Author Topic: I, Caesar  (Read 8298 times)

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I, Caesar
« on: 25 May 2023, 14:36:35 »
I haven't really written anything of substance for years, so I apologize if the start of the road may be a bit bumpy from time to time. Also: not a native speaker.

Disclaimer:
Fair word of warning: the Marian Hegemony in which the majority of this fic will take place is a society in which slavery is a normal fact of life, with all the ugliness that entails. It is also a society that has, for the most part of its existence, heavily sponsored, taken part in and profited from piracy. For the most part, this fic will not make moral judgements about these issues and merely accept them as a given. There will be POV characters from outside the Hegemony who will have quite different views, though.

I will also touch on a few concepts that the late, great Starbug - which you may know as JA Baker - had championed in small ways as the plot progresses.

« Last Edit: 25 May 2023, 14:44:16 by FWCartography »

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #1 on: 25 May 2023, 14:39:56 »
Looking back on his life and accomplishments, one cannot help but wonder how inconsequential Marius O'Reilly's reign actually was in the grand scheme of things. As far as Periphery despots in general, and Marian heads of state in particular go, I suppose the most complimentary thing one could say is that he staid in his lane? His policies? Mostly in line with general public and elite sentiment of his nation. He always strode to emulate the image of the 'reliable Patrician nobleman', aloof but ultimately boring, and in doing so, a facsimile of the sort of ancient Terran Roman nobility the Hegemony so blatantly copies. No great reforms. The colonization of four new planets early on in his reign, which admittedly was very competently done, especially for a small Periphery nation. A public building spree that dotted his planets with lavish representative – many would say pretentious – buildings like theaters, arenas, temples, and admittedly additional infrastructure. No strategic industrial expansion of note. No military accomplishments either. A ridiculously fumbled punitive expedition to Astrokaszy, and the Marian legions were... well, one legion strong when he ascended to the throne, and still one legion strong when he was buried forty years later. His wife? Boring, docile, of 'good' patrician stock. No individual accomplishments to her name. Not one public statement of substance from her on file, so you won't even get marked down if her name doesn't appear in your final papers. So, Marius O'Reilly? At the end of the day his contribution to history isn't what he did – precious little of consequence as we've discussed – but who he sired. It's with Sean O'Reilly that Marian history becomes interesting... – Professor Minerva Crenshaw, Introductory Lecture on Contemporary Periphery Politics, Princeton University, Terra. 3122


P r o l o g u e: Coup d'État​
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Alphard
Capital of the Marian Hegemony
June 16th 3048

"Alright lads, places to be!"
Sean O'Reilly's voice echoed like thunder through the domed halls and passageways of the place. He clapped his bear-paw like hands, adding whip-crack lighting to the thunder as he hurried down a wide set of stairs, a spring in his step from adrenaline. All around him people dashed to and fro, some in uniform, some in plain fatigues, but all of them armed. It wasn't the sort of chaotic bustle associated with panic, but one of concerted activity following a plan. His plan.

Halfway down the wide marble stairs that had a pair on the other side of he mosaic-floored and painted-glass domed entry hall he came face to face with his father's larger than life portray, and even though he had every intention to hurry on he stopped.

He didn't look a lot like his father.
The thought came unbidden to him, but not unexpected. It was a real painting, oil of canvas, life-sized. The artist had taken great pains to do it in the sort of subdued-yet-pompous neo-realist Lyran style of the late 28th century that people with more money than taste liked to spend money on. His father hadn't cared. He'd only cared that it was something the patricians in the senate could relate to and make him look good in the never-ending squabble for political support from one faction or another.

Which it did, Sean conceded sourly. Where Caesar Marius O'Reilly, third ruler of the Marian Hegemony, was polished marble, Sean was rough-hewn granite. His face was broader, his jaws square, his nose flatter, his hair darker. Only his eyes, and the part of his skull surrounding them, came after his father. That, and his smile.

Maybe the lack of similarity had played whatever tiny part in their alienation. Maybe it was because he came more after his mother. Maybe they could have both walked a different path, not opposite but side by side. He exhaled deeply and his shoulders sagged. Maybe pigs could fly, too. One way or another, when the day was over none of that would matter any longer.

Leading his steps back down the towards the grand mosaic of the hall he spotted one soldier ascending the stairwell towards him, his laser carbine shouldered, going against the flow of the majority. He recognized the man's face and quickly put a name to it: Optio Tibbins. The soldier, his senior by maybe two decades and a grizzled veteran of plenty of missions and raids, some of which the heir to Caesar himself had commanded, stopped at a respectful distance and came to attention. If the twenty plus kilograms of gear slowed him down or burdened him he hid it well.
"What is it?"
"The palash groundsh are shecured, sir. Leaving behind the 4th to keep it that way. VTOLs are ready," Tibbins pointed towards the brass-plated fifteen feet high doors leadings outside.
"Resistance?" Unwanted his eyes flashed back to his father's painting. In his mind he had played through this whole day hundreds, thousands of times. And still, to him his voice sounded almost too casual for the occasion.

Tibbins glanced a look back down the hallways leading perpendicular to the entry hall and gave Sean a slight shrug. "Had to shubdue some overzhealous membersh of the Praétorian Guard, but mosht have fallen in line. Minimal cash-ualties. A few wounded on our shide, a few deaid on theirs." The Pompey-born man's native drawl was as close as humanly possible as talking with your mouth full of soggy oatmeal.

Nigh a quarter of the troops Sean had gathered today hailed from that core world of the Hegemony, and he had commanded them personally after his father had replaced him as head of the colonization efforts in lieu of his uncovered embezzlement and corruption. He understood Tibbins perfectly well.
"Before the day's over, they'll all be on our side, Optio," he gently corrected the man. "Some of them just don't know it yet. Some may need a bit more convincing then others," he flashed a sharkish smile.
Much of the 1st Legion had his back, and the Praetorian Guard had always been more for show than for actual combat. That some of them had actually tried to resist? Credit where credit was due. Noticing Tibbins still stood at his side he raised an eyebrow. "Anything else?"

"Aye sir. Tribune Calestes is on line two," the veteran produced a rugged black rubber coated radio from on of his uniform's many pockets and handed it to Sean who grabbed it eagerly.
"Talk to me, Jeannie!"
"Whenever I do that you try to hit on me," came the sardonic answer in a voice that spoke of too many cigarettes and a decent helping of Bourbon. Janina 'Jeannie' Calestes commanded three armored regiments and had secured him the loyalties of the Patrician voting block her father headed. That in turn had given him access to House levies and mercenaries, both which came in extremely useful right now. She was also one of only a handful of women who had never fallen to his charms – or the temptations of a man with his influence – despite his repeated efforts. For that he respected her even more than for her combat expertise and political connections. She was one of his very few true friends, and as such she got a certain degree of leeway in how she could address him.
"I'm not much for flirting on the radio. Believe it or not, but right now I'd be completely satisfied with a short SitRep on your side," he chuckled.

"Can do, boss. CentCom's secure, communications to and from the orbitals as well as every major broadcast system is under our control. The stage's set for the main event. You're good to go."

Sean closed his eyes and took a deep breath, feeling tension falling off his shoulders that he hadn't even known to be there. "Thanks, Jeannie. I owe you one," he said quietly.

"Oh, don't worry, I'll remind you of that," there was a chuckle on the other end of the line. "Now go and make history. We've got your back. Callestes out."

For a moment he just stared at the now silent radio before handing it back to Tibbins.
"The VTOLs are waiting, shir. Are you ready?"

Sean O'Reilly gave one parting glance to his father's portrait. Alea iacta est. The dice had fallen. A small voice in the back of his head wondered how his father really thought about him. If there was still the love of a father for a son. He'd never know now. Not after today.

Tearing his eyes loose he motioned Tibbins to lead the way.
"Yeah, I'm ready. Get the troops airborne. Time to show the Senate their new Caesar." And that for them, fealty would not be optional.


Herculaneum
Marian Hegemony
June 16th 3048
It was a world of stark and savage beauty, with sheer cliffs and jagged peaks that rose towards the sky like jagged teeth, forming a jawline that ran half a thousand miles from start to end. One of them stuck out into the wilderness below, a grey wedge nearly ten thousand feet high topped in snow that had never molten and crevasses of blue ice that sunlight had never touched.

It was here that two men dared to climb.
One was older, but still in great shape, with a body honed by years of hard training and nigh ascetic exercise, his hair grey but still full, his face eagle-like and patrician. Dark rings under his eyes, sweat beading his chiseled face he nonetheless kept his fully concentrated gaze on the task at hand. Which, by now, was trying to keep up with his younger companion.

Stout and unflinching in both, tackling the seemingly infinite cliff face of Mount Callisto as well as in his duty as a bodyguard, the younger man's limbs bulged with muscles under the UV-protected skintight climbing suit. A shock of sandy blonde hair dangled in the cold mountain breeze, sticking out from his rock-climber's helmet. With trained ease his hands and feet found the cracks and ledges to hold onto. Every twenty feet or so he stopped, grabbed a tiny hammer that was fastened to his utility belt, and drove a hook into the solid rock, creating an anchor point for the climbing rope that connected him and his charge.

A blue sun, too large and too bright for comfort, beat down upon them, casting sharp shadows upon the rocky face of the mountain. Down below the atmosphere was thick enough to filter down much of the UV radiation to acceptable levels. But up here the air was thick with the scent of ozone, and the sparse plants that clung to the mountainside were like nothing they had ever seen before.

Far below them, a forest of bioluminescent mushrooms stretched as far as the eye could see, their tops a sea of pastel colors, of pink and white and purple that would erupt into an eerie glow casting an otherworldly light upon the landscape once the sun did set.

Strange, otherworldly creatures flitted through the air below, their calls echoing across the rugged terrain. The two climbers paid them no mind. They moved with a fluid grace born of long practice and hard-won skill, their muscles straining as they made their way up the unforgiving slope.

Marius arms burned like fire, and he risked a jealous look up to Cobb Sextus. The younger man hung on one arm, his fingers dug into a tiny indentation in the increasingly smooth rock face, all while carrying all the climbing gear. The rock was dark here, almost obsidian black, and staring too long at it made his vision swim…

He was slammed into his shock harness, his head ringing momentarily. IMPERATOR buckled under the impact of the enemy's fire as the flagship of his fleet burned towards their formation at just above two gees.
"That's the last one. Enemy now too close for effective engagement with capital missiles," TAC reported. "Kill on three droppers confirmed. Reliability is high for hits on seven additional bogeys."
Marius watched the two flotillas slowly converge on the bridge's central holoplot. Sitting on an elevated dais behind the captain's chair he was nominally in charge of Marian forces. In truth, Captain Hannah Ishawa ran the battle, and he was glad for it.
"Switch to laser batteries. Concentrated firing clusters. I see too many enemy droppers in that plot. Weapons, I want them gone!"
The young officer's hands at TAC darted over their console, plotting firing solutions. Even with the distant rumble of the massive ship's engines Marius could hear the massive servos of gun turrets carrying subcapital mounts moving to face the enemy.
"TAC?"
"Tracing is good. Scopes showing solid hits on forward inbound bogeys." The blurry image of a Union class dropship trailing atmosphere and debris briefly appeared in the main plot, curtesy of IMPERATOR's bow sensor grid.
"Maintain firing pattern. Scopes, where are their escorts?"
"Unknown. Sensors lost tracking when they threw up the ECM. We've been unable to regain lock since, Captain. Our CI3 has its hands full trying to burn away the fog around enemy capitals."
Ishawa turned in her harness. "Sire, your orders?"
Taking in the tactical plot, Marius hesitated only for a second. "Order our ASF to engage. We have to punch through their naval screen to stop the main force."
"Understood. Comms, order Alpha to Gamma to attack the enemy. Delta is to engage any vampires they may find."
With a delay, Marius saw their own ASF squadrons surge ahead, accelerating to torturous five gees or more to quickly bridge the slowly closing gap between the two forces. Two more enemy dropship symbols faded from red to black as IMPERATOR's guns continued their deadly sonata. Marian ASF raced ever closer to their own engagement range while the calm before the storm soothed the flagship's bridge crew.
"Vampire! Vampire! Vampire!" Three red globes appeared right in front of their position as Scopes' hoarse voice yelled in alarm. "Massive enemy ASF, bearing down two-two-zero to alpha three!" His head snapped to the captain. "LRMs inbound!"
"Helm, evasive maneuvers!" Ishawa barked. "Weapons free on all secondaries! Continuous fire from all our PD! Where the hell did they come from?"
"Must've run cold once their ECM went up," Scopes responded through gritted teeth, fighting the ship's sudden acceleration. "Vampires are concentrating fire on CLAUDIUS!"
"All ships, close the formation! TAC, slave their fire control into ours, overlap—"
"Radiological alert! They've got nukes!"
"Concentrate fire to—"
"We've got inbound! Three vampires on direct approach!"
"Put all our point defense on them!"
"They're too fast. Breaking through. Impact in—"
"Sire! Get out! Get out!! Sire?!"

"…sire? Sire?!"
Marius' eyes snapped open, trying to shake off the mental haze. What the hell had that been? He'd never had a dream, a day-dream as vivid as that! It was as if he could still feel the strain the high-G space maneuvers had put on his body. The sounds, the images. The stale air of his vacsuit, it's lingering aftertaste in his mouth. He'd been about to die. In a battle in space. A shiver ran down his spine. What was going on?

Instinctively he thought to push himself away from the looming black wall of the cliff face before a voice finally caught his attention.

"Sire, is everything alright!?"
Cobb Sextus had stopped his climb and was worriedly calling out to him from a few meters higher up.

"Yes. Yes," Marius tried to sound calm and nonchalant and still immediately realized he was everything but. "Just lost my thought there for a second." He balled his fists one after the other, hoping the feeling would somehow anchor himself in reality again. "I'm coming up. Still got a long way to go, eh?"
The words sounded hollow, but he let actions follow.
With a strained grunt Marius pulled one leg upwards, parallel to the rock and reached out for a tiny ledge to use as a handle to pull himself a few feet further up the mountain. A gust of wind beat at him, pushing beads of sweat from his face into his eyes. The salty excretion burned, forcing him to blink and to relinquish his other hand's hold. He realized too late that the change in balance pushed him too far away from the rock face. Strained fingers futily tried to hold on the small ledge and found it far too smooth for comfort. Unable to compensate with his legs he lost his grip, and his footing.

Before he knew it he was falling. A toneless curse was cut short as he slammed into the safety provided by the climbing rope tied to his companion and fastened to a number of hooks above. Pain stabbed at him as the sudden drop clashed his jaws shut with force while trying to push all air from his lungs at the same time. His arm and fingers scraped across the rock, bringing with it a burning sensation immediately doused by the a generous helping of adrenalin his body saw fit to release.

Above, Cobb Sextus grunted, more in surprise than in hurt as the rope suddenly and harshly pulled him against the mountain and two feet down. Pebbles and small rocks came loose and joined the brash of debris Marius' accident had caused to tumble down. Momentarily dazed and hurting, Marius slowly turned on his rope.

Down below a massive shadow flung itself into the air, bellowing hoarse cries of disapproval. Leathery yellow wings twenty feet across shielded a pair of arm-like chitinous claws. Two pairs of milky eyes stared from a triangular skull ending in a two feet long hooked beak lined with blackish teeth that looked as if they could bite a grown man in half. Rows of bioluminiscent tendrils sprouted from the creatures back, floating in the wind like reeds.

A voice called his name through the haze of his agony. His mouth tasted of copper. Shaking himself he spat out a fine red mist. Again he heard his name.
"Sir?! Are you hurt, sir?" If Cobb had been injured from his charge's sudden mishap his voice gave no indication of it. But the concern he had shown before was back on full display.

