The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 82 - 81: Coming Home (Season 3)
Time Remaining: [N/A] (Status: Post-Crisis. Domestic Operations.) Location: The Pendelton Estate - Osgard Valley.
The transition from the public highway to the Pendelton Estate grounds was marked not by a gate, but by a change in vibration.
For the last hour, the Iron Horse had been battling the King’s Road—a glorious name for a rutted mud track filled with potholes deep enough to crack an axle. The new Imperial leaf springs Arthur had installed in Ferro had worked overtime, groaning and flexing to keep the cabin from rattling apart.
But the moment the tires hit the property line, the chaos vanished. Hummm.
The gravel changed to paved slate. Smooth. Graded for drainage. The Iron Horse settled onto the flat surface, gliding forward like a ship entering calm water.
"Finally," Julian sighed from the passenger seat, adjusting his sling. "I forgot how bad the roads are in the valley. I think I dislocated my shoulder again just hitting that last bump."
"The King’s Road hasn’t been resurfaced in fifty years," Arthur said, his hands relaxing on the steering wheel. "It’s an embarrassment."
"It’s tradition," Julian corrected with a weak grin. "It keeps the invaders out. And the tax collectors."
Arthur turned the wheel, guiding the truck up the winding drive lined with ancient oaks. Through the trees, the manor came into view.
It wasn’t the grim, smokestack fortress of the Iron Empire. It was home. The Pendelton Estate was a sprawling structure of grey stone and timber, glowing softly in the twilight. Unlike the other castles in the valley, which leaked heat like sieves and burned thousands of logs to stay lukewarm, the Pendelton manor didn’t bleed energy. The windows were crystal clear—Pendelton Thermal Panes, double-glazed and mana-sealed, an invention from his sixth year. There was no smoke pouring from the chimneys because the Mana-Cycle Furnaces in the basement burned clean.
It looked warm. It looked smart. It looked like the only building in the kingdom that wasn’t fighting the weather.
Arthur pulled the truck into the main courtyard. The surface here was perfectly leveled cobblestone. He parked near the carriage house. He killed the engine. The silence of the valley rushed in—soft, organic, and smelling of pine needles and damp earth.
"We’re back," Vivian said from the back seat. She stretched, her leather armor creaking. "And I can already smell the roast."
The front door opened before Arthur’s boots even hit the ground. Elric, the Estate Steward, stepped out. He was flanked by four footmen. Unlike the terrified, scrambling servants of the capital or the rigid, fearful engineers of the Iron Empire, the Pendelton staff moved with a calm, practiced fluidity.
"Lord Arthur," Elric said, bowing precisely. "Welcome home. We received the semaphore signal from the border outpost two hours ago. The bathwater is hot, and supper is plating."
"Efficient as always, Elric," Arthur said, stepping down. He patted the warm metal of the truck. "We have cargo. Heavy cargo."
Elric didn’t blink. He snapped his fingers. The footmen didn’t rush forward to grab things with their bare hands. They moved to the side of the porch and wheeled out a Pendelton Loader—a heavy-duty hand truck with pneumatic tires and a ratcheting strap system Arthur had designed when he was twelve to stop them from dropping wine barrels.
"Imperial Steel?" Elric asked, eyeing the crates in the truck bed.
"Grade A," Arthur confirmed. "And precision tools. Put them in the Carriage House, bay three. Use the pulley hoist for the big crate. Do not lift it manually."
"Of course, my Lord," Elric said, offended that Arthur would think they would be so primitive. "Bay three has been cleared and swept."
Arthur walked around to the passenger side. "Lord Julian requires the East Wing," Arthur said. "And the good painkillers."
Elric signaled a maid. "The guest suite is prepared. Radiant heating is set to ’High’. We have willow-bark tea brewing."
Julian limped out of the truck, looking grateful. "Elric, you are the only reason I visit this place. The infrastructure is unparalleled."
"We aim to please, Lord Julian."
Vivian stepped out of the truck, dusting road grit from her leathers. The footmen paused, just for a second, to bow. "Your Highness," they murmured in unison.
There was no panic. No scrambling to find a red carpet. Vivian had been coming here since she was a child, usually dragging Arthur back from some experiment or dragging him out to a hunt. To the staff, she wasn’t a distant royal figure; she was the woman who made sure their Young Master ate lunch.
"Hello, boys," Vivian said, grabbing her sword belt. "Don’t scratch the paint on the truck. Arthur gets grumpy."
