While Alex wrestled with the volatile consequences of his new alchemy, a different kind of chemistry was at work across the city. At the Horrea Galba, one of Rome's largest public granary complexes nestled by the Tiber near the working-class districts of the Aventine Hill, Publius Helvius Pertinax was in his element. The air, usually sleepy with the scent of dry grain and dust, was alive with the clang of hammers, the shouts of foremen, and the sweat of honest labor.
Pertinax was not governing from a marble-lined office. He stood on the dusty ground, his formal toga hitched up to his waist like a common engineer, revealing the powerful, soldierly legs beneath. His face was streaked with dirt, his brow beaded with sweat, and he had never looked more like a leader. He moved through the worksite with a purpose that inspired it, pointing out a weak timber here, offering a word of encouragement to a crew of sweating laborers there. He had used the emergency authority of his new office to hire hundreds of men, drawing them from the very neighborhoods whose thirst he had quenched with the waters of the Aqua Marcia. He wasn't just building structures; he was building a loyal army of indebted citizens.
He had gathered a crowd at the base of a half-constructed new silo: dockworkers in their rough-spun tunics, merchants from the grain guilds, and local tribunes who represented the common folk. He climbed atop a stack of freshly cut lumber, his powerful voice easily carrying over the noise of construction.
"Men of Rome!" he began, his tone resonating with a simple, powerful confidence that the Emperor's complex pronouncements lacked. "Our Emperor, in his divine wisdom, has been laboring to secure a new strain of grain for the people of this great city!" He paused, letting the statement sink in. It was a masterful opening, acknowledging the Emperor's role while positioning himself as the man of action. "A grain said to be more bountiful, more resistant to blight, than any we have ever seen! But a gift from the gods is useless if the hands that receive it are not ready!"
He was brilliantly, subtly, reframing the entire narrative. He was not the man shackled to a potentially disastrous harvest. He was the diligent, responsible steward preparing Rome for the Emperor's coming miracle. The responsibility for the grain's quality remained with Alex; the credit for being prepared would be all his.
"For too long, these granaries have been left to rot by lazy bureaucrats!" he roared, gesturing to the flurry of activity around them. "We will not let the Emperor's bounty spoil due to our neglect! We will build new silos! We will reinforce the old ones! We will dredge the canals from the Tiber so the grain barges can unload directly at our doors! We will be ready for this gift! We will be worthy of it!"
A cheer went up from the crowd. They saw a man who spoke their language, a man who built things they could see and touch, a man who respected their labor.
A litter, incongruously elegant amidst the dust and grime, was carried to the edge of the worksite. From it emerged the Augusta Lucilla, veiled and shadowed as always, come to "observe" the project's progress on her brother's behalf. Pertinax met her in the relative quiet of a dusty warehouse office, the sounds of his new Rome echoing outside.
"You are playing a dangerous game, Publius," she whispered, her voice a silken thread of warning. "You are building a monument to a harvest that may never come. Or worse, may come bearing a plague. You tie your name to my brother's folly."
Pertinax offered her a cup of water, a simple gesture that was also a reminder of his first victory. "And what is the alternative, Augusta?" he countered, his eyes as hard and unyielding as flint. "Should I sit in my office on the Forum and wait for the mob to burn it down around me when the grain stores are empty? No."
He took a step closer, his presence filling the small room. "I will be seen as the man who prepared the way. I control the narrative here, on the ground. If the Emperor's grain is good, then I am the faithful steward who made his miracle possible. The people will thank him, but they will thank me for filling their bellies." He paused, a cunning, predatory gleam entering his eyes. "And if the grain is bad… if it is cursed, as your spies suggest… then I am the man who did everything in his power to save this city, only to be betrayed by a flawed crop from the Emperor's secret, unholy farms. Either way, Augusta, the people will see me as their champion."
He could see the flicker of admiration in her veiled expression. This was the kind of ruthless, practical thinking she understood.
"But," he continued, lowering his voice, "a wise man never trusts his fate to a single harvest, especially one grown in the shadows." He was about to show her his masterstroke, to bring her fully into his confidence and make her a true co-conspirator. He was turning Alex's own spy back on him.
"The Emperor gave me authority over the Cura Annonae," he said. "He gave me an emergency budget to 'secure the city's food supply.' He assumed I would use it only for his projects." A slow, wolfish grin spread across his face. "He was mistaken."
He led Lucilla out of the office and across the sprawling complex to a newly constructed warehouse, set apart from the others, its doors bearing the seal of the City Prefect and patrolled by guards fiercely loyal to him. He took a heavy iron key from his belt and unlocked the massive doors himself. He swung them open.
Lucilla gasped. The warehouse, vast as a temple, was already half-full. But not with strange, alien grain. Stack upon stack, reaching towards the high rafters, were thousands of sacks of legitimate, familiar, life-giving Egyptian wheat. The scent was rich, earthy, and real.
"While my left hand builds silos for the Emperor's mystery grain," Pertinax said smoothly, his voice resonating with the pride of a general revealing his hidden reserve line, "my right hand has been busy. I have sent my own agents to Alexandria and Sicily. I have used the Emperor's emergency funds to buy every spare bushel of wheat I could find. A buffer. A precaution."
Lucilla stared at the mountain of grain, her mind reeling at the audacity of the move. Pertinax hadn't just sidestepped the Emperor's trap; he had disarmed it, dismantled it, and used its component parts to build his own fortress. Alex had given him a poisoned chalice, and Pertinax had used it to bargain for a river of clean water. He now possessed a secret, independent food supply. He had a terrifying amount of leverage.
"The Emperor's harvest will receive every possible chance to succeed," Pertinax said, the very picture of loyalty. "But the people of Rome will not starve, no matter the result of his… experiments." He turned to face her, the master of his domain. "I have taken precautions."
The unspoken threat was chillingly clear. He now had the power to choose. He could use this grain to save the city and become its undisputed hero when Alex's plan failed. Or he could hold it back, let the city descend into chaos, and let the mob tear the Emperor from his palace, leaving the path to the throne clear for the man who could magically produce bread from a secret stash.
Lucilla looked from the mountain of grain to the man standing before her. She had thought she was grooming a lion. She had underestimated him. He was already a king.