I Rule Rome with a God-Tier AI

Chapter 63: The Lion and the Serpent



The air in the forgotten archive room was thick with the dust of centuries and the scent of decaying papyrus. Here, hidden in the labyrinthine substructures of the Temple of Vesta, away from the prying eyes of Perennis's spies and the Emperor's new order, the old Rome still breathed. It was in this chamber of shadows and secrets that the lion met with the serpent.

Publius Helvius Pertinax stood straight and tall, his simple, unadorned toga a stark contrast to the opulence favored by the new court. He looked less like a conspirator and more like a statue of an old Republican hero come to life—stern, dignified, and radiating an aura of unyielding principle. Across from him, a heavily veiled figure emerged from the deeper darkness. It was the Augusta Lucilla, her movements as fluid and silent as poured ink. The dynamic between them had shifted. He was no longer her reluctant tool; they were now partners, equals in ambition and disdain for the man on the throne.

"The aqueduct was a masterstroke, Publius," Lucilla's voice hissed from behind the veil, a sound of silk being drawn over steel. "Simple. Traditional. Utterly effective. You give the people something they can see, something they can taste. While my brother plays with his exotic gardens and chases ghosts in the East, you remind them what a Roman leader does."

A flicker of pride, quickly suppressed, crossed Pertinax's stoic features. "It was my duty as Prefect of the City," he replied, his voice a low baritone that resonated with authority. "The aqueducts are the veins of Rome. The Aventine was dying of thirst. I saw a need and I filled it. The people are grateful. That is all."

The unspoken words hung in the dusty air between them. That is all I need. He wasn't plotting treason. He wasn't raising an army. He was simply doing his job with impeccable, visible competence. He was building a foundation of loyalty and public love, brick by brick, while Alex built his empire on secrets and fear. It was a far more insidious, and far more dangerous, form of rebellion.

"His 'miracle grain' is a failure," Pertinax stated, his eyes narrowing. "My agents on the Palatine guard roster speak of a sudden sickness among the German Guard. A quarantine. The Emperor's physicians coming and going at all hours of the night. He found a strange plant, but he cannot make it Roman."

"He is not Roman," Lucilla corrected, her voice dripping with venom. "He is a changeling wearing my brother's skin. A clever monster who knows our history but not our heart. He thinks he can rule Rome with knowledge. You, Publius, will prove that Rome can only be led by character." She leaned closer, her veiled presence seeming to draw the light from the room. "Continue your work. Repair the roads. Clean the sewers. Reinforce the grain silos—the public ones. Be the servant of the city. Be the father they have lost. And when the time comes, when his alien world withers on the vine, they will not turn to him. They will turn to you."

The palace felt colder that evening. The news of Pertinax's triumph had spread through the city like wildfire, a tale of simple, honest competence that served as a stark rebuke to Alex's secretive, grand projects. He sat in his study, the weight of his multiple failures pressing down on him. The sick guards in the villa, the useless harvest in the greenhouses, the popular rival in the streets, the faceless enemy in the East—it was a cascade of crises, none of which Lyra could offer a solution for.

He needed intelligence. He needed to know if Pertinax's move was a direct challenge or a fortunate coincidence. He needed his serpent.

He summoned Lucilla for her weekly report. She entered the study and performed a flawless, deep curtsey, the very picture of a submissive, broken princess. She had learned her role well. She kept her eyes downcast, her posture one of utter deference. Alex watched her, his own expression an unreadable mask of imperial calm, though his mind was churning. He both needed her and loathed the fact that he did.

"Report," he said, his voice flat.

Lucilla began, her tone soft and meticulous. She detailed the minor political maneuverings of the Senate, naming two senators who were skimming funds from a public works project and another who was trying to arrange a politically advantageous marriage for his daughter. It was useful, accurate intelligence, the kind that helped Alex keep the old guard off-balance. It was the bait that made her reports credible.

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