The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 119 - 118: Too Many Wagons

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Chapter 119: Chapter 118: Too Many Wagons

Morning broke over the Silver River Hub.

Arthur walked to the eastern gate and stopped.

The corridor stretched before him, visible for nearly a mile. Every inch of it held wagons. Not in convoy formation—just packed together, waiting, stretching back toward the horizon.

Hundreds of wagons.

Drivers sat on benches, stamping feet against the cold. Horses stamped too, restless from standing. Merchants walked between the stalled lines, arguing with each other, gesturing at the road.

No one moved.

Arthur stood silently and watched.

---

Zack found him twenty minutes later, pushing through the crowd.

"South road’s worse. Wagons backed up to the timber yards. North entrance is completely blocked."

Arthur didn’t turn. "How many?"

"We counted this morning. Four hundred and seventy wagons waiting. Maybe more now."

"And moving?"

Zack shook his head. "Maybe twenty wagons an hour get through. At this rate, some of these people wait three days just to enter the hub."

Arthur finally turned.

"The road is perfect."

Zack blinked. "What?"

"The road is perfect. That’s the problem."

---

They walked through the staging yard.

Every space was full. Wagons parked in rows meant for temporary holding now sat for hours. Workers couldn’t move between them. Cargo couldn’t be unloaded. The system had stopped because too many people wanted to use it.

A farmer sat on his wagon bench, staring at nothing. His vegetables sat in crates behind him—standard crates, perfectly packed.

Arthur stopped beside him.

"How long?"

The farmer looked up. "Two days. Been here two days. My cabbages are rotting."

"Why didn’t you move forward?"

The farmer laughed bitterly. "Can’t. Too many wagons ahead. Too many behind. I’m stuck until someone moves, and no one moves."

Arthur nodded slowly and walked on.

---

At the command pavilion, Zack spread reports across the table.

"Traffic doubled in six weeks. Then doubled again. We’re seeing wagons from provinces we’ve never traded with. They heard about the corridor and came."

Arthur studied the numbers.

"Our design capacity?"

"Three hundred wagons per day maximum. We’re averaging five hundred. Some days six."

"And the convoy system?"

"Works perfectly—for the wagons in the convoy. Everyone else waits."

Arthur set the papers down.

"This is not a road problem."

Zack waited.

"It’s a volume problem. The system lacks flow control. Everyone arrives at once because no one tells them when to come."

---

Arthur spent the morning at the eastern gate.

He watched the chaos with new eyes.

Wagons arrived randomly. Some came at dawn. Some at midday. Some late at night. They all joined the same line, waiting the same wait, moving the same slow crawl.

A heavy timber convoy tried to push through. Behind it, twenty small farmers waited. The timber wagons moved slowly—they were heavy—and the farmers behind them cursed.

A light cart darted into a gap. A guard shouted. The cart stopped, blocking two lanes. More cursing. More delays.

Arthur saw the pattern clearly.

No organization. No priority. No schedule.

Just endless wagons pressing against each other.

---

That afternoon, he gathered Zack and the lead guards.

"Starting tomorrow, wagons don’t arrive whenever they want."

Zack raised an eyebrow. "How do we stop them?"

"We don’t stop them. We schedule them."

Arthur pulled out a fresh map.

"Time-based convoy slots. Every merchant receives an assigned crossing time. Morning slots. Midday slots. Evening slots. Night slots for urgent cargo."

He marked the corridor into segments.

"Staging zones for each time slot. Morning wagons wait here. Midday wagons wait here. Evening wagons further back. When morning convoy departs, morning staging zone empties. Midday zone moves forward."

Zack studied the map.

"So wagons wait in organized groups instead of one giant line."

"Yes."

"And if they miss their slot?"

"They wait for the next slot. Same day or next day. But they don’t cut ahead."

---

The guards looked uncertain.

A senior guard spoke up. "Merchants won’t like being told when to move."

Arthur met his eyes.

"They’ll like waiting three days less."

The guard considered this, then nodded slowly.

---

Zack implemented the system immediately.

Guards erected wooden signs at every staging zone. Large painted letters: MORNING SLOTS. MIDDAY SLOTS. EVENING SLOTS. NIGHT SLOTS.

They stopped wagons at the corridor entrance and checked papers. No slot? No entry. Wrong slot? Turn back.

A timber merchant arrived at dawn, expecting to join the line. A guard blocked him.

"Slot time?"

The merchant blinked. "What? I just arrived."

"Slot time," the guard repeated. "Morning, midday, evening, or night?"

"I... morning? I always travel morning."

The guard checked his board. "Morning slots full. Next available midday."

The merchant’s face reddened. "I’m not waiting until midday! I have contracts!"

The guard didn’t move. "Then you can wait in the general line. Three days, maybe four. Or take the midday slot and move today."

The merchant stared at him.

Then he spat on the ground and wheeled his wagon toward the midday staging zone.

---

Arthur watched from a distance.

Zack appeared beside him, grinning.

"First blood. He’ll tell every other merchant what happened. Word spreads faster than wagons."

Arthur nodded.

"The system teaches itself."

---

The first day was chaos.

Merchants argued. Guards shouted. Wagons blocked lanes trying to change zones. Someone tried to bribe a guard and was arrested.

But by afternoon, the staging zones began to work.

Morning wagons moved forward at exactly the scheduled time. The morning zone emptied. Midday wagons rolled into position. Evening wagons waited further back.

The main line, which had stretched for miles, began to shrink.

A farmer in the midday zone watched morning wagons depart.

