The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 120 - 119: The Speed Problem
The morning convoy assembled exactly on time.
Twenty-three wagons. Perfect spacing. Drivers ready. The slot system had worked flawlessly for weeks.
Arthur stood at the eastern gate and watched them depart.
The lead wagon rolled forward. Then the second. Then the third.
Then everything stopped.
A farmer’s cart had entered the same lane. Small. Light. Unremarkable. But slow. Terribly slow. The horse walked at half the convoy’s pace.
The third wagon slowed. Then the fourth. Then the fifth.
The perfect spacing collapsed into a compressed line of frustrated drivers.
Arthur watched the farmer’s cart crawl up the road.
Behind it, twelve wagons stacked up like a fist closing.
---
Zack arrived at a run.
"Same thing at the south slope. Heavy timber wagon climbing slow, twenty carts stacked behind it. Drivers shouting. Almost crashed."
Arthur didn’t turn from the road.
"We fixed timing. Now speed’s the problem."
Zack followed his gaze. The farmer’s cart had reached the first rise. It was moving slower now—if that was possible.
"I’ll send a guard to move him over."
Arthur shook his head slowly.
"He’s not breaking any rule. He’s just moving at his speed. His speed is not their speed."
---
They spent the morning walking the corridor.
Everywhere, the same pattern repeated.
At the eastern stretch, a heavy grain wagon crawled uphill. Behind it, four light delivery carts fumed, unable to pass. The road was too narrow. The wagon was too slow. Nothing moved.
At the bridge approach, a convoy of empty return wagons moved fast—until they caught a fully loaded timber convoy moving slow. The fast wagons stacked up behind the slow ones, spacing collapsing, drivers shouting.
At the Summit Depot, a luxury passenger carriage tried to overtake a wool convoy on the descent. The carriage driver cut too close. The wool driver swerved. Both wagons nearly went over the edge.
Zack pulled Arthur aside after that one.
"We fix the timing. We fix the slots. We fix everything. And now this." He gestured at the chaos below. "Speed’s killing us."
Arthur nodded.
"Flow breaks when speeds mix."
---
Back at the command pavilion, Arthur spread maps across the table.
"The road works. The timing works. But we’re mixing different vehicles on the same path."
Zack leaned over the maps. "So what? We ban slow wagons?"
"No. We separate them."
Arthur drew lines on the map.
"Every vehicle moves at its own speed. Heavy wagons climb slow. Light carts move fast. Return convoys empty are faster than loaded ones. Passenger carriages faster than freight."
He marked three parallel lines.
"Same road. Different lanes. Heavy lane for slow cargo. Light lane for fast cargo. Overtaking sections where passing is allowed."
Zack studied the drawing.
"Widen the road?"
"Widen sections. Mark lanes clearly. Create passing zones where the road is already wide enough."
Zack nodded slowly. "We can do that. Some sections already have the space."
---
Construction began the next day.
Workers widened key sections of the corridor—the flat stretches between hills, the approach to the bridge, the area before the Summit Depot. They marked lanes with painted lines and wooden dividers.
New signs appeared at every major junction.
HEAVY LANE — SLOW CARGO
LIGHT LANE — FAST CARGO
PASSING ZONE AHEAD
Guards received new instructions. Every wagon was inspected at entry. Load weight determined lane assignment. No exceptions.
A timber merchant argued with a guard at the south gate.
"I’ve used this road for years! I’m not going in the slow lane!"
The guard pointed at the sign. "Your wagon weighs four tons. Heavy lane. Move." 𝒇𝓻𝓮𝓮𝙬𝙚𝒃𝒏𝓸𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝓬𝓸𝒎
The merchant’s face reddened. But behind him, ten other wagons waited. He moved.
---
The first day was confusion.
Wagons drifted between lanes. Drivers ignored signs. Guards shouted until their voices gave out.
A light cart entered the heavy lane trying to pass. It found itself blocked by a slow grain wagon. The driver cursed and tried to cut back across. A guard blocked him.
"You picked the lane. You stay in it until the passing zone."
The driver stared. "But this wagon is so slow—"
"Passing zone in two miles. Wait."
He waited.
---
The second day was better.
Drivers learned the system. Heavy wagons stayed in the heavy lane. Light wagons moved in the light lane. The flow began to separate.
At the passing zones, faster wagons moved around slower ones in their own lanes. No crossing. No cutting. Just smooth overtaking in designated sections.
Zack walked the corridor that afternoon, watching.
A convoy of empty return wagons moved fast in the light lane. They passed a slow farmer’s cart without slowing—because the farmer was in the heavy lane, where he belonged.
The farmer didn’t even notice them go by.
Zack grinned.
---
The third day, Arthur stood at the bridge approach.
