True to her forced word, Lucilla made the arrangements. Her methods were as swift as they were resentful. Two days later, Alex found himself being carried in an unmarked, enclosed litter through the twilight streets of Rome, not to the palace of a senator or a public official, but to a lavish, private villa on the Caelian Hill. It was neutral ground, a property owned by a wealthy merchant from Gaul who was currently away on business, a man who owed favors to both Lucilla and Sabina. It was a perfect, discreet location.
Alex had taken great care with his own appearance. He had shed the imperial purple and the military armor. He wore a simple but immaculately tailored dark grey toga, the kind worn by a private citizen of immense wealth and status. He was not here as the Emperor. He was here as a man, attempting to meet a formidable woman on her own terms. It was a strategic choice, but as he entered the villa's candlelit triclinium—the formal dining room—he realized it was also a necessary one.
Sabina was already there, reclining on a dining couch, a goblet of wine in her hand. She was stunning. Dressed in a stola of deep emerald green that complimented her fiery hair, she looked less like an actress and more like a queen in her own court. She regarded him with a cool, appraising amusement as he entered.
"Caesar," she said, her voice a low, melodic purr. "I confess my surprise. When your sister extended the invitation, I assumed it was some new, elaborate trap. I did not actually expect you to come."
"And yet, here I am," Alex replied, taking his place on the couch opposite hers. Servants moved silently, filling his goblet and placing small plates of olives, cheese, and spiced nuts between them. "I was told you considered our last conversation… unfinished."
"I considered you a tyrant in the making," she corrected him with a wry smile. "A subtle but important distinction."
"And now?"
"Now," she said, taking a slow sip of wine, her green eyes watching him over the rim of the cup, "I am intensely curious. The man who strong-arms his own sister into arranging a dinner party for him is either supremely arrogant or supremely desperate. I am trying to decide which you are."
Her directness was as disarming as it had been at the temple. He decided to meet it not with threats or imperial authority, but with an honesty he had shown to no one else in this world.
"Perhaps I am a little of both," he admitted. He looked at her directly. "You accused me of playing the same dirty games as my enemies. You were right. My methods in dealing with my sister were… harsh. But I need you to understand why."
"I am listening," she said, her curiosity piqued.
"This city, this empire, is a dying patient," Alex began, his voice low and earnest. "It is afflicted with a deep-seated rot of corruption, greed, and complacency. I am attempting to perform surgery, but the disease is fighting back. My methods have been brutal because the infection is virulent. Do you understand?"
"I understand the metaphor," Sabina said, unimpressed. "Every would-be tyrant from the beginning of time has claimed he was only breaking bones for the good of the patient's health."
"Then let me speak plainly," Alex said, leaning forward. "I am not interested in power for its own sake. I am interested in building a Rome where a woman like you does not have to fight tooth and nail against a corrupt and entitled elite for every scrap of success. An empire built not just on the strength of its legions, but on the strength of its commerce, its innovation, its merit."
He spoke then of his vision, translating the advanced concepts he held in his mind into a language she would understand. He didn't talk about Lyra or the future, but he spoke of the principles. He described his plans for the "Knowledge Institute" he envisioned, though he didn't use the name. He painted a picture of a grand institution funded by the state, where brilliant minds like Hero of Alexandria would be empowered not just to build clever toys for the rich, but to solve real-world problems—improving irrigation, designing more efficient shipping, creating stronger building materials.
He spoke of legal reforms, of creating clear and inviolable property rights that would protect merchants and entrepreneurs like her from the whims of powerful senators who could seize assets on a whim. He spoke of a stable, predictable economy where her investments could flourish without fear of sudden political upheaval. He was selling her a vision of a stable, prosperous, and logical Rome—a Rome where someone like her could build an empire of her own without constantly looking over her shoulder.
Sabina listened, her cynical expression slowly softening into one of deep, focused concentration. She challenged him, asking sharp, intelligent questions about the practicalities of his ideas, but her tone was no longer mocking. She was engaging with the vision, testing its foundations.
Finally, she leaned back, swirling the wine in her goblet. "These are pretty words, Caesar," she said, her voice softer now. "They are the dreams of a philosopher. Many men have spoken them. The city is full of their marble busts. Why should I believe you are different? Why should I believe you can actually achieve any of this?"
This was the crucial moment. He couldn't threaten her. He couldn't command her. He had to win her.
"Because I cannot do it alone," he said, the admission costing his pride something, but it was the truth. "And I am not asking you to believe me. I am asking you to help me."
He made his offer, a political gamble of the highest order. "Your financial acumen is legendary. Everyone in this city knows it. The famine crisis is real. The state treasury is a labyrinth of corruption and incompetence that I am only beginning to understand. I need someone to help me untangle it. Someone with a mind for numbers and a healthy distrust of the Senate."
He paused, letting the weight of his offer settle. "I want you to lead a new Imperial Commission, alongside the honorable Senator Rufus, to reform the state's finances. Your task: to audit the entire system, to expose the waste, to rewrite the tax codes, and to make Rome solvent again. You would not be a subordinate. You would be an independent advisor, with direct access to me and the full, unwavering protection of the Emperor's office. You would have unprecedented power to reshape the Roman economy."
The offer hung in the air between them. It was incredible. He was offering one of the most powerful positions in the empire to a woman, an actress, someone who, just days ago, had been actively funding his chief political rival. It was an act of either supreme confidence or supreme foolishness.
Sabina stared at him, her sharp, intelligent eyes searching his face, weighing the man, the offer, the sheer, audacious scope of the vision he had presented. Her alliance with Lucilla had been one of cynical, gender-based principle. This was an offer of true partnership, a chance to be an architect of a new world.
A slow smile spread across her face, a genuine, dazzling smile that lit up her entire expression. "An emperor who admits he needs help," she said, a note of wonder in her voice. "Now that is something new in this city. Something that hasn't been seen since the first Augustus, perhaps."
She didn't give him a direct answer. She wouldn't be won over that easily. But she picked up her wine goblet, her expression unreadable, her eyes sparkling with a new, complex light. She raised the glass, not to him, but towards the idea of him.
"You have presented me with a fascinating and most unusual business proposal, Caesar," she said. "I find myself… intrigued."
She held her goblet high in a toast. "To Rome," she said, her voice a low, musical purr. "And to its very, very interesting new management."
He met her toast, their goblets clinking softly in the candlelit room. He did not know if he had just gained a powerful new ally or armed a more complicated and dangerous enemy. But as he looked at the brilliant, formidable woman across from him, he knew he had tried to win a battle not with a sword, a secret, or a threat, but with an idea. And he had to hope, for the sake of his empire, that it was enough.