The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 68 - 67: Audience Without Trust
Time Remaining: 35 Days, 10 Hours. (Status: Clearance Level 3 [Restricted].) Location: The Citadel - The Apex Tower.
The invitation to meet the Director did not come on a gold card. It came in the form of a heavy iron collar.
Arthur stood in the decontamination chamber of the Citadel. The air here was different. Down in the foundries, the air tasted like sulfur and penny shavings. Here, at the base of the Director’s tower, the air was cold, sterile, and smelled of ozone.
Overseer Silas stood behind Arthur. His hands were shaking slightly as he held the device. It was a thick ring of black metal, lined with sharp brass needles on the inside.
"Neck," Silas ordered. His voice was quiet. He wasn’t barking orders anymore. He was terrified of where they were going.
Arthur lifted his chin. CLICK-SNAP.
The collar locked around Arthur’s neck. It was heavy. The needles pressed against his skin, just enough to prick, not enough to draw blood. A small red light blinked on the front of the throat piece.
"This is a Compliance Collar," Silas explained, stepping back. "It contains a small charge of pressurized alchemical fire. If you leave the designated zone, it detonates. If you attack the Director, it detonates. If the Director presses a button on his desk... it detonates."
Arthur touched the cold metal. "Subtle."
"It is not meant to be subtle," Silas said. "It is meant to be certain. Your team is being held in the lower garage. If you die, they will be processed as waste. Do you understand?"
"I understand," Arthur said, buttoning his coat over the collar. "Lead the way."
They entered the elevator. It wasn’t a cage like the mine shafts. It was a glass capsule. The ascent was fast. They rose above the smoke layer. For the first time in days, Arthur saw the sun. It was setting, painting the top of the smog clouds in bruising shades of purple and orange. Below them, the city of Ferro looked like a circuit board. Rows of factories, rivers of molten slag, and the grid of power lines glowing in the dusk.
Arthur looked at the view. "It’s efficient," Arthur admitted. "Ugly, but efficient."
"It is the engine of the world," Silas said proudly. Then he checked his pocket watch. "Do not speak unless spoken to. The Director does not like wasted breath."
The elevator stopped at the top floor. The doors hissed open.
Arthur expected a throne room. He expected guards, banners, and gold. He found an office. It was large, sparse, and freezing cold. The walls were made of black polished stone. There were no decorations. No paintings. No statues. Just one wall of glass looking out over the suffering city. And a desk.
Behind the desk sat Director Kael. He was writing on a document with a steel pen. He didn’t look up when they entered. He was a man of sharp angles. High cheekbones, slicked-back grey hair, and pale skin that looked like it hadn’t seen the sun in years. He wore a simple black uniform with a single silver pin on the collar.
Arthur stood in the center of the room. The silence stretched. Scritch. Scritch. Scritch. The sound of the pen on paper was the only noise.
Silas stood at attention, sweating in the cold air. "Director. The Asset is here."
Kael finished the sentence he was writing. He dotted the period with precise force. He put the pen down. He looked up. His eyes were blue. Not the warm blue of the sky, but the pale, dead blue of a winter glacier.
"Arthur von Pendelton," Kael said. His voice was soft, smooth, and utterly dangerous. "The bolt at the Magma-Gate sheared at 14:42 and 30 seconds. Exactly as you predicted."
"Physics is predictable," Arthur said.
Kael stood up. He walked around the desk. He didn’t walk like a warrior; he walked like a predator inspecting a trap. "Silas tells me you are a mathematician," Kael said. "But your file says you are a Prince of Osgard. A city of magic. A city of chaos."
Kael stopped in front of Arthur. He looked at the collar. "I despise magic, Arthur. It is messy. It is unpredictable. It defies the laws of order. It is a disease that rots the mind."
"Is that why you use a Suppression Field?" Arthur asked. "To cure the disease?"
"To quarantine it," Kael corrected. "We filter the mana. We strip it of its will. We turn it into electricity. Pure, clean power. That is the Iron Empire’s gift to the world. We brought order to the chaos."
"And now your order is shaking apart," Arthur said.
Silas gasped. You didn’t interrupt the Director. Kael didn’t get angry. He smiled. It was a thin, joyless smile. "Show me," Kael said. He pointed to a large table in the corner. It was a map of the city, illuminated from below by light-tubes.
Arthur walked to the map. He didn’t hesitate. He pointed to the center—the Citadel. "You built your city on top of a First Era Nexus," Arthur said. "The Ancients didn’t use pumps. They used passive intake. They let the earth breathe."
Arthur traced the pipe lines radiating out from the center. "You drilled into their foundation. You hooked up high-pressure vacuum pumps. You are sucking the energy out faster than the core can replenish it."