Below him, two steady streams of wagons moved in parallel. Heavy lane: loaded grain wagons, timber convoys, iron carts—slow but steady. Light lane: delivery carts, passenger carriages, empty wagons—moving at their natural speed.
No interference. No shouting. No near collisions.
A fast carriage approached from behind. In the old system, it would have stacked up behind slower wagons for miles. Now it moved smoothly in the light lane, passing slow cargo without slowing itself.
The carriage driver passed beneath Arthur’s position, glanced up, and raised his whip in salute.
Arthur nodded once.
---
Julian appeared beside him.
"Same road," Julian observed. "Different worlds."
Arthur watched the two streams of wagons.
"Same system."
Julian was quiet for a moment.
"When I first came here, wagons moved randomly. Whenever. However. At whatever speed they could manage. Now..." He gestured at the organized flow below. "Now they move like water finding channels."
Arthur nodded slowly.
"Water finds channels because channels exist. We just built them."
---
But some sections couldn’t be widened.
The narrow pass east of the Summit Depot remained a single lane—barely wide enough for one wagon, let alone two.
Zack reported the problem.
"We’ve got heavy and light lanes everywhere except the pass. And that’s where everything breaks."
Arthur walked the pass that afternoon.
The road cut between two rock faces, barely twelve feet wide. One wagon at a time. No passing. No separation. Slow wagons blocked everything behind them.
He studied the rock walls. Studied the slope. Studied the roadbed.
Then he turned to Zack.
"We don’t widen the pass. We bypass it."
---
The solution was simple.
Instead of forcing all traffic through the narrow section, Arthur designed a second route—a loop that climbed slightly above the pass, wide enough for two lanes, long enough to absorb the grade.
He showed Zack the drawing.
"Slow wagons take the original pass. Short, steep, direct. Fast wagons take the loop. Longer, gentler, wider."
Zack studied the design.
"So we’re not fixing the bottleneck. We’re giving people a choice?"
Arthur shook his head.
"We’re separating speeds permanently. Heavy wagons don’t need speed. They need steady movement. Light wagons don’t need steady movement. They need speed."
Zack grinned. "So we give each what they need."
"Yes."
---
Construction began immediately.
Crews blasted rock. Cut slopes. Laid foundation. The loop took two weeks—faster than widening the pass would have taken, and stronger.
When it opened, the effect was immediate.
Heavy wagons continued through the original pass. Slow, steady, uninterrupted.
Light wagons took the loop. Faster, smoother, climbing at their natural speed.
At the merge point beyond the pass, the two streams rejoined without conflict. No stacking. No shouting. No delays.
A light cart driver pulled up beside a heavy wagon at the merge point.
"You took the pass?"
The heavy driver nodded. "Too slow for the loop. Would have held everyone up."
The light driver laughed. "And we would have been stuck behind you for miles."
They nodded at each other and rolled on.
---
Vivian watched the merge point that evening.
She found Arthur nearby, checking the new signage.
"You’re not just separating traffic," she said. "You’re deciding how people move. What lane. What speed. What route."
Arthur turned to face her.
"I’m removing interference."
She considered this.
"Same result," she said finally. "You control the road. Now you control the behavior on it."
Arthur was quiet for a moment.
Then: "The road doesn’t control anything. The road just exists. The rules make it usable for everyone instead of just the fastest."
---
The lane system settled into rhythm.
Heavy wagons in the heavy lane. Light wagons in the light lane. Passing zones every few miles. Separation at bottlenecks.
Drivers began to talk differently about the corridor.
"It’s not about speed anymore," one told a merchant at the hub. "It’s about being in the right lane. You pick your lane, you stay in it, you move steady."
The merchant frowned. "But speed—"
"Speed is nothing if you’re blocked. I’d rather move slow in the heavy lane than fast in a lane that’s stopped."
The merchant stared at him. Then nodded slowly.
---
Arthur stood at the command pavilion window late one evening.
Below him, the corridor glowed with lantern light. Two streams of wagons moved in parallel—one steady and slow, one swift and light.
Zack entered with final reports.
"Throughput up another forty percent. Accidents down sixty. Complaints about delays almost gone."
Arthur accepted the papers without looking.
Zack stood beside him at the window.
"You know what’s strange? Drivers don’t even think about it anymore. They just... pick their lane and go."
Arthur nodded slowly.
"That’s the point. A system that requires constant thought is a system that’s failing."
---
Julian found Arthur at the eastern gate the next morning.
A convoy was departing. Heavy wagons in the heavy lane. Light wagons in the light lane. Moving together, side by side, at different speeds but in perfect flow.
"Speed was never the problem," Julian said quietly.
Arthur glanced at him.
"Difference was."
They watched the convoy disappear toward the ridge.
Speed was never the problem.
Difference was.
End of Chapter 119







