The alchemist's workshop had become the true seat of power in the Roman world. The air hummed with a quiet, focused energy, a stark contrast to the performative drama of the Senate or the chaotic squalor of the city below. It smelled of hot copper, fermenting grain, and secrets. When Tigidius Perennis was summoned, he entered this sanctum with the reverent terror of a petitioner entering a god's temple. The presence of the formidable Sabina, standing by the Emperor's side like a hawk-eyed priestess, did little to soothe his frayed nerves.
Alex did not waste time with pleasantries. He had moved beyond the need for them. He stood before a large, detailed map of the Eastern provinces, a general already planning a campaign that hadn't yet begun.
"I need a border incident, Perennis," Alex said, his voice devoid of warmth or inflection. It was a simple statement of fact, a command as absolute and impersonal as gravity. "A Parthian provocation. Something bloody, unambiguous, and a profound insult to the honor of Rome."
Perennis, who had been expecting a request for more intelligence or a demand to quell some new rumor, was visibly stunned. His sallow face went a shade paler. "Caesar," he stammered, his mind struggling to catch up to the sheer audacity of the command. "To… to fake a Parthian raid on that scale would be impossible. The logistics, the witnesses—"
"I am not asking you to fake a raid," Alex cut him off, his voice dropping to a temperature that could freeze wine. He turned from the map to face his spymaster, his eyes like chips of obsidian. "I am ordering you to cause one."
He let the horrifying words hang in the air for a moment, enjoying the look of pure, unadulterated shock on Perennis's face.
"You have agents within the Parthian court, do you not?" Alex continued, his tone now that of a master instructing a slow student. "Men loyal to the rebel pretender, Osroes?"
Perennis nodded dumbly, his throat suddenly dry.
"Good," Alex said with a thin, cruel smile. "You will use them. You will leak information to the loyalist faction, the commanders who serve King Vologases IV. False information. You will construct a detailed, believable report that the Roman governor in Syria, a man known for his ambition, is secretly planning to send a legion to aid Osroes in his civil war. To make the bait irresistible, you will add that a massive shipment of imperial gold is being moved to a small, isolated fort near the border to pay for this phantom legion."
He tapped a location on the map with a single, decisive finger. "Fort Zeugma. It's small, undermanned, and far from any immediate support. The perfect target."
The sheer, diabolical elegance of the plan slowly dawned on Perennis, his spymaster's mind appreciating the craftsmanship even as his soul recoiled in terror. Alex was not just setting a trap; he was baiting it with Roman lives, on Roman soil.
"You will ensure this information is 'discovered' by the right kind of man," Alex went on, his voice a relentless, low murmur. "Find me a Parthian commander at a nearby garrison. A man known for his hot-headedness, his hunger for glory, someone whose ambition outweighs his caution. He will see an irresistible opportunity: a chance to capture a Roman pay-chest and preempt a Roman attack, all in one glorious stroke. He will be a hero. He will not be able to resist. He will gather his men and launch a raid on Fort Zeugma, likely without seeking official sanction from his king. He will attack Roman soldiers on Roman soil."
The final, unspoken piece of the puzzle fell into place in Perennis's mind. He looked at his Emperor, his eyes wide with a new level of fear. "The men at the fort…" he whispered, the words barely audible. "The garrison… they will be slaughtered."
"Yes," Alex confirmed, his face a mask of stone, utterly devoid of emotion. "They will. A few hundred men. They will die fighting for Rome, betrayed by their own Emperor. Their deaths will be the spark that lights the fire of a righteous war. Their sacrifice will buy us our empire."
He turned to Sabina, who retrieved a new amphora of the Aeterna Ignis from a locked chest. This one was larger than the last, its black clay polished to a mirror sheen, the Emperor's crimson wax seal impossibly vivid against the darkness. It was a thing of terrible beauty. Alex took it and held it out to Perennis.
"This is your payment for this service," he said. "And your assurance of my continued favor. A fire to burn away your fears." He pushed it into the spymaster's trembling hands. The vessel felt unnaturally cold.
"Succeed, Perennis," Alex continued, his voice dropping to a near-whisper, "and you will be rewarded beyond your wildest dreams. You will have wealth, status, and my personal protection. You will be the second most powerful man in my intelligence apparatus, with only the loyal Maximus above you." He paused, letting the promise sink in before delivering the threat. "Fail, or betray me, and I will ensure that the 'Parthian traitors' who leaked this sensitive information are hunted down, found, and flayed alive in the Forum. Their names will be cursed for a thousand years. Am I understood?"
Perennis stared at the amphora in his hands. It felt as heavy as a millstone. He was trapped. He looked into Alex's eyes and saw no hint of mercy, no flicker of doubt. He saw only the cold, hard certainty of a man who had already weighed the costs and found them acceptable. Perennis was a creature of the shadows, a man who dealt in deceit and betrayal, but always on a small scale, for personal gain. He was being asked to architect a national tragedy, to paint a masterpiece of treason with the blood of his own countrymen.
And yet… he was also being offered everything he had ever craved. Power. Proximity to the throne. And the Aeterna Ignis, this divine substance that he had already tasted, a single drop of which had filled him with a confidence and clarity he had never known. It was a devil's bargain, presented as an imperial command.
With a deep, shuddering breath that sounded suspiciously like a sob, Perennis clutched the amphora to his chest and bowed his head in submission. "It… it will be done, Caesar. As you command."
He backed out of the workshop, a man carrying both his greatest treasure and his own damnation. As he disappeared into the palace corridors, Sabina turned to Alex, her face impassive but her eyes sharp with a new, wary respect. She had seen his ruthlessness before, but this was different. This was a new level of cold, calculated sacrifice.
"You just sentenced a full cohort of your own men to death, Caesar," she stated, her voice flat.
Alex did not even flinch. He turned back to the map of the East, his eyes already tracing the paths his legions would take, the cities they would conquer.
"I have sentenced an empire to survival, Sabina," he replied, his voice distant, as if speaking to her from a great height. "The cost is not my concern."