„Mostly in my pride, Cobb," he winced, his tongue not quite following his commands as readily as usual. „I could use a little rest, I guess." Grabbing the rope with his good hand to steady himself he stared into the wide open air beneath him. "As long as that big fellow doesn't chose me for his next lunch I'll be fine." He eyed the creature circling a hundred feet below warily, suddenly all too aware that he hung freely in the air with nothing to defend him but an ice pick.

Tearing his eyes off the beast he met Cobb's look. His bodyguard already had his short-barreled needlegun out, tracing the creature's path, and the handle of the almost machete-like monofilamen-bladed knife he carried on his left leg was within his reach, if need be.

But Cobb just shrugged. "That thing's called an anglerbird. The brief said they are nocturnal hunters, mostly in the mushroom forests below. And they're picky eaters, supposedly."

"Are you going to shoot it?"

Cobb looked past him and followed the beast. "Eh, not unless I have to, sire. Chances are it's just grumpy we disturbed its sleep. Unless we've really hurt it we should be safe. Besides," he warily eyed the nigh vertical cliff face, "you never know if he's not going to call some friends if I try to take it down."

As if to prove Cobb's point the anglerbird flapped its wings a few times, then sailed away from them and further down the mountain on the crossing winds. Maybe two hundred meters down from the, two more yellow pairs of wings joined it.

Marius felt a cold chill. The universe had lots of predators to offer, and to far too many of them humans came just in the right sizes for quick snacks in between.

"Are you certain don't need help, sire? You look mighty pale." Cobb's voice pulled him back.

The Marian leader frowned. Showing weakness was one of the things Marius had been trained from an early age on not to do. But here he was, sixty-two years old, hanging a couple thousand feet above ground on an alien planet, banged up and weary. This wasn't the snake pit of Alphard. Just Marius, the man, and someone charged with making sure he staid whole and healthy. As much as Marius let him. He sighed and held up his injured arm. It looked worse now than he had initially thought, and with the adrenalin waning the pain was making itself felt. "If the rope's good a couple minutes to recuperate don't sound too bad right about now."

Cobb shot a glance to the hooks he had driven into the rock. "That rope's not going to tear anytime soon, sir. Now let me take a look at that arm or yours, sir." With trained movements he lowered himself down to Marius. Before Caesar could say anything, his bodyguard had a small first aid kit out, coating the wounds on the arms with an antiseptic medigel. Far more gently than the older man expected he placed flexible tissue meshes over the larger injuries. "Open your mouth," he commanded, then peered into it when Marius obeyed. "Hold still. This'll burn, then it'll get really cold. You're still bleeding from where you bit on your cheeks." He shook a tiny spray can. "It'll freeze the wound and congeal the blood in sixty seconds."

Cobb hadn't lied. The little cloud of aerosol found every pore in his mouth like a far too hot chili. New pain shot through his head, only to almost immediately subside again and turn into an unnatural cold. Cobb watched him motionlessly go through the stages, then nodded to himself and pulled himself a few feet up the rope again, tying his part to another hook further up. He met Marius' questioning gaze and shrugged. "Can't really look after you when you're blocking half the view. Somehow I doubt the commander of the guard would be too thrilled to hear that you got eaten by a big bird because I didn't get a good shot off."

Despite the situation Marius had to smile. "No, I doubt she'd be too happy about that." He looked at his arm, then up again. "Thanks, Cobb."

The man just nodded and kept watch. Slowly, Marius' cramped muscles and aching limbs lost some of their tension and, trusting in his rope, he let himself hang, held only by his harness. Pulling in a straw tucked into his shoulder straps he began sipping on the custom-made mix of proteins, minerals and soda he carried in a fluid bag in his own little backpack. The first few sips washed down most of the blood from his gums, then the taste of strawberries replaced that of iron and copper.
Hanging freely from the rock shelter, the alien scented breeze slowly cooling the sweat off his face, with nothing but air beneath him and a mushroom forest reaching to the horizon and beyond, he felt strangely at peace. Away from the demands of court, of senate, of politics, he was not Caesar. Just Marius, the man, the father. The father. And what a great job he'd done at that, he thought with bitter sarcasm. A wave of regret washed over him, colder than any gust of wind that could reach him up here.
Damn it, Sean! Why did you have to betray my trust, again? He wished he didn't have to do what he had to do!
'For the good of the Hegemony'. Somehow that left an even more bitter taste in his mouth than his earlier thought.

He wished … well, what did he actually wish for? Something, anything different. Gods, where had it all gone so wrong, pitting father against son?

Above him, Cobb sat more in his rope harness than hanging in it, one hand on the handle of his blade, the other casually stroking the butt of his rifle. Marius found himself looking directly at the man. With a start he realized he had been holding his breath and exhaled with a deep sigh.
"Do you have children, Cobb?" Marius was startled to find he even had posed the question aloud. And even more aghast at how resigned and weak his voice sounded.

"Me?" Sextus' puzzlement at being asked just that could not have been more apparent. He pondered the question for a brief moment, his brows furrowed. "Nah. None that I know of, anyway. Haven't found the right person yet. Besides," he gestured vaguely at everything and nothing at the same time, "I'd have to be pretty damn irresponsible to keep a family waiting at home, doing all this here. Always on the move on short notice, never sure if I'll be coming back home alive or in one piece. Who'd do that to a kid, a partner?" Sensing that wasn't the answer Marius had hoped for he continued. "But my sister has three. Two girls, one boy, all below the age of ten. Bloody little rascals. They keep you on your feet, I can tell you that!" he chuckled and took a hefty bite out of a protein bar he'd unwrapped with just one hand.

Marius leaned back in his harness again and closed his eyes. "I don't know what I've done wrong, Cobb," he confessed. "Was there some fork in the road that I should've rather taken? Did I expect too much too soon? What could I've done differently?" He opened his eyes again and found Cobb Sextus looking at him without any of the superficial ease or joviality the man had worn on his sleeve the whole day so far. "I don't even know why I'm telling you that," he smiled wearily, not really expecting an answer. But Cobb surprised him.

"We're two men hanging on a tiny piece of rope thousands of feet in the air, sudden and guaranteed death just one misstep away. I'd say there's no place in the whole universe you can find a more impartial listener, sir," the square-jawed bodyguard told him quietly.

Marius let the words linger before he looked away, suddenly feeling both ashamed and vulnerable. "I don't know what to do about my son, Cobb," he admitted after a moment's silence. "I mean, I know what I have to do, but he's still my son. Demotion, charges, exile even maybe. The blood suckers in the Senate will be calling for their pound of flesh, too. Damn it, I know he's lied to me for years, stolen, bribed, gambled. But he's still my son!" He shook his head, ignoring the sudden bout of dizziness the harsh motion brought with it. "Where the hell did it all go wrong, Cobb? Bloody hell," his voice rose, "the boy had everything. Since he was little he was given the best tutors. My wife hand-picked caregivers from all over the nation. Nannies with tons of experience and the best résumés. Famed thinkers, the best-suited slaves to guide and teach him. Hell, I even dragged my good old Posca out of retirement," he chuckled mirthlessly. "What the hell could I've done better? Better than that! Different than that? Tell me, Cobb: what was it that my son's upbringing lacked?"

The bodyguard's face was a mask betraying none of his thoughts. When he finally spoke it was calm and deliberate.
"My brother in law owns a bakery. My sisters helps him, selling the goods, running a small café in their narrow house, right in front of the big stone oven. Both have long days, and him even short nights, but they always make time for my three nephews and nieces. They've got no slaves, no nannies, no tutors. Just the two of them, and all the support and love that parents can have for their children. Sitting down with them to go over their homework for school. Taking a little time to play ball. Comforting them when they're hurt." He tilted his head. "You said you did everything to make sure your son was taken care of, sir. But what if what he really needed was you to care, personally? Not someone you paid to do so. Not some loyal slave you trusted. But you. For the things, the knowledge, the morals only a father could know?"

"Bold words for someone without any children of their own," Marius replied bitterly, surprised at how much Cobb's statement stung, at how much he felt the need to justify himself to this pleb.

The bodyguard simply shrugged. "You asked, I answered, sir. All I know is that nothing may be more important than a mother or father simply proving to their kid that they do care. Family's something we take for granted, until it isn't, I s'ppose. Tutors, nannies, advisors – you think you've won all the battles, but that doesn't mean you also won the war. Your son needed you to be present – and seems you weren't."

Like a needle pricking a balloon Cobb's words deflated his rising ire. He wasn't wrong. Admitting as much felt like mentally climbing a mountain, arduous and unforgiving. But he wasn't wrong. With sudden dread he realized that he couldn't really remember a single time when he had played with his son, or feasted on Saturnalia, or simply been a father on Christmas. To both his children, really. "Keeping the senate in line, setting myself up as the perfect representation of a Marian patrician, as the pater patriae, kept me occupied, Cobb. I always told myself that if I did that it'd be the right thing, not just for me, but for Sean as well. Setting a solid foundation so that when the time was right he could take over," he explained himself wearily. Instead his solitary focus on matters of state had seen him alienated from his close family, including his sister. He shook his head. "And look where that has left us now. When we're back on Alphard I'll be naming his son heir," he looked back up at Cobb. "I wish I could do something, anything to close the gap between my son and I, Sextus. Things should've gone differently, it should never have come to this. Maybe I should've listened more to his ideas. Drawn him closer to me, treated him more as an heir than just an appendix to my rule, my values." He shook his head. "The boy's mother died too soon."

"The curse of the O'Reilly women?" Cobb offered. Caesar's wife had died years ago, and his own mother had not lived to see her son reach adulthood. And even his grandmother had left them before her time.

"Certainly feels like a curse sometimes," Marius conceded.

"Sean… Maybe just treating him more like your son would've been enough."
Cobb's voice held no accusation, only a certain finality, but Marius still looked away.

"I don't know. Maybe yes. I'd always hoped that there was a moment to explain to him, not just as a ruler but as his father, to explain to him what I hoped he would do. And tell him that I didn't want things to end the way they are now bound to play out. To do things differently. But I'm afraid it's too late for this," Caesar frowned.

"Yes, sir. It is too late." Cobb sounded strangely sad, but before he could ponder that the bodyguard continued. "You should know that your son also wishes there was another way. And that he's truly sorry. As am I, sir."

Puzzled, Marius looked up at his bodyguard again – and plunged. To shocked to even cry out, all he saw of Cobb Sextus was the razor-sharp blade of his monofilament knife reflecting the midday sunlight, then the man already shrunk to the size of a dot. Howling air rushed by. Flailing ineffectually, he started to tumble. His heart beat so loud it drowned the whistling air. Stretches of cliff face raced by. Panic gripped his mind, preventing him from thinking clearly. He fumbled for his radio – and found it dead.
Think, Marius! He tried to force himself to calm down. With conscious effort he heaved his body around, facing downwards. The wind whipped at his face. Flocks of birds passed him by, protesting his trespassing in alien chants. Focus! Slowly, with mechanical deliberation he reached for a cord tucked under the shoulders of his bagpack. After a moment of fumbling he found the round pin and triumphantly pulled it.
Nothing happened. And despite himself he laughed. Of course, his emergency chute didn't work. Sean had chosen competent killers. Weirdly enough, that was a soothing thought.

He let go of the cord and spread his arms. It'd slow his fall a bit, steady it. He felt his heartbeat normalize and the panicked fog in his mind clear. Oh Sean. His mind quickly jumped back to the conversation with Cobb. How he wished he could've done something different. So many things.

Falling ever faster he broke through the whispy cloud layer. Down below the rocky slopes and giant fungi grew larger and larger. Blood pounded in his ears, the wind cut into his eyes. Tears streamed down his cheeks. If they were from the wind, or from the deep sorrow he felt in his blank mind he could not say. Above all, he felt a strange peace. Warmer, more earthen smelling wind beat at his face now, and the world rushed in. A single last thought flashed through his head before he closed his eyes.
'Different'.
Then blackness encompassed him.

FWCartography

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #2 on: 25 May 2023, 14:41:25 »
Marian Hegemony and near abroad, 3009 C.E

PsihoKekec

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #3 on: 25 May 2023, 14:43:10 »
Starbug was his SB username, here he was known as JA Baker.

Welcome.
Shoot first, laugh later.

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #4 on: 25 May 2023, 14:45:44 »
Starbug was his SB username, here he was known as JA Baker.

Welcome.
Thank you, I've edited it accordingly to represent his forum name.

I've been lurking here for years, so me writing my own fic was probably the kick I needed to actually start posting.

Sir Chaos

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #5 on: 26 May 2023, 01:09:13 »
That is an excellent start. I am very curious to see where this goes. And the writing so far is up there with the best of them.
"Artillery adds dignity to what would otherwise be a vulgar brawl."
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cklammer

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #6 on: 26 May 2023, 02:12:26 »
The writing is top layer of the top drawer ...

A monarchy can be very democratic: once a majority of Court and Nobility that the ruler has to go he gets gone ....

David CGB

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #7 on: 26 May 2023, 03:21:17 »
The writing is top layer of the top drawer ...
Seconded
Federated Suns fan forever, Ghost Bear Fan since 1992, and as a Ghost Bear David Bekker star captain (in an Alt TL Loremaster)

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #8 on: 27 May 2023, 13:21:59 »
Thank you all for the welcome and the encouraging words. Here's the next chapter.

C h a p t e r 1: Rebirth​
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He floated. There was no body. There was no water here. He wasn't even sure if he had eyes, or where 'here' was. But the feeling was that of floating, gently, safely. The darkness was soft as silk, warm as a fur coat in deep winter, caressing, safe. He didn't know how, but he was convinced that all was as it should be. He was content. At peace.

A bell chimed, its sound clean and bright, resting, barely fading in his hearing. There was a flash of light, barely longer than the blink of an eye. Did he have eyes?

"…don't know what happened… suddenly collapsed…"
Muffled voices echoed through the solace, and were gone a just as quick again.
He felt a tug. There was a tiny spot of light in the infinite blackness, immeasurably far away, yet so bright it pierced his sight. The fall. He remembered falling.

Again the bell rang. It was as if its sound drew him closer to the light. But the light felt wrong. Cold. Unnatural.

"…hemorrhagic fever, maybe? …burning him up! Need to cool…"
The voices made no sense. What fever? He was dead. He knew he was dead. Ten thousand feet, free fall, body-meeting-solid-ground dead.

The bell's sound had barely faded when it chimed again, louder now, more insistent. It was as if he was falling through a void, a never-ending abyss, towards the light. A tiny voice whispered that he should have felt a sense of relief, that the darkness was finally giving way to something bright and beautiful. But as he drew closer to the light, he felt a growing sense of unease and fear. This was not how it should be. This was all wrong! It was as if something inside him was warning him, telling him that he should not go towards the light. That he should turn back and retreat into the darkness, where it was warm and comforting.

Once more the bell chimed, and then again, and again, its chime now a rhythm, increasing in speed, its sound no longer a song but a clamor.

"…what are you doing, boy?" His old tutor sat by his bed, looking worried.
The image was gone as fast as it had appeared, but it left a palpable taste of wrongness in him. Posca. He'd been dead for a decade, last he'd heard before… Before what? His mind whirled. He never had told the man farewell, despite their close relation. Once Marius had ascended to the throne, they had barely interacted anymore. He wished he'd told him how much he had meant to him, that there had been a different end to their path. But why had he looked so young?

Unable to hold on the thought he continued to whirl through the darkness, cold fingers pulling at his mind like an oncoming headache. Try as he might, he could not resist the pull of the light.

"…keeps needing a lot of fluid…can't lose the Emperor and his heir in a fortnight!... doing everything we can, nobilis heres…"

Unseen forces pulled at him like a maelstrom, which grew stronger as the light grew brighter and brighter, until it was almost blinding. He felt like he was falling faster and faster, hurtling towards the light at a breakneck speed. He felt trapped, caught in a nightmare from which there was no escape. Unseen tendrils pulled at him as if to tear him apart, every inch of his being screaming in agony. He wanted to scream, but he had no mouth, no voice to express his pain. Around him, the ringing of the bell had turned into a clamoring staccato.

