Chapter 554: Morning of the Final Day
Chapter 554: Morning of the Final Day
Morning at last broke on the final day of the gladiator tournament, and with its coming the whole of Rome seemed to hold its breath. A peculiar, electric hush clung to the city — not the ordinary hum of market stalls and cartwheels, but the taut silence that precedes a storm. The sunlight crawled over terracotta roofs and gilded eaves, but it did little to warm the tenseness that had settled into the streets.
Before the day had truly begun, legions of soldiers were already in motion. Men in Caesar’s livery — not merely the city watch, but the slender, efficient core of his personal army — ran along paved roads and threaded between colonnades, taking up posts where they would be least expected and yet most effective. They numbered in the thousands; their presence was an assertion more than protection. They were all his men, bound by oath and favor to a single will. Where they gathered, the shape of power gathered with them.
It was by Caesar’s command. He wanted the day orchestrated down to the smallest clatter of a horse’s hoof. He would not tolerate surprises that could unravel the plans he had cultivated for months. Orders had been whispered, sealed, and distributed like poison: each man and woman had targets to watch, houses and estates to encircle. When the Beasts of Rome were let loose — the chaos he had arranged to cloak his true intent — these operatives, posing as frightened civilians or opportunistic plunderers, were to perform another, darker duty. The plan was simple and ruthless: in the uproar, select opponents who could not be called friends of Caesar would be removed, their deaths attributed to the tumult. In the aftermath, when the city reeled and sought reasons, Caesar intended to lay blame elsewhere and step into the void of power he had prepared.
Fulvius was one of many who stood between Caesar and undisputed dominion. He was not alone. There were scores, maybe hundreds, of men and women in Rome who opposed Caesar’s ascent — senators with old loyalties, equestrians who feared the loss of custom, retired officers who remembered a different order. Today, Caesar meant to extinguish all of them. Later, when whispers and accusations sought a culprit, he planned to pin the massacre on Crassus, to shred Crassus’s honor and rebuild it into a useful scapegoat. It would be political alchemy: turn murder into advantage and confusion into personal triumph.
Caesar sat within the cool stone of the senate castle, in his private quarters that overlooked the forum. His chair — an austere thing of polished wood and bronze — seemed less a seat than a throne of calculation. Outside, the city prepared for spectacle and slaughter in equal measure, but inside, everything was measured and still.
Only Octavius stood with him. The young man’s silhouette was precise in the dim, the lines on his face sharpened by the morning light sliding through narrow windows. He had the look of someone who had learned the art of obedience and the dangers of asking questions out loud.
“Is everything as you ordered?” Caesar asked, his voice soft as a blade’s edge.
Octavius inclined his head. “Yes. Our men are in position throughout the city: in alleys, beneath porticoes, near the villas and estates of those you named. They are disguised as plain citizens — beggars, servants, traders. No one will be able to tell they answer to us.” He paused, as if measuring whether the reassurance would suffice. “If anything goes wrong, I have placed equal numbers of patrolling guards. As you requested, there are many within the senate castle and surrounding the arena.”
Caesar listened, the faintest motion of a smile crossing his features like a shadow. He considered Octavius not as a man but as a mechanism that clicked smoothly into place. “Good,” he said finally. His words were laconic, but each carried layers of intent. “We will kill our enemies, yes — but we will also shield our allies. They will be the face of order when the screams stop. We must preserve the illusion of the Republic while we reshape it.”
Outside the room, the city’s sounds had not yet convulsed. Somewhere further away, the first braziers were lit; a baker began the rhythmic pounding of dough; the distant clang of a blacksmith’s hammer set a metronome to the day. To an unaware ear, life continued as it always had. To Caesar’s ear, those simple routines were the soundtrack of an inevitable change, and the instruments of his timing.
Octavius hesitated, then ventured the question that many dared not voice: “What of Aaron?”
The name hung between them and seemed to demand examination. Aaron was a man of secrets — the kind Caesar had made an ally a few years ago, the kind whose usefulness had been purchased and whose loyalty was a matter of expedient arrangement. Caesar had given him the Keys of Rome, a symbolic trust; it was no small gesture in a city that worshipped symbols almost as devoutly as gods.
“You gave him the Keys of Rome,” Octavius continued, voice low. “Can we trust him completely?”
“I have known Aaron for five years,” he said. “We want different things, in ways that satisfy different hungers, but our goals align.”
He did not elaborate beyond that; Caesar rarely wasted words on explanations where implication served better. In his mouth, the phrase sounded like a verdict and a warning. For Caesar, control of Rome was an end, absolute and secular. For Aaron, the thirst ran in another direction altogether: influence over Athena and Pandora. Whether these were titles, organizations, or literal glories of old worship hardly mattered — both men were reaching for authority, only on different thrones. And yet their desires touched at an essential point: to take Athena’s patronage from the goddess who watched over Rome would remove a spiritual obstacle and solidify Caesar’s claim. If Aaron sought dominion of Athena and Pandora — whatever shape that power took — Caesar could use him, at least until Aaron proved more useful dead than alive.
