The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 115 - 114: Messages Move Too Slowly
Morning light flooded the Silver River Hub.
Arthur stood near the dispatch yard, reviewing convoy schedules. Wagons rolled through the gates in steady rhythm. Crates moved from warehouse to wagon in minutes. The system hummed.
Then a commotion erupted near the eastern entrance.
A horse staggered through the gate. Its flanks were streaked with sweat, foam dripping from its mouth. The rider slumped in the saddle, barely conscious.
Workers rushed to catch him as he fell.
Arthur walked over.
The courier’s hands were raw from gripping reins. His face was gray with exhaustion. Someone pressed water to his lips.
He gasped out words: "Message... from the capital... urgent..."
A merchant pushed forward. "That’s my dispatch! I’ve been waiting four days!"
Another merchant grabbed the courier’s satchel. "Mine too. Timber prices changed last week. I already sold at the old rate."
Arthur watched the scene quietly.
---
Zack appeared beside him.
"Courier rode straight through," Zack explained. "One horse, one rider, three days from the capital."
Arthur studied the exhausted animal. Its legs trembled. Its eyes were dull.
"The convoy that left yesterday," Arthur said. "Already arrived?"
Zack nodded. "This morning. Unloaded before noon."
Arthur’s gaze shifted to the arguing merchants.
"They’re getting news the convoy already delivered."
"Looks that way."
Arthur was quiet for a long moment.
Then: "Wagons cross the valley in one day. Messages still take three."
Zack shrugged. "That’s how couriers work."
Arthur shook his head slowly.
"Then the system is incomplete."
---
That afternoon, Arthur summoned the hub’s lead courier.
The man was middle-aged, with leathery skin and permanent squint from years on the road. He stood before Arthur with wary respect.
"You’ve ridden the corridor," Arthur said.
"Many times, my lord."
"How far in one day?"
The courier considered. "Depends on the horse. A good animal, light rider, clear weather—maybe forty miles. Then rest. Then forty more."
Arthur pointed east. "The capital is ninety miles."
"Three days, my lord. Sometimes four if the horse struggles."
"And if the horse dies?"
The courier’s expression didn’t change. "Then I walk to the nearest settlement and buy another. If I have coin. If not, I wait."
Arthur nodded slowly.
"You may go."
The courier left, confusion on his face.
---
Vivian entered as the door closed.
"Problems with the courier?"
Arthur leaned back in his chair.
"Goods move faster than information now. Merchants make decisions based on old news. They lose money. They complain."
Vivian sat across from him.
"That’s always been true. News travels as fast as a horse."
Arthur met her eyes.
"A horse can travel faster."
---
He spread a map across the table.
The corridor stretched from the Silver River Hub to the capital. Three major points marked the route: the hub itself, the Summit Depot on Miller’s Ridge, and the Eastern Waystation near the capital foothills.
Arthur tapped each location.
"These already exist. We built them for convoys."
Vivian nodded. "Rest points. Horse changes. Shelter."
"Exactly." Arthur traced the distance between them. "Twenty-five miles between each. A horse can sprint that distance easily. Then rest while the next horse runs."
Understanding flickered in Vivian’s eyes.
"You want courier relays."
Arthur pulled out a fresh sheet of paper.
---
He drew quickly.
A line representing the corridor. Small squares at regular intervals. Arrows showing messages moving between them.
"One rider carries the message from the hub to the summit. Fresh horse waiting. Fresh rider waiting. He hands it over and rests while the next rider continues."
Vivian studied the drawing.
"The message never stops moving."
"Correct."
"And the riders never exhaust themselves or their horses."
"Correct."
Vivian looked up. "How many stations?"
"Every fifteen miles. Six total between here and the capital. Small buildings. Stables. Feed storage. One or two riders per station."
---
Zack burst in an hour later, summoned by Vivian’s note.
He stared at Arthur’s drawing.
"So messages run like wagons now?"
Arthur nodded. "Same principle. Continuous movement. No stops except handoffs."
Zack’s face split into a grin.
"That’s brilliant. That’s... that’s obvious. Why didn’t anyone do this before?"
"Because the road didn’t exist before. Because the depots didn’t exist before." Arthur tapped the map. "The infrastructure is already built. We just add riders."
Zack grabbed the paper.
"Fifteen mile intervals. Small stations. Fresh horses." He was already calculating. "We’ll need... maybe twenty riders total. Thirty horses. Feed supplies. Construction crews for the new stations."
"How long?"
Zack thought. "Two weeks for the first station. A month for all six."
"Start tomorrow."
---
News spread through the hub within days.
Merchants gathered at the command pavilion, demanding details.
A textile broker pushed to the front. "Is it true? Messages to the capital in hours instead of days?"
Arthur confirmed.
"The first relay station breaks ground tomorrow. Within a month, every message travels the corridor without stopping."
A grain merchant shook his head in disbelief. "Hours. I could check capital prices and adjust my shipments the same day."
Another merchant laughed. "My brother in the capital could order goods and I’d receive it before noon."
The textile broker turned to the crowd. "Do you understand what this means? We’re not just trading faster. We’re trading smarter."
Arthur watched them argue excitedly.
Vivian leaned close. "You’ve given them something they didn’t know they needed."
"They needed it," Arthur replied quietly. "They just didn’t know faster communication was possible."
---
Construction began at the first relay point—a flat stretch halfway between the hub and the Summit Depot.
Workers laid stone foundations for a small building. Stables rose beside it. A fresh water well was dug. Feed storage bins were built.
Zack supervised personally, pushing the crew hard.