"…been more than a week for my brother, and yet you don't know…credentials won't save you from…" Sylvana? No doubt that had been his sister's voice. But she had sounded angry, louder, full of energy. Why could he hear her? Gods, was she dead, too?

He tried to get away from the light, to retreat back into the comforting darkness that had enveloped him before. Instead of feeling relieved at the prospect of reaching the light, he felt more and more anxious. But no matter how hard he tried, he kept falling, the light growing brighter and brighter with every passing second. Ice gripped his mind. The thunder of the bell made it impossible to think. If he was dead, was he going to hell?

"…stable…wait…"
The light was now so close that he could feel it, not hot, but unnaturally cold. It was like an icy furnace, freezing and burning him from the inside out. He needed to get away! Get away from the light! Instead, the darkness, and with it the warmth and safety receded, flowing away like seawater at low tide. The brightness consumed him.

And then suddenly, he opened his eyes. On a nearby monitor his heart rate beeped incessantly. Fast, almost merging.
Like the bell! Vague memories of a fever came flooding back to him. He knew they were his, but they felt…off. More like something he had been told than something he had experienced: the delirium, the pain, the feeling of being lost in a void.

Marius blinked a few times, trying to adjust to his surroundings. His sight was blurry. As tried to move his hand to rub his eyes, but he found wires running from his chest, arms, and legs, all connected to a battery of instruments surrounding his bed in a crescent. Blinking again, some of his sight began to return.

The room was spacious and luxurious, with high ceilings, ornate columns, and marble floors. The style was classical Roman, but with modern technology subtly integrated throughout. Colorful mosaics covered the floor. The walls were adorned with paintings of landscapes, and the windows looked out onto a lush garden, where birds sang and fountains splashed. Something tugged at the edge of his mind. Yes. He knew this room. Very well, in fact. It had been his chambers as a young man! But why was he here? It couldn't be. He knew, with certainty etched in stone – quite literally – that he had fallen off a mountain, almost ninety lightyears away. He ought to be dead. He had to be dead.

He felt his heart racing, and his raspy breath quickening, his throat feeling drier than the great northern desert. Gods, he was thirsty! Pulling himself up proved easier thought than done. His body felt heavy, as if every muscle had been stretched beyond its limit. He groaned, the pain radiating from his chest, down his arms, and into his legs. He tried to call out for help, but his voice was hoarse and weak, barely audible above the hum of the machines. His muscles ached, and his head throbbed with a pounding headache.

Something stirred at the foot of his bed. A head covered in ruffled auburn hair rocked up, and his sister let out a squeal of surprise, almost stumbling over her own feet as she raced to grab his hand. She looked as if she had cried. She looked so young. He frowned. No, not looked. She was young!

"You're awake! Oh my god, finally!" She squeezed his hand, hard, pressing a button probably equally as hard with her other one. "****** nurses, where are they?!" she yelled, far too loud for Marius' ears, only to drop her voice back to a hushed whisper. "You're back, oh thank you, thank you! I thought I'd lost you, too." Grabbing a piece of cloth to clean the sweat off his forehead, she broke into a relieved laughter. "Gods, big bro, you look bad. And you smell worse," she sniffed and poked his nose. "C'mon, where are those doctors?!"

"Water," Marius managed to croak. "Please."

Sylvana nearly jumped to hand him a plain glass. The water was cool and fresh. His throat was so dry it almost hurt to drink. He emptied it in one go and held his hand out, trembling, for an encore. "How?" he managed to ask, his voice still sounding off. "What's going on?"

Her face darkened, if that was possible for such a young face. Sylvana was three years younger than him, which meant she ought to be in her late fifties. The young woman in front of him was undeniably her – and looked not a day older than twenty.

"The doctors said you caught a fever. Burned through you like wildfire through dry grass. They thought we'd lose you. I thought we'd lose you," she almost whispered with a husky voice. Her eyes glistened and she took a deep breath before Marius could speak. "Father's dead, big bro." She'd always called him that when they were young. "Rode through the park like any other day. His horse must've shied, and he fell, badly. Broke his neck. The doctors say he was dead on the spot. Thirteen days ago now. And you've been out of it for far too long, big bro," she sighed heavily and her shoulders slumped.

Nothing here made sense. His father had been dead for forty years. But her hand holding his own felt oddly comforting, calming. He tried to push himself onto his elbows, and failed, breathing heavily. "Where… am I… Sylvana? What's… the date?"

"Home, Marius," she smiled and stroked his greasy hair, sensing his confusion, her voice soothing despite her obvious concern. "In your room, on Mount Caelius. Don't you recognize it? I'll tell the servants to push your bed closer to windows and pull back the shades so you can look over Nova Roma and the bay, all to the horizon of the Stella Maris. And for the date? It's April 19th. Not quite christmas yet," she chuckled.

"The… year!" he croaked, more forcefully and angry than intended.

This time, his sister did frown. Sylvana reached around and picked up a small mirror from his nightstand, shoving it in his face. "You were out for three weeks, Marius, not three years," she scolded him. "There's no need to snap at me when I'm all cried out and almost mad with anxiety for you! It's the same year as when you got sick. It's 3009!"

He heard her voice, but the words made no sense. Neither did the mirror. A young face, marked by sickness and certainly needing a shave, looked back at him. It was his face. But forty years younger.

A voice cackled with laughter in the back of his mind. Different!


Nova Roma, Alphard
Marian Hegemony
April 21st 3009

If it was some kind of hoax or conspiracy, it was a really good one, he had to give it to them. Walking slowly along the meticulously kept hard gravel path while pulling a drip feed behind him on wobbly wheels he savored the cool morning air on his skin. Small steps, deep breaths, he kept reminding himself. Despite a hefty diet of what supposedly were vitamin supplements and a ravenous hunger the palace kitchen struggled to keep pace with, his body felt incredibly weak. A fever that could've killed an aurochs and three weeks of coma wandering between life and death did that to even the strongest body, doctors, nurses, and his own sister kept reminding him. As if on cue, he felt is knees weaken and he stopped on a sandstone balcony shaded by a nearby grove of olive trees. Not moving was enough to steady him for the moment. By now he was more annoyed than concerned about the full ache permeating his head and body. The feeling carried the aftertaste of a massive hangover. He definitely had lost too much fluid.

The scent of blooming flowers filled his nostrils, and the sound of birdsong filled his ears. The lush greenery and sparkling fountains ordinarily would have been a soothing balm to his senses. But he couldn't shake the feeling that something was off, that this was all too perfect.

He glanced around, searching for any signs of danger or deception. There were guards all around, just enough out of sight to not be intrusive. The same was true for nurses and doctors. Again, none of this was in any way out of the ordinary, but there was nothing ordinary about his situation. You didn't just plunge to your death ninety light years away, forty years in the future, just to wake up and be told 'Oh hey, aren't we glad you're awake again, you were really sick and had us worried. By the way, your father's dead.'

Long decades of dealing with the Senate's subterfuge and intrigues had kept him holding his tongue, holding it all together when first faced with that claim. Whatever was really going on, more sedatives and an extended stay in a psychiatric care unit most certainly would not aid him in finding out. So he had been quiet and pretended to accept things at face value. For now.

He always prided himself to be a logical man. This was the palace as he remembered it from his youth. His sister looked the part, acted the part, felt the part. Servants and employees, as much as he could remember them also seemed to check out. The curse of an almost eidetic memory. But he had been witness to too many doppelgänger plots big and small during his time on the throne to quickly let that dissuade his doubts.

Picking up a piece of gravel he weighed it in his hand, calculating, as his look wandered across the panorama in front of him. Alphard was a warm, dry world, and his ancestors had seen fit to build their capital on the shores of one of the few larger bodies of water on the planet. A wide bay stretched from north to south, with Mount Caelius and the ancestral O'Reilly palace forming the southern anchor sticking out into the green-blue sea like an ochre shark tooth. The bay below was bustling with shipping, from small fisher boats and commuter ferries to large container freighters three hundred or more meters long. Behind them, to the north and east, Nova Roma spread out into the hinterlands and steppes like a kraken.

On first glance it looked like the last time he had seen it from this very view, a few days before he had lifted off to his trip to Herculaneum. But it didn't need a trained eye to quickly spot the differences. In '42 the harbor terminals had been expanded to twice their size. Behind that, the skyline lacked many of the distinct skyscrapers the stability and wealth of his reign had seen rise. The large dome of the national opera was nowhere to be seen, and neither was the bowl of the colosseum, in case opera was too high brow for you. Further north the industrial districts looked off, smaller and less busy. In general, the city simply looked less grand, less expansive than he remembered it. It looked like Nova Roma had looked around the turn of the century.

In one swift motion he threw the stone in his hand as far as he could, tracing its trajectory like a hawk tracked a far-away mouse. It plummeted into the shrubbery on the slopes of the outer courtyard with an inaudible and anticlimactic thud. No vast holographic array had been disturbed. No automated lasers had buzzed and shot it down. No guards came streaming. Just a small stone falling in the dirt. Somehow that felt more unnerving than the alternatives.

What was more likely? That he'd fallen and been saved in the last moment by some kind of hidden or pre-placed airbag system, carried away to some secure location and now was subject to a perfect replica of his palace turned prison, populated by doubles? Meanwhile someone had seen fit to surgically alter him to look like his younger self, and kept him drugged up to avoid him finding out that, yes, his body still was and felt like that of a sixty-two years old. All of that individually was probably somewhat in the realm of the technically feasible – but to what end?

At what point did the deception become too grand, to complex? If it was a deception, this was something the Capellans might one day have tried on Hanse Davion. But Hanse Davion he was not. Marius had been saddled with his portion of vanity, but he knew his place in the grand scheme of things. And even with the Maskirovka pulling the strings…cold analytics told him that there were just too many fault lines in this plan. One misstep, on slip of the tongue, and for what? To confuse a minor periphery leader? It made no sense.

He looked up to the blue sky where Alphard's sun was rising towards its daily zenith.
"Well, if this is some kind of purgatory I sure could've gotten it worse," he chuckled sardonically.

A warm breeze blew in from the slopes below, and Marius took that as a cue to return to his chambers. As if to push him on, his stomach raised a complaint in form of a loud rumble. Luckily he found a large sandwich with slices of turkey, roastbeef, cheese, pickles and mayonnaise and a pitcher of orange juice waiting for him. The way he devoured it in record time put another dent into his prison deception scheme; for it was the ravenous appetite of a young man.

But he needed something else to ground him. Something more personal. Something…darker.
He stepped out of his chambers, startling the guard standing next to them.
"Sir, I-"
"Take me to my father," Marius cut him off. "I want to see him."
"But sir—"
"Now." The word wasn't spoken loudly, but it carried enough force with it to shut the man up right then and there. Marius glanced at his drip and, finding it empty, decided to leave it behind. His doctors had laid a port on his arm so luckily that didn't create a mess. "Lead the way."
The palace on Mount Caelius had been built atop and into the mountain, a sprawling complex of buildings ranging from living quarters, kitchens, offices, command and communications centers, swimming pools, and warehouses. The guard, a middle-aged man in purple livery and a bullet-proof vest lead him through the labyrinthine bowels of the complex, down flights of stairs and elevators, criss-crossing corridors. More than once Marius had to stop to steady himself. When they finally arrived at the mausoleum it was almost noon. While it was April on the calendar it was early autumn for Alphard, and the planet's midday sun brought with it an oppressive heat.

Looking out from the western slope of the mountain the round, domed building surrounded by a colonnade covered the entrance to the family crypt. An honor guard kept watch, coming to crisp attention with the old Roman salute as he left his guide behind and entered the chambers. It was cold inside, too cold after the brief flash of midday heat, and it got colder with every step he further entered the outer crypts.

His father awaited him.
Gaius Mercer O'Reilly was laid out on a long marble table, surrounded by wreaths and flower bouquets from all planets of the Hegemony, creating a wall of colors around his corpse. Paying the gifts no heed Marius stepped closer, his breath drawing small clouds in the cold of the chamber.

His father laid there just as he remembered him. The morticians had done a good job, repairing the damage to his head, embalming him, propping him up in ceremonial robes and armor. Somehow, he appeared larger in death, more regal. His thick brows and pronounced nose gave him something of an owlish look, especially as he had been so carefully groomed, but he looked at peace. He looked like his father.
Gently, he reached out to touch his face, trying to recall the memory of this very moment when he had done it the first time. Cold fingers touched cold, waxen skin, and he shivered. Was there something? He didn't know.
"What now, father?" he asked the silent figure quietly, sighing. "Do you really want me to do it all again? Forty years of navigating those snakes in the Senate. Having a plain wife. Siring a patricidal son. Being a 'good Marian'?" He looked down on his father's body, anger suddenly swelling in him. "I've played that role all my life, and now I'm supposed to do it all over again?"
But what choice did he have?
For now, all he could do was play the role he had always played. And use it to watch for clues very closely. He'd get to the bottom of this – whatever 'this' was.

FWCartography

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #9 on: 27 May 2023, 13:22:38 »
I wasn't aware of the size limitations for chapters. Here's part two of chapter 2.


Nova Roma, Alphard
Marian Hegemony
April 25th 3009

It didn't rain. It poured. The past four days had rushed by in a blur, filled with an increasing load of administrative tasks and a schedule filling with what seemed every minute, getting himself ready for his father's state funeral. And just as he remembered it: torrential rain had started to fall the very morning of the ceremony despite all forecasts to the contrary. As expected, this chipped another part off the idea of this being some kind of elaborate ruse. There had been little time just to himself, and even his sister who had been so concerned all the time had been burdened with her part of preparing for the ceremony – and with her grief. Marius felt bad for her, as he himself only felt an echo of the grief he had felt when he had mourned his father the first time. He had buried his father forty years ago. Time did heal not all wounds, but many. This was just a repeat performance. But it did have its uses as a means to prove – or disprove – his theory.

Under the massive marble pillars of the Temple of Jupiter, before the wings of the brass-and-copper hammered doors, Gaius Mercer O'Reilly lay in repose. Alphard's high society and political movers and shakers had turned out in droves in their best mourning dresses and now stood in the pouring rain, most drenched from head to toe already as their personal slaves hurried to and fro to organize umbrellas. The first time around he had felt with them. Knowing how much many of them had gotten on his nerves after, he watched the spectacle with well-hidden but all the more viciously felt glee.

Old senator Chato climbed up the broad stairs to pay his respects. Marius counted down in his head. Three…two…one, and Chato slipped on the wet ground, tumbling down two steps before his personal slaves caught him.

All was as it had been. Clad in an ornate suit of black and grey with a purple cape draped over his shoulders, he stood alone besides his father's body, resting on a simple wooden cane, awaiting the mourners as was proper as the new head of the family.

But was it good the way it was? a voice whispered in his head.
He risked a glance over his shoulders. Sylvana stood between the pillars, her dress black and dark green, surrounded by their closest relatives. The past days had been too hectic for all of them, despite his foreknowledge. But the stress did nothing to sooth the feeling of regret on his part.

As he had thrown himself into the position and duties of Emperor and what he believed to be the correct actions her and him had slowly drifted apart. It'd been the same way with most of his family, he suddenly and quite painfully realized. Uncles, aunts, cousins; people who he had enjoyed being around, had slowly faded into the background as he strove more and more to become the pater patriae, the Father of the Fatherland and the primus inter pares rather than undisputed leader. All in his drive to be the proper, the better Marian. And he'd forgotten his family over this. That he and Sean had ended the way they had, how much of that was owed to this?

