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Chapter 16: The Blueprint & The Wives
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The silence in the workshop wasn’t empty; it was heavy with the humid scent of cedar dust and the low, oscillating hum of Marcus’s mainframe.
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David didn’t look up from the sketchpad, his charcoal stick snapping under the sudden pressure of a jagged line. He stared at the fractured black mark, the silhouette of a bridge that existed only in his mind and the desperate needs of Cypress Bend. He wiped a streak of carbon across his forehead, leaving a dark smear that looked like a bruise in the flickering LED light.
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"It can't be steel, Marcus," David said, his voice raspy from a day of shouting over the river’s roar. "The gorge is too unstable for heavy machinery, and we don’t have the fuel to haul the girders even if we could scavenge them from the interstate. It has to be wood. It has to be a timber span."
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In the corner, Marcus leaned back in an ergonomic chair that looked increasingly out of place amidst the stacks of reclaimed lumber and rusted tools. His face was lit by the cool, sapphire glow of three mismatched monitors. Behind him, the massive 3D-printing rig—a goliath of servos and nozzles they’d spent months calibrating—clicked as its cooling fans spun up.
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"A timber span for a three-hundred-foot gap?" Marcus asked. He didn't sound skeptical; he sounded like he was already doing the math. His fingers danced across a haptic pad. "The sheer stress on the joints would shear standard bolts in a week. You’re talking about a king-post variation, or a Burr arch?"
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"Neither," David said, standing up and walking over to the screens. He tapped the glass. "A modified lattice truss. If we use the old-growth heartwood from the north ridge, the density is high enough to handle the compression. But the geometry has to be perfect. If the angles are off by even a degree, the first winter flood will twist the bridge right off its pilings."
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Marcus nodded, his eyes reflecting a rapid stream of scrolling data. "I can optimize the stress distribution. My AI isn't just for predicting crop yields, Dave. It can simulate the structural integrity of every individual beam. Give me thirty seconds."
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The hum of the mainframe deepened into a growl. On the center monitor, a wireframe structure began to pray into existence. It flickered, collapsed, then rebuilt itself—triangles snapping into place, reinforcing one another in a complex, elegant web.
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"Generating the blueprint now," Marcus whispered.
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Across the room, the wide-format plotter groaned to life. It didn't use ink; it used a chemical etching process they’d perfected to save on resources. A long, translucent sheet of polymer began to slide from the roller.
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The door to the workshop creaked open, letting in the sharp, cool air of the evening. Elena entered first, her boots caked in the gray mud of the lower clearing. Close behind her were Sarah and Helen. They didn't come in with the tentative pace of observers; they moved with the coordinated gravity of a command unit.
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Elena walked straight to the plotter, watching the lines materialize on the sheet. Her eyes, usually warm and quick to find a reason for a smile, were hard as flint. She stayed quiet until the machine gave a final, triumphant click and the blueprint slid onto the table.
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"That's it?" Elena asked, tracing the central arch with a calloused finger.
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"That's the bridge," David said. He felt a sudden, hollow ache in his chest—the weight of what he was asking of the town. "It’s ten thousand man-hours of labor and enough timber to strip the north ridge bare."
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"Then we’d better start moving," Elena said. She didn't look at David; she looked at Sarah. "Sarah, what’s the count on the heavy-duty saws?"
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Sarah pulled a small, leather-bound ledger from her coat pocket. She didn't need to flip pages. "We have four gas-powered Stihls with enough fuel for six days of continuous cutting. After that, we’re down to the crosscuts and the hand-saws. We’ll need a sharpening station set up at the trailhead. I can pull the teenagers for that—they need to learn the grit of a file anyway."
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"And the hauling?" Elena pushed.
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"Mules," Sarah replied, her voice clipped and professional. "We can’t waste the diesel on the tractors. I’ll talk to the Miller brothers. They’ve got the draft team. If we rig the sleds with the rollers David designed last summer, we can bring down two trunks a day."
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Helen, who had been Standing back near the door with her hands tucked into the pockets of her white medic’s coat, stepped forward. Her presence always brought a change in the room’s atmosphere—a sobering reminder of the cost of physical labor in a world without a local hospital.
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"If you're putting thirty men on a ridge with chainsaws and mules, I’m going to need a dedicated triage tent at the site," Helen said. Her gaze moved from the blueprint to David. "I’m already low on antiseptic. If we have a crush injury or a deep laceration from a snapped cable, I can’t be three miles away in the clinic. I need a mobile kit and two runners."
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"Take the North tent," Elena said, nodding firmly. "And Sarah, we’re going to need a caloric surplus for the crew. They can’t do this on thin soup and hope."
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Sarah made a note in her ledger. "I’ll talk to the kitchen collective. We’ll move the slaughter date for the two hogs up by a month. We’ll smoke the meat right at the base camp so the smell keeps the men motivated. We’ll need the children for berry picking and forage—anything to bulk out the stew."
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David watched them. He had spent the afternoon agonizing over the physics of the span, the tension of the cables, and the structural load of the timber. He had been thinking in terms of wood and gravity. But as he listened to Elena, Sarah, and Helen, he realized he had only designed the skeleton. They were the ones providing the blood and the will to make it live.
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"I need the foundation pits dug by Tuesday," David intervened, feeling the need to ground the logistical whirlwind in the reality of the site. "If we don't hit the bedrock before the rains start on Wednesday, the whole south bank will liquefy."
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Elena finally looked at him. She reached out and gripped his forearm, her thumb pressing into the muscle. It wasn't a gentle touch; it was an anchor.
