Ravenna, December 1, 476 AD
Seven days after the arrival of Gelasius.
Spurius never trusted a person he could not read. During forty years of service in the Roman army, he had learned to read n like reading a map. Every crease in a face was a contour, every blink of an eye was a river, every shift in tone was a trail pointing to where a person truly wanted to go. A soldier about to commit treason always avoided eye contact when speaking of loyalty. A cheating rchant always smiled too much. A lying diplomat always began his sentence with ’honestly’.
Fritigern could not be read.
For a week since Gelasius arrived, Spurius had observed the prisoner with an intensity he usually reserved for enemies on the battlefield. Every ti Romulus descended into the dungeon cells at night, Spurius stood at the top of the stairs and listened. Not eavesdropping. He was too far away to hear the words. What he listened to was the sound. The tone. The rhythm of the conversation. When Romulus laughed, small and rare but real. When Fritigern answered, always with a asured pause. When silence fell between them, not an awkward silence but a comfortable silence that only existed between people who did not feel the need to fill the air.
That kind of silence was what bothered Spurius the most.
Because that kind of silence was a sign of trust. And Spurius did not believe that Fritigern deserved anyone’s trust, let alone the trust of a child emperor.
So on the first morning of December, when the air in Ravenna already bit like a swarm of freezing ants, Spurius made a decision. He would interrogate Fritigern himself. Not as a guard reporting to the emperor. As the Praefectus Praetorio protecting his emperor from a threat the emperor himself could not see.
Two soldiers brought Fritigern out of the cell right after sunrise.
Spurius waited in the upstairs interrogation room, a small room that used to be an armory and still slled of sword oil and aged leather.
A wooden table separated two chairs. On the table, a pitcher of water and two glasses. Spurius had prepared the water himself.
Not poison. Just water. But it was the habit of an old soldier who always prepared everything himself so there was no room for surprises.
The door opened. Fritigern walked in between two guards. His hands were unchained because Romulus’s orders still stood, but each guard held one of his arms with an unfriendly grip.
Fritigern was dressed differently than usual. A gray prisoner’s tunic given a week ago to replace his old, worn clothes. The tunic was too large at the shoulders, hanging loosely on a slender body that, beneath all the muscles and scars, felt too light for a warrior.
His dirty and tangled hair was pulled back, revealing a sharp face and its angles, high cheekbones sculpted by years of starvation.
Spurius noted all of this as Fritigern sat in the chair across the table. The guards retreated to the door. Fritigern stared at Spurius with the flat eyes that had beco his trademark. Eyes that showed no fear. Showed no resistance. Only a watchful and patient observation.
"Drink," Spurius said, pushing a glass of water across the table.
Fritigern looked at the glass. Then looked at Spurius. Then he took the glass and drank without hesitation. Not out of trust. Out of thirst.
"I will not beat around the bush," Spurius began. His hands were folded on the table, fingers intertwined.
The posture of a man who had decided his course before opening his mouth. "I want to know who you really are. Not who you are in the arena. Not who you are in the cell when you speak with Romulus. Who you truly are."
"You already know who I am," Fritigern answered. "My na is Fritigern. I am a descendant of..."
"Bullshit." Spurius cut him off with a calmness sharper than anger.
"Fritigern is a na you wear like a suit of armor. A na to be shouted in the arena. A na to make people afraid. But beneath that armor is a person. And that person is the one I want to et."
Fritigern did not react. His face remained flat. But Spurius, who had spent four decades reading n, caught sothing barely visible.
A slight shift in his seating position. A faint narrowing of the shoulders. A defensive movent unnoticed by the one making it.
"You are hiding sothing," Spurius said. Not a guess. A statent. "I can sll it. Forty years in the army taught the stench of a lie. And you, young man, sll like soone who has been hiding sothing very large for a very long ti."
Fritigern gulped down the rest of his water. He set the glass on the table. His eyes did not move from Spurius’s.
"Everyone hides sothing," Fritigern said. "You hid the truth about Ignis Dei from your emperor for weeks. Does that make you a liar?"
The jab hit its mark. Spurius felt his jaw muscles twitch. But he showed no other reaction. Forty years of training were good for sothing.
"This is not about ," Spurius said. "This is about the safety of an emperor I consider my own son. And I will not let a barbarian with an unclear identity spend hours every night alone with him in a dark place without knowing who is truly sitting across the table."
Spurius stood up from his chair. Slowly. Not to intimidate. To approach. He walked around the table and stood beside Fritigern, looking down.
"Stand up," Spurius ordered.
Fritigern did not move.
"I said stand up."
"For what?"
"Because there is sothing that does not sit right in my eyes about you, and I want to look closer."
Fritigern stared at Spurius for a long ti. A small battle took place in his eyes, lasting only seconds but feeling like minutes. Then he stood up.
