The morning started perfectly.
Arthur watched the first convoys depart. The lane system held. The timing held. The marks held. Everything moved like it had moved for weeks—smooth, predictable, efficient.
Then he heard shouting from Dock Four.
He walked over slowly. At first he thought it was a chanical failure. A stuck wheel. A collapsed crate. Sothing he could see, asure, fix.
It was none of those things.
Two groups of workers stood facing each other. Cargo sat between them on the dock. Neither group was touching it.
---
Zack got there first.
He stood between the groups, hands on his hips. "What is this? Move the crates!"
One worker stepped forward. Dark hair, crossed arms. "They’re doing it wrong."
The other group’s leader—older, grey at the temples—stepped forward too. "We’ve always done it this way. It works."
"It’s slow," the first worker shot back.
"It’s our way."
Zack’s voice rose. "I don’t care whose way it is. Move the cargo."
Neither group moved.
---
Arthur arrived and stopped at the edge of the dock.
He watched. The workers weren’t looking at the crates anymore. They were looking at each other. The cargo was irrelevant now. This was about sothing else.
Zack tried again. "You. Load the cart. Now."
The younger worker shook his head. "Not their way."
The older worker crossed his arms. "Not changing."
Zack’s face reddened. He looked ready to grab soone.
Arthur didn’t move.
---
Zack stord over to him. "Tell them. Just tell them which way to do it."
Arthur looked at the workers. Then at the crates. Then at the workers again.
He walked forward.
"This thod is faster." He pointed to the younger worker’s technique. "Use it."
Silence.
The older worker spoke. "That’s not how we work."
Arthur waited for more. No more ca.
The man just stood there, arms crossed, saying nothing else. There was no logic to argue with. No inefficiency to asure. Just a wall.
---
Vivian appeared beside Arthur. She had been watching from the warehouse steps.
She didn’t say anything at first. Just stood there, looking at the sa scene he was looking at.
Then, quietly: "They’re not rejecting the thod."
Arthur glanced at her.
"They’re rejecting you telling them how."
He started to respond. Stopped.
Because she was right.
---
The dock was silent now. Both groups waiting. Zack pacing behind them.
Arthur stood in the middle. He had solved collapses. Floods. Cargo failures. Road foundations. Lane speeds.
He had never solved this.
Vivian nudged him. "Try asking instead."
He looked at her. She raised an eyebrow but didn’t say more.
He turned back to the workers.
---
He walked to the older worker first.
"Show how you’d do it."
The man blinked. "What?"
"Show your thod."
The man hesitated. Then he stepped to the crates. He lifted one, turned it, slid it onto the cart at an angle. He positioned a second beside it, then a third on top. It was slower than the standard thod. But it was precise. Deliberate.
The younger worker started to say sothing. Arthur raised a hand.
He walked to the younger worker.
"Show yours."
The young man stepped up. His thod was faster—crates straight on, no turning, no adjusting. But the stacking was less stable. The top crate wobbled slightly.
Arthur watched both demonstrations. Said nothing for a long mont.
---
Then he moved.
He pointed to the older worker’s positioning. "Keep this part. The crates don’t shift when you turn them."
The man nodded slowly.
Arthur pointed to the younger worker’s speed. "Keep this part. The loading ti is better."
The young man uncrossed his arms.
Arthur stepped back. "The rest, you decide."
The two workers looked at each other. Then at the crates. The older man picked up a crate, turned it, placed it. The younger man handed him the next one. They loaded the cart together.
It took ninety seconds.
---
Zack pulled Arthur aside as the dock started moving again.
"You could’ve just forced it."
Arthur shook his head. "Would’ve slowed everything later."
Zack stared at him. "It’s a loading dock. It’s not complicated."
"It wasn’t the dock."
Zack kicked a crate. Not hard. Just frustrated.
"People are harder than roads."
Arthur nodded.
"Yes."
---
They walked away from the dock. Behind them, the two groups worked side by side. Not friendly. But working.
Zack glanced back. "That’s the best you’re going to get?"
Arthur didn’t answer imdiately.
Then: "It’s enough."
Zack made a sound that wasn’t quite agreent. But he didn’t argue.
---
Julian was sitting on the warehouse steps when Arthur passed.
He had been there for a while, watching the dock. Not the cargo—the people.
"Systems are easy," Julian said quietly.
Arthur stopped.
"They follow rules. They don’t argue. They don’t care who thought of them." Julian gestured at the dock. "People take ti."
Arthur stood beside him.
"Ti is acceptable."
