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Now reading: Chapter 117 - 116: The Hidden Weakness from The Blueprint Prince, a Fantasy novel by AuthorLv1.

The morning after the storm, the corridor looked perfect.

Snow pushed to the edges. Sand spread evenly across the surface. The first convoy moved out at dawn, wheels gripping the treated stone.

Arthur watched from the eastern gate.

Then the lead wagon reached the mile marker.

The road looked fine. Sa gravel. Sa grade. Sa sand.

But the right rear wheel sank.

Not slowly. Suddenly. The stone surface cracked. The wheel dropped into softness beneath. The wagon tilted hard. Cargo shifted. The driver shouted and hauled the reins.

The wagon stopped, angled sharply, one wheel buried to the axle.

Behind it, the entire convoy halted.

Arthur walked toward the failure without speaking.

---

Zack reached it first.

He knelt beside the sunken wheel. Pushed his hand into the gap between stone and mud. When he pulled it out, black water dripped from his fingers.

"The road looks fine," Zack said. "Ground underneath is soup."

Arthur knelt across from him.

He studied the cross-section where the stone had broken. Top layer: gravel and sand, intact. Below that: compacted soil, now wet. Below that: nothing but mud.

"The surface held," Arthur said quietly. "The base failed."

Zack stood. "We fix the surface, right? Patch it?"

Arthur shook his head slowly.

"Patching hides the problem. It doesn’t solve it."

---

They spent the morning inspecting the corridor.

Every few miles, they found the sa pattern.

Sections that looked perfect from above. But beneath the surface, water had collected. Traffic had pressed down. The ground had softened.

Near the Summit Depot, a wagon had left ruts six inches deep—frozen now, but evidence of earlier failure.

At the eastern slope, a section of road had completely collapsed. Stone lay scattered. Mud pushed through the gaps. Workers were already diverting traffic around it.

Arthur stopped at the collapse and stared at the exposed layers.

"Water got in," he said. "Traffic pushed. Ground moved."

Zack crossed his arms. "We cleared snow. We spread sand. We did everything right."

"We fixed the surface." Arthur gestured at the broken road. "We didn’t fix the ground."

---

That evening, Arthur ordered a cross-section cut.

Workers dug a trench through a failing section—straight down, four feet deep, revealing every layer.

Arthur stood in the trench with a lantern.

Top: six inches of gravel and compacted stone. Good.

Below that: twelve inches of packed soil. Wet.

Below that: native earth. Saturated.

He climbed out and faced Zack.

"The road was built for dry conditions. Sumr traffic. Light rain."

Zack nodded.

"Now we have snowlt. Freeze and thaw. Heavy convoys every day." Arthur pointed at the trench. "The water has nowhere to go. It sits. It softens. The road sinks."

Zack stared at the exposed layers.

"So we need... better drainage?"

"We need a proper foundation."

---

Arthur spent three days designing.

He drew cross-sections. Calculated load weights. Studied how water moved through soil.

On the fourth morning, he summoned Zack and spread drawings across the table.

"The old road had two layers. Surface and base. That’s not enough."

He pointed to the new design.

"Four layers."

**Layer One — Deep Stone Base.** Large rocks, hand-placed, eighteen inches thick. Water flows through gaps instead of pooling.

**Layer Two — Crushed Stone.** Smaller rocks, packed tight. Distributes weight evenly.

**Layer Three — Gravel Surface.** What they already used. Smooth, hard, durable.

**Layer Four — Side Slopes and Ditches.** Water runs off the road entirely, not just beneath it.

Zack studied the drawings.

"This isn’t repair. This is rebuilding."

"Yes."

"Every mile?"

"Every mile that fails. Then every mile that might fail. Then every mile eventually."

Zack let out a long breath.

"That’s... that’s the whole corridor."

Arthur nodded calmly.

"We built it once. We can build it again. Better this ti."

---

Work began at the first failure site.

Crews tore up the old road completely. They dug down two feet—deeper than before. They hauled large rocks from nearby quarries. They placed them by hand, fitting each piece against the next.

rchants gathered to watch.

A textile broker shook his head. "They’re destroying the road. Winter’s half over. We’ll never move goods again."

His companion nodded grimly. "Should have just patched it."

But the workers kept placing stones.

By evening, the deep base was complete—a bed of interlocked rock, rough and uneven, but solid.

Zack walked across it. His boots sank between the stones, but the rocks themselves didn’t move.

"That’s not going anywhere," he muttered.

---

The next day, workers added the crushed stone layer.

Smaller rocks poured over the base, then packed down with heavy rollers. The surface began to smooth. Gaps filled. Stability increased.

By the third day, the gravel layer went on—the sa surface they’d always used, but now supported by sothing that would never soften.

Arthur inspected the finished section.

He walked its length. Studied the edges. Checked the new drainage ditches cut on both sides—deep channels that would carry water away before it could soak beneath.

Zack joined him.

"Test it?"

Arthur nodded.

A heavy wagon—the largest in the hub—was brought forward. Loaded with stone until its wheels creaked. The driver looked nervous.

"Just drive," Arthur said. "Normal speed."

The driver flicked his reins.

The wagon rolled onto the new section.

