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Chapter 25 - The Counter-Trap

Perennis's final words hung in the air of the study, a death sentence delivered in a terrified whisper. A direct military coup… within the week. The game had changed. The subtle thrust and parry of politics, the veiled threats and legalistic traps, had been abandoned. The masks were off. His enemies, led by his own sister, were no longer trying to outmaneuver him. They were coming to kill him, with swords, in his own home.

A strange, cold calm washed over Alex. The terror he had felt on the Danube frontier, the anxiety of his first days in Rome—it all seemed distant now. The threat was no longer an abstract probability or a hidden poison. It was a cohort of soldiers with names and faces. It was a physical problem, and a physical problem could be met with a physical solution.

"Heron," Alex said to his chamberlain, his voice steady. "No more visitors tonight. No one enters this study." He then turned to the two men who remained. "Maximus. Perennis. Sit."

He immediately summoned a third. A runner was dispatched to the villa of Servius Rufus, rousing the old senator from his sleep with an urgent imperial summons. Within the hour, Alex's first true Roman war council was assembled. In the opulent, silent study, under the marble gaze of past emperors, the unlikely trinity gathered: Maximus, the embodiment of military honor; Perennis, the personification of political cunning; and Rufus, the voice of law and tradition. They were his rock, his serpent, and his conscience.

Perennis, his hands still trembling slightly, laid out the details his agents had uncovered. "The coup is planned for three nights from now, Caesar. On the final night of the festival of Luna. The city will be at its most chaotic. The noise from the celebrations will mask any commotion from the palace."

"The plan is brutally simple," he continued. "Captain Cassius Valerius of the Third Praetorian Cohort—the night watch—will fabricate an emergency near your chambers. A fire, a security breach, something to justify a full-cohort response. They will overwhelm the few guards at your door, and…" he trailed off, unable to say the final words.

Maximus's reaction was a low, guttural growl of pure fury. He slammed a gauntleted fist onto the polished wood of Alex's desk, making a wine goblet jump. "Then we will not let it come to that! This is a military threat, and it demands a swift, overwhelming military solution!" he roared, his voice shaking the room. "Give me the word, Caesar, and I will march the First Adiutrix into the city tonight. We will surround the Castra Praetoria, arrest this traitor Valerius and his entire cohort, and hang them from the barracks walls as a warning to all who would follow! We will crush this nest of vipers before they can even draw their swords!"

It was the Roman way. Decisive, brutal, and effective. A part of Alex was tempted by the sheer, clean simplicity of it.

But it was Senator Rufus who raised a hand, his expression deeply troubled. "General, I understand your righteous anger. But what you propose is a catastrophe of a different kind." His voice was quiet but firm, a stark contrast to Maximus's rage. "To march a legion across the sacred boundary of the pomerium without the express consent of the Senate… that is the act that marked the beginning of the end for the Republic. It is what Sulla did. It is what Julius Caesar did. It would make our Emperor a tyrant in the eyes of the law, regardless of his justification. The Senate would have the legal pretext they need to declare him an enemy of the state. We would win this battle, perhaps, but we would lose Rome."

Alex listened, caught between the two arguments. He was trapped again. The illegal but brutally effective military option, or the legal path which would leave him vulnerable. He paced the floor, his mind working, processing the variables not with an AI's speed, but with the focused logic he had learned from it. He had to find a third way.

"You are both right," he said finally, stopping his pacing. The three men looked at him, surprised. "General, you are right that this threat must be met with overwhelming force. Senator, you are right that we cannot be the ones to break the law. So we will do both."

He leaned over the large map of Rome that was spread across his desk. "We will not bring the legions into Rome. But we will not wait for their attack in our beds, either. We will let the traitors walk into a trap of our own making. We will give them the stage they desire, and then we will bring the entire house down upon them."

He began to lay out the plan, his voice crisp and authoritative, the mind of a project manager now fully fused with the will of an emperor.

"First, we isolate them," he said, his finger tapping the map. "Maximus, you will use your new authority as head of the Speculatores. For the next two days, you will find plausible pretexts to re-assign loyal Praetorian officers and centurions away from the palace on the night of the festival. An urgent security detail for a panicked senator. A sudden inspection of the grain shipments at Ostia. A training exercise. Bleed the palace of any man whose loyalty is not certain. Let Captain Valerius look around and see only his own men. Let him think the path is clear."

Maximus's grim face broke into a predatory smile. He understood. Deception and misdirection.

"Second," Alex continued, "we prepare our own force. But not a legion. A scalpel, not a sledgehammer. General, I want you to hand-pick fifty of your best men. Not just soldiers, but killers. Veterans from the Danube front, the men who fought in the mud and the snow, the ones who know how to use a blade in close quarters. And they must be fanatically loyal."

"I have five hundred such men who would die for you, Caesar," Maximus said without hesitation.

"I only need fifty," Alex replied. "And they will not be in uniform. We will smuggle them into the palace over the next two days, dressed as servants, as masons repairing a wall, as laborers carrying wine amphorae. We will hide them in storerooms, in empty chambers, in the servant passages along the route you will map from the barracks to my chambers. They will be my ghosts in the machine."

"Third," he said, his voice dropping, "the bait. That will be me. On the night of the festival, I will be in my chambers. The palace will appear quiet, lightly guarded, celebrating. The two guards outside my bedroom door will be Praetorians, but they will be your men, Maximus, dressed in Praetorian armor. I will be seemingly asleep, helpless."

Finally, he turned to the old senator. "And you, Rufus. Your role is perhaps the most crucial. You will not be in the palace. You will be waiting nearby with the Prefect of the Vigiles and a cohort of the city watch. The moment the attack begins, the moment the first sword is drawn, a signal will be given. You will be the first 'independent' official to arrive on the scene. You will not witness a messy palace purge. You will witness a clear, unprovoked, treasonous assault on the divine person of the Emperor, and the heroic, lawful defense by loyal soldiers. You will be the legal authority that sanctifies our actions."

The plan was audacious, intricate, and incredibly risky. It relied on perfect timing, absolute secrecy, and the unwavering loyalty of a few dozen men against an entire cohort of Rome's most elite soldiers.

Alex looked at the three men before him. The honorable soldier, the cunning politician, the righteous lawyer. They were his council, his shield.

"It is a bold plan, Caesar," Maximus said, his voice filled with a grim admiration. "Dangerous. Your father would have admired its audacity."

"My father would have tried to reason with them," Alex replied, a cold glint in his eye. "I, however, am a more practical man." He turned his gaze to Perennis, who had been listening with a mixture of terror and awe. "Prefect. The traitor, Captain Valerius. Does he have a family?"

Perennis, startled by the question, nodded. "A wife and two young children, Caesar. A boy and a girl. They live in a small domus near the Subura."

"Good," Alex said, his voice turning to ice. "An hour before the operation begins, have your most discreet agents take them into protective custody. Quietly. No fuss. Tell them they are being moved to a secure location for their own safety. They will be my insurance policy, in case Valerius is captured alive and thinks he can talk his way out of his treason."

The other men looked at him, startled. In that moment, they saw a flash of the ruthless pragmatism that lay beneath his noble pronouncements. It was a coldness that was both terrifying and, for the men whose lives now depended on him, deeply reassuring. The trap was not just baited. It was locked.

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