Julian looked up at him. Sothing in his expression shifted. Not surprise. Sothing quieter.
"That’s new," he said.
Arthur didn’t explain.
---
Vivian found him at the command pavilion later.
He was standing at the window. Not looking at anything specific. Just watching.
She leaned against the doorfra.
"You didn’t try to fix them."
He turned. "They weren’t broken."
She smiled. Small. Real.
"That’s new."
He looked at her for a mont. Then back at the window.
Below, the dock was running again. The older worker and the younger one were loading separate carts now, not speaking, but not blocking each other either.
"Their thod is still slower than the standard," Arthur said.
Vivian moved beside him. "But it’s moving."
He nodded slowly. "Yes."
---
They stood there for a while.
The yard below cycled through its rhythms. Convoys departed. Wagons arrived. The information board updated. Everything moved.
"Yesterday you didn’t know what to do with yourself," Vivian said.
Arthur glanced at her.
"Today you stood on a dock and watched people argue about how to move crates."
"I solved it."
"You listened." She tilted her head. "That’s different."
He was quiet.
She didn’t push. She just stood there.
---
Arthur looked at the dock again. The younger worker was showing the older one sothing—a different way to lift, less strain on the back. The older man watched, then tried it. Nodded.
Vivian followed his gaze.
"They’re changing," she said.
"They’re adapting."
"Sa thing, sotis."
He considered that.
---
Zack ca up the stairs. He was still frustrated, but less than before.
"Dock’s moving. Both groups working. Not fast, but working."
Arthur nodded.
Zack looked at him. "You could’ve just picked a thod. Told them to use it. Would’ve been faster."
"Would it have stayed faster?"
Zack opened his mouth. Closed it.
He kicked the doorfra instead. "I hate when you’re right about things that aren’t technical."
Arthur almost smiled.
Vivian did.
---
Julian appeared at the top of the stairs. He didn’t speak at first. Just stood there, looking at the three of them.
"You’re all standing around," he observed.
Zack shrugged. "Nothing’s broken."
Julian looked at Arthur. "Sothing was broken this morning."
Arthur shook his head. "It wasn’t broken. It was... stopped."
Julian considered this. "Sa result."
"Different cause."
Julian smiled slightly. "And you’re learning to tell the difference."
Arthur didn’t answer. But he didn’t disagree either.
---
The afternoon passed.
Arthur walked the yard again. Not looking for problems. Just watching.
The older worker from Dock Four was training a new hire. He was using the hybrid thod—the positioning he had kept, the speed the younger man had shown.
The younger worker was loading a cart with a different crew now. He had changed his stacking. Slower than his original thod, but more stable.
Neither thod was perfect.
Both were moving.
---
Vivian found him near the eastern gate.
"You’re staring at people again."
"I’m observing."
She laughed. Soft. "That’s what staring ans, Arthur."
He looked at her. She was smiling.
He didn’t smile back. But sothing in his face shifted.
"You said there was one thing I didn’t build."
She waited.
"I’m starting to understand what you ant."
She didn’t say anything. She just walked beside him.
---
They stopped at the edge of the yard. The sun was lower now. Longer shadows.
Vivian spoke first. "The system works because you made it work. The rules. The lanes. The marks. All of it."
Arthur nodded.
"But this morning, the system stopped. Not because of a rule. Because of people."
He was quiet.
She looked at him. "You can’t build your way out of that."
"I know."
She raised an eyebrow. "You know?"
He turned to face her. "I’m learning."
She held his gaze for a mont. Then she nodded slowly.
"That’s enough."
---
The dock ran smoothly for the rest of the day.
No more argunts. No more stops. The hybrid thod spread to other crews, other docks. Not by order. By example.
Zack reported it at evening briefing. "They’re just... doing it now. Not sure how it started."
Arthur didn’t explain.
Vivian caught his eye across the room.
She didn’t smile. But sothing passed between them.
---
That night, Arthur stood at the pavilion window alone.
The yard was quiet. Lanterns lit the docks. A few workers moved between crates, finishing the last loads of the day.
He watched them work. Not the flow. Not the efficiency.
The people.
One of them adjusted his grip. Another called to a coworker. A third laughed at sothing.
He had spent three years building systems.
Now he was learning that systems didn’t move themselves.
---
Julian passed below. He looked up, saw Arthur at the window, and paused.
For a mont, neither moved.
Then Julian nodded once and walked on.
Arthur stayed at the window.
So problems weren’t solved by design—
but by understanding.
End of Chapter 124
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