The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 67 - 66: The First Prediction
Time Remaining: 35 Days, 13 Hours. (Status: Provisional Asset. Inspection at Core Junction.) Location: Sector 9-Alpha - The Magma-Gate.
The Magma-Gate was not a building. It was a wound in the world that had been stapled shut with iron.
The Iron Horse rolled to a stop at the base of the facility, its tires hissing on the hot asphalt. The heat here was physical—a heavy, suffocating blanket that pressed against the skin. The air shimmered with heat distortion, turning the massive black fortress ahead into a wavering mirage of soot and steam.
This was the throat of the Empire. Directly beneath them, the crust of the earth had been drilled open to the mantle. A massive central pipe, fifty feet wide and reinforced with bands of Adamant-Steel, rose from the ground like the trunk of a mechanical tree. It branched off into hundreds of smaller arteries, feeding superheated steam to the turbines that powered the city.
The noise was absolute. It wasn’t just loud; it was all-consuming. The scream of high-pressure steam venting from safety valves mixed with the deep, subsonic rumble of the magma below.
"Masks on," Arthur ordered, pulling his goggles down over his eyes. "The sulfur content here is high enough to yellow your teeth in an hour."
Zack and Vivian pulled their gas masks tight. Arthur grabbed his clipboard and a heavy brass stopwatch. "Remember," Arthur said, opening the door. "We are not saboteurs. We are auditors. We don’t break things. We just tell them exactly when they are going to break." 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖
They stepped out into the inferno. Behind them, the four Iron-Hulks clanked out of the smog. The heat didn’t bother them; they were steam-powered to begin with. Their sensor clusters glowed dimly in the haze, tracking Arthur’s every movement.
.....
A man walked toward them down the central catwalk. He was huge, his arms thick with muscle and covered in burn scars. He wore a heavy leather apron over a sweat-stained uniform and carried a wrench the size of a sledgehammer. He didn’t wear a mask. He chewed on a piece of unlit tobacco, seemingly immune to the sulfur.
"You’re the Consultant?" the man shouted over the roar of the steam. He spat a stream of black juice onto the grating. It sizzled. "I’m Foreman Grix. Silas radioed ahead. Said I have to let you look at the pipes. He didn’t say I have to let you touch them."
"I don’t want to touch them," Arthur shouted back, walking past him to the railing. "I value my hands."
Arthur looked over the edge. Below the catwalk, the main intake pipe—Valve Assembly Alpha—was visible. It was a nightmare of boltheads and flanges, holding back millions of pounds of pressure. The pipe wasn’t still. It was vibrating. Thrum... Thrum... Thrum.
Grix leaned on the railing next to Arthur, smirking. "She’s purring like a kitten today. Output is 110%. We’re setting records."
"She’s not purring," Arthur said, pulling the stethoscope from his belt. He placed the brass bell against the railing. "She’s hyperventilating."
Arthur listened. The vibration wasn’t smooth. It was a jagged, frantic rattle. The First Era foundation stones were trying to "breathe"—expanding and contracting with the natural mana flow of the earth. But the Imperial bolts were rigid. They were fighting the movement. Friction. Heat. Resonance.
"How long since you replaced the flange bolts on Valve 3?" Arthur asked, pointing to a massive connection joint twenty feet below.
Grix frowned. "Valve 3? We inspected it last week. Rated for another six months."
"It won’t last six minutes," Arthur said.
He clicked his stopwatch. Click.
Grix laughed. It was a harsh, grinding sound. "Listen, college boy. I’ve worked this gate for twenty years. I know every squeak and rattle of this rig. That bolt is solid Adamant-Steel. It could hold up a mountain."
"It’s holding up a frequency," Arthur corrected. "Do you know what Harmonic Resonance is, Foreman?"
"I know it sounds like an excuse to slack off," Grix spat.
Arthur didn’t take the bait. He turned to Vivian and Zack. "Step back," Arthur ordered. "Behind the blast shield."
"Is it going to blow?" Zack asked, eyeing the massive pipe nervously.
"Not the pipe," Arthur said. "Just the containment bracket."
Arthur turned back to Grix. He held up the stopwatch. "The resonance frequency of Adamant-Steel is 440 Hertz. Right now, your ground vibration is hitting 12 Hertz. But the pumps are cycling at 36 Hertz." Arthur tapped the watch face. "12 plus 428... wait for the pump cycle to align..."
"You’re speaking gibberish," Grix sneered. "Get off my catwalk."
"At 14:42 and 30 seconds," Arthur said calmly, "the vibration waves will construct. The amplitude will spike. The third bolt on the left flange of Valve 3 will shear."
Grix looked at the clock on the wall. It read 14:41. "You’re predicting a structural failure to the second?" Grix mocked. "Are you a fortune teller?"
"No," Arthur looked at the vibrating pipe. He could see the stress lines glowing in his mind’s eye—the Heaven-Defying Understanding turning the physical world into a math problem. "I’m a mathematician. Physics doesn’t negotiate, Foreman."
"If you’re wrong," Grix stepped closer, looming over Arthur, "I’m going to throw you off this rig myself for wasting government time."
"If I’m right," Arthur said, holding his ground, "you let me make a phone call."
....
