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Now reading: Chapter 144 - 143: The First Main Street from The Blueprint Prince, a Fantasy novel by AuthorLv1.

Arthur arrived at the pavilion expecting construction reports.

The water system was progressing. The drainage channels were being cut. The survey crews had marked most of the main corridors. Everything was proceeding according to schedule.

Instead, he found complaints.

Lots of complaints.

But not normal complaints.

A rchant who sold leather goods stood at the intake desk, arms crossed, expression aggrieved. "There are too many people," he announced.

Arthur looked at him. "That’s generally considered positive."

"Not when they’re standing in front of my shop." The rchant gestured vaguely toward the yard. "They gather. They talk. They block the entrance. They don’t buy anything."

Before Arthur could respond, a second rchant arrived—a woman who sold spices and dried goods. "The public square is stealing my custors."

Arthur’s brow furrowed slightly. "How?"

"They gather there first. By the ti they reach my shop, they’ve already spent their coin on bread and tea and whatever else those vendors are selling."

Arthur paused.

This was interesting.

People weren’t moving directly between locations anymore—from ho to shop, from shop to work, from work to ho. They were lingering. eting. Talking. Spending ti in places that had no comrcial purpose whatsoever.

The town was developing social gravity.

Arthur looked at the queue outside the pavilion. More rchants were waiting to complain. He turned to the leather rchant. "You’re saying the problem is that too many people exist in the town you chose to build your shop in."

The rchant opened his mouth. Closed it. "When you put it that way—"

"Go back to your shop. Count how many people walk past today. Then co back and tell business is worse than before."

The rchant left, grumbling. The spice woman left shortly after, less grumbling but no less confused.

Arthur stood at the railing, looking down at the settlent. The crowd in the square was larger than yesterday. And the day before. And the day before that.

Sothing was changing.

---

Arthur and Julian walked to the public square together.

Mid-morning. The sun was warm. The dust from construction had settled overnight, leaving the air clear.

The square was full.

Children played tag around the survey stakes that marked future walkways. Workers sat on crates and barrels, eating lunch, laughing at sothing one of them had said. A musician had appeared—not the sa fiddler from before, but a younger woman with a flute, playing a bright, skipping tune. Travelers rested on the edges of the square, unpacking bread and cheese from their bags. rchants negotiated in small groups, their voices rising and falling.

Nobody was being told to stay. Nobody was being paid to be there. They simply wanted to be there.

Julian stood beside Arthur, watching. "The road brought movent."

Arthur nodded slowly.

Julian continued: "The square keeps it."

Arthur was quiet for a long mont. He had always thought of infrastructure as movent—roads for wagons, rails for cargo, bridges for crossing. But this was different. The square wasn’t moving anyone anywhere. It was holding them in place.

Infrastructure didn’t rely move people. It influenced behavior. It shaped how they spent their ti, where they chose to gather, what they valued.

He had never thought about it that way before.

"We didn’t plan this," Arthur said.

Julian shook his head. "No."

"But it’s working."

"Yes."

Arthur watched a child run past, laughing, chasing a dog that had no intention of being caught. "I don’t know how to asure this."

Julian smiled slightly. "Maybe you don’t asure it. Maybe you just watch."

---

Vivian attempted to walk through town. It was impossible.

She had barely left the pavilion before the first interruption—a flower seller thrust a bundle of wildflowers into her hands. "For you, my lady! Complints of the season!"

"They’re lovely, but I’m not—"

A baker appeared, pressing a warm loaf into her other hand. "Fresh from the oven! Tell your husband we appreciate his work!"

"He’s not my—"

A child darted between the adults, looking up at her with wide eyes. "Are you really living with the blueprint man?"

Vivian nearly choked. "What?"

"My father says you’re basically married. He says you live together and make decisions together and that’s basically the sa thing."

Vivian’s face did sothing complicated. "Your father should mind his own business."

The child grinned—the particular grin of soone who had just received confirmation of sothing exciting. "You didn’t say no!"

"Didn’t say—I said mind your own business!"

But the child was already running, weaving through the crowd, shouting sothing that Vivian couldn’t hear but could absolutely imagine.

She stood in the middle of the path, holding flowers and bread, her face warm, her dignity in tatters.