"Look at that," he said to his companion. "They actually left on time."

His companion shook his head. "Won’t last. Never does."

But it did.

---

By the third day, merchants learned the rhythm.

They arrived at their assigned times. They moved into their assigned zones. They waited their assigned waits—short waits now, measured in hours instead of days.

A grain merchant checked his slot paper for the third time.

"Morning, 7 o’clock. That’s... that’s in ten minutes."

His driver shrugged. "Then we move in ten minutes."

At exactly seven, the morning convoy began rolling. The merchant’s wagon slipped into line behind twenty others. They reached the hub entrance without stopping. Passed through the freight yard without delay. Joined the main corridor before eight.

The merchant leaned back on his bench and laughed.

"I didn’t wait at all."

---

Zack reported the numbers at week’s end.

"Average wait time down from three days to four hours. Throughput up forty percent. Complaints down eighty."

Arthur accepted the report silently.

Vivian entered as Zack left.

"Time-based slots," she said. "You’re controlling when people move."

Arthur looked up.

"People move whenever they want. They just can’t all move at once."

She sat across from him.

"This is different from the other fixes. The crates. The convoys. The foundation. Those solved physical problems." She paused. "This solves a human problem."

Arthur considered this.

"Humans are predictable. They want the same thing at the same time. The system just spreads them out."

---

Julian found Arthur at the eastern gate that evening.

Below them, wagons moved in organized streams. Morning zone empty. Midday zone half-full. Evening zone filling slowly. Night zone dark and waiting.

"You didn’t slow them down," Julian observed.

Arthur glanced at him.

"You arranged them. The same number of wagons, moving at the same speed—but now they flow instead of clog."

Arthur watched a midday convoy depart smoothly.

"Movement needs order."

Julian nodded slowly. "Even movement. Especially movement."

---

But not everyone adapted quickly.

A wealthy merchant arrived three days late for his usual slot. He had ignored the new system, assuming his status would grant passage.

Guards turned him away at the entrance.

"I’m a Tier Three trader! I’ve used this corridor since it was dirt!"

The guard didn’t flinch. "Tier Three means nothing without a slot. Come back at your assigned time."

The merchant raged. Threatened. Promised to complain to the council.

The guard waited until he finished.

"Evening slots available tomorrow. Or you can wait in the general line. Your choice."

The merchant stared at him.

Then he wheeled his wagon toward the evening zone, muttering curses.

---

Arthur watched the exchange from a distance.

Zack stood beside him. "Think he’ll complain?"

"Probably."

"Think anyone will listen?"

Arthur shook his head slightly. "They’ll look at the moving wagons and ask what he’s complaining about."

Zack grinned.

---

Two weeks into the new system, something unexpected happened.

Merchants began arriving early for their slots.

Not hours early—days early. They camped near the staging zones, waiting for their assigned times. Not because they had to, but because they wanted to be sure.

A driver explained it to a curious guard.

"Before, I never knew when I’d move. Could be today, could be next week. Now I know exactly. So I show up early and wait. But the waiting’s different. I know it ends at a specific time."

The guard nodded. "So you don’t mind waiting?"

The driver laughed. "Waiting with an end is just resting. Waiting without an end is torture."

---

Vivian shared the observation with Arthur.

"You’ve changed their relationship with time. Before, they waited passively. Now they wait actively—preparing, positioning, planning."

Arthur considered this.

"Time was always infrastructure. No one used it properly."

She smiled slightly. "And now?"

"Now it’s just another variable. Managed like the rest."

---

The corridor reached full capacity by the third week.

Not a single empty slot. Every time block filled. Every staging zone occupied. Every hour of every day scheduled weeks in advance.

Arthur stood at the command pavilion window, watching the organized flow.

Zack entered with new reports.

"We’re maxed out. Can’t fit another wagon without breaking the schedule."

Arthur nodded slowly.

"Then we need more hours."

Zack blinked. "More hours? Days only have twenty-four."

Arthur turned from the window.

"Days have twenty-four. Nights have twenty-four more."

Zack’s eyes widened.

"Night convoys?"

"Night convoys."

---

The announcement spread quickly.

Night slots. Lit by lanterns. Guarded by extra patrols. Moving in darkness while the corridor slept.

Some merchants resisted immediately.

"Night travel? Insane! Bandits own the night!"

But the guards explained: The corridor was patrolled. The road was clear. The convoys would move together, protected, visible by lantern light.

A young driver signed up for the first night slot.

"My goods move faster at night than most move during the day," he told skeptical friends. "I’ll take that risk."

His friends called him foolish.

But when his night convoy completed the crossing without incident—faster than any day convoy because the road was empty—they stopped laughing.

---

Arthur stood at the eastern gate on the first night of full operations.

Below him, wagons moved continuously. Day slots during light. Night slots during dark. The corridor never empty. Never stopped. Never resting.

Vivian appeared beside him.

"Twenty-four hours," she said quietly. "You’ve made the road permanent."

Arthur watched a night convoy disappear into the darkness.

"The road was always permanent. Now the movement is too."

She studied his profile in the lantern light.

"What’s next? When every hour is full and every slot is taken?"

Arthur was quiet for a long moment.

Then: "We build another road."

---

Julian joined them, wrapped in a heavy cloak.

He watched the night wagons roll past—lanterns swaying, wheels rumbling, guards riding alert at the edges.

"Before," he said quietly, "the road moved wagons."

Arthur nodded.

"Now time moves the road."

They stood together in the darkness, watching the endless flow.

The road moved the wagons.

Now time moved the road.

End of Chapter 118