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Days passed in a blur of frantic planning and sleepless nights. Alex felt like a ghost in his own palace, a specter haunted by the future. He ate without tasting, walked the marbled halls without seeing, his mind consud by the three-front war he was now fighting. He had dispatched his orders to Celer, a desperate prayer to the god of invention. He had sent Rufus on his thankless mission, a poisoned dart of bureaucracy aid at his sister's heart. He had authorized Sabina's information blockade, drawing a curtain of lies across the north. He had done all he could. Now, there was only one fire left to face.

A report from the Praetorian scouts confird his fears: General Gaius Maximus and his small, fast-moving cavalry escort were just hours from the city.

Alex stood on a high balcony of the Palatine Hill, overlooking the sprawling majesty of Ro. But he was not admiring the view. His gaze was fixed on a single point in the distance: the northern road, the Via Flaminia, a dusty ribbon winding its way towards the city gates. He was watching for the arrival of the one man in the world whose judgnt he truly feared. He felt like a prisoner on death row, listening for the footsteps of his executioner.

He had faced down assassins, outmaneuvered senators, and even battled an alien automaton. He respected Pertinax as a political animal and feared Lucilla's serpentine ambition. But Maximus was different. Alex admired Maximus. The General was the living embodint of the honor, duty, and stoic integrity of the Old Ro, the very ideal he had, in his most optimistic monts, hoped to save and build upon. To have that man look at him with contempt, with the cold, unforgiving eyes of betrayal, was a thought he could barely stomach.

For the first ti since his arrival in this brutal era, he felt the full, crushing weight of his guilt over the massacre in Noricum. In his secure chamber, it had been a tactical error, a regrettable but necessary move in a secret war. From this balcony, imagining it through Maximus's eyes, it was an atrocity. An indelible stain.

He retreated into the cool shadows of the palace, seeking counsel from his only true confidant. "Lyra," he said to the empty air, knowing the device in his study was listening. "Give a psychological profile of General Gaius Maximus. What is the optimal strategy for this confrontation?"

The AI's firewalled voice responded, devoid of empathy, rich with cold, hard data. General Maximus is a Type-A personality, driven by a deeply ingrained code of honor, duty, and loyalty to the abstract concept of the Roman state. His personal loyalty to you is secondary to this primary code. He responds negatively to deception and political maneuvering, which he views as decadent and dishonorable. Your actions in authorizing the Devota's mission, as he perceives them, directly contradict all of his core values. The optimal strategy is to provide a truthful and compelling justification for your actions, appealing to his sense of duty to the greater good of the Empire.

Alex let out a short, harsh laugh that held no humor. A truthful justification. The truth was aliens and quantum priests and galactic gardeners. The truth was so far beyond the realm of possibility that it would sound like the ravings of a lunatic. To tell Maximus the truth would not earn his understanding; it would earn him a straitjacket. The optimal strategy was impossible. He would have to lie. And he would have to make the lie better than any he had ever told before.

A Praetorian Centurion appeared at the doorway, his polished helt tucked under his arm. "Caesar. A ssage from the Flaminian Gate. General Maximus has entered the city."

Alex's heart hamred against his ribs. "He is to be admitted to the palace at once," he said, his voice calr than he felt. "Escort him to the throne room. And Centurion... see to it that he and I are left completely, utterly alone. No guards. No scribes. No one. Is that understood?"

"Perfectly, Caesar," the Praetorian said, his eyes betraying a flicker of curiosity at the strange command before his face settled back into a mask of discipline.

Alex began the long walk through the marble corridors to the throne room. Each step echoed, a countdown to his judgnt. The walk felt like the last mile of a condemned man. He passed magnificent mosaics depicting the triumphs of Augustus, the stoicism of Vespasian, the wisdom of Hadrian. The stone faces of his predecessors seed to watch him, their gazes filled with silent accusation. He straightened the folds of his imperial toga, smoothed his hair with a hand that was not quite steady. He had to compose the mask of the Emperor. He could not afford to be Alex Carter, the terrified imposter from the future. He had to be Commodus, the Divine Ruler, the man born to this power.

He entered the vast, echoing throne room. Sunlight stread through the high clerestory windows, illuminating dust motes dancing in the air and casting long shadows across the floor. He ascended the five steps of the dais, the soft leather of his sandals making no sound on the porphyry stone. He sat upon the Imperial Throne, a massive chair of gilded wood and ivory, forcing his posture into one of regal, unconcerned authority. He rested his hands on the carved lion heads of the armrests, his fingers gripping them tightly.

He waited.

The great bronze doors at the far end of the hall, each one the height of three n, swung open with a low groan. A single figure was frad in the doorway, silhouetted against the bright light from the peristyle courtyard beyond.

General Gaius Maximus.

He wore not the gleaming parade armor and crimson cloak of a courtier, but the simple, worn leather cuirass of a field commander. It was scarred and stained with the hard-won gri of the frontier. He was not here as a subject paying homage. He was here as a soldier demanding answers.

He strode forward, his heavy, hobnailed boots striking the marble floor with a rhythmic, percussive clang that echoed like hamr blows in the cavernous silence. Clang. Clang. Clang. Each step was a asured, deliberate accusation. He did not slow, did not falter, his gaze locked on the figure of the boy sitting on the throne.

He stopped at the foot of the dais, a re twenty feet from Alex, close enough for Alex to see the deep lines of weariness and fury etched around his eyes. Close enough to see the profound, soul-deep disappointnt that radiated from him like heat from a forge.

He did not bow. He did not salute. He did not offer the customary greeting of "Ave, Caesar."

The two n stared at each other across the symbolic gulf of the throne room. The young emperor on his gilded seat of absolute power, and the old general on the hard marble floor, representing the two opposing souls of Ro: the new, divine autocracy and the old, honorable Republic. The silence stretched, absolute and suffocating, filled with everything that was unsaid: the broken trust, the shared guilt, the sorrow of a bond shattered.

Finally, Maximus spoke. His voice was not a shout, but a low, dangerous rumble that seed to shake the very foundations of the palace.

"You wanted to see , Caesar?"

The use of the cold, formal title, stripped of all warmth and familiarity, was a deliberate insult. It was a rejection of their friendship, a blade twisted in the mory of the camaraderie they had once shared. The confrontation had begun.

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