#i just watched gladiator ii with my brother
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thinking about prince soushirou who is relegated to clerical duties simply because he is the second born of the emperor.
your family has served the throne for generations as the pride of the military. quelled many resistances. thwarted even more assassination attempts. your father gave his life for the emperor to retain his.
and yet, the emperor insists on giving you crown prince souichirou to be your husband upon your coming of age. it is supposed to be the single greatest honour that the empire could bestow on a citizen.
however, two issues ariseâ
you have a strong preference for prince soushirou above anyone else, and;
you are aware that crown prince souichirou is the emperor's whore-son.
#kaiju no. 8#hoshina soushirou#hoshina soushirou x reader#kaija rambles#wouldn't it be fun if both hoshina brothers had a crush on you?#*twirls hair*#i'm in the middle of writing something else#but i needed a palate cleanser hahaha#the image of one (1) hoshina soushirou in emperor caracalla's outfits haunts me#i just watched gladiator ii with my brother
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Denzel Washington is having the time of his life.
#yes i just watched#gladiator II#the guy is clearly having fun.#my brother didn't like. i had fun sorry
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'Hands in the hair of somebody named Marcus'
Marcus Acacius x f!reader
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summary: the cursed blood of Geta and Caracalla runs through your veins sealing your fate. However, the General Acacius is willing to fight for you.
w.c: 5k>
warnings: angst, violence, power imbalance,and fluff.
a/n: I had this one in my drafts but after watching gladiator ii twice. I had to finish it and write about my beloved General Acacius because he deserves it. I hope you like it. This may have a part ii depending on its performance. PLEASE DON'T BE MEAN. Reblogs and comments are always. appreciated đ
| dividers by @/saradika-graphics |
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Inhale.
Exhale.
Breathe in, breath out.
There was it, the rattle breathing inside Marcus Acacius lungs. The way life has turned out for him felt like cuts all over his skin.
Sometimes he felt he could even breath from how bloody his hands were. How dirty his name felt to his own honor. How salty his tears felt down his cheeks every night. Every time he closed his eyes at night, the screams pierced through his ears.
Mothers mourning their children.
Men mourning their wives.
Families destroyed.
All because of him.
All because he must have served those two spoiled kids so called emperors of Rome.
And he still couldn't wrap his mind around the idea of you, someone so pure and kind was cursed to share the same blood as them.
Every time he came back to the city. He witnessed on first hand, how badly you were treated by them. The laughs, the humiliation, the segregation, and how your voice had been silenced just for you to be unwillingly part of a legacy that felt like your back being split in two.
Marcus was aware of the adoration people felt for you, how your kindness had reached to every single person in the empire. People loved you, but you were nothing more than a puppet under their fingers.
And he felt pity for you.
He could see the way your eyes seemed lost in the arena, in the way your hands trembled where Geta or Caracalla looked at you with disgust when you didn't approve of the madness they had arisen under their control.
You were the opposite of them.
You were Kind.
Kind as no one had been on here for so many years. You shared the same dream of Marcus Aurelio.
An empire for the world and a refuge for those in need.
and Marcus looked at you with tenderness in his heart from afar.
Most of the time you didn't acknowledge him. He knew you weren't really fond of him or the idea of him leading armies to claim cities under the glory of Rome.
For you, he was just a general repeating the same cycle of madness.
And you didn't acknowledge him until Geta slapped you on front of him for not showing your gratitude towards him after his returning from battle.
The sting lingered on your cheek after his slap, not from the force but from the humiliation of it. The room fell silent, the tension arose like flames to the fire. Geta and Caracalla, with their arrogant disdain, seemed to punish your perceived disobedience.
But Marcus? His expression shifted, subtle, yet profound. His sharp gaze, so often unreadable, burned with an intensity that wasnât anger but something close to defiance. He stepped forward, his towering presence demanding the attention of everyone in the room.
âEnough,â Marcus said, his voice calm and gentle, the command laced with quiet fury. The word carried weight, a warning not to be ignored. Your brothers exchanged a glance, clearly displeased but unwilling to challenge the general directly. They turned and left, leaving muttered curses in the air.
