The sounds from the courtyard below were no longer a distant roar; they were the sharp, terrifying noises of an active breach. The splintering crash of a wooden portcullis, the triumphant shouts of the first wave of rioters pouring through, the desperate, overwhelmed cries of the few guards who had been stationed there. Rocks and cobblestones, torn from the path, began to thud against the palace walls, a percussive, chaotic drumbeat of insurrection.
Alex looked at the faces of his council, illuminated by the flickering torches on the wall. He saw the naked terror in Senator Rufus's eyes as the old man realized his belief in reason and order was being washed away. He saw the color drain from Perennis's face as the master of whispers was confronted by a raw, popular fury that could not be manipulated or bribed. He saw Sabina, her usual cynical confidence gone, her expression a mask of grim, horrified resolve.
And he looked at Maximus. The old general was right. The time for sentiment, for the ideals of a more civilized world, was over. Those ideals were a luxury, and the palace was on fire. His dream of saving Rome could not be realized if he allowed himself to be torn limb from limb by the very people he was trying to save. The benevolent philosopher-king had to step aside. The Roman Emperor had to act.
He closed his eyes for a single, painful heartbeat. He pictured the green shoots in his garden, so fragile, so full of impossible hope. Then he pictured them being trampled into the mud by a rampaging mob. The choice was brutal, but it was not a choice at all.
He opened his eyes. The hesitation, the moral agony, was gone, replaced by a chilling, absolute stillness. His face hardened into a mask of cold, imperial command. He had made his decision.
"General," he said, his voice flat, devoid of all emotion. It did not sound like his own. "You have your order. Clear the courtyard."
Maximus nodded once, a sharp, satisfied movement.
"Use what force is necessary," Alex continued, the words tasting like ash in his mouth. He added one final, desperate plea from the man he had been just minutes before. "But if you can… use the flat of the blade, not the edge."
Maximus did not acknowledge the final part of the order. He turned away, his duty clear. He strode to the edge of the battlement and bellowed a series of commands, his voice a force of nature that cut through the chaotic din below. On the ground, a senior centurion raised a horn to his lips.
A single, piercing, disciplined horn blast echoed across the palace grounds. It was a sound that spoke of order, of violence, of the unyielding power of the Roman military machine.
The effect was instantaneous. From the main palace gate, two full cohorts of Praetorian Guards, nearly a thousand men, surged forward. They did not run. They advanced at a relentless, quick-march pace, a perfect, terrifying wedge of steel and crimson shields. Their shields were locked together, their short swords drawn, the torchlight glinting off their polished helmets. They were silent, a wave of disciplined death moving into a sea of chaotic life.
The scene in the courtyard below became a horrific tableau of controlled violence. It was not a battle; it was a suppression. The disciplined, armored soldiers crashed into the disorganized mass of civilians with the force of a tidal wave hitting a shantytown. The front ranks of the mob, who had been celebrating their breach of the gate, were trampled and crushed under the relentless advance.
The Praetorians were brutally, terrifyingly efficient. As Alex had commanded, most used the flat of their blades, but the effect was no less devastating. The sound of heavy oak gladius hilts and iron shield bosses striking bone and flesh was a sickening, wet thud that carried up to the battlements. People screamed, not in anger anymore, but in pure, animal terror. The charge of the wedge formation was designed to break morale, to turn a mob back into a crowd of terrified individuals. It worked with horrifying perfection.
The wave of humanity broke. They turned and fled, trampling each other in their panicked desperation to escape the courtyard, to get away from the silent, implacable wall of steel that was driving them back. Within ten minutes that felt like an eternity, the courtyard was cleared. The Praetorians stood in perfect formation, their shields unscratched, their lines unbroken.
The ground was littered with the casualties of the brief, one-sided conflict. The injured, the unconscious, and a handful of dead—men and women who had not been cut down by a sword, but had been trampled to death in the stampede of their own retreating mob.
The roar of the city was gone. The thousands of people pushed back beyond the palace walls were silent now. Their righteous rage had been broken, replaced by shock, fear, and the bitter, metallic taste of defeat. They were no longer a threat. They were just a pathetic, defeated mass of hungry people, staring up at the monolithic palace that had just answered their pleas for bread with cold, hard steel.
Alex stood on the wall, looking down at the scene, his stomach churning with a mixture of relief and self-loathing. He had won. He had secured the palace. He had saved his allies and his mission. And he felt as though he had just irrevocably lost a vital part of his soul. The idealistic reformer who had dreamed of a better, more just Rome had just given the order to beat his own starving people into submission. He hated himself for it. But a cold, pragmatic voice in the back of his mind—a voice that sounded disturbingly like Lyra—whispered that he had done what was necessary.
This was the brutal lesson of Roman rule. Benevolence was a privilege afforded by stability. And stability, he now understood, was maintained by the implicit threat of overwhelming force. He looked at the fear in the eyes of the crowd below, and while he hated being the cause of it, he recognized its utility. Fear brought order.
That evening, a tense, military-enforced curfew settled over the city. The streets were unnervingly silent. Alex sat alone in his study, the events of the day replaying in his mind. The roar of the crowd, the splintering gate, the chilling efficiency of the Praetorians, the whimpers of the injured.
The door to his study opened silently. It was Sabina. She had dismissed the guards. She said nothing. She walked to his private stock of wine, poured a generous measure of strong, unwatered Falernian into a silver goblet, and brought it to him. She placed the cup in his hand and then rested her own hand on his shoulder, a simple, solid gesture of silent understanding and support. In that moment of shared trauma, watching the brutal reality of power unfold, their relationship deepened, moving beyond politics into something more personal.
As they stood there in the quiet room, the silence was broken by the arrival of Perennis. The prefect looked pale, but there was a new, invigorated energy about him. He held a scroll.
"Caesar," he said, his voice low but excited. "Your… decisive action today. It has had an effect that has rippled far beyond the city walls."
"What is it, Perennis?" Alex asked, his voice weary.
"The Senate is terrified," Perennis said, a hint of a smile playing on his lips. "They saw you use the Praetorians against the people. They believe you are capable of anything now. My sources report that Senator Metellus and three of his key allies, fearing you would use the riot as a pretext to declare martial law and conduct a full purge, have fled the city under the cover of darkness. They have abandoned their homes and retreated to their country estates in Campania."
Alex took a long drink of the wine, its fiery heat doing nothing to warm the ice in his veins. He looked up at Perennis, and Sabina felt a slight tremor go through his shoulders. His voice, when he spoke, was colder and harder than she had ever heard it.
"Fled?" he said, the word a soft, dangerous hiss. "No, Prefect. They have not fled." He set the goblet down with a sharp click. His eyes were like chips of ice.
"They have merely made themselves easier targets. Isolated. Away from the legal protections of the city." He turned to his prefect, his expression now utterly devoid of the conflicted idealist who had agonized on the wall. This was the Emperor. "Send a message to General Maximus. Tell him to prepare a cohort of his Speculatores. The fifty men who defended this palace so ably."
His gaze was fixed on some distant point, his mind already formulating a new, ruthless plan. "It is time to go hunting."