Spurius studied him from close range. Very close. He walked around Fritigern with slow steps, his eyes tracing every detail. Narrow shoulders beneath the oversized tunic. Wrists smaller than what a warrior with the strength he displayed in the arena should possess. A neck too long and slender. Jaw skin too smooth in certain spots, despite being covered in dirt and gri.
And those hands. Spurius took Fritigern’s right hand and held it, pulling it toward the light spilling from the small window. Strong hands, yes. Hands full of calluses from gripping weapons. But the fingers were long and slender. Too slender. The bones in the wrists were too small. The proportions were wrong for a male body with this much combat strength.
Fritigern pulled his hand back with a swift motion. His flat eyes finally showed sothing new. Not fear. But a sharply heightened alertness, like an animal realizing a trap had been set and the escape route was narrowing.
Spurius stood before Fritigern. Eye t eye. One second. Two seconds. Three.
Then Spurius reached out and pulled the collar of Fritigern’s tunic down.
Not roughly. Not with a yank. A quick and efficient motion of a soldier who had inspected thousands of recruits in his life. Pulling the collar low enough to see the collarbone and upper shoulder.
The fabric fell.
And Spurius saw it.
Beneath the oversized tunic, bound tightly by linen cloth wrapped firmly around the chest, hidden from the world for years behind armor and dirt and a persona built with sweat and blood.
Fritigern took a step back. Hands grabbed the tunic’s collar and yanked it back up with a motion too quick, too panicked, too different from the calmness that had always been a hallmark.
And in that panic, in the crack of a mask that had been perfect all along, Spurius saw the whole truth burst forth like water breaking through a dam.
The silence that fell in the room was no ordinary silence.
It was the silence that happens when the world shifts on its axis. When sothing assud certain suddenly becos nothing like imagined. When the map you have been using turns out to depict the wrong land entirely.
Spurius took a step back. His face, trained for forty years to show no surprise in the face of anything, now showed sothing more than surprise. It was disbelief. Raw and total.
The two guards at the door sensed the shift in atmosphere and stepped forward, hands on the hilts of their swords.
"Get out," Spurius told the two guards without taking his eyes off Fritigern. His voice was low but brooked no questions. "Get out and close the door. Do not let anyone in. Anyone."
The guards exchanged confused looks, then bowed and exited. The door closed. The lock turned.
Now only two people remained in the room.
Spurius and the person he had known all this ti as Fritigern.
"You are..." Spurius started, his voice unsteady for the first ti in the mory of anyone who knew him. He swallowed. Started again. "You are a woman."
Not a question. A statent still trying to convince himself.
Fritigern stood in the middle of the room. Hands still gripping the collar of the tunic. The body tensed like a bow drawn to its absolute limit, ready to loose an arrow or snap in two. Those eyes, which had always been flat and unreadable, now ca alive with emotions too nurous and too strong to hide any longer. Anger. Fear. A strange and unexpected relief. It all swirled in those dark irises like currents on the surface of a rushing river.
Then sothing changed.
Shoulders that had always been pulled back with a warrior’s stiffness slowly dropped. A chin that had always been lifted defiantly slowly lowered. And the posture that had deceived the entire barbarian camp and the entire palace of Ravenna slowly, slowly, shifted into sothing more natural. More honest.
"Yes," Fritigern said. One word. Spoken in a voice slightly different from the one Spurius had ever heard. Still low. Still raspy. But there was a pitch that had been hidden beneath years of trained male imitation, and now that pitch surfaced like color beneath peeling paint. "Yes. I am a woman."
Spurius opened his mouth. Closed it. Opened it again. For a man who was never at a loss for words, this was a profoundly alien experience.
"What is your na?" Spurius finally asked. "Your real na."
A pause. The sound of winter wind forcing its way through the window cracks. The sound of crows cawing on the palace roof.
"Gisela."
The na dropped between them like a pebble tossed into the bottom of a very deep well. Small. Simple. But its echo lingered long after the sound vanished.
"Gisela," Spurius repeated, as if testing how the na felt on his tongue. "And the na Fritigern?"
"My ancestor. Fritigern the Goth." Gisela took a deep breath. "My father was his great-grandson. He was killed when I was seven years old. My mother... my mother was killed on the sa night." Her voice did not tremble. Too accustod to this fact to tremble. The fact had beco a part of her like her own ribs. "They killed everyone in our camp. A rival tribe. I survived because my mother hid under a pile of hay and told to stay quiet. I heard them drag her out. I heard..."
She stopped. For the first ti, the boundary between fact and wound could not be crossed without pain.
"I heard everything," Gisela said. "From beneath the hay. Unable to do a single thing."
Spurius stared at the young woman before him. Forty years in the army had made him see things that would drive other n mad. He had witnessed cities burn. Had seen children die in the streets. Had killed n with his own hands and not lost sleep over it. But there was sothing in the way Gisela said ’I heard everything’ that pierced those shields and touched sothing very rarely touched within the chest of Spurius Maecenas.
