The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 88 - 87: The Southern Problem
Time Remaining: [N/A]
(Status: Active Construction. Substructure Phase.)
Location: The Silver River - South Bank.
The North Abutment was behaving beautifully.
Arthur stood on the grassy bank at 6:00 AM, holding a heavy iron hammer. He looked at the massive grey block they had poured yesterday. The timber forms had been stripped away, revealing the raw, industrial face of the concrete.
It was ugly. It was scarred with the grain of the wood. It was a dull, flat grey.
To Arthur, it was a masterpiece.
He swung the hammer.
PING.
The sound was bright and sharp, ringing out across the quiet river valley like a church bell.
"Hardness achieved," Arthur noted, running a hand over the cool surface. "Curing heat has dissipated. The lattice is locked."
"It didn’t crack," Vivian said, standing beside him with a mug of tea. She kicked the base of the block with her boot. "Solid."
"It’s not just solid," Arthur corrected. "It’s monolithic. There are no joints for the water to attack. It’s one single, twenty-ton rock."
He turned his back on the success.
He looked across the river to the South Bank.
The trenching crew was already over there, digging the matching hole for the second abutment.
But they weren’t moving with the rhythmic confidence of yesterday. They were stopping. They were pointing.
Garnas was waving his shovel.
"Problem," Arthur said, already walking toward the ford. "The South side is misbehaving."
By the time Arthur waded across the shallow ford to the southern bank, the situation was clear.
The North side had been stiff clay and gravel—hard digging, but stable.
The South side was soup.
The trench was only three feet deep, but the walls were already slumping inward. Wet, sandy soil was sliding down into the hole like a slow-motion avalanche.
Water wasn’t just bubbling up from the bottom; it was weeping in from the sides.
"It won’t hold a shape, m’lord," Garnas said, looking frustrated. He tossed a shovel of muck out, only to watch half of it slide back in. "It’s like digging in porridge. The deeper we go, the wetter it gets."
Arthur knelt by the edge. He grabbed a handful of the soil.
It wasn’t the clean yellow clay of the North. It was dark, silty, and saturated.
He squeezed it. Water dripped out between his fingers.
"The river bends here," Arthur noted, looking upstream. "The current hits the North bank and scours it clean to the bedrock. But on the South side, the water slows down. It deposits silt. We aren’t digging in earth. We’re digging in a hundred years of river sludge."
Julian stepped up, looking wary of the mud.
"The mana flow is erratic here, too," Julian added quietly. "Underground turbulence. The water table isn’t flat. It’s churning."
"Can we plug it with clay?" Vivian asked. "Like yesterday?"
"No," Arthur stood up, wiping the muck from his hands. "The soil is too soft. If we put a heavy concrete block on top of this, it will sink. Or worse, it will tilt. The foundation will settle unevenly, and in five years, the bridge will crack."
The farmers leaned on their shovels, looking deflated. The magic of the "liquid stone" was fading in the face of the wet reality.
"River always wins," a younger worker muttered.
"The river doesn’t win," Arthur said evenly. "It just changes the rules. So we change the design."
Arthur grabbed a stick. He smoothed out a patch of wet sand.
"We can’t go deep," Arthur explained to the crew. "If we dig down to bedrock here, the walls will collapse on us before we can pour. It’s too dangerous."
He drew a square. Then he drew a much larger square around it.
"So we don’t go down. We go wide."
"A Spread Footing," Arthur announced. "Imagine walking on snow. If you wear boots, you sink. If you wear snowshoes, you float. Why?"
"More surface area," Vivian answered instantly.
"Exactly. The weight is the same, but it’s spread out. The snow doesn’t have to push back as hard on any one point."
He pointed to the slumping trench.
"Stop digging down. Widen the hole. We are going to make the footprint three times larger. We’ll pour a massive, flat slab of reinforced concrete to float on the silt. Then we build the pier on top of that."
Garnas looked at the diagram.
"That’s a lot of digging, m’lord. And a lot of stone."
"It’s a lot of digging," Arthur agreed. "But it’s better than a bridge that leans."
The work changed.
Instead of a deep, narrow pit, they dug a wide, shallow basin. It looked less like a grave and more like a cellar floor.
They lined the bottom with heavy river rocks—the biggest stones they could find from the old ruined bridge.
Then they dumped a layer of gravel on top.
"It’s still spongy," Arthur noted, walking on the gravel bed. "There are air pockets. If we pour on this, it will settle later."
He turned to Julian.
"I need you."
Julian sighed. "Please tell me I don’t have to hold back the ocean again."
"No," Arthur said. "I need a compactor. High-frequency vibration. Low amplitude. Shake the ground."
Julian looked intrigued. "Like a mild earthquake?"
"Like a shiver," Arthur corrected. "Just enough to make the rocks settle."
Julian stepped into the center of the wide, gravel-filled basin. He closed his eyes.
He extended both hands downwards.
Hummm.
It wasn’t a sound. It was a sensation in the teeth.
The farmers watching from the rim felt their boots vibrating. The water in the puddles rippled with concentric rings.
The gravel bed hissed.
Crunch. Shift. Settle.
Under the influence of the mana vibration, the stones jostled against each other. The small rocks fell into the gaps between the big rocks. The sand filtered down into the voids.