The room fell silent once again, and you found yourself standing alone with General Acacius. Your hand hovering your cheek, the skin still warm from Getaâs punishment. You didnât look up at first, embarrassed not just by the slap but by the realization that Marcus had witnessed it. You had worked so hard to ignore him, to keep him at a distance, but now, there was no avoiding him.
âYou didnât deserve that,â he said softly, his voice a startling contrast to the authority he had wielded moments ago.
You finally raised your eyes to meet his, expecting pity but finding something else entirely different, something softer. âIt doesnât matter,â you murmured, attempting to dismiss it, but he shook his head.
âIt does,â Marcus said, taking a step closer. âYou shouldnât have to endure this, least of all from them. Theyâre your bloodâ
His words hung in the air, and for the first time, you saw him not as the general who commanded armies in your brothersâ name but as a man standing apart from their cruelty. He wasnât like them, not entirely.
And perhaps, you thought, he never had been.
Your gaze lingered on Marcus for a moment longer, his eyes searching yours as if waiting for you to say somethingâanything. But you couldnât. Your throat tightened, and you turned away, moving to the window to avoid the weight of his attention.
âI donât need your protection,â you said, though the words came out softer than you intended. âYouâve done enough by speaking against them. They will get under your skin for it.â
Marcus hesitated, his heavy footsteps echoing as he approached you. âYou shouldnât have to thank me for doing whatâs right.â
His words made your chest ache. When was the last time anyone had done what was ârightâ for you? You stared out at the gardens beyond the window, their beauty feeling distant, unreachable. Your brothers had never cared about right or wrong, only power.
âI donât understand you,â you admitted, your voice barely above a whisper. âYou fight for them. You serve them. And yetâŚâ
âAnd yet I see who they truly are,â Marcus interrupted gently. âI serve Rome, not their cruelty. Thereâs a difference.â
You turned to face him, his nearness almost startling. For the first time, his presence didnât feel overwhelming. Instead, it felt⌠grounding. Safe. He stood tall, but his expression was open, waiting for you to respond.
âTheyâll hate you for standing up for me,â you said, your tone cautious. âThey donât forgive things like that.â
âLet them hate me,â Marcus replied without hesitation. âI wonât stand by and let them treat you as they do.â
The conviction in his voice sent a shiver through you. You wanted to argue, to remind him that opposing your brothers would bring nothing but trouble, but the words wouldnât come. Instead, you found yourself studying him. His broad shoulders, the sharp lines of his face, and the way his eyes softened when they rested on you.
âI donât need anyone fighting my battles,â you said, though even you werenât sure if you believed it. âIâve survived this long on my own.â
âYou shouldnât have to,â he replied, stepping closer, his voice low but steady. âYou deserve better than survival.â
Your breath hitched, the weight of his words pressing against you. Before you could respond, Marcus straightened, his demeanor shifting as if sensing he had said too much. He nodded once, a gesture of respect, before stepping back.
âI should leave you to rest,â he said. âYouâve been through enough todayâ
Your breath caught at the sound of his voice, so steady and sincere, the words lingering in the air like a balm to your frayed nerves. You wanted to reach out, to say something and stop him, but you hesitated, unsure of what held you back.
Marcus took another step away, his broad shoulders tense, as though leaving you was harder for him than he let on. His words, though respectful, carried a tone of finality that made your heart twist.
âIâll see you soon,â he murmured, his voice softer now, almost reluctant. He bowed slightly, taking your hand in his, and kissing it as his dark eyes met yours, âMy lady.â
As if his words had worked as a kind of manifesto, the âsoonâ came no long after.
There you were in the gardens, barefoot, with your wild hair looking at the moon shining over the town you had been forced to call it home.
Marcus could see from your posture to your void eyes when you were there in the middle of your brothers, faking enthusiasm, while inside your bones you hate with passion this torturous show.
You didn't wish to be cruel to the world but kind.
You didn't wish to see blood coming out from innocent men who had fallen prey under the hands of the cruelty of the roman empire.
And you were exhausted of seeing and hearing the cheering of people celebrating death as a spectacle.
You didn't want this to be your life but just a nightmare you were going to wake from too soon.
And now, as Marcus could see the moon reflecting on your face. He was able to see through the golden jewelry and the soft material of your dress, he could see a soul pleading to the moon to set her free.