"And after that," Gisela continued, her eyes staring at a point that did not exist in this room, a point in the past whose distance could not be asured in miles, "I cut my hair with a dull knife. I bound my chest with bandages torn from my mother’s dress. And I walked out of the ruins of that camp as a boy. Because in this world, Praefectus..." her eyes returned to Spurius with a painful clarity, "...an orphaned girl from an annihilated tribe has no other choice but to beco sothing she is not, or die being who she is."
Spurius sat back down in his chair. Slowly. Not because his legs were weak, though truthfully they did feel heavier than usual. But because he needed to sit to think, and Spurius always thought better while sitting.
"How long?" Spurius asked.
"Eight years."
"Eight years you lived as a man."
"Eight years I survived," Gisela corrected. "There is a difference. I did not choose this because I wanted to. I chose this because there were only two choices. Beco a man and live, or remain a woman and die. Or worse than death."
Spurius understood what worse than death ant. He had seen what happened to won and children when barbarian camps were raided.
The realization made the hairs on the back of his neck stand up.
"And your fight in the arena," Spurius said. "Your skill is real. Not a trick."
"I learned to fight because fighting is the only language n respect. If I could not fight better than all of them, they would discover the truth about . And if they discovered the truth about ..." Gisela did not finish the sentence. She did not have to.
Silence again. Lighter than the last. The silence of two people adjusting to a new reality they had not fully processed.
"Does Romulus know?" Spurius asked.
"No."
"He does not know you are a woman."
"He never asked what I was hiding. He only asked what my na was. And I answered it was not yet ti."
Spurius let out a breath that felt like bearing the weight of all the fortress stones of Ravenna.
"This complicates everything," he said.
"It does not complicate anything," Gisela replied. "I am still the sa person who defeated your emperor in the arena. I am still the sa person who speaks with him every night. The fact that I am a woman does not change a single word of the conversations we have already had."
"It changes everything and you know it." Spurius stood back up, frustration beginning to seep through the cracks in his professional calm. "He is a fifteen-year-old boy who has never spoken to a woman besides the kitchen maids. And you... you are the descendant of the greatest enemy Ro has ever faced on the battlefield. The blood of Fritigern. The blood that destroyed our legions at Adrianople. And now you sit in the cell beneath my palace, speaking for hours every night with the emperor I am supposed to protect, and it turns out you are not who you have pretended to be all this ti."
Spurius wiped his face with both hands. The motion of a man exhausted and out of answers.
"I have to tell Romulus," Spurius said.
"No."
The word left Gisela’s mouth with a speed and firmness that made Spurius snap his head toward her.
"You do not have the right to decide that," Spurius said.
"And neither do you." Gisela stared at him with unblinking eyes. "This truth is mine. I decide when and to whom. You can lock away forever in that cell, Praefectus. You can chain again if you wish. But the truth of who I am can only be given by , to the person I choose, at the ti I choose."
Spurius stared at Gisela for a long ti. He saw sothing in her eyes that reminded him of soone. An unshakable resolve. A courage born not from an absence of fear, but from the habit of living with fear until fear itself grew bored and left.
He saw Romulus.
Almighty God, Spurius thought. They are the sa. Two children who lost everything and built a new identity from the rubble. One beca an emperor. One beca a masked warrior. And now they sit across from each other every night in a dungeon cell, without knowing how similar their stories are.
"Alright," Spurius said finally. The word felt like swallowing bitter dicine. "I will not tell Romulus. Not yet. But you..." he pointed at Gisela with a solid finger, "...you must tell him yourself. Soon. Because the longer this lie persists, the deeper the wound when the truth is revealed. And Romulus... Romulus has been lied to far too often by the people around him."
Including by , Spurius thought, but he did not say it.
"There is one more condition," Spurius said. "From now on, female guards will be assigned to you. Two of them. They will know your identity. No one else."
Gisela nodded. One small nod that carried far more relief than she let show. For eight years, she had carried this secret alone. Alone in muddy camps, alone among n who would kill her if they knew, alone in the arena and in the cell and in every bed that was not hers. And now, for the first ti, one other person in this world knew the truth.
That person was not a friend. That person might not even be an ally. But that person knew, and did not kill her for it.
For now, that was enough.
Spurius opened the door and summoned the guards.
"Take him back to his cell," he ordered. His voice had returned to its usual professional hardness. But his eyes, as they followed Gisela walking out between the two guards, carried sothing new. No longer pure suspicion. Sothing more complex. Sothing that did not yet have a na.
At the threshold, Gisela stopped. She turned her head slightly, not completely, just enough for her voice to reach Spurius’s ears.
"Thank you," she said. Two words that sounded foreign on her tongue, as if it had been years since she last spoke them.
