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A strange hush settled on the Palatine after the double executions, as if frost had crept over a field that once rang with harvest songs. Senators postponed their audiences; scribes delivered reports at arm’s length, and courtiers developed the habit of staring at the floor when they spoke. No official proclamation explained why Caesar Crispus and Empress Fausta had vanished, but every soul in the palace knew whose hand had removed them. The Emperor walked the marble corridors without escort, a tall shadow in purple, and the very clack of his boots on stone sounded like a verdict.

Constantine altered nothing in his routine. He rose before dawn, reviewed troop dispositions from Britain to Arnia, drafted edicts on tax reform, and spent the afternoons with architects refining the sea walls of his New Ro. Only the clerks who entered his study saw the change. They ca out pale, whispering that the air within felt colder than the sumr heat outside. No one dared ntion the nas of the dead-not Crispus, not Fausta-as if to utter them was to invite the fate that had claid both.

Inside the silent furnace of his mind, a relentless audit was under way. Constantine dissected each step that led to his heir’s death, tallying misjudgnts like a general reexamining a lost campaign. He assigned bla. Fausta’s jealousy was predictable. The court’s gossip channels were detectable. The fatal flaw had been his own complacency-his arrogant belief that logic alone shielded him from manipulation. Now he understood: affection was a data vulnerability. From that mont, he resolved, affection would be sandboxed, observed, and never again trusted.

While Constantine rebuilt his private world of logic, a courier galley sliced eastward across the diterranean. Its mission was to find Helena and deliver tidings that would shatter the heart of the mother who had once shielded her son from Diocletian’s fury. She had just overseen the laying of a basilica over what the locals called Golgotha, buoyed by visions of a redeed empire. She read the imperial letter twice, folded it with shaking hands, and ordered the horses harnessed. She sailed for Italy at once, praying only that the world would hold together until she reached her son.

The day Helena arrived, the palace guards recognized an authority older than imperial decrees. Grey-haired, travel-stained, her cloak slling of brine, she marched through bronze doors that had swung open for conquerors. Eunuchs scattered in her path. She found Constantine in the map room, bent over a grid of the Bosporus. She did not bow or greet him. Instead, she slapped the scroll from beneath his stylus. It fell to the floor, curling like a wounded thing.

"What have you done, Constantine?"

He straightened, his single eye reflecting the torchlight. "I have preserved the state."

"You have butchered your own son," Helena whispered. "The grandson who carried your standard across the Rhine. And for what? A woman’s whisper?"

"Fausta’s testimony exposed treason." The words were iron filings: uniform, sharp, impersonal.

Helena’s voice cracked. "I warned you her hunger would consu this family. You have silenced the only light in the court and left wolves to raise your cubs." She pointed at the scattered building plans. "You pave streets two centuries into the future, yet you cannot read the face of the boy who loved you."

She expected anger. Instead, she saw sothing worse: a flicker of acknowledgnt, pain turning into sothing harder than denial. "Leave Ro, Mother," he said, the sentence heavy as a closing gate. "Your safety requires distance."

Helena stood there, tears welling but refused release. "It is not my safety that concerns . It is your soul." She turned and walked out, her footfalls echoing like a dwindling heartbeat through halls choked by their own silence.

When the door shut, Constantine braced his palms on the table. The confrontation had pierced deeper than Fausta’s lie, deeper than Crispus’s death. Helena had spoken in the only grammar his calculations could not parse: love without utility. In that light, every rationale looked brittle. Rage followed-rage at himself, at Helena for exposing the wound, at a cosmos that punished foresight with betrayal. He swept ledgers, seal rings, and tablets from the table, leaving only the blueprints of Constantinople untouched. Stone and geotry would not lie; they would stand when mories rotted.

Night deepened. Torches flickered and guttered low. Alone in the cold, Constantine unlocked an ebony coffer and removed the iron nail-the impossible artifact recovered from the Germanic battlefield, an object no known forge could have produced. He had studied its lattice under glass, hoping science might yield its secret. It had not. Where knowledge failed, faith began to whisper. Perhaps this nail belonged to another order of reality, one beyond the treacheries of flesh.

