The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 91 - 90: The First Crossing

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 91: Chapter 90: The First Crossing

Time Remaining: [N/A]

(Status: Final Assembly. Decking & Load Test.)

Location: The Silver River Bridge.

The morning sun hit the steel truss, warming the black metal against the cool mist of the valley.

From the bank, the bridge looked like a spiderweb made of iron—a geometric lace of triangles stretching one hundred and forty feet from shore to shore. It was imposing. It was rigid.

But it was hollow.

"It’s a skeleton," Arthur said, standing at the North Abutment with a mug of coffee. "Now it needs a floor."

Behind him, the carriage house truck had already made three trips to the local sawmill. Piled high on the grass were hundreds of thick oak planks, each one treated with a dark, pungent oil to resist rot. They smelled of tar and fresh sawdust, a sharp contrast to the metallic tang of the forge from the day before.

"Zack," Arthur called out. "Bring the bolting crew. We start from the ends and meet in the middle."

The installation wasn’t glamorous. It was loud.

The farmers, now acting as rough carpenters, carried the heavy timbers out onto the steel structure. They had to balance on the bottom chords of the truss, looking down through the gaps at the brown water churning fifteen feet below.

"Don’t look down," Vivian advised a younger farmer whose knees were shaking. "Look at the bolt hole. The bolt hole isn’t moving."

They laid the first plank. It spanned the width of the bridge, resting on the steel stringers Arthur had designed to support the roadway.

Arthur knelt by the connection point.

He didn’t use nails. Nails worked loose under vibration.

He used carriage bolts—thick steel pins with rounded heads that passed through the wood and the steel flange below, secured with a nut and washer.

"Ratchet," Arthur ordered.

Zack handed him the tool.

Click-click-click-click.

Arthur tightened the nut. The washer bit into the oak. The wood groaned slightly, then seated firmly against the steel.

It wasn’t going anywhere.

"Next one," Arthur said. "Leave a quarter-inch gap."

"Why the gap?" Garnas asked, hauling the next plank into position. "Don’t you want it tight? Like a floor?"

"It’s an outdoor floor," Arthur corrected. "If we butt them tight, rainwater has nowhere to go. It pools. It rots the wood. And when the wood swells in the winter, it will buckle."

He placed a small wooden shim against the first plank.

"Gap it. Let the water fall through. The river can have it back."

They fell into a rhythm.

Place. Shim. Bolt. Torque.

Place. Shim. Bolt. Torque.

The bridge began to close. The open air between the beams disappeared, replaced by a solid roadway of dark oak. The sound of the river faded, muffled by the timber deck.

It stopped feeling like a high-wire act and started feeling like a room.

By noon, the decking was halfway done.

Arthur went underneath.

He climbed down onto the concrete abutment, looking up at the underside of the steel structure.

"Julian," Arthur called up. "Send down the X-braces."

Julian, who was supervising the stockpile, levitated a bundle of lighter steel angles down to Arthur.

"More triangles?" a villager asked, peering over the edge. "I thought we were done with geometry."

"The big triangles hold the weight," Arthur shouted up, his voice echoing off the concrete. "These little triangles hold the wind."

He bolted the cross-bracing between the bottom beams, forming a horizontal ’X’ pattern under the floor.

"Imagine a ladder," Arthur explained, tightening a bolt. "It’s strong if you climb it straight. But if you twist it, it snaps. The wind wants to twist the bridge. These braces lock it square."

He gave the cross-brace a sharp tug. It was rigid.

"If a storm hits this valley," Arthur muttered to himself, "the trees will fall over before this bridge does."

...

By early afternoon, the final plank was bolted down.

The bridge was a solid, continuous road of wood and steel.

But it still looked dangerous. The edges were open drops to the water.

"Railings," Arthur ordered. "Waist height. Bolted to the vertical posts."

The crew brought out the timber rails—sturdy 4x4 beams planed smooth to prevent splinters.

"Why so high?" Bern the cart driver asked. "A curb is enough to stop a wheel."

"It’s not for the wheels," Arthur said, bolting the rail into place. "It’s for the people. And the drunk oxen."

"My oxen don’t drink," Bern protested.

"The river does," Vivian said dryly, testing the rail with a shove. "And I don’t want to fish your cart out of it."

The railing went up quickly. It transformed the structure again.

Before, it looked like a piece of industrial machinery. With the wooden deck and the handrails, it suddenly looked... inviting.

It looked like a path.

The First Step

3:00 PM.

The worksite went quiet.

The tools were packed away. The sawdust was swept off the deck.

The bridge stood finished.

The late afternoon sun cast long shadows through the truss, painting geometric patterns on the oak deck.

The villagers gathered at the North Abutment. There were nearly fifty of them now—people from the village, farmers from the estate, travelers who had heard the rumors.

They stood at the edge of the concrete, looking at the wooden road that stretched across the water.

Nobody moved.

The conditioning of ten years—the belief that the river was a barrier—was hard to break.

"It’s quiet," someone whispered.

Arthur stood by the truck, wiping grease from his hands. He didn’t step forward. He didn’t make a speech.

He looked at the boy—the one who had carried rivet buckets for two days, his face smeared with soot and pride.

"Hey, kid," Arthur called out.

The boy looked up, startled.

"Me?"