Grix crossed his arms. The Iron-Hulks shifted their weight, their hydraulics hissing. The Seconds hand on the stopwatch ticked. Tick. Tick. Tick.
Arthur watched the pipe. To Grix, it looked solid. To Arthur, it looked like a guitar string being pulled tighter and tighter. The "Hum" of the ground shifted pitch. It went from a low rumble to a high, singing whine.
"Do you hear that?" Vivian whispered from behind the shield. "It sounds like... glass rubbing together."
"That’s the metal screaming," Arthur said.
14:42:00. The pump cycle shifted. The massive pistons inside the facility slammed into their sync phase. THUD-THUD.
The vibration traveled down the pipe. It hit the flange. The bolt in question—a massive threaded rod of steel—began to glow dull red. Not from heat, but from kinetic friction. The nut was vibrating so fast it blurred.
Grix stopped chewing his tobacco. He squinted at the bolt. "Why is it shaking?"
14:42:15. The whine became a shriek. The catwalk vibrated violently beneath their feet. Dust rained down from the ceiling.
"Stabilize!" Grix yelled, reaching for his radio. "Drop pressure on Valve 3!"
"Too late," Arthur said.
14:42:28. The frequency peaked. The wave of force hit the bolt at the exact moment the metal lattice was stretched to its limit.
14:42:30.
PING.
It wasn’t a boom. It was a sharp, piercing crack, like a gunshot amplified ten times. The bolt—three inches of solid Adamant—sheared cleanly in half. The head of the bolt shot off like a bullet. It ricocheted off the steel wall—CLANG—and embedded itself in the floor plating right between Grix’s boots.
HISS! A jet of high-pressure steam erupted from the hole where the bolt had been. It screamed like a banshee, cutting through the air.
Grix stared at the bolt head smoking between his feet. His face went pale beneath the soot. He looked at Valve 3. The flange was shuddering, held by the remaining bolts, but leaking dangerously. He looked at the clock. 14:42:35.
He looked at Arthur.
Arthur clicked the stopwatch. "Right on schedule," Arthur said. "You might want to tighten the others before the flange warps."
...
Chaos erupted on the rig. "Emergency Maintenance!" Grix screamed into his radio. "Seal Valve 3! Bypass to Auxiliary! Get a weld team down there now!"
Workers scrambled. Steam vented. Alarms blared. Arthur stood calmly in the center of the storm, putting his stopwatch back in his pocket. The Iron-Hulks, confused by the sudden activity, looked from the leaking pipe to Arthur, their sensors flashing yellow. They didn’t know whether to arrest him or salute him.
Ten minutes later, the leak was patched. The screaming steam died down to a dull roar. Grix walked back to Arthur. He was shaking. He wasn’t chewing tobacco anymore. He pulled the sheared bolt head from the floor. He stared at the break. It was perfectly smooth—a fracture caused by pure sonic resonance.
"How?" Grix whispered. "How did you know?"
"The grid is singing, Foreman," Arthur said. "You just stopped listening to the music." Arthur leaned against the railing. "That was one bolt. A warning shot. In 35 days, the song gets louder. And when the bass drops, the entire Magma-Gate cracks in half."
Grix wiped sweat from his forehead. He looked at the massive facility around him—the pride of his life. Suddenly, it didn’t look like a fortress. It looked like a bomb.
"Silas needs to see this," Grix muttered. "The Director needs to see this."
"Make the call," Arthur said.
...
Location: The Citadel - Director Kael’s Office. Time: One Hour Later.
The office was stark. No windows, just walls of black marble and screens displaying live production metrics. Director Kael stood behind his desk. He was a tall man, severe and sharp. He wore a pristine black uniform with silver trim. His face was unscarred, cold, and utterly emotionless. He didn’t look like a tyrant; he looked like a CEO.
On his desk lay a report. Stamped: URGENT. Subject: Structural Anomaly / Asset 04 Prediction.
Overseer Silas stood in front of the desk, sweating profusely. "The bolt sheared exactly at the predicted timestamp, Director," Silas said, his voice trembling. "To the second. Foreman Grix confirmed it. The Consultant claims it is a harmonic resonance issue caused by the core overload."
Kael picked up the report. He read Arthur’s file. "Arthur von Pendelton," Kael murmured. His voice was smooth, cultured, and terrifyingly calm. "The boy from Osgard. The one who fixed the Mana Grid."
"He claims the city has 35 days," Silas added.
Kael walked to the wall of screens. He watched the feed from the Magma-Gate. He saw Arthur standing on the catwalk, looking up at the camera. Arthur wasn’t cowering. He was waiting.
"He isn’t guessing," Kael said. "He is calculating."
"Shall I terminate him?" Silas asked. "He is disrupting the workforce. Grix is terrified."
"No," Kael turned around. His eyes were cold, calculating chips of blue ice. "You don’t scrap a tool that works better than your own."
Kael pressed a button on his desk. "Upgrade his clearance," Kael ordered. "Level 3. Let him inspect the Core."
"But sir—"
"I want to see what he can do," Kael sat down. "If he is right, he is useful. If he is wrong... he will make an excellent test subject for the new bio-fuel program."
Kael looked at Arthur’s face on the screen. "He demands a demonstration? Let him demonstrate. But put a Kill-Switch collar on him. I don’t like variables I can’t control."
End of Chapter 66