The desire to look for similarities and clues evaporated on a bout of anger and regret. Ignoring the looks of bystanders and the murmur of the passing mourners he turned around and walked over to his younger sister. She looked no less surprised, but he just held out his left hand.
"I don't care what the people say, Sylvie. Mom's gone. And now dad's gone, too. It's just the two of us now. So, let's do this together, little sis."
Uncertain, she almost stumbled with him back to their father. Gently, he put his arm around her.
"You're my sister. I'll always be there for you, no matter what," he whispered with a soft reassuring smile. "I promise."
There was a warmth and sincerity in his voice that she had not heard in a long time. Tears were streaming down her face now, smearing her makeup. Part of him screamed that this wasn't proper, but the far louder voice in his mind made it crystal clear that there was no shame in this. Indeed, being there, just being a brother felt good, and that feeling surprised him maybe the most. He hadn't felt it in a long time.

The feeling staid with him during the whole rite of mourning, and Sylvana did not leave his side even when the procession carrying his father's body had returned to the palace's mausoleum after a slow drive through Nova Roma's main boulevards where plebs and patricians of lesser status had their chance to catch a glimpse of them and pay their respects. Only when he had to return to the city did the feeling fade.

It was customary to address the Senate after the prior emperor had been laid to rest. It had already been a long and tiring day when he took the dais, resting more on his walking cane than he was comfortable with. Marius's speech was about remembrance, honor, duty, family; all 'traditional' Marian values, as far as an eighty years old nation had anything like that, and all of them carrying rather different weights for the assorted dignitaries in the crescent marble chambers, given by what he had learned of them in his decades as emperor. The speech wasn't long, and he thought he held it well. Better, indeed, than the first time around. The words had come back to him naturally when he had picked up the manuscript again, and he gave them more emotion than had been the case when he first ascended the throne. Still, the reception was subtly different than he remembered it. Not sure whether it was due to the cane, his pale complexion and obvious fatigue, or because he had chosen to break protocol, but there was a restless undercurrent running through the chamber.

Once he had finished, the speaker of the Senate – old Chato, but with fresh pants – moved up the steps to the dais, one after another, and presented Marius with a thin crown of laurels made from silver.
"The Emperor is dead!" he proclaimed with a booming voice belying his old frail body. "Long live the Emperor!"
Marius knelt down with some effort and soon felt the cold silver pressing against his head. Applause rose in acclamation of his ascendance, though not as thunderous as he remembered it. All of them had had their ideas of who he was. Healthy, youthful, trained in his father's image. And now, with a small gesture, had he added that much uncertainty to the mix?

But then, how much could he trust his memories? Common sense dictated that this was real, even if it couldn't be. If it had been just the palace, maybe that would have been doable, if insanely complicated and expensive. But the city, the Senate, the Temple of Jupiter, let alone the people? Chato, his Chato, had died in 3015. Marius remembered it well; he had held his eulogy. But the man who crowned him was his spitting image, not only in looks but voice and mannerisms. As were many in the crowd of assembled senators, as best as he could tell. No, it made no sense, even though the consequence of that line of thought was to accept an even greater madness. A smile crept on his face. If it all was a fake, what did it matter if they cheered a little less? And if it wasn't? Well, in his mind he could draw in four decades of experience in how to deal with them.

Slowly rising with a white-knuckled grip on his walking cane he came to face the senators, finishing the ritual with as much vigor as his tired body could muster.
"Long live the Senate! Long live the Marian Hegemony!"
This time the cheers were genuine.

Later…

Night had already fallen when he finally slumped down on his bed in his chambers. Half undressed, famished and feeling as tired as never before in his life he devoured a bowl of ramen noodles, vegetables and marinated shrimps with a side dish of garlic bread, not caring for the crumbs that landed between his sheets. His eyes felt heavy, almost as leaden as his limbs, and the dull ache was back, even though not as bad as the prior days.

There was a soft knock on his door.
"Not now," Marius groaned. "I'm eating, and I'm tired. Go away!"

Wood scraped on stone as the red-painted door swung open. Marius tensed, getting ready to throw insults, objects, or call for the guard, but stopped in his track.
"Posca!" involuntarily his heart skipped a beat.

A middle-aged man with whispy grey-white hair and sideburns, wearing a simple light brown slave's tunic, his face tanned and full of laughter lines running all the way up to his bushy eye brows and high forehead slipped through the crack that had opened and pushed the door shut behind him. A polished steel bracelet dangled around his arm and marked him as a slave, the laser-etched marking on it showed his owner. He bowed slightly.
"My sincerest apologies for disturbing you, dominus, but I wanted to see how you are doing," Posca's voice carried his clipped Stewart-born accent. "I was not allowed to visit when you fell sick, and when you finally woke up every soul in the palace seemed to wanted a piece of your time."

"More like every soul in the Hegemony, but my sister and her army of nurses somehow managed to keep them at bay," Marius smiled warmly. "Had I known I would've made sure you could visit."
With the first surprise of the visit waning, Marius felt a wave of emotions rushing over him. Posca. Slave. Tutor. Father-figure. Friend?
A sudden gust of weariness and mistrust smothered the comforting warmth, and he eyed the slave wearily. He intended to put him to the test.
"Posca, do you remember, back when I was ten years old and hid in the outer gardens the whole day, driving my parents insane with worry?"

The older man frowned, pushing his bushy grey eyebrows against each other.
"Which part of that do you mean, dominus? The one we agreed to tell the world? Or the truth?"

"And what would that be?" Marius asked quietly, his hands folded in his lap.

"That you slipped through the kitchen gate, spent the day wandering through the Perfumed Alleys and the grand bazaar, and were back home in time for dinner as I found you outside the Gardeners' Gate. We both swore to keep this our secret, for your sake, dominus and mine. Your father would've seen me crucified had he ever found out, or worse, had something happened to you." He shook himself. "Anyway, you were eleven, not ten, if my senses haven't completely abandoned me. Why are you bringing these old stories up?" he asked, more curious than irritated.

"It's a secret only the two of us shared, Posca." Strange as it was, this childhood memory did more to settle his mind than all the prior events of the day. Even if they had somehow surgically altered himself, put him in some kind of grand play for whatever screwed up reason: in 3048 C.E. Posca had been dead for more than fifteen years. Nobody could have gotten to this intimate detail they shared. He had heard an old saying once: If you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth. Which left only one conclusion.
This was really 3009 C.E. He was in the body of a twenty-three year old. And the man standing in front of him truly was his old mentor.

Acceptance sent shivers down his spine and gave him goosebumps all over his body. Marius wished he could tell him, hug him. His head felt light.
Instead, he tried to remain outwardly calm. "I've had a lot on in my mind as of late, Posca. My father's sudden death. My own brush with death, and feeling that kind of mortality? It's left my anxious, given me much to ponder." Almost as an afterthought he added: "But thank you for your concern, old friend."

"That much I do owe to the boy that once sat on my lap and who now will sit the throne," Posca shrugged awkwardly. "Besides, what a waste of my talents it would've been had you died to some common fever before receiving the silver laurel wreath."
That was Posca.

"A tragedy, truly. And what would've old Chato done, robbed of this once in a lifetime chance."

"You are doing the man a disservice, dominus. Chato surely is old enough to have been present during your father's coronation, and his father's before him."

"Ah, possibly," Marius chuckled, stifling a yawn. "But it's been a hard day."

Posca's face darkened.
"More hard and tiresome days will come, dominus. I am afraid rulership always finds a way to take its toll."

Oh, if only you knew, Marius thought.
"Wish if it were different. Think I can still pick a different career path?"

"I am afraid if you have it on your mind to run away with your 'mech to live a mercenary life of adventure and debauchery all of the Hegemony would have to stage an intervention, dominus."

"Who said I wouldn't drag you into it? Mad Marius in his Marauder, traveling the Periphery to fight evil with the help of his terminally sarcastic man-servant. I like the ring of that!" he laughed before his voice took on a more somber tone. "Don't believe I haven't thought of that over the years more than just once, Posca."

"You could never earn enough money to compensate me for keeping you out of trouble, dominus."

"Today more than ever I think maybe we should give it a try," he smiled. "Thank you, Posca. For your concern, and for looking after me. I know you didn't have to, not after your dismissal."

Tilting his white head in acknowledgment, Posca took a step back. "It is good to see you up and about again. Thank you for having a few minutes with this old man. You must be tired, and the coming days surely will be taxing, so I will leave you be, dominus."

Gaius O'Reilly had dismissed his own tutor once he had been crowned with the silver laurels, and supposedly the founder of the Hegemony had done the same. Custom therefore demanded Marius followed suit, nothing to the contrary had been stated, and Posca had settled into this expectation.
The snarky League-born slave had never failed him, had always counseled him honestly – brutally so, in private. When everybody tried to be his friend for their own benefit the middle-aged man had been the closest to a true confidante. Was following tradition, following the expectations of others for the sake of optics really the right choice then?

What if he did things different, a voice in his head hummed, and the feeling of falling threatened to overwhelm him, drawing him down as he almost physically felt the pull on his body. Cold sweat beaded on his forehead, white knuckles grabbed the bowl so hard he feared the pottery would break into a thousand pieces. Posca was almost out the door when he called after him.

"Posca, wait!" his voice croaked, his mind racing.

With a start the man stopped in his tracks and turned around.
"Yes, dominus?"

"Can I ask you something? Not as dominus, or emperor, but as the man you've tutored and raised since he was a boy? And I need you to be truthful about it to me."

Wordlessly Posca pushed the door shut and stepped back into the room. "Go on, ask."

"What do you think of my father?" Marius leaned forward.

Posca gave him a look he could not quite decipher, stroking his sideburns before he hesitantly began to speak. "That… is a strange question to ask of the man who was abducted and abused by the pirates your father sponsored, made a slave on the markets your father allows, and then bought like a tool by him." His voice was detached, as if he spoke about the weather rather than something that had shaped his fate. "But I suppose that is not what you are asking about. I know you loved your father, dominus, and it is bad form to speak ill of the dead, especially those so very recently buried. But you want the truth, and truthful I shall be," he sighed.

Marius nodded, gulping down the unease he felt about his tutor's first sentences, motioning him to take a seat on the stool next to the bed.

"Truth is, the Hegemony would have run just as well for the past forty years had they put a broom with a hat on your father's throne." Seeing Marius' raised eyebrows and uncomfortable look Posca simply shrugged. "That is the truth, dominus," he emphasized his words. "I believe I taught you your history well enough. Name one great initiative your father has spearheaded? A set of laws that brought social growth or change? Economic programs? Infrastructure projects? Military campaigns? No?" he leaned back on the stool, studying Marius' face. "Your father was very keen to keep the peace in the Senate. He has played up the example of your grandfather's mannerisms and solidified social norms and traditions. Helped to further establish Marian society as we know it now, with the patricians here, the plebs there, and the slaves down there. All the things your grandfather started, he took on and reinforced them, kept them running," Posca sighed. "People out there liked him. Not because he was a good ruler, or because he did great things, no." He looked into Marius' eyes. "They liked your father because he did nothing. Because he has never stepped on the toes of those with influence. Because by doing nothing he has never had to drag people out of their comfort zones. People do not like change, dominus. Oh, sure, by not doing anything he also ended up not doing anything wrong," he waved one hand dismissively. "And because he has kept himself out of the hair of the senators and patricians, letting them do as they please for the most time, he has ended up being lauded as a good and proper Marian: doing the right moves at the right time, always in line with what your grandfather did, but without any of Johann O'Reilly's vigor or drive to create something."

Posca's words were hard to swallow. But with all the foreknowledge and experience he himself had he had to admit that they were objectively true. "Not exactly what a son wants to hear about the man he just had to burry, Posca," he quietly told the slave.

"You asked, dominus." Posca's voice was level, but he had crossed his arms and eyed Marius carefully.

His mind raced, trying not only to process Posca's words but the reality of his situation. He had been given a chance to correct whatever mistakes he might have made! Not only that, but he was also free to try out all the things his old self never would have done because he had always tried to please all sides. Especially the senate. The aloof father of the fatherland, the mediator. Not the mover and shaker.
But now? Gods, he had a near eidetic memory of events of the next four decades! That gave him, and him alone a forty-year head start on the rest of the known universe as a whole and events in the Hegemony in particular! Suddenly he saw things very clearly, calmly smoothing the storm that wrecked his mind.
With new-found purpose he abruptly rose from his bed.
"That I did. But if my father achieved nothing, Posca, then why should I do things just the way he did!?" he growled before turning to Posca with a wolfish grin. "No. I'm turning your retirement into a promotion, old friend. I think it's time to do things my way. And you're going to help me do it. We're going to do things differently."


I promise I won't ride this dead 'different' horse any further, 'kay?

EAGLE 7

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #10 on: 27 May 2023, 20:40:07 »
  Congrats this is the best Marian Hegemony thread, not real fans so most of this is new to me. Looking forward to more as you have peaked my interest.
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cklammer

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #11 on: 28 May 2023, 02:33:57 »
The plot is extremely well thought out ... so far.

Reliving his original life won't work anymore even at this as the butterflies have been flapping their wings already.... and the same decisions made at the same time may not be  (or may be more ... isn't chaos theory delightful  ;D) appropriate to the changed situation at the respective points-in-times.
« Last Edit: 28 May 2023, 04:41:03 by cklammer »

PsihoKekec

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #12 on: 28 May 2023, 02:43:29 »
Now while I couldn't give adamn about a bunch of slavers cosplaying as Romany, but good writing tends to pull me in. What do they say, youth is wasted on the young? Being young with lifetime worth is a great opportunity, Sean is determined to fo things differently, but we have all been there, after initial struggle to change things there is always the temptation to retreat into a comfortable routine.

  Congrats this is the best Marian Hegemony thread,

That doesn't say much  ;D
Shoot first, laugh later.

worktroll

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #13 on: 28 May 2023, 03:47:39 »
TAGged!
* No, FASA wasn't big on errata - ColBosch
* The Housebook series is from the 80's and is the foundation of Btech, the 80's heart wrapped in heavy metal that beats to this day - Sigma
* To sum it up: FASAnomics: By Cthulhu, for Cthulhu - Moonsword
* Because Battletech is a conspiracy by Habsburg & Bourbon pretenders - MadCapellan
* The Hellbringer is cool, either way. It's not cool because it's bad, it's cool because it's bad with balls - Nightsky
* It was a glorious time for people who felt that we didn't have enough Marauder variants - HABeas2, re "Empires Aflame"

FWCartography

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #14 on: 28 May 2023, 13:37:06 »
  Congrats this is the best Marian Hegemony thread, not real fans so most of this is new to me. Looking forward to more as you have peaked my interest.
Thank you. I hope I can deliver. :D
The plot is extremely well thought out ... so far.

Reliving his original life won't work anymore even at this as the butterflies have been flapping their wings already.... and the same decisions made at the same time may not be  (or may be more ... isn't chaos theory delightful  ;D) appropriate to the changed situation at the respective points-in-times.
He's going to go off script pretty soon. I mean if he didn't where'd be the fun in this fic?
Now while I couldn't give adamn about a bunch of slavers cosplaying as Romany, but good writing tends to pull me in. What do they say, youth is wasted on the young? Being young with lifetime worth is a great opportunity, Sean is determined to fo things differently, but we have all been there, after initial struggle to change things there is always the temptation to retreat into a comfortable routine.

That doesn't say much  ;D
I guess the big issue is trying to correctly portray the Marians as a bag of d*cks while while keeping them interesting and likeable enough as a protagonist faction, with the added difficulty of not everything going right for them just because of Marius' general foreknowledge of events for the next forty years. Nothing gets boring so soon as a fic where everything just falls into place for the main character(s).
TAGged!
Thanks, appreciated.

Sir Chaos

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #15 on: 28 May 2023, 13:48:11 »
Thank you. I hope I can deliver. :DHe's going to go off script pretty soon. I mean if he didn't where'd be the fun in this fic?

I mean, technically he has already gone off script in how he treated his sister during the funeral (his talk with his old tutor, too, but that was not a public event). In a society as hidebound and ritualized as the Romans whom the Marians are emulating, that has got to have an effect.

