Chapter 417 - 417: Preparing For a New Tomorrow
The resonance tower pulsed like a heart—silent, unseen by the masses, yet ever-beating, ever-alive. A hundred meters away, deep within the converted laboratory grounds, incandescent filaments hummed softly. Not from oil. Not from coal. Not from lines strung like the arteries of a sickly, wheezing world. But from the very breath of the Earth itself.
Electricity, pure and unbound, flowed through the air like a second atmosphere—neither visible nor entirely comprehensible. But it was real. The lights did not flicker. The machines did not stutter. The energy remained stable, day and night, drawn from harmonic resonance, its song inaudible yet everlasting.
The laboratory that once stank of grease and metallic sweat had become something else. Not sterile. Not holy. Something between. The sacred cathedral of the mind, where man’s defiance of entropy had taken form. And Nikola Tesla, ever the ghost in his own lifetime, now stood as a prophet whose gospel was no longer theory, but testament.
And yet, Bruno von Zehntner was already elsewhere—his mind racing far beyond the flickering bulbs and the gentle hum of modern Prometheus. The future was no longer to be envisioned. It was to be prepared for.
Innsbruck. Jewel of the Alps. Cradle of Tyrol. From the hillsides that sloped like the gentle sighs of old gods, the valley city gleamed under the spring thaw. And on the outskirts, as if conjured from myth and memory alike, a structure began to rise.
It was not merely a palace.
It was a statement.
Baroque in style, it echoed the glories of old Vienna—the ornate columns, the gilded ceilings painted with the divine, the vast domes and stained-glass windows catching light like trapped rainbows. Murals of saints, martyrs, and monarchs intermingled across the ceilings with scenes of thunder and celestial fire—testaments not to heaven, but to the ambition of man climbing toward it.
Yet beneath that beauty lay teeth.
The walls, while dressed in stone and gold leaf, were layered with steel-reinforced concrete at the core. Shatterproof glass shielded the windows. Air filtration systems, disguised behind rococo vents, could seal the estate airtight in under ten seconds. Hidden turrets sat dormant behind statues of angels and kings, while elevators descended far deeper than any servant would ever suspect.
For beneath this palace lay the true heart of it all.
A second home, mirroring the first in layout, but not in style. This was not a place of beauty—it was a place of endurance. The floors were steel and ceramic. The lights were harsh and clinical. Every room—every corridor—was redundant, backed with fail-safes and contingencies.
Deep wells for water. Hydroponic gardens lit by resonance-powered UV strips. A medical bay with enough equipment to perform open-heart surgery in a blackout. Armories, shelters, war rooms. If fire rained from the sky, or plague turned cities to mass graves, Bruno’s bloodline would not merely survive—they would remain sovereign.
It was not born from fear. Not exactly.
It was born from understanding.
Empires fell. Nations shattered. Families died not because they were weak—but because they were unprepared for the nature of decay and atrophy. Bruno would not allow that. Not again. Not after what he had seen. Not after what he remembered.
And so as engineers oversaw the final wiring of the resonance receivers to the palace grid—no longer dependent on the coal-fed systems of a world gasping its last breath—Bruno stood on a balcony overlooking it all. Dressed not in finery, but in the simple, iron-gray coat of an officer.
This would be the home of his children. Not just in beauty. But in security. A castle of art for the world to admire above. A fortress of fire for the enemies of the world below. And for the first time in months, he allowed himself to exhale. He had not yet saved the world. But he had bought it time. And time, at last, was now on his side.
Tesla’s visions for power had not just brought the world unlimited free energy, free from the constraints of oil barons and industrial titans—it allowed Bruno to maintain the flow of energy in his own home. If the entire grid were dismantled, his resonance receiver, and personal tower adjacent to the estate, would continue providing power even in the darkest of days.
This was a palace, built for elegance, peace, diplomacy, but above all: endurance. Survival. And, God forbid, apocalypse. Bruno was a man who had seen the worst humanity had to offer in two lives. He had stared down its self-destructive nature, and gained an understanding of just how close the world could come to total annihilation in the near future.