A passing rchant nodded sympathetically. "First ti?"

Vivian closed her eyes. "I need to find Arthur."

"He’s in the square."

"Of course he is."

---

Zack heard the rumor before lunch.

He was standing near the well, reviewing the water distribution plan with one of the engineers, when a rchant approached with a knowing smile.

"Is it true?" the rchant asked.

Zack looked up. "Is what true?"

"About the lady and the blueprint man."

Zack’s expression didn’t change. But sothing behind his eyes sharpened. "I enjoy having employnt."

The rchant’s smile widened. "So yes?"

Zack picked up his clipboard. "I’m saying I like breathing."

By afternoon, the rumor had exploded.

Vivian and Arthur were living together. They were married secretly. They were planning a wedding. They had been married for years and had simply kept it quiet. Every variation spread through the settlent like fire through dry grass.

Arthur remained completely unaware.

He spent the afternoon inspecting the water tower foundation, reviewing drainage plans with the survey crews, and marking the alignnt for a new road that would connect the square to the eastern warehouse district. Not once did anyone ntion the rumor to him.

Because everyone was afraid of his reaction.

And because everyone was enjoying the situation far too much to end it.

---

Arthur noticed that traffic naturally followed one corridor.

Not the main freight road. Not the eastern bypass. A different path—one that ran from the public square, past the growing cluster of shops, toward the river crossing. People walked there. Shopped there. t there. Traded there.

Without realizing it, the town had selected a main street.

Arthur stood at the intersection, watching the flow. Wagons, pedestrians, workers, families—all moving along the sa corridor. Not because anyone had told them to. Because it was convenient. Because the shops were there. Because other people were there.

He studied the movent patterns for an hour. Then another hour. Then he returned to the pavilion and began drawing.

Widen the street. Add drainage on both sides. Install lighting at regular intervals—every thirty feet, enough to keep the street usable after dark. Build proper walkways, raised above the wagon track. Add benches. Plant trees. Install signposts at major intersections.

Everyone was confused.

"Why make walking more comfortable?" a worker asked.

Arthur didn’t look up from his map. "Because people already walk here."

The worker frowned. "But they’re already walking."

Arthur paused. "Yes. And if we make it more comfortable, more people will walk. And stay longer. And spend more ti near the shops. And the shops will do more business. And more shops will open. And the street will beco more valuable."

The worker stared at him. "You’ve thought about this."

"I’ve asured it."

The worker shook his head and returned to his shovel.

---

Weeks passed. The street transford.

The widening was completed first—crews moved the survey stakes outward, clearing space for walkways and benches. Drainage channels were cut along both sides, lined with stone to prevent erosion. The lighting crew installed lantern brackets every thirty feet, the ironwork simple but elegant.

Wooden storefronts began appearing. rchants who had operated from tents and wagons now built permanent structures—timber fras, plank walls, glass windows for those who could afford them. Signs hung over the street, painted with symbols and letters, identifying shops for those who couldn’t read.

Flower boxes appeared outside the baker’s shop. Stone sidewalks replaced the muddy paths near the well. Public seating—benches, simple and sturdy—lined the walkways.

The city stopped looking like a construction project. It began looking like ho.

Arthur walked the street one evening, lanterns newly lit, the last light fading from the sky. The walkways were busy—workers heading ho, families returning from the square, rchants closing their shutters.

He didn’t understand why it felt different. The infrastructure was functional. The asurents were correct. The design was efficient.

But sothing else had happened. Sothing he hadn’t planned.

Vivian walked beside him. She understood imdiately.

"People have started personalizing the city," she said.

Arthur looked at her. "What?"

She gestured at a flower box. At a painted sign. At a bench where an old man sat, watching the street, clearly content.

"You gave them a frawork. They’re filling it with themselves."

Arthur stopped walking. Looked at the flower box. The sign. The bench. The old man.

He had never thought about it that way.

---

The first unofficial town festival happened on a warm evening in late sumr.

Nobody organized it. No permits were issued. No schedule was posted.

A musician started playing near the public square—the fiddler from weeks ago, returned with new songs. Another musician joined him, a drumr with a small hand drum. Then food vendors arrived, rolling carts and setting up makeshift tables. Then families. Then workers. Then everyone.