Quote
I guess the big issue is trying to correctly portray the Marians as a bag of d*cks while while keeping them interesting and likeable enough as a protagonist faction, with the added difficulty of not everything going right for them just because of Marius' general foreknowledge of events for the next forty years. Nothing gets boring so soon as a fic where everything just falls into place for the main character(s).

That is indeed a challenge; but at the same time, those are also usually the most interesting stories.
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The Wobbly Guy

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #16 on: 28 May 2023, 20:34:20 »
The Marians are interesting because they offer a refreshing look at the 'wolves become guard dogs' evolution, as a bandit state slowly inches towards legitimacy.

You could have well-bred patrician nobles whose grandfathers were bloodthirsty pirates, who have that self-awareness that only a thin line separates barbarity and civilisation, with none of the self-righteous airs carried by most of the Inner Sphere scions, or even the clans.

cklammer

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #17 on: 29 May 2023, 05:28:42 »
Slave labour in R/L was always very much economically inefficient compared to other labour forms.

To discuss reasons for that would most likely derail.

Where I am going with that is that an economic system incorporating slave labour - among other forms of labour - only make economic sense when
 (a) said economy does not (or is unable to) exceed a certain technological level and/or
 (b) shortage of (skilled) man-power

 Re (a) what I am trying to say ist that feeding and housing and caring for a few hundred slaves for manual agricultural work does not make any economic sense at all on farming has access to tractors, harvesters, other agricultural machinery and pesticides and such. And if you do not care for manual labour your slaves you end up being grossly inefficient. And the marians have have that technological level for mechanized agriculture at least at r/l early 20th century level.

 Re (b) continuing from (a) infers that the Marians do not need large bunches of unskilled manual labour slaves but skilled workers with at least journeyman-level qualifications (master technicians, medical care professionals and such) up to university-level education (engineers, doctors, teachers). Posca must be one the latter as otherwise he would not have been allowed being close to Caesar's family.

If one has skilled slave labour then keeping them working efficiently in order to provide good results requires leverage and motivation: leverage as allowing abducted family groups to stay together and manumission. Or do you want to put yourself under thescalpel of a surgeon still smarting from the last whipping delivered by you personally having nothing to lose because there is no hope for him ....

Closing up: if Caesar is really, really smart then he will strive to end slavery as a system (and the raids which sustain said system) once he has established himself in power (minimum of five years) as economically it does not make any other sense medium-to-long term. Politically it is a whole different Pandora's box to open, though, as the oligarchs in the system will resist this.

The Wobbly Guy

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #18 on: 29 May 2023, 07:37:12 »
Actually, a lot of blue and even white collar work can be entrusted to slaves. Childcare services, lower level medical personnel in public healthcare, basic level techs, etc. They would be slaves working for very low wages for patricians who own the companies, literally the wage-slaves for which there is no near economic equivalent IRL (but certain countries come close coughChinacough). These slaves can't quit their jobs, or seek alternative employment, and are at the mercy of their masters. If they don't perform at a minimum level, it's the whip for them.

The nobles will rely on citizens in a parallel and private system, of course. They aren't stupid. If they're smarter, they'll also toss in an incentive system for slaves not to revolt, and to work harder for an extra scrap or two.

Sir Chaos

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #19 on: 29 May 2023, 11:16:53 »
Actually, a lot of blue and even white collar work can be entrusted to slaves. Childcare services, lower level medical personnel in public healthcare, basic level techs, etc. They would be slaves working for very low wages for patricians who own the companies, literally the wage-slaves for which there is no near economic equivalent IRL (but certain countries come close coughChinacough). These slaves can't quit their jobs, or seek alternative employment, and are at the mercy of their masters. If they don't perform at a minimum level, it's the whip for them.

The nobles will rely on citizens in a parallel and private system, of course. They aren't stupid. If they're smarter, they'll also toss in an incentive system for slaves not to revolt, and to work harder for an extra scrap or two.

All that is pretty much what the historical Romans did. Add tutors, scribes and secretaries to the list of jobs, too.
"Artillery adds dignity to what would otherwise be a vulgar brawl."
-Frederick the Great

"Ultima Ratio Regis" ("The Last Resort of the King")
- Inscription on cannon barrel, 18th century

FWCartography

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #20 on: 30 May 2023, 05:47:15 »
There are political forces in the Hegemony that cover more or less every position on the spectrum with regards to slavery, with the pro-slavery faction being the undeniably largest one.

Marius will approach the topic largely from the point of how he can leverage the issue to diminish patrician power.

cklammer

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #21 on: 30 May 2023, 12:00:12 »
They aren't stupid. If they're smarter, they'll also toss in an incentive system for slaves not to revolt, and to work harder for an extra scrap or two.

The incentive would be manumission: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manumission

FWCartography

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #22 on: 30 May 2023, 13:32:01 »
The incentive would be manumission: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manumission
That already exists canonically in the Hegemony, IIRC.

FWCartography

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #23 on: 31 May 2023, 13:56:01 »
C h a p t e r 2: Charting a New Course
[/b][/size]


Alphard
Marian Hegemony
April 26th 3009

Posca held on to his seat as the large VTOL lurched up and down, fighting the queasy feeling in his stomach. He had never been much of a fan of flying, and even though the aircraft was stupendously luxurious by most standards it largely failed at counteracting the treacherous wind currents and air pockets over the Stella Maris.

Contrary to that, if 'unfazed' had a face, it would have been that of Emperor Marius. The younger man sat across him in a soft-cushioned bright leather seat, devouring the second of two large toasted sandwiches with pastrami, turkey, avocado, mango chutney, tomatoes and lots of cheese with one hand while the other deftly balanced a large cup of steaming coffee without a care in the world.

From a nearby window Posca caught a glimpse of two smaller VTOL aircrafts, autocannons and missile pods glistening in the morning sun, flying as their escort.

"You sure you don't want anything to eat? It's going to be a long day!" Marius called out, but Posca shook his head and held up his hands, just in time for the aircraft to shudder softly once more.

"I am sure the flight crew would petition to see me whipped if I defiled all that leather and hardwood, dominus."

Marius shrugged. "Get some chamomile tea then, for your belly. Or something stronger, for your anxiety. Casually having a drink on the job is one of the perks of your new position," he smirked.

Despite not feeling it Posca humored the younger man with a smile. "I would rather not on an empty stomach. Not right now. Where are we going again, dominus?"

"Gaul," the young emperor replied briefly, finishing the last bite of his meal. "I'm visiting family, and I need you along for the ride. My great-uncle and aunt, to be specific."

Posca furrowed his brows, trying to quickly run a tally of the O'Reilly family in his mind. "Corvinus O'Reilly?"

"That's the one," Marius took a sip of his coffee. "Him and auntie Neeva. Haven't seen them in a while, and they weren't present at father's burial."

"I seem to remember your late father and his cousin did not part ways on the best terms, dominus. What has caused this sudden urge to reconnect with distant family?"

"Isn't visiting family a good reason in and by itself?" Marius smiled.

"Just so. But I reckon you would not have had me dragged to the helipad at dawn if craving your aunt's company was all there was to it," Posca shot back sardonically. "Why am I here anyway?"

"You're here because as my personal slave it would raise eyebrows if you were not," Marius flatly stated. "But the bigger issue is, uncle Corv's falling out with my father stemmed from his ideas and proposals for how to expand and structure our military. Do more with less. Or, at least, with the same. Father was against it. Maybe he was too set in his ways. Either way, they had a falling out, and Corvinus left the capital in disgrace. However," he put the now empty cup down, "I reckon if I want to do things in another way than I had originally intended, one way to get a start is to do it with the help of different people."

"That is going to ruffle some feathers," Posca warned. "There certainly are some back in Nova Roma who were all but sure that they would move up into your inner circle."

Marius snorted. "Well, they better get used to it." Because that was just the start, he added in his mind. But he would have to throw them a bone every once in a while. The Senate and its patricians sadly were not impotent, and as much as forty years of accumulated disdain grated on his patience he knew he would have to play ball with them. For a time, at least.

Outside, the sound of the VTOL's engines suddenly changed to a lower whine, and Posca could feel the craft slowing.
"Approaching LZ, sir," the pilot announced via the cabin's intercom.

Drawing his attention to a nearby window, Posca saw the large VTOL sink through a layer of wispy clouds. Down below, a rolling steppe of thigh-high grass broken by rocky arroyos and copper-colored tower-like buttes spread from east to west. As they kept losing altitude the image became clearer, with a set of low grey concrete bunkers and white prefab buildings sitting clustered around a communications array between two low hills.
"Where are we, dominus?"

"The Merovian Plains, Posca. That down there should be a training ground for Alphard Trading Company's corporate security. Corvinus is on contract as a security consultant," Marius had to shout as the engines roared, the pilot holding the craft in place a few hundred feet above the ground, waiting for permission to land from ground control.

Posca could see it now.
A few hundred meters to their north a force of six militarized industrial mechs painted yellow ran towards the compound in a wedge formation, lasers firing and tracer rounds crossing the distance. A lance of apparently lighter mechs in green strode out to meet them, trading fire. The battle seemed a foregone conclusion, until about halfway towards the base two light green tanks emerged from behind a hill to the north, attacking the yellow force's left flank, easing the pressure on the defenders. Two yellow mechs moved to face them, in turn exposing their own flanks to harrying shots from the green team. As if on cue, two APCs burst from the cover of the compound at full speed, zigzagging their way across the rock-strewn plains towards the yellow's right flank, pelting them with machinegun fire. As they came closer they launched smoke grenades to obfuscate their maneuvers, hiding what the dust clouds had no already hidden. Fascinated, Posca watched as once again two of the attacking mechs broke off to face this new threat, only to be dumbstruck as the APCs raced out of cover again, now in the back of the yellow force. Out of the white smoke and brown dust infantry erupted like a swarm of ants, scrambling to cover between some of the bigger rocks. Muzzle flashes, small laser beams, and the smoke trails of shoulder-launched missiles added to the turmoil.
The center of the yellow formation suddenly found itself under the concentrated fire of the four green mechs. Then the view changed as the VTOL turned, preparing to land.

Marius had also followed the mock battle below with an equal amount of fascination, though his motivation had been a different one. Hanse Davion and the planners of the AFFS had championed the revival of combined arms tactics in the 31st century on a broad scale. When the 4th Succession War had erupted and lead to the near destruction of the Capellan Confederation everybody had scrambled to copy the model, with varying degrees of vigor and success. But that did not mean the idea had been dead and forgotten before the First Prince embraced it.

Corvinus 'Corv' O'Reilly had spent a lot of time outside the confines of the Hegemony as a mercenary out in the Periphery, and when he returned, foreign wife in tow, his ideas for the Marian armed forces had mirrored those of traditional combined arms thinkers. Over the years Marius had gained the theoretical knowledge as well; if anything, he was a relentless student of events. The second half of his reign had seen him start the Collegium Bellorum Imperium, the Imperial War College. But at the end of the day, he was the theorist. Corvinus O'Reilly, however? He had the practical chops, and the knack for organization.

The four engine VTOL touched the ground, and without waiting for the cabin crew Marius opened the hatch and stepped outside. Posca fumbled to open his seat belt and hurried after him, cursing the youth's élan. A wave of hot, dry air welcomed him as he left the aircraft.

Outside, a man about Posca's age strode to meet them, flanked by two officers. He was a short, stocky fellow with a beer belly stretching his light blue corporate security uniform, held in place by a military leather belt. White-blonde burnsides framed a hard face topped by a fringe of blonde hair, and mirrored aviator's sunglasses hid his eyes from both the glaring sunlight and the whirled-up dust.

"Uncle Corvinus," Marius greeted the man, extending his hand for a handshake rather than the more formal Marian salute. "It's been a while. You've met Posca?"

"You ruined the last stage of the exercise!" Corvinus yelled over the sound of the idling engines but took the extended hand anyway, giving it a solid shake. To Posca's - and Marius' – surprise the patrician turned to him and offered him his hand as well. With a start the older slave took it, shaking the bear-paw like hand firmly. "Yeah, it's been a while. Too long, to be honest. Shall we go inside?" he motioned towards the nearby bunker. "It's boiling out here in the sun."

"If it's not too much of a hassle I'd rather do this in private," Marius pointed back at the VTOL and its running engines. "Might take a while, so I'm offering you a ride home where we can talk."

The older O'Reilly tilted his head, his sideburns touching the epaulets of his uniform. "Well, who am I to deny such a request from the newly- crowned emperor? I want a full report on today's raining exercise on my desk tomorrow morning," he told one of his escorts. "Tell the men to call it a day for today. Training will continue on schedule in twenty-four hours. Lead the way," he nodded towards Marius.

The three men slipped back into the VTOL, and before Posca knew it they were airborne again. Corvinus O'Reilly gulped down a large glass of cool water and wiped the sweat of his brows with his shirt sleeves, all the while mustering his grand nephew closely. When he finally spoke his voice sounded no less gravelly than it had outside.
"You look terrible, if you don't mind myself saying so. Didn't you get any sleep?"

"I can sleep plenty when I die, uncle, and I almost did that for three weeks already," Marius told him sardonically. "But no, not much, I suppose? My doctors were less than thrilled, and Sylvana threw a fit when she found out, but I've got too much to think about and too little time to act on it," he shrugged nonchalantly.

Corvinus nodded, more to himself than the two of them. "I'd heard you fell sick. For what it's worth I'm glad that you're back on your feet again. And my sincere condolences to your father's death."

"Thank you. Sylvie and I, we missed you at the funeral. You and father, you used to be close," Marius remarked.

Corvinus shook his head with a sad smile. "That we were, back in the day. But we had a falling out about matters of policy, and while your father was indecisive on about ninety-nine percent of everything, the one percent he had an actual opinion on he was as stubborn as a ****** mountain." He sighed. "You were too young back then. But when all was done there was too much bad blood, and too many angry words were attached to my departure. And I didn't want to bring that into focus by attending."

Sensing that this was all the man was willing to reveal on the matter for the time being, Marius changed the topic. "What did we witness back there? I wasn't aware the company needed that much gear to operate on Alphard and our other worlds."

"It doesn't," Corvinus conceded. "But Alphard Trading's active on a lot of worlds that don't really register on the maps. Prospecting, research, industrial testing in places where it won't hurt too many people if things go south. Most the time knowing who they're dealing with is enough to keep the locals and, ah, 'enterprising outsiders' in check. But every once a while they need more than a smile and a bribe to leave use alone. That's where my guys come in. And if you know one thing about corporate security, it's always spread too thin. So, I've tried to make a virtue out of necessity. A well-coordinated and motivated force of tanks, infantry and mechs is far more than the sum of its parts," he explained. "It's also got a lot more mission flexibility. Tanks and infantry can reach places mechs can't."
He turned to Posca, smiling jovially. "I suppose combined arms doctrine wasn't on the curriculum you taught that youngster?"

"What can I say. I am more of a generalist, dominus."

"You've done a fine job all around, old friend," Marius was quick to reassure him.

"And you're hardly an objective source for that!" Corvinus guffawed, his hard face showing laughter lines for the first time since they had met. "But I'll take your word for that, nephew. Besides, why should you know something that a thousand settled worlds all but have forgotten in their drive to bomb each other back into the stone age? Then again, better for me, eh?"

"Just so," Marius reaffirmed his great-uncle soberly. "And it's why I came to talk to you. But that can wait until we're settled in at your place."

"Alright, fair enough. Besides, Neeva will be thrilled to see you again. How old were you the last time? You had a crush on her, right?" Corvinus chuckled.

Despite decades of trained self-control Marius felt his cheeks blush. "I was fifteen, uncle Corv. And having a crush on a relative would be rather improper, right?"

"Boy, there hasn't been a man who has met Neeva who did not develop some crush," he told him warmly with a wink. "But your secret's safe with me. Now if you excuse me, I'll tell the pilot to call ahead."