He tightened his fist around the artifact until its edges bit his skin. Power, he reflected, was not asured by provinces annexed, but by mastery over the self. He had misread the limits of that dominion. Now his empire would expand inward. Every affection quarantined, every decision subject to triple corroboration, every heir weighed with the detachnt of a census column.

At dawn he convened the Consistorium, his voice smooth as polished onyx. Crispus’s statues would remain in public squares, an inspirational mory for the legions. Official bulletins cited the young Caesar’s "untily illness," and Ro accepted the fiction with grateful relief. For Fausta he ordered a funeral of spectacular grandeur: fifty ivory wagons bearing perfus, a sarcophagus carved from Phrygian marble, priests chanting her virtues until the smoke made their eyes water. The spectacle smothered rumor and demonstrated that even an empress who conspired died enshrined by his rcy, not damned by his wrath.

Helena refused to attend. She retreated to the Lateran, fasting and praying before a simple wooden cross. Constantine did not compel her. Let her intercede with heaven; he would govern earth. Yet, alone in his private chamber, he caught himself listening for the soft tread of her sandals, the gentle correction that would never co again. The absence tolled like a bell.

Weeks blurred into months. Edicts flowed, aqueducts rose, Legio V drilled on the Danube. To observers the emperor seed unchanged, save for a new glint-steel honed to razor thinness-behind his single eye. But when night cloaked the palace and ink dried on the day’s orders, he would drift to the balcony overlooking the Tiber, nail hidden in his fist, and stare eastward toward the unfinished city whose walls he vowed would outlast every weakness of the human heart.

Below, in the lamplit streets, children practiced shouting the nas of imperial princes who would one day rule. Constantine listened, his expression unreadable. Assets to be managed, he thought. Nothing more, nothing less. Behind him, the wind rustled the vellum plans of Constantinople, and the faint tallic chill of impossible iron seeped into his bones, sealing the promise he had made to himself: never again.

In the following weeks, Constantine plunged himself deeper into work than ever before. He pored over reports from the eastern frontier, recalculated grain quotas, and checked the titables for the next construction phase on the Golden Horn. He t with generals, engineers, and tax collectors, his attention never straying from the matters of the state. He no longer dined with the court, preferring a bowl of lentils and a cup of water in his study to the laughter and idle talk of the triclinium.

One night, Valerius brought him news of a minor rebellion in Cilicia. "They test your silence, Augustus," Valerius said, "thinking the blood in Ro has made you vulnerable."

"They will learn otherwise," Constantine replied. He ordered a legion to march at once and sent word to the provincial governor: no leniency, no delay. The revolt was snuffed out before it could gather strength. News of the emperor’s swift, rciless justice echoed throughout the empire. The ssage was clear: affection was dead, and the only currency that mattered was obedience.

Yet not all could be controlled. Constantine’s dreams grew restless. Sotis he saw Crispus standing in the doorway, silent, his face pale and uncertain. Sotis he heard Helena’s voice reciting prayers for the dead. Each morning he rose colder, the ache inside hardening into resolve.

One late evening he summoned his sons. They entered the study quietly, eyes wary. He looked at them one by one and began to speak, not of love or of sorrow, but of duty. "You will study, you will serve, and you will obey," he said. "I have made too many mistakes. You will not add to them." The boys nodded, and the audience ended as quickly as it had begun.

So the palace settled into its new rhythm. The only constant was Constantine himself, tireless, unsmiling, and relentless as the rising sun. Under his hand, New Ro would rise stronger, untainted by the failures of the old. The city, like the emperor, would outlast heartbreak and betrayal. Stone would outlive sorrow.

At dusk, with the city aglow in the last light, Constantine walked alone in the palace gardens. The roses were in bloom, and the scent rose heavy on the air. For a mont, he allowed himself to rember-then banished the mory as he always did, sealing it away beneath layers of resolve. The empire remained, his alone to shape. And if the price was emptiness, it was a price he would pay. For Ro, for power, for the promise he had carved into his own soul.

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