Chapter 126: The Ghost in the Machine (Revisited)
While Alex grappled with the unnerving evolution of his new political and military factions, Sabina's own grand project was bearing its first, tantalizing fruit. The Roman Occidental Trading Company, her audacious financial gambit, had been a stunning success. The initial stock offering, fueled by the legally mandated investments of the entire senatorial class, had flooded the treasury with a massive infusion of private capital. The old guard's ancestral wealth was now being used to fund the very regime they secretly despised. With this new war chest, Sabina had worked with a speed and efficiency that left the traditionalists breathless. Ships were built, crews were hired, and the first exploratory voyages were launched into the unknown western seas.
Now, the first of those ships had returned. It was a sturdy trading vessel named the Fortuna, which had been tasked with charting the Atlantic coast past Gaul and Britannia, following the faint, half-mythical trails of the ancient Phoenician tin traders. Its captain, a grizzled, sun-beaten navigator from Massilia, reported to Alex and Sabina in the palace map room.
His report was a litany of wonders. He spoke of treacherous seas and strange, northern lights. He presented charts, drawn with a new and stunning accuracy, of coastlines that had previously been the stuff of legend. He confirmed the existence of a major, navigable river mouth in the far north of Britannia, opening a potential new route to the island's rich tin and lead mines.
His most exciting discovery, however, was a geographical anomaly. Weeks out to sea, driven off course by a storm, his ship had stumbled upon a "strange, new island," a place of impossibly lush greenery and a mild, gentle climate, even in the autumn months. It was a volcanic island, blessed with rich soil, perfect, he said, for cultivating grapes and the finest olives. He had named it Insula Sabina, in honor of his patroness.
But he had brought back more than just charts and tales. "There was a strange ruin on the island's highest peak, Caesar," the captain said, his voice dropping with a hint of awe. "Not Roman, not Greek, not anything I have ever seen. It was ancient, worn by a thousand years of wind and rain. Most of it had crumbled to dust, but we found this inside the central chamber."
He gestured to two of his crewmen, who struggled forward with a heavy, lead-lined crate. They opened it, and nestled inside on a bed of thick wool, was a perfect, seamless sphere of a dark, non-reflective metal, about the size of a human head. Its surface was cool to the touch and covered in a faint, intricate pattern of swirling lines. And engraved at its pole, small but unmistakable, was the now terrifyingly familiar symbol of a hollow, eight-pointed star.
The Aethel-Tech insignia.
The air in the room went cold. Sabina looked at the sphere with a flicker of recognition and fear. Alex felt a jolt, a surge of pure, ice-cold adrenaline. The ghost he had faced in the mountains of Armenia had a sibling, and it had been sleeping quietly just off the coast of his new empire.
"Leave us," Alex commanded, his voice tight. The captain and his crew, sensing the sudden, dangerous shift in the atmosphere, bowed and retreated hastily.
Alex approached the sphere with extreme caution. It was inert, silent, seemingly dead. There was none of the humming energy he had felt from the pillars in Armenia. He had it transported under heavy guard to the most secure, lead-lined chamber in the Imperial Institute, a room they had built for the storage of the Aethel-Tech fragments from the battle.
He brought the laptop. He had to know what this thing was. He set the rugged computer down on a workbench a few feet away from the sphere. For a long moment, nothing happened. The sphere remained a dead, dark object.