They silently settled back into their seats for the rest of the flight.
Posca was surprised at how much the landscape outside began to change with how comparably little distance they passed. Steppe, mesas and lonely buttes slowly gave way to rocky hills and terraced fields, carefully hedge by orchards and olive groves to prevent soil erosion. Reservoirs, either in form of small ponds or squat white towers built from natural rock dotted the landscape, supplying precious water via an intricate network of stone-flagged trenches.

Corvinus' estate covered thousands of acres. At its center sat a long-drawn valley basin, filled with irrigation trenches, orchards of peach, orange, and olive trees, and terraced wheat and vegetable fields, neatly divided by a wide, paved road. At the far end the basin widened, and the road ended at a large, white neo-Roman mansion with a low-angled, red-tiled roof, built into the sides of the hill in two offset levels. Solar panels covered the south-facing parts, and a pair of wind turbines on a nearby hilltop provided the power for the villa and its many adjacent outbuildings.

Slowing down in a wide circling approach Marius' VTOL and its two escorts touched down on a wide ferroconcrete pad on the estate's north-eastern edge. Roads and foot paths shaded by palms and fruit trees led away from it like the rays of a star.

FWCartography

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #24 on: 31 May 2023, 13:56:14 »


As they exited the craft, a Hunchback leisurely made its way towards them, its massive form never touching the nearby trees despite the narrow alleys. Its torso casually swung from left to right, giving the pilot a good overview of the newcomers – and Marius' security detail a near aneurysm, given the massive AC/20 could go through everything on the pad like tissue paper.

The hulking medium mech came to a halt at the edge of the pad, and Neeva Lee-O'Reilly skidded down the ladder leading to its cockpit.

Corvinus rushed to meet her. "Can't you keep that damn thing in the garage just for one day?" he called out in greeting his wife.

"'t was just a few steps!" she yelled back, pointing at her decidedly non-mechjockey attire in defense. "Besides, if you don't use it, you lose it." She leaned down to him and sniffed. "You smell of sweat."

Corvinus smiled like a cat faced with a pot of cream, planting a kiss on his wife. "You look great, too."

She did.
Neeva Lee-O`Reilly was of indo-korean heritage, tall and athletic and looking not a day older than a very well maintained forty years. The right side of her head was shaved, revealing an intricate pattern of tattoos. She wore the rest of her dark hair combed over with purple and white-colored strains hanging down to her chin. Instead of the customary cooling vest an asymmetric gold-embroidered purple linen dang'ui jacket covered to upper part of her hourglass figure, with the right sleeve reaching down over her hand and the left sleeve ending at her elbow. Reversed left to right a white silk skirt went down to her ankles on her left side, but was cut open to only cover part of her right thigh.

Introductions were made, and she led them down a shaded foot path to the villa. Marius noticed that only few people were out and about in the orchards and fields and chalked it up to the heat. Gaul was one of the few continents on Alphard where agriculture was possible, but even this far north of the equator the middays did get scorching hot.

Neeva held the door open for them.
"Come, let's get inside. I'll have refreshments and a light meal served, and we can catch up." Marian society had adopted the old Roman custom where the woman of the house usually ran the estate. It was no different here, even though Neeva had not been born in the Hegemony. "What brings you here? I thought you were neck deep in government business?"

Marius let the mansion's cool air wash over him. "It's more like up to my ears than my neck. And I felt I needed some change of scenery after the events of the past month."

Neeva gave him a sympathetic smile and hugged him.

"But they placed those silver laurels on my head, so honestly, nowhere I go is just for myself. There are some ideas I've been juggling with in my head. Ideas that I need feedback on that's not tainted by what the Senate or courtiers think," he explained with just a touch of remorse.

"Oh, Nova Roma follows you around where ever you go," she gave him an understanding nod and led them through rooms painted in soft yellows and whites, with dark red tiled floors divided by playful mosaics. "Getting rid of that feeling was among the best things happening to us when we closed that chapter a few years ago. Place is riddled with a bunch of pricks."

They took seats in the shade of a terrace built into the mansion's inner colonnade, where colorful flowerbeds, green plants and garden ponds created a naturally cooled down climate. After servants had supplied them with drinks and finger food, Marius decided it was time to get down to business.
"Thank you for your hospitality, especially on such short notice," he began. "You must wonder why I'm here, so let's not beat around the bush any longer than necessary. For most of my life I've tried to follow in my father's footsteps. But my recent brush with mortality's shown me that maybe my time would be better spent trying to build something rather than simply to preserve it. The Hegemony needs change, needs growth to weather the coming decades if we don't want to stay just another pirate kingdom that can be wiped off the map in a stormy afternoon, uncle. Now I'm faced with the task of setting up my government, and for that I need people who can think out of the box."
Marius reached into his jacket and produced a leather-bound notebook.
"I've been neck deep in memos and proposals ever since waking up again, and browsing the archives I came across your paper from seven years ago about building a new model army for the Hegemony," he shrugged. "And I saw part of your training exercise today, Corv. That's exactly the kind of force I have in mind. Neeva, I'm here to steal your husband," he smiled at her apologetically.

"I thought I made it clear how I feel about Nova Roma and the halls of power just a minute ago," Neeva voice was clipped.

"I'm on contract with Alphard Trading, nephew," Corvinus reminded Marius, his face sunken in thoughts. "Besides, it's not like I made many friends when I left Nova Roma behind. Besides, doesn't have General Volkova her eyes on the position of Magister Militum?"

"Volkova is a good officer, and I'd rather keep her were she's now. She's probably better suited to active command than the desk job of Secretary of Defense. In any case, she can either deal with my decision or hand in her resignation," Marius said sternly. "I'm going to expand the legions, Corv, turn them into a combined arms force, and I want you to be the man to do it. Your talents are going to waste trying to train corporate security to deal with riled up stone age yokels. Here," he slid another paper across the table, this one not typed but in stenciled handwriting. "Can it be done?"

Posca watched the older O'Reilly's eyes race across the paper. His face lit up and he whistled softly.
"Four full combined arms legions within fifteen years?"

"More, if we can manage," Marius added quietly. "Money really isn't an issue. The treasury's bursting at the seams," he quickly continued, almost defensively, "and germanium exports remain steady. So," he leaned forward, "can you do it?"

Corvinus picked up a pair of glasses from his pocket and re-read the paper carefully. "Your three maniple unit structure plus combined elements simply isn't workable with existing dropships. Fifteen mechs, five vehicles, and the equivalent of two platoons of ground-pounders won't fit in any Union class known to man. And your legions are too mech-heavy compared to their other elements," he picked up a pen and started to cross out some sections while adding to others. "However, if we cut down the basic centuria to ten 'mechs plus armored and infantry elements we should be able to remodel our dropships to that effect. Yeah, converting two mech cubicles…," his voice trailed off as he nodded to himself.
Neeva cleared her throat. Corvinus blinked with a start, then looked at them apologetically like a child caught with their hands in the cookie jar. "Where was I? Ah, right. Here, that's how your legion should roughly look," he placed the paper back in the middle of the table. "Three battlemech cohorts, joined by six armored cohorts and another six infantry cohorts. They should have independent air defense and fire support elements, too; at least a few centuriae worth of them. That's not a small order," he skeptically shook his head, then sighed.
"So, can it be done? In principle? Sure. But I need you to understand the scope of what you're asking me to do here. This isn't just buying some mechs and tanks and raising the necessary manpower for them, Marius." He raised one fist and extended his arm, tilting his head towards it. "The legions' rank structure is wholly inadequate to organize a modern armed force of that magnitude, so that'll need to change. Recruitment will need to be organized. Seasoned NCOs and officers will have to be drawn from the existing ranks or hired abroad to get such a vast expansion under way. Which, at least temporarily, will leave the standing formations less combat capable. Unit integration already gives me a headache as well," he rolled his eyes. "We'll have to quickly and decisively get a force that's been solely comprised of patricians for the past eight decades to not only work together with newly raised troops that'll overwhelmingly be plebs, but actually reach a point where they see them as their equals. And that's only one side of the equation, Marius," he shook his head, then raised his other hand to parallel the first one.
"The other is material. Not just battlemechs and tanks, but guns, spares, uniforms, gear, munitions. Building the bases for the new troops. Setting up depots. Establishing logistics chains. I know our privateers have made stealing everything that's not bolted down into an art form, but we're talking about hundreds, if not thousands of vehicles, and tens of thousands of weapons, ideally standardized, the lion's share of which we don't produce domestically."

"I didn't consider the logistical details when I sketched out this plan," Marius admitted sheepishly.

"Eh, I've seen worse proposals into which more time and effort were put," Corvinus shrugged and gave him a reassuring smile. It looked odd to Marius, if only in his mind he was actually the older of the two men. "You've come to me because you want to get a fresh perspective, because you want to run those ideas you've got in your head past people to check if they aren't full of shit," his uncle continued with the bluntness of a hammer. "So, lets be real here. You're a smart boy, Marius. Always have been. What you're actually asking me here is to build you not just an army, but a tool for political leverage. No more, but no less," he rumbled. "Now, if you want to have serious armed forces the first thing to do is to take stock of the situation as it is, and let me tell you something, it's a ******."
He held up one finger. "Right now, excluding your Praetorian Guard, at the top of the pyramid you've got the equivalent of a single great house battlemech regiment. One that's mostly comprised of second and third children from patrician families, who occasionally dip their spears in blood by commerce raiding or pirate raids on our neighbor with the serial numbers filed off. Quite literally so, sometimes."
Another finger popped up. "Then, for a very long time, there's nothing. And once we've gone down long enough, there's patrician levies, which range from anywhere between ten people with guns to the equivalent of a combined arms company, complete with battlemechs. And of course, ad-hoc pleb militias."
Finger number three came up. "As if that wasn't complicated enough, you've got thirteen pirate bands of at least company size and countless smaller ones running around that are just eager enough to drag you into whatever hornets' nest they decide to poke, but whom you can't rely on for territorial defense, at all." Corvinus closed his fist. "I can't do anything about the latter. Honestly, the less I have to deal with our esteemed privateers the better," his voice dripped with disdain as he exchanged a look with Neeva that Marius didn't miss. "I can ****** the rest. Bring order to chaos, set up an organized militia controlled by the Hegemony rather than individual patricians. Build a standing mechanized infantry division for home defense. Probably all at the same time, too. But if you want me to do this, we're going to do it my way. I'll want your word, both as my relative and as a Marian man of honor, that you'll have my back and keep the senate out of my portfolio."

"You have my word, both as Emperor and as you relative by blood," Marius nodded. "But prying the militia from the hands of the patricians will probably the biggest hurdle in that whole plan of yours."

"Ahem?! I feel like you guys are purposely ignoring me!" Neeva growled. "Corv, you were the one who couldn't yell 'Go to hell!' loud enough the last time you left the capital. And now you're ready to go back, just willy-nilly-like-that?"

The stout man looked back and forth between her and Marius. "I know what I said, my love. But that was then, with my cousin on the throne and me fighting an uphill battle and failing in the opening moves of it. Now this?" he pointed at the sheet of paper. "This can make a difference, Neeva. That's a proper army for a true nation, not just noble arseholes in renfair togas and 'mechs raiding people."

"Sure, and because you and him," she shot a finger at Marius, "are both O'Reillys and share your family's brick-wall stubbornness it'll all be a breeze, right?!" Neeva angrily replied, her green eyes flashing.

"If your husband can make it work, I'll always have his back. I promise, auntie." Marius tilted his head and placed the palms of his hands flat on the table.

"Oh, don't 'auntie' me like I'm some old spinster!" she snapped, but the flash in her eyes carried some humor this time.

"Well, I could always try and drag you back with me," Corv purred, giving him the look and sound of a fat and very pleased cat.

"Over my dead body. And yours, Corvinus O'Reilly." She angrily stabbed a finger into her husband's wide belly.

Corvinus just calmly took her hands into his and smiled gently at her.
"Aw hell, Neev. I'm gone half the time anyway, trying to put some sense into people too stupid for real soldiers on the one hand and corporate execs who can't find their heads up their asses on the other. And you're running such a tight ship with the estate that when I'm home I feel like I'm in the way more often than not." He gently caressed her cheek with his thumb, giving the scene the look of a high fantasy dwarf looking up to an elven lady. A grumpy one at that.

"You've always been better at setting things up than at actually running them, Corvinus," she sighed, her anger deflating. "And you make it sound as if I'm chasing you away!"

"You're not, stupid," he jovially scolded her. "But as you said, we're both good at different things. And this is my chance to be good at mine. Besides, it's just a three hour flight from here to the capital."

"And I'll make sure he takes his weekends off," Marius piped up. "Even if it means Posca will have to wheel him to the flight pad on a dolly!"

"Oh please, leave me out of this, dominus!" the slave held up his hands in mock defense.

Neeva's shoulders slumped and she sunk down on a chair.
"Fine. Fine. Now that you've all managed to ruin the mood, can we break out the wine, please?" She clapped her hands, and moments later servant in a simple long white dress arrived, carrying a tray of wine glasses, a pitcher, and a selection of snacks. She helped herself to a selection of all of it. "Just so you know, Corv: it's your fault when I get drunk and fat!"

"I'm married. Being at fault is the default setting I've gotten used to," the older O'Reilly replied without missing a beat.

"You know, I've got a lot more sheets of paper to ruin the mood," Marius deadpanned.

"I was afraid you'd say that," Neeva flicked an olive into the air and caught it with her mouth. "Well, bring it on?!"

"If you insist…," he unfolded a map from the notebook and placed it next to a stack of notes. "Posca has already seen this. I came up with it as part of my college thesis."

"A Plan for Peaceful Expansion Through Colonization, by Marius O'Reilly. And a public building program?" Neeva read the abstracts with a questioning look. "Three new systems?"

"Two now," Marius corrected her. "Just New Venice and Horatius."

"What about Herculaneum?"

"At three jumps it's too far away," he explained in an almost too flat tone. "And I think for now the money can be better spent on your husband's new task, among others." He wouldn't go back to Herculaneum. Among the things he could do to avoid repeating his fate, this was one of the simpler ones. "Anyway, the plans are rather solid, I think, but in going over them another question popped up in my head. I don't want the Hegemony just to grow in size, Neeva. I want it to grow in capabilities, too. Grow tall and grow wide, if you know what I mean?"

"Let me have a look. And have something to eat in the meantime. You look like you're starving!"

As if on cue Marius' stomach growled, and he helped himself to a smattering nuts, olives, pickled vegetables and sandwiches with tuna and smoked salmon. Halfway through his second sandwich she looked up from his notes.
"A lot of your building program can be done on a budget, nephew. In its current form it's just grandstanding, a lot of excess fat than can be cut. I'm sure the people would love it, and contractors would make a killing of it, but if I were you, I'd go for substance over form. Polished concrete instead of marble, painted tiles instead of mosaics, opulent fronts and functional interiors rather than neo-Roman pomp all over, fewer theaters and collisseums."

"Sounds fair. Now where would you put the money then?" he gulped down a bite.

"Infrastructure, on one hand. Roads, space ports, orbitals, communications, you name it. That's roughly one side of the coin. Now, I ran a mercenary company before I ran a ten thousand acre estate with half a thousand people on it. And whether it's a mech tech, an irrigation engineer or a gardener: you need people that are well trained and educated, and willing to work for a fair wage. That's the other one," she explained.


"We can't compete with colleges and universities in the successor states," Marius shook his head. Even around the time of his death establishing something doing groundbreaking research like NAIS on Alphard would have been a pipe dream.

"That's the neat thing: you don't have to. Some mandatory system of education for the general pleb population will already go a long way. Right now everybody's just somehow muddling through. Setting up a basic national school system isn't quite as glorious as colonizing new worlds or raising armies, but the dividends it'll pay will be worth it. Then add another layer on top of it. Call it vocational schools, or third level courses. Train and educate people on basic science and engineering. Set something up that'll allow you to draw deep from the plebeian masses. That eighty percent is where the true unpolished gems can be found, not in the ten percent that make up, well, us patricians. Get the people, and our industries will be able to grow organically."

