The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 123 - 122: A Perfect Delivery Day

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Chapter 123: Chapter 122: A Perfect Delivery Day

Silas loaded his wagon before dawn.

The crates were already packed. He had filled them yesterday, sealed the lids, painted the marks. First grade vegetables. His farm’s stamp. Inspector Corbin’s name.

He lifted the first crate onto the wagon bed. Then the second. Then the third.

The load balanced perfectly. No shifting. No guessing. The wagon settled level on its wheels.

Silas stepped back and stared at it.

Something felt wrong.

He checked the harness. Fine. He checked the wheels. Fine. He checked the crates again. Still fine.

His wife appeared at the door, wrapped in a blanket.

"What’s wrong?"

Silas shook his head slowly.

"Feels like I forgot something."

She looked at the wagon. The crates. The harness.

"You didn’t forget anything. You’ve been doing this for twenty years."

He nodded slowly. Climbed onto the bench. Picked up the reins.

"That’s what worries me."

---

The road to the hub was quiet.

Not empty—other wagons moved alongside him. But no shouting. No fighting. No wagons stuck in ditches.

Silas kept waiting for something to go wrong.

Nothing did.

He reached the Silver River Hub as the sun cleared the trees. The eastern gate stood open. Guards waved him through without stopping.

He pulled into the freight yard and stopped.

A worker approached. Silas started to climb down, ready to help unload.

The worker pointed to a row of marked crates. "Drop them there. Load master will sort them."

Silas blinked. "I don’t need to... I mean, I usually—"

The worker was already walking to the next wagon.

Silas unloaded his crates. Stacked them where he was told. Climbed back onto his bench.

He sat there for a full minute, waiting for someone to tell him he’d done it wrong.

No one came.

---

He walked to the information board.

It was larger than last season. More numbers. More updates. But the format was clear. Prices. Demand. Arrivals.

He scanned the vegetable section.

Cabbage: low price. Oversupply from the eastern valley.

Carrots: steady.

Onions: high price. Capital bakeries buying everything.

Silas read it twice.

His wagon was full of onions.

He laughed out loud. A merchant beside him glanced over. Silas pointed at the board.

"Good thing I didn’t bring grain."

The merchant nodded and went back to his notes.

---

He checked his slot time at the dispatch office.

Morning convoy. Light lane. Departure in thirty minutes.

He walked back to his wagon. Climbed aboard. Waited.

A guard approached. "Slot time?"

Silas held up his paper.

The guard glanced at it. "Morning convoy. Light lane. You’re in the third wave. Follow the green markers."

Silas looked at the yard. Green markers lined a lane that led straight to the eastern gate.

"That’s it?"

The guard had already moved to the next wagon.

---

The convoy moved exactly on time.

Silas followed the wagon ahead. The green markers guided them through the yard. They reached the gate without stopping. The guard there checked his paper and waved him through.

He was on the corridor before he realized he hadn’t waited at all.

He looked back at the hub shrinking behind him. Then forward at the road stretching east.

"That’s it?" he said to no one.

---

The light lane was smooth.

Silas had driven this road for twenty years. He knew every bump, every rut, every place where the wagon would jolt.

The bumps were gone. The ruts were gone.

He drove with one hand on the reins. That was new. He usually held them in a death grip until the capital gates appeared.

A heavy wagon moved in the lane beside him. Slow. Steady. Not blocking anyone. Not blocking him.

Silas watched it for a long moment.

Then he sat back and let his shoulders relax.

---

The Summit Depot appeared ahead.

Silas remembered when this climb meant stopping twice to rest the horses. Sometimes three times. Sometimes turning back if the snow was bad.

Now the road climbed steadily. His horse didn’t slow. The wheels didn’t slip.

He reached the depot and pulled into the exchange yard.

A handler approached. "Fresh horse?"

Silas blinked. "I... yes. Usually I just rest mine."

The handler was already unhitching. "Rest yours here. Take a fresh one. Faster on the descent."

A stable boy led a fresh horse forward. The handler had the harness switched in minutes.

Silas stood there, useless.

"You eat yet?" the handler asked.

"I... no."

Handler pointed to a stone building. "Shelter’s open. Hot stew. Bread. Free for drivers."

Silas stared at the building. "Free?"

The handler shrugged. "Hub pays for it. You want to stand here or eat?"

---

Silas sat at a long wooden table with twenty other drivers.

