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The year 321 AD found Constantine in his study in Trier, a city transford by his will. The peace he had enforced upon the West was bearing fruit, a fact confird by the man standing before him. Claudius Martinus, his acting Praetorian Prefect, gestured to a stack of scrolls. "The revenues from the Gallic weaving guilds are up nine percent since you standardized the import duties on Egyptian flax, Augustus," the old prefect said, a rare note of admiration in his voice. "And the reports from Hispania show that silver production from the mines has increased by a fifth since the new aqueducts were completed." "Good," Constantine replied, his single eye scanning the figures. "Efficiency is its own reward, Martinus, but a state cannot run on efficiency alone. It requires stability. Are the people content?" "The roads are safe, Augustus. The granaries are full. The sound of construction is everywhere. For people who have known war for a generation, this peace... your peace... is a thing of imnse value."

As Martinus was turning to leave, a military courier, his uniform caked in the dust of the northern roads, was ushered in. He knelt, presenting a sealed ssage cylinder. Constantine broke the seal and read the report from the Rhine frontier. A rare, almost invisible flicker of sothing—satisfaction, perhaps—crossed his face. "Caesar Crispus has t a Frankish warhost that crossed the lower Rhine in force," he announced to the court officials present. "He did not wait for them to raid. He ambushed them at the river crossing, shattered their shield wall with his cavalry, and has driven the survivors back into the forests of Germania with heavy losses." He looked up, his voice clear and projecting. "He sends two hundred prisoners for labor on the new basilica and the captured Frankish chieftain’s head as a gift to his father."

A murmur of approval went through the hall. Constantine handed the report to Fausta, who had been observing the proceedings from a seat near the window. She read it, her face a mask of perfect imperial grace. "A true lion’s whelp," she said, her voice smooth as silk as she handed the scroll back. "He brings great glory to your house, my lord husband. And to himself." The complint was perfect, yet her eyes, when they t his, were as cold as winter stone. Her own son, Constantine II, was a toddler in the nursery; Crispus, the son of a concubine, was a victorious general, adored by the legions. The dynasty was taking shape, with all the attendant rivalries that implied.

Later that week, Helena ca to him. The serene piety she normally wore was replaced by a deep and troubled sorrow. She held a crumpled letter, its script in Greek. "From a priest in Nicodia," she began, her voice trembling with emotion. "He escaped with his life. Licinius has begun a new purge, Constantine. He accuses the bishops of being your spies. He has forbidden them to assemble, even for worship. Soldiers have closed the churches. Good n are being dismissed from the army, thrown into poverty, or worse, simply for their faith. He breaks the Edict of Milan, the very treaty that binds you." She looked at him, her eyes pleading. "You are their protector. The Christians of the East suffer under this tyranny."

"I am aware, Mother," Constantine replied, his gaze distant. He let her speak, let her pour out the litany of horrors. He felt no empathy for the suffering, no religious outrage. He felt only the cold recognition of a strategic blunder on his rival’s part. When she had gone, her sorrow a heavy presence in the air behind her, he summoned Valerius. "Licinius persecutes the Christians," he said, his voice flat. "His paranoia makes him a fool. I want this folly known." "Augustus?" "I don’t want edicts, Valerius. I want stories. I want the letter my mother just brought copied and distributed by trusted agents to every major Christian community in my domain. I want rchants traveling from the East to be questioned, their tales of churches being closed and priests being arrested recorded and spread. Let it travel through their networks, from bishop to bishop, from congregation to congregation. Let them hear of the tyranny in the East, and then let them see the peace and justice my Christian subjects enjoy here. Let them draw their own conclusions about which Augustus truly has the favor of their God." Valerius bowed, understanding the unspoken command in his emperor’s eyes. It was not a declaration of war, but a weaponization of faith, a campaign to win the hearts of his enemy’s subjects before a single sword was drawn.

It was in the midst of these grand strategic plays that the world presented him with a problem his mind could not solve. A work crew, digging the deep foundations for the new basilica in Trier, had unearthed a small, lead-lined coffer. It was ancient, the lead brittle with age, the seals on it of a design so old it was unrecognizable. Valerius brought it to him with a report that the masons’ best tools could not scratch what was inside. In the privacy of his study, Constantine pried open the soft lead lid. Inside, nestled in linen that had decayed into black dust, was a single, large iron nail. It was crudely forged, thick and square, its head hamred into a rough cap. He reached for it, then hesitated. An unnatural cold seed to emanate from the box. He picked it up with a pair of iron tongs. The cold was imdiate and profound, a deep, penetrating chill that had nothing to do with the temperature of the room. It felt like it was drinking the heat from the tongs themselves. He ordered a brazier brought in, the coals glowing white-hot. He placed the nail directly into the embers. The iron of the tongs glowed red, then orange, but the nail remained as it was, a black, lusterless shape in the heart of the fire. After ten minutes, he removed it. It was as cold as it had been before. His jaw tightened. He placed the nail on a small, solid anvil kept for armor repairs and took up a heavy smith’s hamr. He swung, putting the full force of his soldier’s arm into the blow. The sound was not the ringing clang of steel on iron. It was a dead, flat thud, a sound of absolute absorption. The hardened steel face of the hamr was dented, a small crater marking the point of impact. The nail was utterly unmarked. He stood over it for a long ti, the cold logic that had guided him his entire life grinding against an impossible reality. It defies thermal transfer. It has a molecular cohesion greater than any alloy I have ever conceived of. It absorbs kinetic energy without deformation. His mind, Alistair’s mind, ran through every scientific principle it knew, from this primitive age back to his own lost future. None applied. This was an anomaly. An impossible variable in the equation of the world. He locked the nail away in his private safe, a cold, unsettling secret. So other force, beyond politics, beyond religion as he understood it, was at play.

He stood before his great map. His army was at its peak. His treasury was full. His heir was a victorious hero. His rival was alienating a vast portion of his own populace. The pretexts for war were ripe. And now, this... this unseen variable. He summoned tellus and his other senior generals. "Ready the legions," Constantine commanded, his voice holding the finality of a striking serpent. "We march east. It is ti to unite the Roman world." The final war had begun.

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