Caesar folded his hands, the gesture belonging more to a man who constructed futures than to one who lived in the present. “If Aaron fulfils his part, he will be necessary,” he said. “If he does not, he will be dispensable. We have safeguards, Octavius. Men placed where men must be placed.”
Octavius let out a breath that might have been relief or might have been resignation. He was a careful man; he knew the price of being indispensable to another’s ambition. “And Crassus?” he asked, probing at the final piece of the plan.
Caesar’s lips curved in that slight, unreadable way. “We will make Crassus the face of the violence, the man whose ambition everyone remembers and reviles. Once his name is sullied beyond repair, none will look for the hands that truly pulled the strings.” He tapped the carved key as if punctuating the sentiment. “The Beasts of Rome will provide the cover. Panic will rearrange loyalties. And from the ashes of that panic, I will stand.”
Caesar’s smile was the kind that did not so much ease a worry as fold it into a new calculation. Seeing Octavius still uneasy, he let the expression linger — a thin, confident arc that carried the weight of promises and threats both.
“Do not fret,” Caesar said, his voice warm but edged with steel. “Everything will unfold as we planned. That Septimius will not thwart us. And when I stand alone atop the city, you will be my heir.” The words were honeyed; the promise of power settled over Octavius like a glove slipped onto a willing hand.
Octavius bowed his head in acknowledgment, though the knot of concern had not entirely unwound. A thought tugged at him, one that had been gnawing since the morning intelligence reached the quarters. “What of Cleopatra and Amun Ra?” he asked, lowering his voice. “There is a chance Cleopatra is involved — that she might move against us in concert with Septimius.”
Caesar’s features contracted at the name, but only briefly. He leaned back, letting the words hang so he could weigh them as if they were coins. “It is a possibility,” he admitted. “But not a certainty.” He tapped a knuckle on the arm of his chair, considering. “I have Arsinoe — her sister. Septimius, who rescued the two women from Tenebria, did not, it seems, attempt to free Arsinoe. If he truly had Cleopatra at his back, would he have left her sister to rot?” He smiled then, a small, speculative curl of a smile. “Perhaps Cleopatra is not the hand behind Septimius after all.”
The admission was not so much evidence as a maneuver. Caesar had thought, in the first shudder after Johanna’s confession about Septimius, to strike at Arsinoe — to snuff her life and send her head as a bleak gift to Cleopatra, a warning wrapped in blood. Yet even in that dark calculation, hesitation had come: if Nathan found an alliance with Cleopatra, if the young man had indeed risked all for her, then killing Arsinoe might sever a bridge Caesar had need of later. Ambition, Caesar knew, required not only the removal of obstacles but the keeping of potential favors.
Octavius listened, the lines of doubt softening into a cautious acceptance. He too had suspected Cleopatra’s complicity and, for the moment, saw reason in Caesar’s restraint. If Cleopatra were not allied with Septimius, then Nathan stood alone — a solitary force, dangerous precisely because he acted without the weight of a foreign queen’s influence.
Caesar’s mien shifted; a predator scenting the edge of its prey. “Once Septimius is dealt with,” he said, the smirk at the corner of his mouth sharpening into cruelty, “we will quickly unearth where he has hidden Crassus, Pompey, and Servillia. All threads will be pulled, and the web will show us where the others cower.”
No sooner had the last syllable left his lips than the two men left the quarters and found Axel waiting in the corridor, flanked by three of his own followers — boys hardened into swagger by proximity to danger. Axel’s brow was taut with something like adrenaline and bravado. “You are going then,” he said, not strictly asking, more asserting what he presumed.
There was an irony in his tone: Caesar, who had engineered assassins and staged panic, would walk openly to the colosseum where Septimius was to fight. The arena was a place where the crowd swallowed spectacle and spat it back as triumph or pity; it was also a place where anything could happen and most could die. It might have seemed reckless to a less calculating mind.
But Caesar did not believe Septimius could simply end him. The thought of death at the hands of a crowd swollen champion was not one Caesar entertained lightly. He had built an image in Rome — a subtle, vast architecture of influence and fear — and he had no wish to watch that monumental self be toppled by a single blade or a sudden surge of fortune. Besides, he suspected Nathan would not seek his death; the young man, he judged, loved the grand narrative of Rome almost as much as Caesar did. He would not want to mar that legend with a petty murder, at least in front of whole Rome.
“Keep Brutus safe,” Caesar said, his voice dropping to a colder timbre. The words were a command sharpened by personal stake. “If you cannot protect him, then kill him.” The sentence landed like a slate across the corridor, final and merciless.
He rather have Brutus dead than him getting back to Servilia alive.
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