Was this the goal all along when he pursued Tesla and invested in the man’s potential? No, not exactly. But it was a byproduct. A necessary step in the process of ensuring civilization had a future that didn’t end in fire or chains.
Still, the palace was far from complete. The structure had barely broken ground. What Bruno now gazed upon was not the actual estate—but a scale model, meticulously carved, with a sculptor’s eye for beauty and an engineer’s precision. It stood in the center of his war room like a holy relic. Not of the past, but of the future.
What once had been a room of sand tables and model troops, of terrain boards and strategy dice, had become something far more sophisticated.
This was no longer a general’s war room.
It was the crucible of tomorrow.
The table no longer displayed campaigns or frontlines. Now, it displayed the outline of a new world: city districts, electric tram systems powered by wireless energy, defensive sectors for riot control, central hubs for food distribution. A complete logistical and architectural rethink of what it meant to house a civilization.
And Innsbruck? That ancient city nestled between peaks—it would be the prototype. Not Berlin. Not Vienna. Innsbruck.
Because of its insignificance, and because of its symbolic weight.
The soul of Tyrol would become the blueprint for the soul of the world.
Bruno would dabble with this project daily, though reluctantly, as duty still called him elsewhere. A Generalfeldmarschall could not simply vanish into dreams. He clocked in every morning to the military council, reviewed deployment reports, oversaw logistics. But as soon as he was dismissed, he returned here—always here—before going home to kiss his children goodnight.
Eventually, he began consulting the military engineering division directly.
What began as a single conversation soon became a growing obsession among the officers. They weren’t content to passively suggest. They wanted to build. By Sunday evening, the war room had become something between a think tank and a beer hall.
Twelve engineering officers, thirty cadets, dozens of blueprints pinned to every available wall. Men once trained to think in terms of trenches, firepower, and bridges now debated municipal layouts, airflow efficiency, energy distribution patterns, and sewage control with a fiery passion.
And they came not in uniform—but in overalls, boots, and rolled sleeves. Beers in hand, sleeves rolled up, arguing over city grid sectors and pressure valves with a vehemence that, to outsiders, might’ve seemed hostile. But no. It was the language of Germans. Precision through combat. Collaboration through debate. It wasn’t war—it was ritual.
Bruno sat at the head of it all. Not as emperor. Not as general. But as the architect of an age yet unborn.
This, he thought, was the real war. The long one. Not of bullets and bombs—but of infrastructure. Of permanence. Of preparing for the world after the fire.
And for the first time in all his lives—Bruno allowed himself the smallest thought:
Maybe this time… it will last.
And yet, even as the engineers argued and charted the new world over a table littered with measurement tools and empty bottles, Bruno knew that all of this—every plan, every system—hinged on something far more fragile than concrete or copper. Trust. Will. Memory. These were the keystones no blueprint could guarantee.
He walked the perimeter of the war room slowly, eyeing the rows of sub-structures and projected power conduits, pausing at one section marked “District VI – Education and Civic Development.” It was not enough to build walls and power grids. The mind of the future had to be shaped too.
So he had already begun allocating funds to restructure the Tyrolean education board—emphasizing engineering, philosophy, history, and responsibility. If resonance was the blood of this future world, then its people had to be its immune system.
A child raised with purpose, trained in reason and discipline, was more dangerous to decadence and decay than any rifle or drone. Bruno knew this intimately. After all, he had once been born into a world that praised comfort over character—and it nearly killed them all.
He circled back toward the city mock-up, now illuminated by soft electric light. His engineers were still arguing—one about seismic tolerances, another about antenna placement. Good. Let them fight. Let them build.
From a nearby phonograph, Wagner crackled to life softly. The notes echoed across the vaulted room like the ghosts of old emperors giving their blessing.
“Innsbruck,” Bruno whispered, more to himself than anyone else. “If you are to be the cradle of the next thousand years… then let you be made of stone, steel, and soul.”
And with that, he returned to his desk—not to rest, but to draft the policies that would turn this dream into doctrine.