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"The pits will be ready, David," she said. "You focus on those timber joints. If Marcus’s magic machine says a beam needs to be cut to the millimeter, you make sure it happens. I’ll handle the people."
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She turned back to the other two women. "Sarah, you head to the Miller place now. Don’t ask them for the mules—tell them the mules are drafted. Helen, start packing your trauma bags. I want the first crew at the ridge before the sun breaks the treeline."
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Without a word of dissent, Sarah and Helen turned and vanished back into the night, their shadows stretching long across the workshop floor.
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Marcus let out a low whistle, leaning back from his screens. "I'm glad they're on our side, Dave. Truly."
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David looked down at the blueprint. The lines were sharp, the geometry flawless. It was a masterpiece of digital engineering. But outside, he could already hear the distant, rhythmic clanging of the bell in the square—Elena’s signal for an emergency assembly.
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He walked to the window. In the darkness, lanterns were flickering to life in the cottages. People were moving, silhouettes crossing the muddy paths, drawn toward the center of the settlement. He saw Sarah’s lantern bobbing toward the stables and Helen’s white coat disappearing into the clinic.
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"It’s not just a bridge, Marcus," David said, his voice barely a whisper. "It’s a tether. If we fail, we’re just a collection of people waiting for the woods to swallow us."
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He picked up the polymer sheet, the blueprint feeling deceptively light in his hands. He felt the phantom weight of the logs, the heat of the forge, and the inevitable exhaustion that was about to settle over every soul in Cypress Bend.
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David stepped out of the workshop and onto the porch. The air was thick with the scent of ozone and wet earth. Elena was standing at the base of the steps, looking up at him. She didn't say anything, but the way she squared her shoulders told him she was already carrying the weight of the ridge.
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"Is it possible?" she asked, the first hint of vulnerability creeping into her voice now that they were alone.
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David looked at the blueprint, then at the black silhouette of the north ridge looming over the valley like a sleeping giant.
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"On paper, it’s perfect," David said. "In the dirt? We’re going to find out tomorrow morning."
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Elena nodded once, a sharp, decisive movement. She took a lantern from the hook by the door and held it up, lighting the path toward the square. David followed her, the blueprint tucked under his arm like a scroll of war.
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As they reached the edge of the clearing, the roar of the river seemed louder than before, a constant, churning reminder of the barrier that cut them off from the rest of the world. David looked at the water—white foam and black depths—and then at the faces of the neighbors gathered in the torchlight.
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They looked tired. They looked hungry. But as Elena stepped into the light and raised her hand for silence, David saw the one thing the river couldn't wash away.
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He saw the hunger for a way out.
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"Listen up!" Elena’s voice rang out, cutting through the wind and the water. "David has the plan. Marcus has the math. And the rest of us? We have the work."
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She unrolled the blueprint against the side of a supply crate, pinning it down with two heavy rocks. The crowd surged forward, their faces illuminated by the flickering flames.
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"Tomorrow," Elena said, her voice dropping into a low, fierce growl, "we start taking back the other side of that river."
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A low murmur rippled through the crowd—not of fear, but of a grim, collective resolve. David felt a chill that had nothing to do with the night air. He looked at his hands, already imagining the splinters and the grease.
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The bridge was no longer a dream on a screen; it was a crusade.
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"David," a voice called out from the back. It was Thomas, the oldest of the woodworkers, his face a map of deep-set wrinkles. "Are we using the mortise and tenon for the main chords?"
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David stepped forward into the circle of light. "We’re using a double-tusk tenon, Thomas. It’s the only way to ensure the vibration from the crossing doesn't shake the pegs loose."
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Thomas nodded slowly, a ghost of a smile touching his lips. "It’ll be a bitch to cut."
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"Then you’d better start sharpening your chisels tonight," David replied.
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He looked over at Sarah, who was already delegating tasks to a group of younger men, her ledger open and her pen flying. He saw Helen speaking quietly with the village elders, likely checking their blood pressure before the strain of the coming days.
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He felt a hand on his shoulder. It was Marcus.
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"You realize," Marcus whispered, leaning in close, "that if the AI’s stress-test was even slightly optimistic about the heartwood’s moisture content, the center of that arch will buckle the moment we pull the supports?"
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David didn't look away from the blueprint. He watched the way the light danced over the etched lines, making the bridge seem to pulse with a life of its own.
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"I know," David said. "But look at them, Marcus. Look at Elena. If I tell them this bridge might fall, they'll just try to hold it up with their bare hands."
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He turned back to the crowd, raising his voice to meet Elena’s. The instructions began to flow—a symphony of logistics, resource management, and raw human labor. Every person had a role. Every role was a vital link in the chain they were trying to forge.
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As the meeting began to break up and the people drifted toward their homes to fetch tools and pack bags, Elena walked back to David’s side. She looked drained, the adrenaline of the speech beginning to fade, replaced by the crushing reality of what came next.
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"We have three days until the storm hits," she said, looking toward the dark clouds gathering on the horizon.
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"Then we have to be done in two," David replied.
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He reached out and took her hand. Her palm was rough, mapped with the scars of a dozen different labors. She squeezed back, a silent oath.
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Across the square, the first axe hit the sharpening stone, a long, high-pitched screech that echoed off the surrounding hills. It was the sound of a town waking up to a fight they weren't sure they could win.
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David turned his gaze toward the river one last time. Somewhere in the darkness, the water crashed against the rocks, a relentless force of nature that had dictated their lives for far too long.
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He didn't see the water anymore. He saw the timber. He saw the span. He saw the way across.
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But as the first raindrops began to patter against the polymer blueprint, David felt the cold realization that the river wasn't the only thing trying to tear them apart.
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