The square filled. The main street filled. The benches filled. People stood in clusters, talking, laughing, eating, listening.

Arthur stood at the edge of the square, watching, deeply confused.

"Why are there so many people?" he asked.

Zack appeared beside him, holding a cup of sothing that slled like spiced wine. "It’s called having fun."

Arthur’s brow furrowed. "I didn’t schedule this."

Zack grinned. "Exactly."

Arthur watched a group of children dancing to the fiddle music—not well, but enthusiastically. He watched a rchant arguing with a custor over the price of a carved wooden bowl, both of them laughing. He watched two young workers sharing a bench, sitting closer than necessary, clearly on a first date.

"I don’t understand the logistics," Arthur said.

Zack took a sip of his drink. "That’s because there aren’t any."

"Everything has logistics."

Zack clapped him on the shoulder. "Not tonight, boss. Tonight just has people."

Arthur stood there for a long ti, watching. Trying to understand. Failing. But not leaving.

---

Festival evening. Lanterns everywhere—strung between buildings, hanging from poles, floating on the water in small paper boats soone had made. Music drifted through the streets, different tunes from different directions, overlapping and separating.

Arthur and Vivian walked through the crowd together. No work. No reports. No etings.

Just people.

They passed a couple sitting on a bench—older, comfortable, watching the crowd with quiet satisfaction. The woman looked up as Arthur and Vivian passed.

"Newlyweds?" she asked warmly.

Arthur opened his mouth. Closed it. Opened it again.

"We’re not married," he said.

Pause.

Then, before he could stop himself, he added: "Not yet."

He heard the words as they left his mouth. His brain registered what he had said approximately half a second later.

The older couple smiled knowingly. "Congratulations," the man said, and turned back to the crowd.

Vivian had frozen beside him.

Arthur stood there, processing his catastrophic verbal failure.

The couple did not look back. The crowd moved around them. The music played on.

Arthur finally turned to Vivian. "That statent was inaccurate."

Vivian’s expression was unreadable. Her voice was careful. "Was it?"

He opened his mouth. Closed it. "I—"

She waited. Patient. Still.

He had no escape. No deflection. No system to hide behind.

"I didn’t an to say that," he managed.

"But you said it."

"Yes."

Silence. The fiddle played on.

Vivian’s lips twitched. "Arthur."

"What?"

"You just told strangers we’re getting married."

"That’s not—I didn’t—the statent was—"

"Accidental?"

"Catastrophically."

She was smiling now. Trying not to. Failing.

Arthur stood there, completely defeated.

Vivian laughed. Not the small, controlled laugh from before. A real laugh. Warm. Unrestrained.

"Your face," she said.

"My face is normal."

"Your face is terrified."

"I’m not terrified. I’m—"

"Terrified."

Arthur closed his mouth. Said nothing. Because she was right.

They stood in the middle of the festival crowd, lantern light reflecting off both of them, music playing, people laughing, life happening around them.

Vivian reached out. Took his hand.

Just held it.

Arthur looked down at their hands. Then at her face.

"I didn’t plan this," he said.

Vivian’s smile softened. "I know."

---

Late night. The festival ending.

The crowd had thinned. The musicians had packed their instrunts. The food vendors were closing their carts. Lanterns still glowed along the main street, but fewer now—so had burned out, so had been taken down.

Arthur and Vivian stood at the edge of Main Street, watching the last people head ho.

A family with young children, the smallest one asleep on the father’s shoulder. A group of workers, arm in arm, singing sothing off-key. An old couple walking slowly, holding hands, saying nothing.

The town felt alive. Not because of infrastructure. Because of people.

Arthur finally understood. The roads. The warehouses. The markets. The houses. They were never the destination. They were the frawork.

The people were always the point.

Vivian leaned slightly against his shoulder. Not heavily. Just enough.

"You did this," she said quietly.

Arthur shook his head. "I built the streets."

"And?"

He looked at the fading lanterns, the empty benches, the dark windows of the shops.

"The town built itself around them."

They stood together in the quiet, the festival over, the night settling in. No rush. No urgency. Just the warmth of the evening and the knowledge that sothing had begun that couldn’t be undone.

Arthur had built the streets.

The town had built itself around them.

END OF Chapter 143

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