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Tushar Srivastav
Tushar Srivastav

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Chapter 19: Designs of the Divine

As Harry turned to Sena, his Lo'taur, he allowed a small smile to tug at the corner of his mouth.

One thing Hecate had done well—perhaps the only thing—was establish a transparent chain of command. The First Prime oversaw the military; the Lo'taur handled civilian governance. It removed internal competition, which plagued other System Lords, where ambition often undermined loyalty. It wasn't perfect—there were overlapping domains, such as military industry—but it worked. Grouder managed the weapons: Sena, the workers. The rest was compartmentalised.

"Sena," Harry said, voice low but firm, "things look bleaker than when I left."

She bowed deeply. "Yes, My Lord. The attack crippled our logistics. Our central storage facilities and planetary warehouses were primary targets. It has led to severe food shortages across twelve systems. We've been forced to ration supplies, but Stargate deliveries cannot meet the demand."

Harry nodded slowly, frowning. He'd always known the Stargate system was a marvel—but not made for freight. Containers needed to be under six meters in diameter, and the wormhole collapsed every thirty-eight minutes. That might work for emergencies, but not for feeding billions.

He nearly facepalmed.

Of course. Why didn't they think of this before? The Goa'uld were brilliant at building terrifying weapons… but their infrastructure philosophy was medieval. No scalable logistics. No long-term civil planning. They relied entirely on intimidation and superstition. No wonder the System Lords plateaued—they had the weapons of gods but the economy of feudal barons.

Turning to Grouder, Harry asked, "How many Tel'taks do we currently have in the fleet?"

"Twenty, My Lord," Grouder answered, surprised by the change in topic.

Not much. But it would be enough for now.

"Deploy all of them," Harry commanded. "They'll act as agricultural carriers. Have them run continuous relays from our farming colonies to high-need worlds. Each Tel'tak can carry forty tons. That's more in one run than the Stargate can handle in days."

Grouder blinked. "As you command… My Lord."

Harry didn't press the disbelief on Grouder's face. He was accustomed to Goa'uld lords ruling from thrones, not managing cargo routes. They'll adjust.

"This loop should stabilise our food situation in three to four days," Harry continued. "Sena—do we have enough to last until then?"

"We can stretch our supplies for seven or eight days if no further raids occur," she confirmed.

"Good. Then let's move on."

Harry stepped down from the dais and began to pace slowly across the chamber.

"Every factory, every shipyard, must operate around the clock. But I want shifts—three per day. No one works longer than necessary. Rest and learning must be mandatory. One-third of the day is work. One-third is recovery. One-third is education or personal development."

Sena was already noting it down.

"For Laconia, that means nine-hour rotations. Other worlds can adjust to their planetary cycles. The important part is balance."

Then came the core of his reforms.

"I've prepared urban design templates for all major cities. We won't rebuild what was lost—we'll build better: plumbing, heating, and clean water. Every structure must have it. I'll provide tools for that."

He waved his hand, and an array of artefacts shimmered into existence—sinks, toilets, faucets, even prefabricated rune-etched pipes.

Sena stepped forward, eyes wide with wonder, reaching out hesitantly, half-expecting a hologram. Her fingers touched cold, solid metal. She gasped, then began inspecting each item as if it were a scholar at a sacred archive.

The faucet proved her undoing.

She turned the handle, and water gushed out, soaking her instantly.

With a shriek, she leapt back and dropped the fixture, face flushed. The floor was suddenly slick, and everyone in the room tensed.

Harry chuckled. A flick of his wand dried her in an instant. Another flick absorbed the spill and resealed the faucet.

"If her eyes go any wider, they'll fall out of her head," Harry thought in amusement.

"Sena, it's alright," he said gently. "Go on—inspect the rest."

She did, now careful to stand as far from the taps as possible. When she saw the sink drain actually worked, her knees almost buckled.

Sam had joined the inspection, curiosity gleaming in her eyes. They are likely trying to reverse-engineer where the water went.

Let them marvel, Harry thought. A god who gives is more powerful than a god who demands.

When the others were absorbed in study, he gestured for Sena to approach.

As she ascended the steps, Harry conjured a slate-like tablet—sleek, metallic, its screen faintly glowing with runes. It ran on magic, not electricity, a creation of his long months in isolation. Inside it were his complete civil blueprints—city layouts, power grids, education plans, public transport, even libraries and forums.

"Sena, look into my eyes."

She obeyed without hesitation. A short burst of Legilimency confirmed what he already knew—her loyalty burned like a star. Utter, complete.

With a whispered incantation, he transferred the interface knowledge into her mind. The ancient spell lit the space between them for a moment. Then he handed her the tablet.

"This holds everything. Use it to serve me. If it breaks, come to me. I'll replace it."

Tears brimmed in her eyes. "Yes, My Lord. I will not fail you."

"You won't. Now go. Review the city plans. Prioritise the factories that can produce these infrastructure components first."

She descended, still holding the tablet as if it were a holy relic.

Harry turned to the rest of his council.

"These artefacts are not for show. Every item you see is imbued with rune-based enchantments—water generation, waste removal, temperature control. Mass-producible. Durable. Scalable. Our people deserve dignity. Clean homes. A future worth serving."

There were murmurs. Nods. Even a few expressions of awe.

"Also," he continued, "begin designing a citizen registry. Everyone—Jaffa or human—will receive a unique identification. Not for control… but for support. I would like to know the names, ages, family structures, skill sets, and medical histories of the individuals. We can't uplift our people if we don't know them."

He turned to Sam now, who had just returned from inspecting the plumbing setup.

"Colonel Carter. You'll have access to one of the Ancient databanks recovered from beneath the temple. The interface is encrypted, but I believe your knowledge may help me unlock it. There's likely technology in there far beyond anything we've seen."

Sam nodded, eyes sharp. "Understood. I'll get started immediately."

Harry smiled faintly. "You've got the mind of a Ravenclaw, Sam."

Laconia — Nightfall

Later that evening, from the highest terrace of the temple, Harry stood alone. Below him, reconstruction had already begun. Workers were moving, orders were shouted, and supply drones were rerouted—magic and labour, industry and faith—intertwined.

The stars shone brilliantly above, untouched by war.

Harry whispered into the night:

"I am not a god."

He let the words sit.

"But maybe… I can be what they need."

And far below, a world began to change.

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