"We wouldn’t dream of it, Your Highness," the lead footman said, already securing the straps on the heavy crates.
Vivian turned to Elric. "Is the cook making the rosemary lamb?"
"With root vegetables, Princess," Elric confirmed. "And he baked the apple tart you prefer."
Vivian smiled. It was a genuine, relaxed smile that she never showed in the capital. "I’m going to the kitchen," she announced. "If my father’s messengers come looking for me, tell them I’m asleep."
She walked past them, entering the house through the main doors as if she owned the place. In a way, everyone knew she eventually would.
...
Arthur stood in the courtyard for a moment, watching the unloading. It was smooth. The footmen used the hand truck to leverage the heavy crate of steel off the tailgate. They rolled it effortlessly across the level courtyard to the carriage house. Inside, he saw the yellow glint of the brass pulley system he had installed years ago. Click-clack-whoosh. The crate was lifted and stacked.
No shouting. No sweating. No danger. It was efficient. It was exactly how he had designed it.
But then, a sound broke the peace. Crack. Rumble. A delivery cart—a local merchant’s wagon carrying firewood—came lurching up the driveway. It hit the transition from the gravel road to the cobblestone courtyard hard. The driver shouted at his ox. The wheels were caked in thick, heavy mud from the journey. The poor beast was foaming at the mouth, exhausted from dragging the load through the valley’s clay.
The driver hopped down, wiping sweat from his face. "Apologies, Lord Elric! The bridge down by the river is washed out again. Had to go the long way round. Nearly lost a wheel in the marsh."
Arthur frowned. He looked at the exhausted ox. He looked at the mud-caked wheels ruining his clean courtyard. He looked at his footmen, who were waiting patiently with their high-tech hand truck, unable to do anything until the primitive wagon was positioned.
The estate worked. The world outside didn’t.
.....
Arthur walked into the house. The warmth hit him instantly. It wasn’t the dry, suffocating heat of a fire; it was the ambient, gentle warmth of the mana-cycle system circulating hot water through the walls. The hallways were lit by Mana-Lamps—glass spheres filled with a phosphorescent alchemical solution that glowed when tapped. Soft, white light, steady and shadowless.
He walked into his study. He sat at the desk. The room was quiet. The double-glazing cut out the noise of the ox-driver shouting outside.
For years, Arthur had sat in this chair and felt satisfied. He had taken a drafty, medieval castle and turned it into a modern sanctuary. He had optimized his life. He had good heat, good light, and good staff. He had thought that was enough.
He reached into his bag and pulled out the Imperial Contract. He placed it on the desk next to the report about the washed-out bridge.
He looked at the two papers. One represented the capability to build anything. The other represented the inability to move a cart of wood five miles without nearly killing an ox.
He had spent his childhood optimizing his bedroom. He had spent the last month saving an Empire. But looking at the mud on his boots, he realized he had skipped the middle step.
He had built an island of efficiency in a sea of mud. And islands were lonely.
"Elric," Arthur said, not turning around. He knew the steward had entered silently to light the evening lamps.
"My Lord?"
"The bridge by the river," Arthur said. "Why hasn’t it been fixed?"
"The local mason is ill, my Lord. And the Guild says they don’t have the stone available until spring."
Arthur picked up his pen. He didn’t sketch a new machine. He didn’t draft an engine. He drew the road.
A simple line from the estate gate to the village. From the village to the river crossing. He marked the washed-out bridge with a small, irritated circle. The estate ran smoothly. The kitchen ran on schedule. The furnaces burned clean. The staff moved like clockwork. And yet one broken bridge was enough to drag mud into his courtyard and exhaust an ox at his doorstep. That was unacceptable. Not tragic. Not political. Just unacceptable.
"Tell the cook to pack a lunch for tomorrow," Arthur said.
"Are you going hunting, Lord Arthur?" Elric asked.
Arthur closed the notebook. "No," he said. "I’m tired of cleaning mud off slate."
He stood, sliding the Imperial contract neatly beneath the bridge sketch. "If the road to my house is unreliable," Arthur added calmly, "then my house isn’t finished."
From the kitchen, Vivian’s laughter drifted down the hallway. The estate hummed softly around him—warm, steady, efficient. Arthur allowed himself a small breath. He was home. And tomorrow, he was going to make sure staying that way was easier.
End of Chapter 81
Start of Season 3







