The new machine of government began to turn, its gears grinding with friction and distrust, but turning nonetheless. Perennis fed Sabina a steady stream of intelligence on the financial vulnerabilities of her senatorial targets. Sabina, in turn, used that intelligence to draft ruthless new regulations and tax loopholes to close, which the honorable Senator Rufus would then propose in the Curia, giving them the unassailable veneer of law and tradition. Maximus, for his part, kept the peace with a grim efficiency, his new Speculatores a shadowy presence that ensured no senator felt brave enough to openly oppose the Emperor's will.
But while Alex's new political machine was making slow, grinding progress against the city's corruption, the other, more relentless enemy was gathering strength. The famine.
Weeks passed. The initial influx of subsidized grain from his emergency release had been a temporary balm, but it was now gone. The price of bread on the streets of Rome began to climb again, slowly at first, then with terrifying speed. The "Fire and Fallow" edict, his long-term solution, was a distant promise that did nothing to fill the empty stomachs of the city's plebeians. The first confirmed reports of starvation began to trickle in from the city's poorest districts—the Subura, the Esquiline—where families were living on little more than boiled beans and scraps. The mood in the city was growing ugly, the cheerful crowds that had once hailed him now sullen and quiet.
The crisis escalated from a chronic condition to an acute emergency with the arrival of a panicked dispatch from the port of Ostia. The message, delivered by a breathless courier, was read aloud to Alex in his study. Several large grain ships, privately owned vessels from Sardinia and Gaul whose owners had been tempted by Rome's sky-high prices to risk the journey, had been attacked.
Maximus, who was present for the report, scowled. "Cilician pirates? So far west? It's bold of them."
"It was not pirates, General," Alex said, his eyes scanning the report. "Not in the way you mean. The attacks did not happen in the open sea. They happened within sight of the Italian coast, near the mouth of the Tiber. The attackers were not professional corsairs in swift warships. They were desperate men in fishing boats and refitted coastal barges, armed with little more than clubs and knives. They swarmed the merchant ships, overwhelmed their small crews, and seized the cargo. They didn't even take the ships themselves. They just took the grain."
A new term, a new and terrifying symptom of the societal breakdown, was born in that moment. These were not pirates. They were "Grain Pirates."
Alex immediately convened his council. The atmosphere in the room was grim. This was a direct assault on Rome's lifeline.
Maximus, as expected, advocated for a swift, brutal military response. "This is an act of war against the Roman people!" he thundered, his fist striking the map of the Italian coastline laid out on the table. "These are not just thieves; they are traitors who would see the city starve for their own gain. Give me two naval cohorts from Misenum. We will sweep the coast from Cumae to Ostia. We will hunt these scum down, and I will personally see them crucified on the beaches as a warning to any who would dare interfere with Rome's bread."
"A necessary show of force, General," Senator Rufus agreed, his voice heavy. "But it does not solve the root of the problem. Fear will not convince a merchant to sail. The shipping guilds will be terrified. If they believe their cargo and their crews will be lost to these coastal gangs, they will stop sailing altogether, no matter the price you offer for their grain. The state must reassure them. We must issue an edict guaranteeing their losses. We must promise to compensate them for any cargo seized."
Sabina, who had been listening silently, finally spoke, her voice cutting through the debate with a cool, clear logic. "You are both correct," she said, looking first at Maximus, then at Rufus. "But you are only treating the symptoms. You, General, are trying to kill the fever. You, Senator, are trying to soothe the patient's aches. Neither of you is addressing the disease itself."
She walked to the table, her presence commanding the room's attention. "The pirates exist because the people of the coastal towns are as hungry and desperate as the people in Rome. The merchants are hesitant because the risk of sailing has become too high. We need to change the entire equation. We need a solution that is military, economic, and social."
She proceeded to lay out an audacious, multi-pronged plan that stunned the other three men into silence with its scope and ingenuity.
"First, the security," she said, nodding to Maximus. "Your naval patrols are essential. But they should not be hunting for needles in a haystack. They should become shepherds. We will organize the private grain merchants into protected convoys. We will establish a schedule. Once a week, a fleet of grain ships will sail from Sardinia, from Gaul, from Sicily, and your warships will escort them directly into the port of Ostia. The risk for any individual merchant is dramatically reduced, and your military assets are used with maximum efficiency."
Maximus grunted, a flicker of admiration in his eyes. It was sound military logistics.
"Second, the economics," she continued, turning to Rufus. "Your idea of state compensation is good, but it is a pure expense. Let us instead turn it into a self-sustaining system. We will create an Imperial Insurance Fund, backed by the treasury. Merchants wishing to join the protected convoys will pay a small premium, a percentage of their cargo's value, into this fund. If their ship is lost—to a storm, not just to pirates—they are compensated from the fund. If they arrive safely, the fund keeps the premium. It is a shared risk, a shared reward. It encourages trade, and over time, it will generate revenue for the state, not drain it."
Rufus looked astonished. It was the principles of maritime insurance, a concept that existed in a primitive form but had never been attempted on such a state-sponsored scale. It was brilliant.
"Third," Sabina said, her voice dropping as she came to her final, most radical point. "The social problem. The pirates themselves. You are right, General, they are criminals. But they are criminals born of desperation. We cannot crucify every hungry fisherman on the Italian coast. We must give them a better option."
She pointed to Ostia on the map. "The port is a chaotic mess, too small and inefficient for the volume of shipping Rome truly needs. I propose a massive new public works project: the dredging of the harbor and the construction of a new, larger series of wharves and warehouses. We will fund it with a new, temporary 'port tax,' levied not on essential goods like grain and oil, but on the luxury imports that line the pockets of men like Senator Metellus—silk, spices, marble, exotic animals."
She looked directly at Alex. "The project will require thousands of laborers. We will offer fair, steady wages. We will employ the poor, the unemployed, the hungry men of Rome and Ostia. We will give the very men who might otherwise turn to piracy a reason to build Rome up, not tear it down. We will solve the security problem, the economic problem, and the social problem in one single, integrated plan."
Silence fell over the study. Alex stared at Sabina, a sense of profound awe washing over him. It was a true "God-Tier" solution. It was elegant, comprehensive, and addressed the root causes of the crisis, not just the symptoms. It was the kind of integrated, multi-variable thinking that he had relied on Lyra for every single day. And it had come not from a machine, but from the mind of this brilliant, unpredictable woman.
He didn't hesitate for a second. "Do it," he said, his voice ringing with absolute authority. "All of it. General Maximus, you will organize the naval convoys at once. Senator Rufus, you and Domina Sabina will jointly oversee the establishment of the insurance fund and the port expansion project. You have the full and unlimited authority of my office. Spare no expense. Commandeer whatever you need."
The new machine was finally working, its disparate parts clicking into place to execute a single, complex vision. As his council hurried out, energized and filled with a new sense of purpose, Alex felt a surge of real hope.
His secretary, Heron, entered silently, bearing a message on a wax tablet. "Caesar, a report from the scholars you commissioned for your… philosophical research."
Alex's heart leaped into his throat. He had almost forgotten about his desperate, secret project.
"They say their experiments with the joined and heated metals have finally produced a consistent result," the secretary read, his tone betraying his confusion at the strange words. "They do not understand its nature. They call it a small, but entirely stable, 'flow of elemental heat.'"
A charge. A tiny, stable, continuous electrical charge. For weeks his hope had been a flickering ember. In a single day, it had just been fanned into a roaring flame.