The Reckoning
Twenty-four hours earlier, the man Claudius killed was his mentor.
The market bustled with complaints and smells of roasted lamb, figs, and the sharp tang of fermented fish sauce. There, in the Peristylium of Governor Marcus Sextus, a quiet conflict simmered. Marcus, draped in his imperious white toga, gestured sharply at Claudius as servants poured dark red wine into golden goblets.
"You think Rome values truth when truth bows to ambition?" Marcus said, his voice low but fierce. His broad shoulders hunched over the table, a wolf poised to strike. "Your noble ideas will sink you faster than a Gallic arrow."
"Ambition without honor is a flame consuming its bearer," Claudius replied, cutting through the air like one of Rome’s gladii. He leaned forward, the faint scar tracing his cheek taut as he clenched his jaw. "Have you so easily forgotten that you gave me the sword for this very fight, Marcus?"
"That was before the Senate became a pit of ravenous dogs. Now, the only way to survive is to throw them scraps—or throw one among them to the wild."
Bile rose in Claudius’ throat. He understood Marcus’ words well, but their meaning betrayed Rome far worse than the Gauls had centuries earlier. Protecting Rome had long turned into protecting the Rome within themselves. The city had become a corpse dressed as a god.
It was only later that Claudius visited the temple of Janus, the god of doors and transitions, choices etched deeper into his conscience like lines in marble. He stood beneath the open archway, silvered moonlight washing over his tunic. A beggar with a voice like broken reeds sat crouched there, rambling. “Will you find wrath, or will wrath find you, nobleman?”
Claudius stared at the beggar’s clouded eyes but said nothing as coins clinked into the man’s outstretched palm.
Unmasking Power
When Claudius returned to Marcus’ villa later that night, the realization that had dawned in the temple stood like a weight before him: Marcus wasn’t protecting Rome. He was selling it. Scrolls on Egypt, bribes passed from trader to traitorguard, all of them lay scattered on his desk like fallen laurels stripped of value. And Marcus, drunk on spiced wine, didn’t notice Claudius until the cold blade pressed against his throat.
"Do you feel divine, Marcus?" Claudius whispered, his voice colder and softer than the shadow enveloping them both.
"No." Marcus’ reply wasn’t fear—it was exhaustion of men who had fought too many wars, political or otherwise. But ambition’s ghosts had no sympathy for surrender, and Claudius stopped the last lie the world might tell of Marcus Sextus' treason with one swift, silent cut.
Beyond the Shadows
Now, back in the present, Claudius adjusted his toga and stepped past the Senator’s still body. The blade’s hilt burned against his side, still warm. Killing a man who had been like a father felt like cutting away Rome’s last shreds of decency within himself.
Footsteps echoed, and two figures emerged—one, a young noblewoman with calculating eyes, dressed in violet silks that shimmered beneath the torches. "Senator Varron," she greeted him, her tone unreadable. Beside her, a boy no older than fifteen carried a scroll sealed with wax. "Your reckoning is already written."
Claudius smiled faintly but bitterly. "Is it prophecy or ambition to see oneself undone?" He didn’t wait for their answer. He walked past them into the arranged shadows of Rome’s deepest corridors. What ambition courted him now was not survival—it was a darker thing: a willingness to let ambition consume him fully.
Some men are made immortal by their deeds; others by their sins.
Genre
Historical Fiction (Roman Republic)
The Source...check out the great article that inspired this amazing short story: Canadian Government Collapse
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