Something must have alerted you. You turned around facing him hiding under his cloak.
"General Acacius?" You whispered, closing your eyes a bit to take his form under the soft light of the moon.
"My lady" he replied softly, with respect to his tone.
âWhat are you doing here?â you breathed, your voice trembled under his gaze.
He hesitated for mere seconds, his gaze intense as it locked onto yours. âI could ask you the same, my lady,â he replied, a trace of sweetness in his tone. âIt seems even those closest to the emperors need to escape from time to time.â
A silence fell between you, charged with a tension that both thrilled and unsettled you. The few stolen glances youâd shared over the past days had spoken volumes, but you had never dared to hope his heart could be beating as fast as yours in your presence.
You turned around again, your back to him. "I love coming here to look at the moon. " You spoke, breaking the silence "This seems to be the only place my brothers haven't tainted yet."
"How they don't know about this place?"
"My father sent this place to be built for his only daughter." You replied, and Marcus could notice how the corners of your lips graced with a smirk, even from behind. "A place for her to be a girl."
"What do you mean?"
"You know, General. Women seem to be useless for having a voice, less for ruling an Empire. Everything I can do is stay here and feel like I own something." You hold your voice for a minute, âIâm just a statue waiting to crumble.â
Marcus didn't reply to your words and if it wasn't for the sound of his steps getting closer you would have thought he left.
You could see his outline from the corner of your eyes, the way his face had been marked by cruel events you despise. A red mark on his cheek, a few scars on his neck and for brown eyes that contrasted from his hard exterior, shinning under the same moon as yours.
"How did you find this place, General?" You asked, bow fully looking at him. You were wondering how your brothers never knew about this place but him had been the first man to find it, just after his return.
He took a brief look at you from the corners of his eyes. "I would say that something brought me here," he paused for a moment, "but it seems like it was you, my lady."
You had to hold your breath for a moment. You didn't expect such words from Marcus. He was the beloved general of Rome. But to your eyes he was still a man who had built his honor from cruelty or that was what you thought.
"I don't believe so." You replied, despite the rapid beating of your heart, you didn't want to be fooled by a man with soft brown eyes and a heart that seems to be kind. "I do not desire a man to follow me, not less one who is the puppet of the cruelty of all this cold nonsense."
"My ladyâŚ"
"Please, you may go now." you said, turning your gaze back to the moon.
Marcus didnât leave immediately. Instead, he lingered in the doorway, his silhouette framed by the faint torchlight flickering in the hall. His hand rested on the edge of the door, his knuckles tight and pale as if he were restraining himself from saying something he would later regret.
For a moment, the only sound in the room was the crackling of the embers in the hearth. The tension between you felt almost unbearable, a quiet battle waged in silence.
âI know what you think of me,â he finally said, his voice softer now, like the hush of a secret shared in the dark. âYou see a man of blood and iron, one who serves an empire that devours cities for the Glory of Rome.â He exhaled slowly, almost as if gathering the strength to continue. âYouâre not wrong to think that. There are nights when I wonder if all of this is worth it, if I am worth anything beyond my sword.â
His admission struck something deep within you, though you kept your face turned toward the moon. You refused to let him see the small crack forming in your carefully constructed armor.
âThen why stay?â you asked quietly, your voice carrying an edge of challenge. âWhy continue to serve a cause you doubt?â
âI stay because I must,â Marcus said without hesitation. âIt is all I have known, and it is all that has been asked of me. But youâŚâ His voice faltered, and you felt the weight of his gaze, though you didnât dare meet it. âYou are different. You are everything this empire is not, kind, unyielding. Someone like you should be the one ruling Rome, the princess.â
You chuckled at the statement âMy brothers would send me to death before Iâll have the chance to sit on that throne.â
Your fingers tightened around the fabric of your dress. His words shouldnât have this effect on you, yet they lingered, stirring something unfamiliar.
âAnd that is why you should go,â you said, more firmly now. âYouâre talking nonsenseâ
Marcus took a step closer, his steps echoing faintly against the cobblestones âPerhaps I do not belong here,â he said, his tone unwavering, âbut that does not mean I will walk away so easily and let this empire fall under your brotherâs madness.â
You turned to him then, unable to ignore the quiet determination in his voice. His eyes, those soft brown eyes that had once seemed so dangerous, now held a sincerity you hadnât expected. For the first time, you saw not a general, but a man, a man who carried the weight of his choices and the burden of his doubts.
