief Engineer confirms the thermal buildup in the Governor’s input leads. We have less than four days before the choice is made for us."
He looked at Rylan. "Can you mobilize the Reserve Guard in 48 hours?"
Rylan chewed his lip. He looked at the map. "It will be ugly. We’ll have to pull labor from the mines. We’ll have to open the armories." He looked up. "But yes. I can put a rifle on every parapet in two days."
Kael looked at Vane. "Can you absorb the 18% shock?"
Vane sighed. "I will have to freeze all non-essential spending. The grand construction projects in District 1 will halt. The aristocracy will complain." He tapped the iron table. "But the ledger will balance."
Kael picked up the Executive Order. He uncapped his steel pen. "Then it is decided."
He signed his name at the bottom. The scratch of the nib was loud in the quiet room. Director Kaelen Voss.
He handed the document to Silas. "Issue the standby command. Level 1 Alert. Begin the mobilization of the Reserve Guard immediately. Tell the ambassadors that a Grand Review is scheduled for Friday."
"And the Governor?" Silas asked, holding the paper as if it were burning. "When do we pull the lever?"
"When the walls are manned," Kael said. "Not a moment before."
He looked at the Council one last time. "Gentlemen. Ladies. Prepare your departments. The Empire is about to change gears. If the clutch slips... we all crash."
....
Location: The Core Control Room - Central Junction.
Deep below the council chamber, the air was hot and still. Arthur sat on a crate near the Primary Throttle, reading a battered book on fluid dynamics he had found in the break room. Vivian was asleep on a bench, her hammer across her chest. The engineers were silent, watching the gauges.
The vibration was a constant companion now. Throb. Throb. Throb. The green line on the oscilloscope was fuzzy with static. Arthur didn’t look up when the phone rang.
The Lead Engineer answered it. He listened. He went pale. He hung up. He turned to Arthur.
"Consultant," the Engineer said. "We have received a flash traffic alert from the Citadel."
Arthur marked his page and closed the book. "Decoupling?"
"Mobilization," the Engineer said. "The Reserve Guard is being called up. General Rylan has declared a ’Grand Strategic Exercise’. All leaves canceled. The borders are being sealed."
Arthur nodded slowly. "He’s reinforcing the shell before he removes the spine."
"It means he accepted the math," Vivian said, opening one eye.
"It means he accepted the cost," Arthur corrected. "He’s not doing this because he trusts me. He’s doing it because he ran the numbers and realized he can’t afford a crater."
Arthur looked at the ceiling, toward the distant, invisible tower where the Governor spun. "He’s buying insurance. It’s smart. But he’s cutting it close."
Arthur checked the thermal readings on the Core inputs.
Temperature: Critical. Time to Failure: 85 Hours.
"He has two days to man the walls," Arthur said. "And we have three days before the solder melts."
He picked up his slate. "Tighten the bolts," Arthur told the engineers. "And get some sleep. Once the lever is pulled... the ride gets bumpy."
End of Chapter 77







