The news of Sabina's intervention was a sharp, unpleasant jolt. Alex had been fighting a war on two fronts: the public, political battle against the Senate, and the shadowy, economic war against his sister. He had felt in control of both. But this was a new front opening up, a social and personal one he hadn't anticipated. Sabina wasn't a corrupt senator or a bitter rival. She was an independent player, an unknown variable, and her motives were a mystery. A mystery he intended to solve.
Feeling outmaneuvered and furious, he did something the "new Commodus" had not yet done. He acted on impulse. He dispatched a Praetorian guard to the residence of Aurelia Sabina with a simple, imperial summons. Not a request, but a command. He expected to intimidate her, to use the raw power of his office to frighten her into backing down. It was a miscalculation.
She arrived at the palace that afternoon. She was not brought in by guards like a petitioner or a criminal. She arrived in her own litter, attended by her own servants, and was escorted to his study with the deference due to a woman of immense wealth and influence. She entered not with the fear of a commoner called before her emperor, but with the cool, unruffled confidence of a woman meeting with a business rival. She was dressed in a simple but exquisitely tailored grey stola that emphasized her intelligence rather than her beauty, and her green eyes were sharp and direct.
"Caesar," she said, offering a shallow, almost perfunctory bow. "You summoned me. I confess I was surprised. I did not take you for a man who enjoyed the theater."
They were alone in his study. He had dismissed his guards and secretaries, wanting no witnesses. He gestured for her to sit, but she remained standing, forcing him to look up at her from his own chair. It was a subtle but effective power play.
"My interests do not lie with the stage today, Domina," Alex said, his voice cold. "They lie with the silver mines of Hispania. Your recent business acquisitions are… noteworthy." He let the threat hang in the air. "An actress with a sudden, profound interest in industrial mining. You have aligned yourself with a known enemy of the state."
Sabina's lips curved into a wry, knowing smile. She was not intimidated in the least. "I have aligned myself with a sound investment, Caesar," she replied, her voice as smooth as polished marble. "The Augusta was selling valuable assets at a considerable discount, thanks to some… unfortunate market rumors." Her eyes glinted, letting him know that she knew exactly where those rumors had originated. "It was a simple business decision. Or is the Emperor now in the business of dictating who his citizens are allowed to trade with? I was not aware that was a power granted to you by the Senate."
She had brilliantly and immediately turned his accusation on its head. He was trying to frame her as a traitor's accomplice. She was reframing his actions as tyranny, a direct threat to the property rights of a Roman citizen. He felt a surge of grudging respect for her audacity.
"This is not about commerce," he countered, trying to regain the offensive. "This is about propping up a woman who conspired to have me assassinated."
"Is it?" Sabina asked, tilting her head. She took a few steps, circling a globe of the heavens that stood in the corner of the room. "I see it differently. I see a brother systematically attempting to bankrupt his own sister, using the shadiest tricks of the financial forum. You think you are saving Rome by crushing your enemies with manufactured rumors and logistical strangulation. But you are just playing the same dirty games they do, Caesar. You're simply proving to be better at it."
"I am doing what is necessary!" he shot back, his frustration making his voice rise. "I am trying to prevent a civil war, to reform a corrupt system that is bleeding this empire dry!"
"Are you?" Her voice was soft, but her question cut him to the quick. "Or are you just replacing one set of powerful elites with your own? You have your general, your pet prefect, your tame senator. You attack my business enterprises. You squeeze your sister's finances because you cannot touch her legally. How is that functionally different from the old emperors who would seize the property of any family that displeased them? You speak of justice, but your methods, Caesar, are the methods of a tyrant."
Her words hit him with the force of a physical blow, because they resonated with a truth he had refused to confront. He had been using fear and coercion. He had been operating in the shadows. He had justified it all as a means to a noble end, but Sabina was holding up a mirror to him, and he did not like the reflection.
He slumped back in his chair, the anger draining out of him, replaced by a weary confusion. "Why?" he asked, the question genuine. "Why are you helping her? You are a shrewd woman. You must know she is dangerous. You must know what she tried to do."
Sabina stopped her pacing and looked at him, her expression softening for the first time. "Of course I know. Lucilla is a venomous, ambitious, and often foolish woman. I have no illusions about her character."
"Then why?"
"Because I am a woman of business in a man's world, Caesar," she said, her voice now carrying a fierce, quiet pride. "My father did not leave me a fortune. My husband did not grant me his name. Everything I have, I built myself, through my wits, my work, and my refusal to be intimidated by men like Senator Metellus who believe a woman's place is in the nursery. And do you know who my greatest rival has always been? Who has tried to block my every venture and buy out my every success? Your sister."
Alex was stunned. "She's your rival, and you're helping her?"
"She is my rival, yes. But she is also one of the only other women in this entire city who wields true, independent power. She does not answer to a husband or a father. Her power is her own. And when I see a man—even an emperor who claims to have the best of intentions—using the full force of the state to systematically tear down one of the only other powerful women in Rome… I choose a side. My investment in her is not about friendship. It is a message. It is about solidarity. It is about ensuring that the game of power in this city is not played exclusively by men."
Her revelation left Alex speechless. He had viewed the entire conflict through a two-dimensional lens of politics and survival. He had never once considered the complex social dynamics, the struggle of women in a patriarchal society. He had been fighting what he thought was a simple villain, but he had just discovered that his war had unforeseen consequences and was creating alliances based on principles he hadn't even known were in play.
Sabina walked towards the door, her point made, her victory in their debate absolute. She paused at the threshold and looked back at him.
"A final piece of advice, Caesar, offered freely. You cannot save Rome by simply becoming a more efficient version of its monsters. To truly change this city, you must actually be something different. Think on that."
She gave him a wry, challenging smile. "And a word of warning. Lucilla is no longer just fighting for power. You have made her desperate. And desperate people do desperate things. Her newfound poverty has made her far more dangerous, not less. She is looking for a new weapon to use against you. A weapon that can hurt you in a way that swords and politics cannot." She held his gaze. "And I think she may have just found it."
Sabina departed, leaving Alex alone in the grand, silent study. He was reeling, his moral certainty shaken to its core. He had won his military and political battles, but he was now mired in a new kind of war he didn't understand, against an opponent whose motives he was forced, in some small way, to respect. And as her final warning echoed in his ears, he had a terrible, sinking feeling that he knew what new "weapon" his sister would be looking for.
Not a poison. Not an assassin.
The truth. The truth about the strange, calculating man who now sat in the emperor's chair.