Marian plebeians could apply for higher education if their grades in high school were good enough. So far only the children of patricians had almost guaranteed access. Following Neeva's idea would add an intermediate path to higher education, undermining the patricians priorisation. "It's hard to argue against the obvious merits here," Marius conceded. "But there'll be resistance from the senate."

"I suppose that's what you have to expect if you want to change the game," she shrugged. "Remember: you want this. So the real trick will be playing them against each other. I'm getting the idea that you've got a rather solid take on how the senate and my fellow patricians will react to change, any change that threatens to disrupt the cozy status quo. Play the industrialists against the traditionalists. Use the plebs to balance the patricians. Cut slices off their power, just small enough that they don't mind in the moment. Bait them with short term profits while you reap long-term rewards. If you can play them for this plan, you can play them for any other idea as well."

If only you knew, Marius thought, half darkly, half amused.

"But that'll just be the basic knowledge to repeat what others have done before them. For anything really at the technological edge, though? Fat chance," she shook her head. "You'll want foreign specialists to help out with that. But you're not going to get many. Probably none, for that matter."

"Why not?" Marius gave her a puzzled look. "Decent standard of living, especially for someone that looked after, good pay, safe streets…"

"So what?" Neeva rolled her eyes. "That's no better than the standard of living most candidates will be used to anyway. But, nephew: the Hegemony's a slave state." She could see the lack of understanding on Marius' face an let out an exasperated sigh. "Nobody's going to move here if they don't have to," she explained. "People with more than two brain cells – you know, the people you want – will take a look at Marian society and nope the ****** out," she rolled her eyes. "Here, he gets it!" she pointed a finger at Posca.

The slave-turned-advisor cleared his throat, nodding in agreement. "There is no great riddle to this, dominus. Why would, say, a Lyran aerotech engineer or graduate uproot themselves and probably their family, too, move possibly hundreds of light years – only to always be faced with the risk that if they screw up or fall on hard times there's more than just a small chance to end up as slave? For generations even, potentially?"

"Despite the common misconception we're not enslaving everything that's not climbed a tree in less than three seconds," Marius frowned. "And the things we do enslave people for are very well codified, mostly criminal offenses. Doesn't sound like much of a reason to never set foot in the Hegemony to me."

"It's a pretty damn good reason for most people outside the Hegemony," she shot back. "And the fact that it's a 'common misconception' should tell you a thing or two, too!"

"Well, I can hardly put one of the core tenets of Marian society in question just because some foreigners might get their pants in a twist because of the concept," he countered her outburst with an equal part of annoyance. "How do you imagine I do that? Ban slavery? The senate would have my head on a spike before I could finish reading them my proposal!"

"There's a reason slavery is outlawed in ninety percent of human civilization! It goes against every human right known to man, it's archaic and barbaric!"

"And yet, here you are, sitting comfortably in your giant estate run by slaves, among the slavers you despise," Marius mocked her.

Neeva looked about to explode when Corvinus spoke up, his voice bereft of his normal joviality. "Maybe we should all take a breather now, calm our tempers."

His wife rose abruptly from her chair. "If you excuse me, I'll be outside," she stated coolly and left, her dress fluttering behind her.

Corvinus' eyes followed her before he looked back at Marius, shaking his head. "Well done," he told him, disappointment dripping from his voice. "Give her a moment."

The young emperor nibbled at the rest of his sandwich, but the ravenous hunger was gone. Still, the three men continued their meal in silence before he excused himself.

Neeva Lee-O'Reilly stood outside on a wide balcony overlooking her lands. Evening had fallen and doused the valley in golden sunlight.

"That got pretty heated in there," Marius picked up two glasses from a nearby tray and filled them with wine, handing his great-aunt one with a reparative smile.

Neeva took it and emptied half of it in one go, shaking her head as she stared out across the terraces of the mansion and its orchards and fields bathed in the last glows of the evening sun. "I swear to god, sometimes I wonder how I could ever marry a Marian. You lot are as narrow-minded as medieval inquisitors!" she growled. "Yeah, yeah, I know," she held up her glass and cut him off before he could answer. "Marian traditions, part of your society, it's always been like this – I get it, trust me, I do. Never going to like it, but I can live with it, even if it's only for that pot-bellied buffoon in there who carries my heart in his hands," her face and voice softened.

"I'm glad this isn't standing between us," Marius took a sip of wine. "You know, I truly meant it that I wanted a different perspective on things. Not going to lie and pretend I agree with everything you and Corv say, but… it's good to get a different take once a while." He took a deep breath. "So, no chance on running the great Marian vacuum cleaner of oh-nine across the Inner Sphere to steal their specialists?"

Neeva gave him a mirthless chuckle, emptying the rest of her glass. "Marius, I think you're a good man. Or trying to be a good man, for what it's worth. Look at it this way: I've been a mercenary most of my life. For thirty years all I did was put my life on the line. More than once I got really close calls with the grim reaper. And the only reason I'm here today is because the man I love introduced me into national nobility." She put the glass away and looked him right in the eyes. "Now tell me, how likely do you think is it that some normal run-of-the-mill risk averse civilian specialist comes here?"

Marius had no answer to that. At least none that he liked. He turned his look back to the orchards and fields, just in time to catch the last rays of sunshine before Alphard's central star sunk behind the horizon. "You've got it beautiful here. Serene, almost. Whenever I look out of the palace's windows all I see is either the sea and its steady cavalcade of freight ships or Nova Roma's sprawl."

Now it was her turn to not react on what had been said.
"You said I was here, comfortable in my slave-run estate. What would you say if I told you there are barely any slaves here?" she looked at him.

He turned to her in surprise. "The orchards, the fields, all of that must be extremely labor intensive?!"

"It is, and don't get me wrong, we do have slaves. More than I like – which would be none –," she muttered, "but far fewer than comparable patrician households. Look, I understand you're Marian, and I'm not. Not truly, at least. So, I'm not going to make this a moral argument. Might just as well argue against breathing. Anyway," she shook her head, then pointed at her land. "Most tasks are handled by plebeians; paid employees and worker. Trained gardeners, trained irrigation techs, horse handlers, farm workers, cooks, you name it. That, or by machines."

"That sounds excessively expensive," he remarked doubtfully.

"That's the thought most patricians immediately have. Do you have more of that wine?"

He reached for the pitcher and refilled her glass.

"Thanks," she took another sip. "Already feeling it. The safest sign that, in fact, I am getting old," she sighed. "Where was I? Ah yes: all this. Would you believe me if I told you these estates generate a twenty percent higher profit than comparable patrician lands? And that our productivity is up even higher, nearly 25%? Ah, I know that look: you don't." She giggled, then sobered almost immediately. "Free people work because they want to. For themselves, for their families, some even because they think they've found their calling in a profession. They work faster, harder, better than slaves, which means we need fewer of them. Do I need to pay them a decent wage? Sure. But I don't have to house them. Feed them. Clothe them. School them. Employ a medicus for them. One free man does the work of two slaves on these fields, your majesty. And when the work is done, they go home to their family – and eventually pay taxes." She looked at her half-filled glass and put it away. "Maybe that is an angle you ought to consider? Now, lets get back inside, shall we? I'd like to enjoy the last evening with my guests and my husband before you drag him back into your pit of vipers," she smiled wryly.

Marius mirrored her smile and offered her his arm, leading her back to soft warm glow of the villa, where they left politics behind for the remainder of the evening, reminiscing about shared memories of the past.

He knew that when he returned back to the capital in the morning, it would not just be a new day.
It would be the first day of the new Marian Hegemony.


[]...early days of Marian education were symptomatic of a general disregard for the lower classes persisting on many less-developed worlds, especially in the known Periphery. For the Hegemony, Patricians ran their own system of private schools, which even today are the academic equals of privileged schools in the larger Periphery states; slaves still receive whatever education their owners see fit to give them, depending on the skills needed for the positions they're expected to fill. Education for the broad masses, however, personified by the lower and middle class plebeians, had no public funding until the reforms enacted by Imperator Marius O'Reilly early in his reign, and were fully dependent on local will, ability and finances to provide for teachers and infrastructure. This sort of official neglect led to widely fluctuating levels educational achievement and even basic literacy. While this sort of non-education is unthinkable on Terra, it is indeed widespread in much of human-settled space, including even parts of some successor states.
Imperator Marius' reforms established a two-tiered public school system, requiring all students to pass seven years of primary school and four years of high school, ending in a standardized yet rigorous Leaving Exam. Those who pass their exams within a certain percentile gain permission to enroll with the state's renowned Polytechnics, which provide a mix of vocational training and higher courses geared towards studies in the practical sciences like engineering, business degrees, and architecture, for example. Some of these may also include specialized programs like that of the Gaius Mercer Polytechnic of Nova Roma, which among others offers zero-g welding courses in one of Alphard's many orbitals...
[]. – Handbook of Periphery Studies, Shanghai University Press, 3083, 6th Edition.

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #25 on: 03 June 2023, 11:39:12 »
Laws are like sausages. It is best not to see them being made.” – Quote attributed to German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck

Dealing with the Senate is like playing a game of chess, on multiple boards, against leeches. No matter how careful you are, one of the damn things will end up trying to suck you dry.” – Quote from The Diaries of Emperor Johann Sebastian O’Reilly, authenticity not verified


C h a p t e r  0 3:  Chamber of Whispers (Part 1)

Nova Roma, Alphard
Marian Hegemony
May 2nd, 3009

“It's quite an ambitious program.”
Senator Olivia Patel leaned her back against one of the thirteen crimson pillars holding the domed chamber, her face turned towards the nearby window overlooking the plaza far below, bustling with people scurrying from the shadow of one palm tree to the next under Alphard’s glaring midday sun. The air shimmered over the pavement, turning the capital’s skyline into a hazy fog in stark contrast to her comfortably cool surroundings. Rising more than twenty feet to hold a dome once again as high, the columns were smooth as ice, and veined with gold and silver inlets, their bases and capitals carved in the form of vines with a gild-plated finish. Smooth slabs of the same material covered the chamber’s floor, vanishing under a polished round table made from fine wood around which more than a dozen people found place in comfortable chairs with room to spare. In contrast, the high dome above was alabaster white, brightened by the glow of carefully hidden lights, providing the illusion of an open sky, accentuated by a holographic projection that, if need be, could be used to present more mundane images if the people convening there needed it to.

The Marian Senate convened twice a year, usually at the beginning of March and September for one month each to discuss the state of the nation, petition the emperor, embark on legislative initiatives, and act as a forum to voice its members’ grievances. Even at the Hegemony’s comparably small size the lack of faster than light communications aside from a Type-B complex on Alphard itself made a permanent sitting representation impossible to maintain. To circumvent the issue, Johann Sebastian O’Reilly and the founding families had agreed that each of the senate’s relatively loose factions appointed one member, traditionally from Alphard, to represent their interests. Thus reduced to less than a dozen people, they regularly convened in an annex of the Senate’s cathedral like dome.

Those that met there called it the small senate, but in common parlance its name was the Chamber of Whispers. For what the mighty whispered here between blood-red marble columns more often than not would end up being shouted from the ranks of the assembly and fill the headlines of the press soon thereafter.

“I’ve been given to understand that, per capita, it would represent an unprecedented scale of militarization, right?” The result of a long Indian and southern European lineage, Olivia Patel had long, flowing hair that she kept in a loose braid, accentuating the amethyst-laden tiara she wore. She wore a vibrant orange toga over a deep blue tunic, and a gold bangle on her wrist. Her sparkling deep drawn eyes betrayed the disinterested tone with which she maintained the conversation.

A relative moderate on most issues, Marius knew her closet to be full of skeletons, some of them not just figuratively present. He ought to be able to work with her if he managed to sell his points right.

Technically, he did not need the support of the people that had gathered together with him in this room: he could rule by decree. But technically, as long years of dealing with the same institution he now once again had to handle, did not always translate to real life. Disagreement could lead to institutional blockades, administrative resistance, patrician funded public opposition if they called upon their patronage. If an emperor antagonized too much of the senate too often, chances rose they would fall victim to some scheming. That much history had proven. Sean also would not have moved against him without at least some backing from senators. That thought left a sour taste in his mouth. Hence his need to at least uphold appearances and clue them in. For now, at least.

“Not per capita, no.” Marius leaned back in his high-backed chair – the only such one and the only outward sign representing his position – turning to face Patel. “The Taurians have conscription, as have others, so this would actually still put us very much down on the list. But it is a very steep increase in capabilities, both offensive and defensive, especially seen in relation to our nations comparably small size.”

“More like you mean the costs are insanely prohibitive,” Marcos Kimura shook his head. Kimura, representing what could reasonably be called the traditionalist block, was a tall, athletic man with  dark, almond-shaped eyes and jet-black hair only graying at the temples that he kept trimmed short. His mixed Japanese and south American heritage gave his skin is a warm olive tone, and he had a well-defined jawline and high cheekbones. Sitting on the opposite side of the table and nervously pushing a silver-framed goblet back and forth, he wore a traditional Roman toga in vibrant shades of green and gold, embroidered with intricate traditional Japanese designs. He was also, in Marius personal opinion, a mouth-breathing moron ready to initially oppose anything that did not follow the founding generation’s example to a T. “A massive financial boondoggle for little apparent use or need.”

“It’s your prerogative to view it that way, senator. I suppose it's my lucky day that the expenses fall under the government's discretionary spending then,” Marius retorted flatly. The man hadn’t batted an eye at the costs of the proposed public school system but only demanded reassurances it would not impede on the patricians’ private schools.

“That still doesn’t make it a wise decision,” the older man growled, and Marius had to count to three in his head to calm himself before he answered.
“The universe isn’t standing still. Every report from the Inner Sphere suggests that the great house are well on their way to recovery from the turmoil of the succession wars. What do you think it’ll mean for our way of life, for our security, if the Free Worlds League rebuilds enough to garrison the border worlds properly? If they decide to turn the table eventually once they can spare a regiment of mechs or three?” He rose from his seat, both hands firmly planted on the table. “None of you can possibly claim that one mech legion is enough to defend what’s soon to be eleven star systems. Even a military layman like yourself ought to understand that much,” he shot Kimura a hard glance. “Besides, more legions mean more officer commissions for those pesky second and third children. Gives them something to aspire to, and keeps the line of succession clear.”

“God knows I could use that,” Senator Malik Al-Amin’s chuckle was a low rumble, like a grinding avalanche. A tall, imposing man with a shaved head and bright green eyes, mocha skin, high cheekbones and a broad nose offset by a strong jawline and a neatly trimmed beard, Al-Amin was the head of the Meridian Alliance, a loose cartel of trading houses. Lounging in his seat with a steaming cup of tea standing on table just in front of him he wore a white thobe cut to resemble a tunic and a golden torque set with a single emerald, a symbol of his house's wealth and power.

“Now don’t tell me your wife’s pregnant again!” Kimura rolled his eyes.

“With my sixth child,” the trader shrugged. “Getting their commissions probably would do my two oldest good. Besides,” his face turned serious again. “The way I see it most of the spending on those new troops will flow back into the Hegemony’s economy. That means us, ladies and gentlemen.”

“You’re not getting taxed one extra denarius for this, Marcos,” Olivia Patel’s voice held just a tiny edge of annoyance.

“There’s that, too. Also, consider this, senator: what little standing forces we’ve had have been use to harass and raid our neighbors. Now, I do agree with you that, in interstellar politics, might does make right,” at least, it usually did, “but appearances do also matter. Everybody – at least everybody who matters – considers us a pirate kingdom. As far as diplomatic leverage goes, it gives us none. A standing army, a true army of several legions, will go a long way to provide the sort of legitimacy we need if we want to survive in the interstellar game of houses,” Marius explained, far more patiently than he actually felt.