He had never seen most of them before. Different routes. Different cargo. Different schedules.

Now they sat together, eating stew, drinking tea, not arguing.

A young driver across from him shook his head. "They feed us now too?"

An older driver laughed. "Don’t question it. Just eat."

Silas ate.

The stew was good.

---

The descent was nothing.

Silas remembered white-knuckle rides down the mountain. Wheels sliding. Horses slipping. Drivers praying.

Now the road was graded. Sanded. Marked with lanes. The descent was smoother than the climb used to be.

He held the reins loosely. The wagon followed the road. The road knew what to do.

He reached the bottom before he was ready to be there.

---

The capital freight yard was organized like the hub.

Silas pulled into the vegetable section. A buyer approached with a clipboard.

"Cargo?"

Silas handed over his paper. "Onions. First grade. Silver River mark."

The buyer glanced at the paper. Walked to the wagon. Looked at the crate marks.

Then he stepped back.

"Unload them. Payment counter on the left."

Silas waited. "You’re not going to... check them?"

The buyer looked at the crates again. First grade. Silver River. Inspector Corbin.

"Corbin’s marks are good." He turned to the next wagon.

Silas unloaded his crates. Walked to the payment counter. Collected his money.

The whole transaction took less time than the old inspection used to.

---

He stood outside the freight yard, holding his payment pouch.

The sun was still high. Not even noon.

He had delivered his cargo. Collected his money. Eaten a hot meal. Rested his horse.

He looked around, waiting for something to go wrong.

Nothing did.

He walked back to his wagon and sat on the bench.

He didn’t know what to do with himself.

---

He checked the wheels. They were fine.

He checked the harness. Fine.

He checked the empty wagon bed. Still empty.

He sat there for a long moment, hands in his lap, staring at nothing.

A guard passed by. "You alright?"

Silas nodded slowly. "I’m... fine. Just finished early."

The guard shrugged and walked on.

Silas laughed quietly.

Twenty years of delivering goods, and he had never finished early. Never. There was always a delay. Always a problem. Always something that made the day longer than it needed to be.

Now he had time.

He had no idea what to do with it.

---

Julian stood at the capital freight yard entrance that afternoon.

He watched the small traders arrive. Unload. Collect payment. Leave.

No arguments. No inspections. No delays.

They moved through the yard like water through a channel. Smooth. Continuous. Calm.

Arthur appeared beside him.

Julian gestured at the flow.

"They’re calmer."

Arthur watched a farmer climb onto his wagon bench, looking slightly confused by his own free time.

"Because nothing is fighting them."

---

Vivian found Arthur at the capital’s information board later that day.

A small farmer stood before it, reading the prices for his return trip. He wasn’t rushing. He wasn’t worried. He was just... deciding.

She watched him for a long moment.

Then she turned to Arthur.

"You didn’t just build roads. You gave people time back."

Arthur was quiet.

She continued. "That farmer has delivered to the capital for years. He always returned after dark. Always exhausted. Always stressed." She watched him walk calmly back to his wagon. "Now he’ll be home before sunset."

Arthur nodded slowly.

"Time was always there. It was just being wasted."

---

Silas reached home as the sun touched the trees.

His wife was in the garden. She looked up when she heard the wagon. Her face shifted from surprise to confusion to disbelief.

"You’re early."

Silas climbed down slowly. His legs didn’t ache. His hands didn’t hurt. He wasn’t exhausted.

He shrugged.

"Road’s faster."

She walked to the wagon. Looked at the empty bed. Looked at him.

"How early?"

He held up the payment pouch. "Delivered by noon. Ate at the summit. Rested the horse. Still home before dark."

She stared at him.

He laughed. It was a strange sound. He hadn’t laughed at the end of a delivery day in years.

She started laughing too. Neither of them could explain why.

---

That night, Silas sat on his porch.

The wagon was parked. The horse was fed. The payment pouch was inside.

He looked at the road that passed his farm. Twenty years ago, it was dirt. Ten years ago, it was gravel. Now it was stone. Marked with lines. Lined with markers.

He had watched it change. He hadn’t understood most of the changes. They had seemed unnecessary at the time. Too much work. Too much money. Too much planning.

Now he sat on his porch, home before dark, and realized he hadn’t worried once today.

Not once.

He laughed again, softer this time.

Then he went inside to eat dinner with his family.

---

For the first time in his life—

the road gave something back.

End of Chapter 122