Arthur visited on the third day.
The building was already framed. Workers fitted roof beams while others stacked stones for the fireplace.
Zack approached, dust covering his clothes.
"Another week for this one. Then we start on the next."
Arthur walked the site. Measured distances with his eyes.
"The horses?"
"Thirty purchased. Good stock. Fast, strong, well-fed. They’ll rotate between stations."
"And the riders?"
Zack grinned. "Found the fastest messengers in the valley. They’re excited. Said this is better than riding the whole route alone."
---
Julian appeared at Arthur’s side as he left the construction site.
"You’re building something invisible this time," Julian observed.
Arthur glanced at him.
"Messages are invisible?"
"The system is invisible. Roads we can see. Bridges we can touch. Crates we can stack." Julian gestured at the half-built relay station. "This moves words. You can’t hold a word."
Arthur considered this.
"Words move markets." 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺
Julian nodded slowly. "Yes. They do."
---
Two weeks later, the first relay test began.
Arthur stood at the hub’s eastern gate. A young rider sat mounted on a fresh horse, a sealed leather tube in his hand.
Inside the tube: a simple message.
"Departure time recorded. Relay test begins."
Zack stood beside Arthur, stopwatch ready.
"First rider to Summit Depot. Fifteen miles."
Arthur nodded to the rider.
The young man kicked his horse and exploded down the road.
Hooves thundered against stone. Dust rose behind him. Within seconds he was a shrinking figure on the horizon.
Zack clicked his stopwatch.
"Let’s see how fast words really move."
---
Twenty-three minutes later, a signal horn sounded from the ridge.
Zack raised his binoculars.
"He’s at the summit. Handing off to the next rider."
Arthur waited.
Another horn. Then another. Each marking a relay station passed.
Fifty-seven minutes after departure, the final horn sounded from the Eastern Waystation—the last stop before the capital.
Zack lowered his binoculars, face incredulous.
"That’s... fifty-seven minutes to the Eastern Waystation. The capital’s what, another fifteen minutes beyond?"
"Twelve," Arthur corrected.
Zack stared at the stopwatch.
"One hour and nine minutes. Hub to capital. That’s..."
"Impossible," a merchant behind them whispered. "That’s impossible."
Arthur turned to the gathered crowd.
"Nothing is impossible. Only unbuilt."
---
Within days, the relay system was operational.
Riders stationed at each point. Fresh horses always waiting. Messages moved in continuous streams.
Merchants lined up at the new Message Office—a small building near the hub entrance where they could send dispatches for a small fee.
A wool merchant emerged from the office, staring at a receipt in his hand.
"I just sent word to the capital. My factor there will receive it before dinner." He shook his head. "Yesterday, that would have taken three days."
Beside him, a grain trader laughed. "My brother owes me five silver. He’ll get the demand letter today instead of next week."
They walked away laughing.
---
Vivian found Arthur at the Message Office that evening.
He stood near the counter, watching clerks sort incoming dispatches.
"Thirty-seven messages today," she reported. "Mostly merchant correspondence. Some private letters. One official dispatch from the capital council."
Arthur took the dispatch. Scanned it.
"The council wants to know how we’re moving messages so fast."
Vivian smiled. "Tell them?"
"Eventually." He set the dispatch down. "First let them see the value."
---
The next morning, a convoy departed for the capital.
But this time, something was different.
Before the wagons moved, a rider sprinted ahead—carrying the convoy’s cargo manifest, arrival time, and merchant requests.
By the time the convoy reached the capital, waiting buyers already knew what was coming.
A timber merchant watched his wagon disappear down the road, then turned to Arthur.
"I used to arrive and hope someone wanted my wood. Now they’re waiting before I even leave."
Arthur nodded.
"That’s the point."
---
Julian joined Arthur at the eastern gate that evening.
They watched a rider return from the Summit Depot, fresh message tube in hand.
"The valley feels smaller now," Julian remarked.
Arthur didn’t respond.
Julian continued quietly. "First the road moved goods. Now it moves words. Words move faster."
Arthur finally spoke.
"Words move markets. Markets move goods. Goods move people."
Julian nodded slowly.
"And people move kingdoms."
---
One month after the first relay station broke ground, Arthur received a message from the capital.
It arrived in the afternoon—handed directly to him by a relay rider who had covered the distance in just over an hour.
The message was from the king’s trade minister.
It read:
*"Your relay system has been observed. The council requests a demonstration for official delegates. We wish to understand how messages travel faster than horses.*
*Deliver your response within the week."*
Arthur read it twice.
Then he handed it to Vivian.
She read it and looked up.
"They want to copy it."
Arthur nodded slowly.
"Let them watch. Let them learn." He turned toward the window, where a relay rider sprinted past on the road below.
"By the time they build their own, ours will be faster still."
---
That night, Arthur stood alone at the hub’s eastern gate.
Lanterns lit the relay station nearby. A rider sat mounted, ready for the next dispatch. Fresh horses waited in the stables.
Behind him, the hub hummed with nighttime activity. Warehouses glowed with lantern light. Workers moved crates. Wagons prepared for morning departure.
A rider approached from the darkness, reining in at the gate.
"Message from the Eastern Waystation, my lord. Capital prices updated. Grain up two copper per bushel."
Arthur took the tube. Handed it to a waiting clerk.
"Distribute to the grain merchants. They’ll want to adjust morning shipments."
The clerk hurried away.
Arthur stood alone again, watching the dark road stretch east.
The road carried wagons.
Now it carried news.
And news could change a kingdom faster than any convoy.
End of Chapter 114