"You carried the steel," Arthur said. "You walked the beams. Go check the other side."

The boy hesitated. He looked at the long span.

Then he looked at Arthur’s calm face.

He took a step onto the timber deck.

Thud.

A solid, dull sound. Not a creak. Not a hollow boom.

He took another step.

Thud.

He walked out to the quarter point. He stopped. He jumped.

The bridge didn’t bounce. The vibration traveled into the truss and vanished into the abutments, absorbed cleanly by the triangles. The massive steel truss absorbed the energy instantly. The deck felt dead under his feet.

He ran.

He ran all the way to the South Abutment, his boots pounding a drumbeat on the oak. He touched the far railing and turned around, breathless.

"It works!" he screamed, his voice cracking.

Vivian stepped onto the bridge.

She walked with a different energy—heavy, purposeful strides. She marched to the center span.

She grabbed the truss upright and shook it.

Nothing moved.

She looked back at the crowd and nodded once.

"Clear," she said.

"Bern!" Arthur shouted. "Bring the wagon."

Bern swallowed hard. He patted his oxen. The cart was fully loaded with firewood—heavy, dense logs that usually required two teams to drag through the ford.

"You sure about the weight, m’lord?" Bern asked. "It’s two tons."

"The bridge is rated for twenty," Arthur said. "Drive."

Bern clicked his tongue. "Hup! Hup!"

The oxen stepped onto the concrete abutment. Their hooves clattered.

Then they stepped onto the wood.

Clop. Clop. Clop.

The heavy iron-rimmed wheels rolled onto the deck.

Arthur watched the center of the span.

He was watching the camber—the slight upward bow he had engineered into the truss.

As the heavy cart rolled toward the middle, the steel settled.

The upward curve flattened out.

The steel groaned—a low, settling sound—as the tension loads engaged. The bottom chord tightened. The top chord compressed.

The bridge became perfectly flat.

"It’s flattening!" Garnas shouted, alarmed.

"That’s the design settling into equilibrium." Arthur corrected quietly. "It’s taking the load."

The cart reached the middle.

Usually, this was the part where Bern would be shouting, whipping the oxen, fighting the mud, praying the axle didn’t snap.

Instead... silence.

The wheels rolled effortlessly on the smooth timber. The oxen weren’t straining; they were walking.

The cart glided across the river.

Bern looked down at the water flowing fifteen feet below him. He looked at the dry, clean deck. 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝒆𝒘𝙚𝓫𝙣𝙤𝒗𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢

He started laughing.

It wasn’t a triumphant laugh. It was a confused, incredulous laugh.

"It’s easy," Bern shouted back to the bank. "It’s just... easy."

He rolled off the South Abutment and onto the far bank.

He turned the cart around.

"I’m coming back!"

That broke the spell.

The villagers surged forward.

They didn’t run. They walked. Tentatively at first, then with confidence.

They touched the steel rivets. They stomped on the planks. They leaned over the railing to spit into the river, just to see how far down it was.

"It doesn’t feel like a bridge," a woman said, holding her child’s hand. "The old one used to sway. You had to hold your breath."

"It feels like ground," her husband agreed, stomping his boot. "It feels like the road just kept going."

Arthur stood back near the Iron Horse, watching them.

He wasn’t looking at the people faces. He was looking at the structure.

He checked the bolt heads on the decking—none had popped.

He checked the bearing pads on the concrete—no cracking.

He checked the drainage gaps—light was visible through them, meaning they weren’t pinched shut.

"Good," Arthur murmured. "It was exactly as drawn."

.....

By late afternoon, the bridge was a thoroughfare.

Two more carts had crossed. A group of sheep had been herded over (the railing did its job). Children were using the smooth timber deck for footraces.

The ford downstream was empty. The mud was already beginning to dry in the sun.

The Silver River flowed beneath the truss, ignored and conquered.

Arthur leaned against the fender of his truck, cleaning his glasses.

Vivian walked over. She had a smudge of grease on her nose and a splinter in her glove, but she looked satisfied.

"They like it," Vivian said, watching the crowd.

"They’re using it," Arthur corrected. "That’s better."

"You look happy," Vivian noted.

She looked at his face. The tension lines from the Iron Empire were gone. The frustration from the survey day was gone. He looked calm.

Arthur put his glasses back on.

He looked at his boots. They were dusty, but they weren’t muddy.

He looked at the cart rolling smoothly across the span.

"I look dry," Arthur said.

"Is that the goal?" Vivian teased. "Dry boots?"

"Dry boots mean efficient travel," Arthur said. "Mud is friction. Friction is waste."

He opened the door of the truck.

"Zack! Pack the tools. We’re done here."

"Where to next, Boss?" Zack asked, tossing the wrench bag into the bed. "Back to the estate?"

Arthur looked at the road leading away from the bridge.

Now that the crossing was solved, the flaws in the road itself were glaringly obvious. The ruts. The lack of drainage. The uneven grade.

The bridge was perfect. The road was an insult to the bridge.

"No," Arthur said. "We go to the quarry."

"The quarry?" Julian asked, climbing into the back seat. "Why?"

Arthur pointed to the dirt road.

"Because now we have a bridge," Arthur said. "And I’m not driving this truck on dirt anymore. We need gravel. We need tar."

He started the engine.

"We’re paving the valley."

End of Chapter 90