âYou think you can change my mind?â you asked, your tone sharp despite the unease stirring in your chest.
âNo,â Marcus admitted, a faint smile tugging at the corner of his lips. âBut I hope, one day, I can show you what I am talking about.â
Before you could reply, he bowed his head slightly, as a gesture of respect rather than submission, and turned to leave.
As the door closed behind him, you stood in the quiet of the garden, your heart beating fast while his words played over in your head.
The arena buzzed with the deafening roar of the crowd, their excitement spilling into the air as dust kicked up from the floor below. You sat stiffly behind Geta and Caracalla, their laughter and sharp whispers grating against your ears. This was how it always was, trapped in their own world, watching their cruelty unfold.
Today, the games were bloodier than usual, the violence more drawn out, as if they relished every clash of blades and every cry of pain. You tried to ignore the chaos, your gaze drifting to the far horizon, where freedom felt like a distant dream in the blue sky.
But then, a movement to your right drew your attention. You turned your head just slightly, your breath catching when you saw Marcus approaching. His expression was calm, unreadable, though his eyes softened ever so slightly when they met yours. Without a word, he settled into the seat next to you.
âGeneral,â you greeted, your voice low.
âMy lady,â he replied, his tone equally soft, though there was a subtle warmth in it.
For a while, neither of your spoke. The sounds of the crowd and the clash of weapons filled the silence between you, but it wasnât an uncomfortable one.
âThey love this,â Marcus finally said, his voice barely audible over the noise.
You didnât reply, too focused on fidgeting with the material of your dress, your fingers twisting the fabric in small, anxious movements. The tension in your shoulders was noticeable, your gaze fixed on the arena below, though it was clear your mind was far from the bloodshed.
Marcus noticed. He always noticed. After a moment of hesitation, his hand moved, gentle, placing it over yours. His touch was warm, steady, and it stopped the restless motion of your fingers.
Startled, you glanced at him, your breath catching as you saw the softness in his expression. There was no judgment, no pity, only quiet reassurance. For a moment, you forgot where you were, the chaos of the arena fading into the background.
But the moment didnât last.
âAh, whatâs this?â Getaâs voice cut through the din, sharp and mocking.
You flinched, quickly pulling your hand away as Geta turned in his seat, his eyes narrowing as he looked between you and Marcus. His lips curled into a sly grin, the kind that sent a chill down your spine.
âWell, well,â he drawled, leaning closer as if sharing a secret. âOur dear sister has caught the attention of the great general. How⌠intriguing.â
Marcusâs jaw tightened, but he said nothing, his gaze unwavering as he stared ahead.
Geta leaned back in his seat, his grin widening as an idea seemed to spark in his mind. He turned to Caracalla, nudging him with an elbow. âBrother, I think we havenât been too generous with our sister, have we?â
Caracalla raised an eyebrow, intrigued. âOh? What do you suggest we could do for her?â
Getaâs grin turned wicked, his eyes gleaming with malice. âA little incentive for the games. Let the gods decide her fate.â
Your blood ran cold as you realized what he was suggesting. âGeta, donâtââ
He ignored you, standing abruptly and raising his arms to address the crowd.
âCitizens of Rome!â Getaâs voice boomed over the noise, silencing the arena. âToday, we have a special reward for our brave gladiators. A prize worthy of their strength and valor.â
Caracalla caught on quickly, his laughter echoing through the stands. âIndeed, a prize unlike any other,â he added, his voice dripping with amusement.
You shot to your feet, panic rising in your chest. âGeta, stop this!â
He turned to you, his smile cruel. âSit down, sister. This is for the glory of Rome.â
You didnât move, but your voice faltered, your protests drowned out by the cheers of the crowd as Geta announced his decree.
âThe victor of this fight,â he declared, âshall win not only their freedom but also the hand of our beloved sister.â
The crowd erupted in applause and cheers, their excitement deafening.
Beside you, Marcus remained seated, his expression unreadable. But you could see the storm brewing in his eyes, the muscles in his jaw clenching as he processed what had just happened.