Visibly, the level of the gravel dropped two inches as the air was shaken out.
The ground tightened.
"Hold it," Arthur ordered. "Let it lock."
Julian held the pulse for another minute. Sweat beaded on his brow, but he looked less strained than yesterday. This was finesse, not brute force.
"It feels... stiff," Julian murmured. "The resonance is gone. It’s solid."
He cut the power. 𝘧𝘳𝘦ℯ𝓌𝘦𝒷𝘯𝑜𝑣𝘦𝓁.𝒸𝘰𝓂
Arthur stepped onto the gravel.
It didn’t shift under his boots. It felt like pavement.
"Compacted," Arthur declared. "Lay the steel."
Zack and the steel crew jumped in.
This time, they didn’t just lay a grid. Because the footing was wide and shallow, the tension forces would be higher. The concrete would try to crack in the middle.
"Double mat," Arthur ordered. "One grid on the bottom. One grid on the top. Connect them with stirrups."
Zack wrestled the heavy Imperial rebar into place. He bent the stirrups—U-shaped connectors—around the bars, wiring them tight.
It looked like a massive steel cage sitting in the pit.
"That’s a lot of iron to bury in the mud," Garnas noted, handing down the wire ties.
"It’s the skeleton," Arthur said. "The concrete is just the muscle. This is what holds it together."
Within an hour, the cage was ready.
The farmers lined up at the mixing trough.
They knew the drill now.
Gravel. Sand. Lime. Ash. Water.
Mix. Lift. Pass.
The bucket line moved faster today. There was less shouting, more rhythm. They weren’t just laborers anymore; they were a crew. They anticipated the hand-off. They knew exactly how much mix to load so it didn’t spill.
Vivian didn’t even have to shout orders. She just stepped into the line and kept the tempo.
SPLAT.
The concrete hit the steel cage.
SPLAT.
It flowed around the rebar, burying the iron deep inside the grey mass.
Because the hole was wider, it took longer to fill. The sun beat down. The humidity from the river was stifling.
But nobody stopped.
They watched the grey slab spread out, covering the mud, covering the gravel, sealing the unstable South Bank under a blanket of artificial stone.
By early afternoon, the slab was finished.
It was massive—twenty feet square, two feet thick. A solid raft of concrete floating on the soft soil.
Steam began to rise as the chemical reaction kicked in.
Arthur nodded to Julian.
"Even it out. Don’t rush it."
Julian applied the thermal pulse. He kept it gentle, spreading the heat to the edges of the wide slab to prevent curling.
The workers sat on the bank, eating their lunch, watching the steam rise.
They weren’t skeptical anymore. They were critical.
"Surface looks good," one farmer said, chewing a piece of cheese. "Zack smoothed it better this time."
"Edges are sharp," another agreed. "Clay held up."
Garnas stood up. He walked down to the water’s edge.
He looked at the North Abutment—tall, deep, and vertical.
He looked at the South Abutment—wide, flat, and horizontal.
They looked different, but they both looked permanent.
"River can try," Garnas muttered to the water.
He turned to Arthur.
"It’ll hold?"
"It’ll hold," Arthur promised. "The South side is softer, so we gave it bigger shoes. It won’t sink."
A cart driver rolled up to the ford, pausing his oxen to look at the construction.
"That’s a lot of stone, m’lord," the driver called out. "Is that the bridge?"
"That’s the feet," Arthur called back. "The bridge goes on top."
"How wide?" the driver asked. "Wide enough for a hay wain and a timber cart?"
"Wide enough for two timber carts and a horse in the middle," Arthur said.
The driver whistled. "When?"
"Steel goes up tomorrow," Arthur said.
The boy from the previous day—the one who liked the Iron Horse—ran up to the edge of the pit. He stared at the curing concrete, then at the steel bars poking up from the center where the pier would attach.
"When do the triangles go up?" the boy asked, breathless.
Arthur smiled. He wiped a smudge of lime dust from his cheek.
"Tomorrow, kid. Bright and early."
Arthur stood in the middle of the river—or rather, on the gravel bar in the center of the ford.
To his left was the North Abutment.
To his right was the South Abutment.
Two grey sentinels, waiting.
The river flowed between them, brown and fast. It swirled around his boots, tugging at him.
For years, people had adjusted their plans around this river. It had decided when people could cross. It had decided how much wood they had to waste.
Now, the terms had changed.
Arthur looked at the distance between the two blocks.
One hundred and forty feet.
Empty air.
But in his mind, he could already see the truss. He could see the steel girders lacing together, the rivets locking them tight, the roadway hovering safely above the flood line.
"It looks far," Vivian said, wading out to join him. She shielded her eyes against the sun.
"It’s not far," Arthur said. "It’s just empty."
He looked at the two foundations.
"Now it has footing. Tomorrow, we span it."
He turned to the bank.
"Pack it up!" Arthur ordered. "Zack, bring the truck around. We need to prep the steel. We’re done playing in the mud."
The farmers cheered—a tired, dusty sound, but genuine.
They gathered their shovels. They hauled the buckets.
For the first time in the history of the valley, they weren’t going home defeated by the river.
They were leaving it under construction.
End of Chapter 87