“Fine!” Kimura threw up his hands in annoyed surrender. “Have it your way for the standing forces. I still think most of it could’ve found better used, like with that third star system you cut from your plans.”

Marius shook his head. “I’ve gone over this too often to repeat myself again, senator. Horatius and New Venice are without a single jump of our current territory. They are easier to colonize, closer to the Terran standard, and if problems should arise we’d know of them immediately. The distance of ninety plus lightyears alone makes Herculaneum an expense I found easy to cut.” He turned his attention to the rest of the room. “Can I expect you to be present at the first launch two weeks from now?”

The question was largely rhetoric in nature. None of them would open themselves to talk and ridicule by missing one of the most important events for the Hegemony in a decade, if not a generation. The Horatius and New Venice star systems had been catalogued and prospected for years already. Unregistered mining outposts and settlements already existed, but with the start of the first jumpship carrying colonists it would become official. Originally, he had waited with his plans until a few years of his reign had passed, but he knew the ins and outs. If anything, his knowledge of events propelled him to start as soon as possible. With everything, really.

“Of course, your majesty,” Senator Isabella Osei’s bright soprano voice was the first to answer. She was the last remaining current member of the Chamber of Whispers. A petite woman in her early forties, her deep blue eyes were the focal point of her face which otherwise was dominated by full lips and a strong nose that gave her a distinctive look. Her curly, jet-black hair was kept styled in an elegant updo. Her skin had a warm, golden undertone that pleasantly contrasted with the deep purple toga trimmed with gold that she wore, adorned with a brooch that bore the emblem of her house.
“It’s a monumental occasion and should be honored accordingly,” she eyed her colleagues sharply.

“My family was among the first settlers on Alphard,” Senator Kimura opined, “and always supported our founding father’s drive to expand the Hegemony. Naturally I will attend, and I think the majority of the Senate will see it the same way.”

“Indeed,” Malik Al-Amin scratched his chin, “it would be rather unwise not to attend. The funding is secure, and if preliminary reports can be trusted both worlds will be worthwhile additions to the Hegemony. I suppose it’s a good thing that much of the shipping used for the last colonies still exists in some form.”

Olivia Patel merely nodded in acquiescence.
Marius was glad for it. The people in this room liked the sounds of their own voices too much as it was. He would very much have preferred to revisit the details of the first colonial missions once more in the privacy of his solar, but he knew how to take a victory when it occurred. At least he had been able to slide in clear instructions to protect the Horatian magnalizard from extinction on the last minute. Keeping the towering six-legged herbivores alive would hopefully prove to be a longtime boon for the colony’s development.

On to the meat of the discussion. Internally, he steeled himself.
The four senators had begun to talk among themselves about the coming ceremony. Would there be fireworks? Parades? Fly-bys?
He cleared his throat and steepled his fingers.
“We need to address one more issue, amici. Slavery.” His voice had been calm, but the words cut right through their conversation, drawing all attention back to him.

“I take it as my mandate to increase the welfare of this nation and its people, Marcos,” he chose to address the man by his first name, leaning forward a bit. “That includes you, your esteemed three colleagues here, and all the other patrician families that have lent you their support. But it also includes the people who constitute the vast majority of our population. The plebs.”
He raised one hand to stop Kimura’s reply in its tracks.
“Two points, really. One is a suggestion, backed by data collected across our worlds. Empiric data is clear on the fact that productivity and profit margins increase dramatically if pleb workers and machinery replace mass forced labor, and also those positions filled in our households and corporations that fill special niches. My servant Posca has already prepared dossiers and provided your attendants with copies to that effect. I assure you they are quite exhaustive, and I would welcome it if you were to relay them to those on whose behalf you are speaking. Since this concerns your property, the choice remains yours, of course. Still, I believe that enabling our plebeians and cutting the cord on too much of a reliance on imported slave labor will provide us all with significant advantages in the long term.”

Imported slave labor,” Isabella Osei’s face twisted in disgust. “What a neat euphemism for people that have been kidnapped at gun point from the embrace of their loved ones by the very pirate scum other nations hunt and hand.”

“Here we go again,” Kimura groaned and pushed his chair back to grab a glass. A slave servant appeared from between the crimson pillars with a tray of cool drinks to hurriedly satisfy the senator’s desires. “We all know your extremist stance on the matter, Isabella. Beating that dead horse isn’t going to curry favors with anybody. Your Majesty,” he turned to Marius who focused him with green-brown eyes, “our nation's economy has been built on the backs of our slaves since the founding. They are our property and we have every right to use them as we see fit. Limiting their use will only serve to weaken our economy and undermine our property rights. If it is your goal to further the Hegemony’s welfare we must consider the economic impact of such measures and ensure that we do not harm our nation's prosperity in the process.”

“And I say,” Isabella’s soprano snapped like a high-toned bell, sharp and piercing, “that his majesty’s suggestions don’t go far enough. In fact, I would urge you to consider outright abolition of slavery in the Hegemony. It is time we move towards a more just and egalitarian society!”

“I wonder, my dear, if you would sing the same tune if the majority of your personal wealth was not tied down in real estate rented to plebeians but rather in the kind of actively managed enterprises the rest of us lead?” Olivia’s smile with cold and toothless, and her sparkling eyes carried a warning that went right over the other female senator’s head.

“What do you mean to insinuate by that?!”

“It means, my dear,” Marcos Kimura smiled like a cat presented with a bowl of the sweetest cream, “that ideas, that your morals are cheap if you don’t have to sacrifice anything to uphold them. We cannot ignore the practical realities of our nation's security and economic interests. Our slaves have been instrumental in providing the labor necessary for much of our economic success. Abolishing slavery would lead to a decline in productivity and a decrease in the very military capabilities you seek to expand. Furthermore, it would lead to outright turmoil, to more unemployment and a decline in the standard of living for many of our citizens.”

“You heartless-“

“Enough!” Marius’ hand slapped the table.
“We are not here to discuss the abolition of slavery. Senators, I appreciate your concerns. This is a suggestion. I may wear the silver laurels, but it's not my place to tell you how to handle your own property. To do so would be quite un-Marian. I'm merely offering an alternative for those of you who are interested in it. You know my family well enough to understand that I’m not an abolitionist, even though someone standing by their convictions will always have my respect,” he tilted his head towards Osei. “Be that as it may, I do believe we can increase productivity and stimulate economic growth not just for us, but also for the very people whose patrons you all claim to be, my esteemed friends. The compact of our nation is between us patricians and the plebeians. It is them who have suffered from the institution of slavery, by robbing them of opportunities to build themselves up by their own hands. If we provide them with better opportunities, we increase their standard of living and reap the benefits of greater social stability.”
Pushing an indention on the table a control panel popped up, and he activated the holographic projector. Immediately the rest of the lights in the room dimmed. “There’s more, amici. I won't beat around the bush. If current trends continue the percentage of slave labor on the labor market compared to pleb laborers is set to grow by nought point one to nought point three percent per year. Draw this graph into the future a few decades, and it will at one point become a dire problem for our nation's welfare and inner peace. Tell me, whose taxes are going to finance their welfare and quiescence?” He pointed at the graph flowing in mid-air. “The numbers don’t lie. I’m not going to force any of you to take action. This is not the way. But I have already tasked the imperial bureaucracy and the board of Alphard Trading to check which positions currently occupied by slaves can be replaced by plebs, by machines, or be completely cut. I’ll lead by example, and I hope your enlightened self interest will let you follow me if you can.”
That was not quite the truth. He had made that one up on the spot, but as far as lies went it cam almost too easy to him. Keeping a straight face had never felt easier, especially as he now used it to lead into his next point.
“This was my suggestion. In addition, our foreign policy concerns demand that we take steps to attract foreign investment and specialists. A just and efficient system of labor is key to achieving these goals. Again, my proposal does not have an abolition of slavery as its goal, but merely a... re-contextualization of it to take our wider needs into consideration. Some adjustments will have to be made.”
He pointed at the hologram hovering over the middle of the round table. 
“No more hereditary slavery. A child born to a slave will be free. And new slaves will be limited to menial tasks.”

“No ****** way!” Kimura growled, but Marius went right over him.

“Legal immigrants will be exempt from being subjected to slavery, as will their children! We need foreign technology, foreign capital, and foreign specialists to fill any gap that we cannot close ourselves. None of you actually believe that any of that will happen if, say, a Lyran-born engineer who came here legally, possibly even sponsored by one of our corporations, comes into financial trouble and ends up a slave to pay off his debts? People outside our borders already have the impression that we excel at the worst excesses of the old Terran Romans. There have to be guarantees in place that make it clear to them they won’t end up in a loincloth in a quarry being whipped by an overseer,” he explained.

“The repercussions on foreign relations, especially if the Hegemony were to build those first, would probably be catastrophic,” Patel mused.

“Undoubtedly so!” Osei enthusiastically agreed. “This is not just about economics or security. It's about our image and reputation. We are already facing criticism from other nations for our use of human slaves. If we continue down this path, we risk isolation and condemnation from the rest of the galaxy. You have my support on this, your majesty!”

“Well, I can see your point,” Al-Amin weighed in, his voice hesitant. “I dare say none of my business partners from outside the Hegemony’s borders are too keen to fall subjects to the hurdles or justice system allows. But wholly exempting one brand of people from slavery, that opens up the slippery slope towards jealousy, and to a two-class justice system. Don’t get me wrong, the Meridian Alliance is onboard with attracting foreign capital, whether we’re talking about currency or talent. But this is path that ought to be treaded on carefully, lest it undermines the peace you’re seeking, your majesty.”

“I can’t believe what I’m hearing here!” Kimura’s dark eyes blazed with anger. “Your Majesty,” somehow he managed to fill the title with absolutely no respect, “I understand your concerns for the well-being of our citizens, and I couldn’t give a rat’s ass about the complaints that some foreigners, some day, may somehow have. But this here is an intrusion into our property rights! We, all of us here, must consider the basic economic implications of limiting the use of human slaves. Slaves are a perpetually reproducing labor force. Many of our farms, our plantations rely on the labor of these individuals, and any attempt to limit their use will undoubtedly harm the livelihoods and the secure supply of many of our citizens! And what about the privateers? Don’t you think they’ll be less than amused about regulations on their business?”

“Oh, don’t make a mountain out of a molehill, Marcos,” Olivia Patel chided him, her long polished nails tapping the table. Marius had realized early on that it was a sign of her head racing with thoughts. “I loathe the government regulating how and what to do with my property as much as the next person. But this here largely concerns property that you don’t have yet?! And don’t pretend one second you care for the opinions of some pirates. The Crimson Chalice doesn’t care what we do with the slaves they put on the markets. There main profits aren’t in engineers and builders,” she rolled her eyes.

“Nobody’s taking away your current property, Senator Kimura,” Marius quietly reassured him. “Within the legal framework of the Hegemony you are free to handle your property as you see fit. Keep them, sell them release them. All the same, it is my right within the same framework to suggest changes and limitations to the practice that will only have an impact in the future. I don’t see how anything I have put on the agenda today endangers your immediate operations in any shape or form?”

“I’m not trying to beat a dead horse by hoping you all agree to my stance on human rights in the slave question,” Isabella Osei looked weary, yet defiant, “but you cannot seriously tell me, Marcos, that you could not possibly adapt your businesses’ specialist positions from slaves to plebs or even lower patricians in case those slaves die or get too old? The process alone will take decades; that’s a trickle, not a flood.”

Kimura stared back at her, unfazed. “It is my property. What you are suggesting is akin to me owning a car, and all of a sudden the state decrees that I can no longer buy repair parts for said car. Worse, you’re telling me I can buy the car, but prohibit me from using it the way I see ft. No, I will not have any of it!”

“There’s stubborn, and then there’s bull-headed,” Patel shook her flowing mane. “I am no friend of undue investments, but if push comes to shove I’d rather adapt than struggle against the flow. There are other ways to ensure our prosperity without continuously bloating some parties already impressive stocks of slaves. Maybe we can really achieve better outcomes if we invest in new technologies, improve our infrastructure, and get more productive plebs into the right positions. It’s at least worth of being considered and not flat-out rejected.”

“Thank you, Senator Patel,” Marius nodded gratefully. “For most of this, that’s all that I’m asking for.”

“And you haven’t really thought that through, have ya?” Kimura harrumphed, whatever respect he had now subdued by his bad mood. “Assume your ideas catch on, people dump their slaves, then what?” he gesticulated wildly. “Emancipating a large number of slaves, some of them in the second or even third generation, provides external powers with immense opportunities to compromise our national security via infiltration. Just because we set them free doesn’t mean they would immediately love their former masters,” he grinned scornfully. “How many would be stuck on our worlds with no means to return to wherever they were initially taken captive from? Now wouldn’t that be a ground ripe for unrest and violence.”

“Any change carries some dangers with it, senator. But you’re doing your position no favors by being a doom monger. Since whether you adapt or remain as you are is voluntary, it is unlikely that mass releases of slaves will coincide. And a trickle can be controlled by existing security. That’s why we have it.”
Forty years of patience in dealing with this very kind of person did have their advantages. Advantages like ‘not risking a civil war by having Marcos Kimura thrown from a window on the twentieth floor’. Patience that, sadly, was seldomly rewarded.

“Change? What you are proposing is not change, it is chaos!” Kimura growled. “I fear that you are risking everything for a vague and uncertain future. We have a duty to protect the interests of our people, not to indulge in empty idealism. Looking good to foreigners doesn’t put food on the table. We need to be pragmatic and realistic, not idealistic and naïve. Slavery as practiced now has let our society thrive for decades. It is a fundamental aspect of our way of life and our culture. To abandon it now would be a betrayal of our ancestors and our traditions!” He rose from his chair. “Thus, with all due respect, I must insist that you reconsider this proposal. It is not in the best interest of our people, our culture, or our nation, and it will not have my support! Good day!”

Almost in unison the others also rose, but in protest and to sway the senator.
Marius remaining on his chair, his eyes following Kimura as he made his exit, his face quite as he was fuming. There was no point in appealing to the man’s reason. Fifteen years of dealing with the man the first time around had proven just as much.

Osei was on his side. Patel and Al-Amin were open enough to endorse his suggestion, and flexible enough to adapt to his proposal. Which only left Kimura. He could try and decree the changes anyway. And Kimura could try and force the Senate to convene and vote on it. The vote would still not be binding. But Kimura’s faction was the largest among the many faceted senators. Failing such a vote would be akin to a vote of no confidence this early in his reign. He leaned back in his seat and watched the double door close behind Kimura’s towering form.

Staring at the door he gritted his teeth. This was not over yet.

cklammer

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #26 on: 04 June 2023, 11:45:41 »
Kimura's faction will contain more extremist senators than him as leaders of a faction are rarely among the more parochial ....

cawest

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #27 on: 04 June 2023, 12:37:41 »
if he knows the year of when the WD's leave to make the first supply and when they get back (i would not go with year and month).  he could place a bet on the gaming world.  thank of the odds and what if he puts a million C-bills on the bet.  now that would help with "his" budget.  when the WD hear this when they get back.. you can bet that there will be a meeting between him and the WD.  The Caeser will not know about the clan ties.  i would pass a note that is not to be opened unless the WD find themselves working for the FWL.  it would warn Jaime about losing his brother and others to Anton.  what would this be good for?  Well...ask the WD help set up a mech works or tank factory if this FWL info proves true.  make it as another bet.  lets just say it will open a line of commo between the two.  next alert would be about the DCMS and 3028.  it is all a politcal game so would he get out of the WD or take from the FWL? 

Lazarus Sinn

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #28 on: 04 June 2023, 16:06:19 »
Tagged
Foolish consistencies are the hobgoblins of little minds.

PsihoKekec

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Re: I, Caesar
« Reply #29 on: 05 June 2023, 00:29:08 »
WD were not working for FWL during Anton's revolt, they were working for CC. Putting such bets would also draw attention of ROM and MH simply does not have ability to counter them.
Shoot first, laugh later.