And for the first time, you saw something in him that you hadnât before, a quiet, burning fury, one that made you wonder just how far he would go to defy your brothers.
"They offered me as a price." You whispered to Marcus who was offering his arm for you to hold, as you tried to keep your composure.
You felt humiliated.
You felt that men owned you and despised the feeling.
Marcus didnât respond right away. His arm remained steady, extended for you to hold, a silent offer of support. His face, though unreadable, betrayed hints of a restrained angerâanger that wasnât directed at you, but at the cruelty of your brothers, the twisted spectacle they had made of your dignity.
âThey did,â he finally murmured, his voice low but firm, so only you could hear. âAnd they will answer for it.â
You hesitated, your hand trembling slightly before resting on his arm. The gesture was subtle, almost imperceptible to anyone else, but between the two of you, it felt like a silent pact. Marcus guided you to sit back down, his movements deliberate, as if shielding you from the prying eyes of the crowd.
âHold your head high,â he said quietly, leaning just close enough for his words to reach you. âYou are not a prize. You are a queen in all but name.â
His words, though softly spoken, struck a chord deep within you. They carried a weight that steadied the storm of emotions threatening to overwhelm youâhumiliation, anger, and a raw, aching vulnerability you despised feeling. You clenched your jaw, forcing yourself to sit straighter, your gaze fixed on the arena even as your chest burned with resentment.
The fight began, the clash of swords and the roar of the crowd filling the air. The gladiators fought with a ferocity that was almost unbearable to watch, knowing that your fate hung in the balance of their blades. You despised every second of it, despised the men in the arena who saw you as a reward to be claimed, despised the crowd who cheered for your subjugation, and most of all, despised your brothers for orchestrating this humiliation.
And yet, as the fight dragged on, your attention kept flickering to Marcus. He hadnât moved, his posture rigid, his gaze fixed on the arena with an intensity that made your heart race. His hand rested on the hilt of his sword, fingers tightening with every blow exchanged below.
âThey cannot do this,â you whispered, your voice trembling with barely contained anger. âThey cannot decide my life like this.â
âThey can try,â Marcus replied, his tone like steel. âBut they will not succeed.â
His words were cryptic, but there was something in his voice, a quiet, unshakable resolve that made you glance at him. For a moment, you wondered if he already had a plan, if his mind was racing with strategies to undo the cruelty your brothers had unleashed.
The fight ended abruptly, the crowd roaring as the victor emerged, bloodied but triumphant. Your stomach churned as the man was announced, his grin wide as he looked up to the podium where you sat. You felt Marcus tense beside you, his hand gripping his sword so tightly you feared it might snap.
âDonât,â you whispered urgently, sensing the storm about to break within him. âPlease, Marcus.â
But he didnât respond, his gaze locked on the victor below. And for the first time, you wondered just how far Marcus would go, not just to defy your brothers, but to protect you from their cruelty.
The victor's triumphant roar echoed through the arena, and the crowd erupted into wild cheers. You couldnât bear to look at the man below, his eyes alight with the promise of his prizeâyou. Your stomach churned with revulsion, and your breathing quickened, panic clawing at your chest.
âCome,â Marcus said quietly, his voice cutting through the noise. His hand found yours again, firm but not forceful, and this time, you didnât hesitate to take it. The heat of his palm against yours grounded you, gave you a tether to hold onto as you stood on unsteady legs.
You didnât wait for your brothersâ gloating remarks or the smug expressions on their faces. Without a word, you let Marcus guide you away, his presence shielding you from the leering eyes of the crowd. The noise of the arena began to fade as you descended the steps, replaced by the rapid beating of your heart.
The corridors beneath the stands were dimly lit, the cool air a welcome reprieve from the suffocating heat of the arena. You kept your gaze forward, refusing to look back, refusing to give your brothers or the victor the satisfaction of seeing your fear. But inside, you were trembling.
âMarcus,â you finally whispered, your voice breaking. âWhere are we going?â
âSomewhere they canât touch you,â he replied, his tone low and steady. His hand tightened around yours, a silent vow that he wouldnât let you face this alone.
The two of you emerged into the open courtyard behind the arena, the setting sun casting long shadows across the stone walls. The sounds of the crowd were distant now, muffled by the heavy doors that closed behind you. You stopped walking, pulling your hand from his and turning to face him.