Arthur looked Kael in the eye. "You think you conquered the earth, Director. But you didn’t. You just put a leash on a dragon. And now the dragon is waking up." 𝓯𝙧𝙚𝒆𝙬𝙚𝒃𝙣𝙤𝒗𝓮𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢
Kael stared at the map. "We have drilled deeper," Kael said. "We added more vents. We used stronger steel. We have kept this city running for two hundred years."
"With band-aids," Arthur said flatly. "You add a patch here, a strut there. But you never fixed the root problem."
Arthur leaned over the table. "Your systems are destabilizing an Ancient grid you do not own."
The words hung in the cold air. Silas looked like he was about to faint. Kael’s eyes narrowed. "I own everything in this sector, Prince. The land. The air. The people. And the grid."
"You own the pipes," Arthur corrected. "You don’t own the pressure. And right now, the pressure is winning. The bolt at the Magma-Gate was a warning. The vibration in the ground is a countdown. In 35 days, the bedrock liquefies. Your city falls into the mantle."
Kael walked back to the window. He looked out at his empire. The smoke, the fire, the steel. "35 days," Kael murmured. "That is your calculation."
"It’s a fact," Arthur said.
Kael turned around. "You are arrogant. I like arrogance. It usually means competence." Kael pressed a button on his desk. The red light on Arthur’s collar beeped once.
"I have a thousand engineers in this city," Kael said. "They tell me the vibration is normal wear and tear. They tell me to increase output, not decrease it."
"Your engineers are afraid of you," Arthur said. "I’m not."
"You should be," Kael tapped the control button. "I can take your head off without leaving my chair."
Kael sat down. He steepled his fingers. "You say my system is flawed. You say the Ancient Grid is rejecting my technology. Prove it."
"I proved it with the bolt," Arthur said.
"That was a prediction," Kael dismissed. "A parlor trick. Anyone can find a loose screw. I need a solution."
Kael opened a drawer and pulled out a blue folder. He slid it across the desk. "This is Sector 7-Bravo. The Waste Processing Unit."
Arthur picked up the folder. "What about it?"
"It has been offline for three months," Kael said. "The pressure valves keep blowing. My engineers say it is cursed. They say the mana there is ’too wild’ to contain. They want to abandon it."
Kael leaned forward. "If your theory is correct... if this is a problem of ’Ancient Grids’ and ’Resonance’... then you should be able to fix it."
"And if I fix it?" Arthur asked.
"Then I will believe you," Kael said. "I will give you access to the Main Core. I will let you save my city."
"And if I fail?"
"Then you are just another charlatan," Kael said coldly. "And I will detonate your collar."
Arthur opened the folder. He scanned the schematics. It was a mess. A tangle of broken pipes and failed valves. "It’s a wreck," Arthur noted. "It will take weeks to rebuild."
"You have 7 Days," Kael said.
"Seven?" Arthur looked up. "That’s impossible. I need parts. I need a crew."
"You have your crew," Kael said. "The Driver and the Warrior. And I will give you a squad of Laborers. But no Imperial Engineers. You work alone."
Kael stood up. The meeting was over. "Seven days, Arthur. Bring Sector 7-Bravo back online. Stabilize the pressure. Prove that your ’First Era’ theory is better than my Iron Empire steel."
Kael turned his back. "Silas, escort him out. If he isn’t finished by next Sunday... burn him."
...
The elevator ride down was silent. Silas was wiping sweat from his forehead with a handkerchief. "You are insane," Silas whispered. "You told the Director he didn’t own the city."
"He needed to hear it," Arthur touched the collar. It was still warm from the test beep.
They reached the ground floor. The air was thick and foul again. Zack and Vivian were waiting by the Iron Horse, guarded by a squad of Iron-Hulks. They saw the collar on Arthur’s neck. Vivian stepped forward, her hand going to her hammer. "Arthur," she growled. "What is that?"
"It’s a deadline," Arthur said, climbing into the truck. He looked tired. "We have a job."
"What kind of job?" Zack asked, looking at the blinking red light on Arthur’s throat.
"We have to fix a broken waste plant," Arthur said. "In seven days."
"Or?"
"Or my head explodes," Arthur tapped the collar. "And then they turn you two into coal."
Zack gripped the steering wheel. His knuckles were white. "Seven days," Zack said. "Okay. Where is this plant?"
Arthur tossed the blue folder onto the dashboard. "Sector 7-Bravo. The deep slums." Arthur looked out the window at the dark, towering city. "The countdown has started, Zack. Drive."
End of Chapter 67