"For what?" Spurius asked.
"For not calling a monster."
Then she left. Her steps on the stone corridor sounded different to Spurius’s ears now. Lighter. A little more human. Or perhaps the steps had always been that way, and Spurius was only now hearing them correctly.
Spurius stood alone in the interrogation room. On the table, two glasses of water. One empty. One untouched. Outside the window, the winter sun had passed its peak and begun to lean west, painting the Ravenna sky with thin and sorrowful orange streaks.
He thought of Romulus. The boy would go down again tonight. Would sit on the wooden bench in front of the cell. Would speak with the person he thought was a man. Would share stories, share silence, share sothing Spurius could not define but which was clearly needed by both.
And Romulus would not know.
Spurius felt the weight of the decision he had just made pressing down on his shoulders. He had promised not to tell. He had given Gisela the right to reveal her own truth. It was an honorable decision. A dignified decision.
But was it the right decision?
He did not know. And that ignorance, for a man who had built his entire life upon certainty and clarity, felt like standing at the edge of an abyss without being able to see the bottom.
Spurius did not sleep that night.
He sat in his room, in the wooden chair that had ford a hollow conforming to his body after years of use, and stared at the wall. The candle on his desk lted slowly, its drippings flowing like wax tears forming random patterns on the wood surface.
Below, he heard Romulus’s familiar footsteps descending the stairs toward the dungeon cells. Like every night. Those footsteps had beco part of the palace’s night sounds, like the squeak of mice in the attic or the chirp of crickets in the garden.
But tonight those steps sounded different to Spurius’s ears. Because now he knew who was waiting at the end of those stairs. Not a harmless barbarian boy. A young woman. The descendant of Fritigern. Who had deceived the entire world for eight years and who was now deceiving the emperor Spurius loved like his own son.
But was it deception?
The question appeared uninvited and refused to leave. Spurius tried to banish it with military logic. Of course it was deception. A false identity. A hidden gender. A na that was not a real na. All the classic signs of a spy or an infiltrator.
But a spy did not defeat the emperor in the arena and humiliate him in front of hundreds of people. A spy tried to please their target, not destroy their pride. And a spy did not give hurtful answers when asked. A spy gave the answers the questioner wanted.
Spurius wiped his face again. A habit that appeared increasingly often lately.
He rembered Gisela’s words earlier. ’There were only two choices: beco a man and live, or remain a woman and die.’ That sentence reminded him of the night in the sewers, when Romulus crawled through human waste to reach Odoacer’s tent. Romulus also had no other choice. Kill or die. Crawl or surrender. Beco sothing he was not, or cease to be anything at all.
They are the sa, Spurius thought for the second ti that night, and for the second ti the thought made him uneasy.
He grabbed a pen and a sheet of parchnt from his desk drawer. He wrote, not an official letter, but an entry in his journal. A journal he had been writing for years, containing not military strategies or reports, but small observations about the boy he had raised since the night Odoacer died.
December 1, 476.
Today I found that the world is more complicated than I thought, and I thought I had stopped being surprised by the world twenty years ago.
Fritigern is a woman. Her na is Gisela. Descendant of Fritigern the Goth. Orphaned since she was seven. In disguise for eight years. Defeated my emperor in combat. And now speaks with him every night in the dark.
I do not know what I should do with this information.
My instinct says, eliminate her. Keep her away from Romulus. Send her to a border camp or to a small island in the Adriatic where she cannot touch anyone important.
But my heart, the part of too old to be lied to by its own instinct, says sothing else. My heart says that the boy, my little emperor who still crawls through nightmares every few nights, has found sothing I cannot give him with all the swords and all the training in the world. He found soone who sees him not as an emperor, not as the killer of Odoacer, not as a little fire weapon or a puppet on a throne. Soone who sees him as Romulus. Just Romulus.
And that soone, it turns out, is a woman.
God has a cruel sense of humor.
I promise myself one thing tonight: I will watch. I will not eliminate Gisela. Not yet. But I will watch with both my eyes open and my sword within arm’s reach. Because there is one thing I know better than anyone in this palace about Romulus Augustus: the boy gives his trust too quickly and too deeply. And every ti that trust is betrayed, a small piece of his already cracked soul shatters further.
I will not let another piece shatter.
Not on my watch.
Spurius set down his pen. The ink dried slowly on the parchnt. Below, faintly but still audible if you stayed quiet long enough, the sound of two young people talking in whispers behind iron bars and the flickering light of a torch.
One of them was an emperor who did not know that the person he was speaking to was a woman.
The other was a woman who did not know that her secret was no longer hers alone.
And above them both, an old man stared at his ceiling and prayed, for the first ti in a very long while, not for victory or salvation, but for sothing far harder to obtain.
Wisdom.
Reviews
All reviews (0)