The wheels passed over the gravel. The surface held. The base beneath didn’t shift. No sinking. No cracking. No softness.

The driver reached the end and looked back, eyes wide.

"That felt... solid."

Zack grinned. "It is solid."

---

Word spread quickly.

rchants who had complained now crowded the rebuilt section, walking its length, stamping their feet against the gravel.

A grain rchant knelt and pressed his palm to the surface.

"Feels different," he said. "Harder. Deeper."

"It is deeper," Arthur replied. "The road now continues beneath what you see."

The rchant looked up. "How far?"

"Two feet of stone before ground. Water runs away before it reaches the base."

The rchant stood slowly. "This section will never fail."

"It will fail eventually. Everything fails." Arthur t his eyes. "But not this year. Not next. Probably not in your lifeti."

The rchant stared at him.

Then he laughed quietly and shook his head.

---

But not every mile could be rebuilt at once.

Zack organized crews into teams. One team for deep base. One for crushed stone. One for gravel surface. One for drainage.

They worked in sequence, moving down the corridor, rebuilding section by section.

Traffic slowed. rchants complained again.

But every completed section proved itself imdiately. Wagons crossed rebuilt roads without slowing. No ruts. No sinking. No surprises.

Drivers began requesting the rebuilt sections.

"I’ll wait an extra day," one said, "if it ans crossing stone instead of mud."

Another nodded. "My horses feel the difference. Less strain. Less fear."

---

Julian found Arthur at a newly completed section one evening.

Workers were packing up tools. The road stretched smooth and dark into the twilight. A lone wagon crossed it, wheels humming.

"You changed what people see," Julian observed.

Arthur glanced at him.

"Now you’re changing what they don’t."

Arthur considered this.

"The unseen parts matter more."

Julian nodded slowly. "The road they walk on is just the surface. The road that holds them is underneath."

Arthur said nothing. But he didn’t disagree.

---

Vivian arrived at the hub after a week away.

She found Arthur at the command pavilion, studying maps marked with rebuild progress.

"I heard you’re tearing up the corridor," she said.

"I’m fixing it."

"rchants say you’re slowing trade."

"rchants said the sa about the bridge. And the road. And the crates." Arthur didn’t look up. "They’ll stop saying it when they see the result."

Vivian sat across from him.

"I saw a rebuilt section on the way in. The drainage ditches alone are deeper than the old road’s foundation."

Arthur nodded.

"Water must leave. Before, it stayed. Now it runs."

Vivian studied him quietly.

"You’re not just building roads anymore. You’re creating standards. Rules for how a road should exist."

Arthur finally looked up.

"A road that fails isn’t a road. It’s a trap."

---

Weeks passed.

Spring approached. Snow lted faster now. Water ran everywhere—but on rebuilt sections, it ran into ditches and away. On old sections, it pooled and softened.

Zack reported daily.

"Section seven complete. Section eight started. rchants fighting over which gets rebuilt next."

Arthur accepted the reports silently.

Then one morning, Zack arrived with different news.

"The last old section failed overnight. Complete collapse. Wagon stuck, cargo damaged, driver injured."

Arthur set down his pen.

"How many sections remain unrebuilt?"

"Twelve. Maybe thirteen."

Arthur stood and walked to the window.

The corridor stretched east, visible in patches between buildings. Rebuilt sections stood dark and clean. Old sections showed their age—ruts, cracks, soft shoulders.

"Prioritize the worst," Arthur said quietly. "Then the rest. Then every mile eventually."

Zack nodded and left.

---

That evening, Arthur walked to the failed section.

Workers had already pulled the wagon free. Cargo lay stacked nearby—textiles, now mud-stained. The driver sat on a crate, arm bandaged, staring at the broken road.

Arthur stopped beside him.

"Your arm?"

"Sprained. Nothing broken." The driver spat on the ground. "Road broke first. Wagon followed."

Arthur studied the collapse.

The surface had caved completely—a hole six feet wide, four feet deep. Mud filled the bottom. Stone fragnts lay scattered.

"Should have rebuilt this section first," the driver muttered.

Arthur nodded slowly.

"Yes. We should have."

---

The next morning, three crews began working on the failed section simultaneously.

Deep base. Crushed stone. Gravel surface. Drainage ditches cut wide and deep.

By evening, the road was whole again.

Stronger than before.

Arthur stood at its edge as the first wagon crossed—the sa driver, sa wagon, sa cargo, now reloaded.

The driver reached the end and pulled up beside Arthur.

"Feels different," he said. "Solid."

Arthur nodded.

The driver looked down at him. "Wish you’d built it like this the first ti."

"So do I," Arthur replied. "But we didn’t know what we didn’t know."

The driver considered this. Then he nodded slowly, flicked his reins, and continued down the corridor.

---

Julian appeared beside Arthur as the wagon disappeared.

"We learn by failing," Julian said quietly.

Arthur shook his head.

"We learn by observing failure. Then building so it doesn’t happen again."

Julian smiled slightly. "Sa thing. Eventually."

Arthur watched the empty road.

The sun had set. Lanterns lit the new section. Its surface glead faintly in the growing dark.

A road is not what people walk on.

It is what holds beneath their feet.

End of Chapter 116

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