Chapter 516: The Night of the Three Emperors (1)
Chapter 516: The Night of the Three Emperors (1)
Night had fully fallen over the villa, and the shadows pooled like ink in the corners of Crassus’s private chambers. The great windows were closed against the chill, but the orange smear of torchlight from the courtyard still found its way through the heavy drapes and painted the marble floor in slow, trembling bands. The estate, with its columns and frescoes and the faint, perfumed echo of the day’s incense, should have felt like sanctuary. Instead it felt like a gilded cage.
Since the moment Nathan had confessed—so quietly, so flatly—that Caesar intended to erase him and every member of his house, sleep had become impossible. Crassus lay awake most nights, listening for footsteps that were never there, palms damp, mind racing through lists of names and possible betrayals. Every creak of the timber, every distant clink from the servants’ wing set his heart skittering. He had men positioned outside the gates; he had paid for loyal eyes. Yet the thought of assassination gnawed at him with a small, relentless hunger.
Paranoia had tightened its grip on him. He told himself it was reasonable—necessary, even—given the stakes. Thankfully Nathan had sent a bodyguard to him to keep him and his family safe.
However he had never seen that bodyguard again since that day she vanished—had been watching over him. He hadn’t seen her face, only the borrowed calm she left behind like a perfume: a presence that pricked the back of his neck and made the hairs rise there. He could not say whether that sense was a comfort or another source of dread; it did both, like a double-edged blade.
He worried, too, for his family. His wife slept in the next chamber; his children’s rooms were down the hall. The idea of them dragged from their beds, of hands striking through the threshold of this place he had made his home, sent a hot, private terror through him. All the plans he used to make—menus for feasts, seating for guests, debates over land—now shrank down to one single, horrible question: would they live to see the morning?
He tried to place his faith in Septimius. The man had shown competence and a ferocity that made Crassus believe, in the small moments when reason returned, that the tyrant might yet be opposed. If anyone could thread through Caesar’s circle and survive, he thought, it might be Septimius. The thought offered him a brittle comfort; after all, if a man could get as close to Caesar as Septimius had and still breathe, then perhaps there was still a path forward.
He had just let himself sink into one such thought—careful, reluctant, willing to be fooled by hope—when the air in the room seemed to change. It slipped colder and thinner, like the breath from the sea, and the warmth of the torches dimmed in his perception. Crassus felt, rather than heard, a presence materialize behind him: a measured, deliberate closeness that made his shoulders lift with sudden awareness.
He turned slowly. The woman stood in the doorway before him, wrapped in darkness as if she had stepped from the walls themselves. She wore a mask that hid her entire except her eyes; that he couldn’t even make out anything out of out except the coldness. Crassus’s mouth opened, and a name that had floated at the edge of many of his conversations slipped free. Medea. That was the name Nathan had called her.
“You scared me,” Crassus admitted, and there was relief in his voice he could not hide. “But—” He let out a short, shaky laugh. “At least now I feel safer. Knowing you’re here.”
Medea held his gaze, her posture calm. “Someone is waiting outside,” she said, cutting short his rambling with the bluntness of one who had little patience for needless comfort. “He wishes to speak with you in secret.”
“Who?” Crassus’s question was cautious; his mind catalogued possibilities with the speed of a hunted animal. Who would seek him out in the dead of night, and why?
“He wants to meet you,” Medea answered. “I will take you.” Her voice was quiet but absolute.
Before he could protest, a strange sensation stole through him: the weight of his body lifting, as if invisible hands had slid beneath his ribs and raised him from the ground. The chamber spun in a slow, nauseous circle. Crassus blinked, startled, and for a moment the marble floor seemed impossibly far below him.
“W…wait!” he stammered, clinging to the polished arm of his chair. “This could be a trap from Caesar! Are you trying to get me killed? I— I am safer here. You’re trying to get me killed!”
Medea’s eyes hardened, the only part of her face that betrayed anything like emotion through the mask. “Nate asked me to keep you safe,” she said, each word carefully measured. “And I will keep my word—no matter what it costs me.”
Crassus stared at her, his protests dying in his throat. There was something about her certainty that left no room for argument; it was a vow spoken into the bones of the world. He found himself oddly disarmed—not by gentleness but by the implacable steadiness of her conviction. She was not a woman who offered reassurances lightly. She offered deeds.
He knew, or rather he suspected, that her fierce protection had nothing to do with him personally obviously.
Medea’s loyalty to Nathan was an iron thing. She was not merely protective; she was, in her own way, devoutly, irrationally devoted. Nathan’s words sat with her like commands from a god. Her greatest fear would be to fail him.
There were other threads too—reasons for her disdain that had nothing to do with him. Medea disliked almost everyone; her trust and love was rationed, reserved for Nathan and two others, her adopted sisters—Scylla and Charybdis. For everyone else, contempt and distance were her default posture. He was merely another face in her broad field of disfavor. And yet, despite her dislike of the world, she moved to protect his life as if his existence were a pledge bound to Nathan’s name.
Crassus swallowed. In the wavering torchlight, the mask hid the finer contours of her face, but he could see the set of her jaw through the dark fabric. She was beautiful in a way that made the heart uneasy—sharp, purposeful, like a blade meant as much to wound as to guard.
He had no words to answer her oath. What could he say to a woman willing to die for someone else’s command? He felt, in that strange hovering moment, both humiliated and grateful. He was the beneficiary of faith not born of him but entrusted to him nonetheless.
