The Alban Hills, a traditional summer retreat for Rome's wealthy, now hosted a far more serious enterprise. In a secluded, rocky valley, screened from prying eyes by thick groves of chestnut and oak, Alex had established a secret training ground. It was here, far from the whispers of the city, that he would forge his new weapon. The dozen veterans of the German Guard, his first test subjects, were brought here under cover of night. They were healthy, restless, and possessed a new, unnerving swagger born from their brush with death and their taste of divine fire.
With them was a man who was the antithesis of their volatile energy. Centurion Cassius was a man carved from granite and iron discipline. He was not a giant like the Germans, but of average height, with a wiry, whip-cord strength. His face was a roadmap of old campaigns, his eyes a pale, piercing gray that seemed to miss nothing. He was a veteran of the brutal Dacian wars under Trajan and had served with Marcus Aurelius on the Danube. He was known for two things: his almost suicidal bravery in battle and his unbreakable, almost cruel, discipline off it. Alex had hand-picked him not for his strategic mind, but for his unyielding will.
Alex stood before Cassius and the assembled German guards, the cool mountain air sharp in his lungs. He decided on the blunt truth. It was the only language a man like Cassius would respect.
"Centurion," Alex began, his voice echoing slightly in the rocky clearing. "These twelve men are heroes. They were the first to fall victim to a strange sickness from a tainted grain supply. They were also the first to be cured by a new, potent stimulant I have developed—the Aeterna Ignis."
He paused, letting the guards swell with pride. "This 'Ignis' does more than cure," he continued, his gaze locking with Cassius's. "It grants them strength and speed beyond the limits of normal men. But it is a double-edged sword. It is a fire that can forge a weapon, or consume the man who wields it. It is a poison to the mind if overused or undisciplined."
He gestured to the twelve towering Germans. "They are to be our new weapon. A force unlike any Rome has ever seen. They will be the Cohors Ignifera—the Fire Cohort. The tip of our spear in the coming war. And you, Centurion Cassius, will be their commander. Your task is to hone them into a disciplined fighting unit, to harness their unnatural strength."
Cassius looked at the twelve men, his experienced eyes assessing them not as heroes, but as assets. He saw their immense physical power, but he also saw the restless, twitchy energy, the slight tremor in their hands, the hungry look in their eyes. He simply nodded, a single, sharp dip of his chin. "I understand, Caesar."
The first training exercises were nothing short of terrifyingly effective. Lyra, via a small, disguised earpiece Alex wore, provided real-time feedback and data analysis. Under her guidance, Alex instructed Cassius on the optimal dosage—a small, carefully measured amount of Aeterna Ignis, diluted in wine, administered just before the drills began.
The results were spectacular. The guardsmen, their bodies coursing with the stimulant, became demigods. They shattered thick oak training shields with single punches. They scaled sheer rock faces without ropes. They ran for miles over rugged terrain without tiring, their stamina seemingly endless. In mock combat, they moved with a liquid grace and a brutal ferocity that was breathtaking. Alex and Lyra observed, collecting data on reaction times, power output, and metabolic rates, constantly refining the combat doctrines for this new type of warfare. They were, quite literally, forging the future of the Roman army.
The problem, as Cassius had foreseen, arose when the Ignis wore off. The transition was jarring. The demigods vanished, replaced by hollow-eyed, irritable men. Their legendary strength evaporated, leaving them feeling weaker than normal. They became sullen, argumentative, their discipline fraying at the edges. They were men trapped in a cycle of profound, artificial highs and crushing, unnatural lows. They craved the feeling of power, the memory of the fire in their veins.
The breaking point came one evening, three days into the training. Cassius was doing a final patrol of their barracks when he heard a scraping sound from the small stone hut where the cohort's supply of Aeterna Ignis was stored. He found two of the guardsmen, their massive frames trembling with need, trying to pry the hinges off the heavy, iron-bound lockbox. They were like desperate animals trying to get at their food.
Cassius did not shout. He did not draw his sword. He moved with a cold, brutal efficiency. He disabled the first man with a vicious strike to the back of the knee with his vitis, the gnarled vine-staff that was his badge of office. As the man went down with a howl, Cassius drove his armored fist into the second man's solar plexus, knocking the wind out of him in a great, whooping gasp. He then proceeded to beat them both into submission, not with the frenzied rage of their own fighting style, but with a cold, methodical application of pain and pure, unbreakable discipline. He was the master; they were the unruly hounds.
Later that night, he requested an audience with Alex. They met outside, under a cold, starry sky, away from the sleeping men.
"Caesar," Cassius said, his voice flat and grim, his face a mask in the moonlight. "We have a problem. These are not soldiers."
Alex stiffened. "Their performance in the drills is exemplary."
"Their performance is irrelevant," Cassius countered. "A soldier's quality is not measured when he is full of wine and courage on the battlefield. It is measured in the long, quiet hours of the watch, in the discipline of the camp. These men have no discipline left. They have only the craving. They are hounds, Caesar, and this 'fire' is the only master they will now obey. You can point them at an enemy, and I have no doubt they will tear them to shreds. But the moment the battle is over, they will turn on each other, or on us, for their next taste."
He looked towards the dark barracks. "This is not a cohort. It is a burden. A dangerous one. They cannot be commanded. They can only be managed."
Alex felt a chill that had nothing to do with the mountain air. He was forced to confront the stark, human reality of his brilliant creation. Lyra's data could measure their combat effectiveness down to the decimal point, but it could not measure the corrosion of their souls. He had succeeded in creating the perfect warriors, but in doing so, he had destroyed the men inside them.
He stood in silence for a long time, the weight of his decision pressing down on him. He had unleashed this force. He could not put it back in the bottle. He had to control it.
He finally turned to Cassius, his own face now as hard as the centurion's. "Then you will not be their commander," Alex said, his voice quiet but firm. "You will be their keeper. Their loyalty is to the Ignis, but your job is to ensure their obedience is to me. From this day forward, they receive their dose only from your hand, and only upon my direct, sealed command. When not in battle, they are to be kept isolated, honored from a distance, and feared by all. They are no longer men of the German Guard."
Alex looked over at the barracks, where his new super-soldiers now huddled, miserable and twitching in the depths of their withdrawal.
"They are a weapon. And a weapon must be kept in its sheath until it is time to strike."