Medea carried Crassus effortlessly through the silent halls and past the shadowed arches of his grand estate. The marble floors and mosaics that once symbolized wealth and power looked more like hollow ornaments to her, meaningless compared to the duty she carried. Once they passed beyond the gates, Medea finally lowered him. Her touch, though careful, was impersonal; he landed softly on the packed earth near the rear courtyard, his sandals pressing into the grass at the edge of the estate grounds.
The night was still, save for the quiet chirping of insects. Beyond the flicker of distant torches, the air hung heavy with secrecy. Crassus steadied himself, brushing his toga as if to recover some dignity, when his gaze caught movement near an old cypress tree. A lone figure waited there, cloaked and hooded, the shape of him stirring something sharp and familiar in Crassus’s chest.
He narrowed his eyes. Then they widened in sudden recognition. “Fulvius?” he whispered, half in disbelief.
The man raised his head, revealing hardened features worn by years of suspicion and struggle. Fulvius gave a quick, impatient glance around, as though the shadows themselves might be listening.
“Not so loud,” he hissed. “I’m not here to embrace you as a friend, Crassus. I have never been your friend. In truth, I despised you. You more than anyone fed Caesar’s rise. You built the pedestal from which he now rules, and that pedestal will become your family’s grave.” His voice cut sharp, laced with bitterness.
Crassus’s fists clenched at his sides, knuckles white against the moonlight. His lips trembled with words unsaid before he forced them out.
“Yes. You did warn me, Fulvius. And you were right.” He lowered his head, his voice stripped of pride. “It is my fault.”
The admission landed heavier than any insult could. Fulvius blinked, caught off guard. He had expected defiance, arrogance, a man clinging to his wealth and excuses. Instead, before him stood Marcus Licinius Crassus—the richest man in Rome—looking strangely hollow, worn by guilt and fear. Something in him had changed. Perhaps it was the shadow of Caesar’s looming betrayal, or perhaps his children had forced his pride to bend, but the arrogance Fulvius remembered was gone.
For a moment, a quiet thought stirred in Fulvius’s mind: He has learned, at least. He finally sees Caesar for what he is.
“Good,” Fulvius said at last, his tone less venomous though still guarded. “At least you’ve learned. That may yet matter.” He shifted his cloak, as if eager to rid himself of the encounter. “I brought someone who wishes to speak with you. My part is done. Waste no time—speak quickly, and be done with it.”
And with that, like a shadow swallowed by deeper darkness, Fulvius slipped away, his form vanishing into the night.
Crassus frowned, unsettled, his pulse hammering in his ears. Then, from behind the same tree, another figure emerged. His gait was slow, deliberate, carrying the weight of history between them. The hood fell back, revealing a familiar face—lined with age, but unmistakable.
Crassus’s breath caught. His voice came out broken. “G… Gaius?”
The name carried the weight of years, of partnership and rivalry, of wars fought under the same banners. Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus—Pompey the Great—stood before him.
“It has been a while, Crassus,” Pompey said, lowering his hood fully. His tone was calm, though a sharpness lingered in his eyes. “Tell me—did you wish for my death in that arena?”
Crassus’s hands trembled. His voice wavered as he answered. “No… no, never. I asked mercy for you. But the Senate—those jackals—they are Caesar’s creatures now. My words held no weight.”
Pompey’s gaze darkened with old resentment. “I warned you,” he said, each syllable deliberate. “I told you what Caesar was becoming. Once I fell, the next step was inevitable. He would strike at you—so that nothing would remain between him and the throne. The sole Emperor of Rome.”
Crassus lowered his eyes, the truth of those words pressing on him like chains. Slowly, he nodded. “You were right. You were always right. Tell me, then—how did you escape him?”
Pompey shook his head. “That matters little. What matters is this.” He reached beneath his cloak and drew out an object that glowed even in the faint moonlight.
Crassus gasped. It was a key—beautiful, ornate, golden, its shaft carved with intricate symbols of antiquity. An object of both power and mystery.
“A Key of Rome,” Crassus whispered, his voice hoarse. He recognized it at once. The very key that Pompey himself had carried—one of the most coveted relics in the city.
Pompey held it out, though his expression was still shadowed with anger. “As much as I despise you for standing idle, for failing to support me when I needed you, I know this: you are the only man left in Rome I can trust. This key will serve Rome better in your hands than in mine.”
Crassus’s throat tightened. His hand shook as he reached for it, his face twisted with shame and sorrow. “Gnaeus… I am sorry. For everything. For not standing with you when I should have.”
Pompey’s grip tightened briefly on the key. His voice was low, grim. “Do not waste this chance. Whatever else happens, you must ensure Caesar never lays his hands upon it.”
Crassus nodded, his jaw set. For once, sincerity burned in his eyes. “I will.” He extended his hand, ready to accept the key. For a heartbeat, the air between them felt almost reconciled—two old rivals finding common ground at the edge of ruin.
But then the night was split apart by a powerful impact.
BADOOM!
An explosion tore through the quiet, a flash of fire and dust erupting between them. Crassus and Pompey were hurled backwards, rolling across the ground, coughing as debris rained down.
Through the smoke came laughter—deep, mocking, triumphant.
“Haha! So this is where the rats gather. And what’s this?” The voice rang with cruel delight. “Plotting together against me, in the dark?”
Crassus’s blood froze. He turned, his face draining of color, and there—illuminated by torchlight—stood Julius Caesar himself. Cloaked in imperial confidence, flanked by a dozen armored soldiers, his lips curved into a victorious smile.
Novel Full