âTheyâll come for me,â you said, your voice laced with frustration and fear. âThey wonât let this stand. Geta and Caracallaââ
âTheyâll have to go through me first,â Marcus interrupted, his tone sharp, his brown eyes fierce. âAnd I promise you, my lady, they wonât succeed.â
You stared at him, his words sinking in. He looked every bit the general now, strong, resolute, and unyielding. And yet, there was something else in his gaze, something softer that made your chest tighten. He wasnât just protecting you out of duty or honor. There was something personal in the way he looked at you, in the way he stood so close, as though shielding you from the world.
"I can fight in the arena" he said, "for you."
You stared blankly at him, shocked at your core.
"What would you win from that? Do you want to own me like those men?" You asked.
"I do not wish to own you, my lady. You're not property. You're a free woman, and If I win, I'll become your husband and you would never have to endure those humiliations ever again."
"Just because I would be yours." You whispered, still broken at the thought of not being enough.
"You would be my wife, not my property." He clarified, "I will live and fight to keep your honor just as you deserve"
You looked away, heart pounding, his words washing over you like laurels over your skin. A part of you longed to believe him, to let his offer pull you from the grip of your familyâs ambitions. But fear clung tightly, rooted in years of being nothing more than a pawn in your brothers' power games.
"GeneralâŚ" you murmured, voice wavering. "If you fight for me, you put yourself in danger. And if you fall, my life will only become darker, lonelier. I donât want your blood on my hands."
He stepped closer, his eyes steady, fierce. "I would rather risk everything than stand by while you suffer. You deserve a life where you choose, where you're loved, not used."
Your throat tightened, emotions swelling. "But if you fight and lose, youâd be at their mercy. Theyâd make you a symbol. A warning to anyone else who dares to defy them."
He lifted your hand, pressing it to his heart. "Then let them try," he said, his voice unyielding. "For you, my lady, I would face even the wrath of the empire."
His touch was gentle, but his resolve was unbreakable. In that moment, you realized he wasnât just a man willing to fight for you, he was someone who saw you as more than a title, more than a sister to emperors. He saw you, truly.
âWhy?â you asked, your voice barely above a whisper. âWhy would you risk this for me?â
For a moment, he hesitated, the stoic mask slipping just enough for you to catch a glimpse of the man beneath. âBecause you deserve more than to be treated as a pawn in their games,â he said finally. âAnd because IâŚâ He stopped himself, shaking his head as if the words were too much to say aloud. âYou donât deserve this.â
You swallowed hard, your throat tight with emotion.
"Acacius⌠if you truly wish to do this," you whispered, your fingers trembling in his, "then I will stand by your side, come what may."
He smiled, a rare softness breaking through his stoic exterior. "Then weâll face them together, my lady. And if they stand in our wayâŚ" His eyes darkened, a spark of defiance glinting within them. "Theyâll learn that love is a force they cannot control"
"Do you believe you could come close to loving me?" You asked, heart pounding.
His reply didnât come from words. Instead, he squeezed your hand over his heart.
His words lingered in the air, hanging between you like the delicate balance of a fragile moment. You searched his face, his steady eyes holding yours as if daring you to see the sincerity in them. For all his strength, for all his might as a general, Marcus stood before you as something else entirely. A man laying his heart bare.
Your breath hitched as his hand moved from yours to gently cradle your cheek, his touch warm and careful, as if he feared you might pull away. You didnât. You couldnât. Instead, you leaned into his palm, your heart pounding so loudly you thought he must hear it.
âMay I?â he murmured, his voice soft and hesitant, as though you were something precious, he was afraid to break.
You nodded, unable to speak, your eyes fluttering closed as he leaned in. His lips brushed against yours, tentative and light, testing the waters of your comfort. It was not the kiss of a conqueror or a man accustomed to taking what he wanted. It was the kiss of someone who had been waiting, who had held back his own desires out of respect for you.
The first touch was fleeting, but when he felt you relax into him, he deepened the kiss, his other hand settling on your waist to anchor you against him. The world around you faded. The distant noise of the Coliseum, the threat of your brothers, even the weight of your own fear. All that remained was the warmth of his lips, the steady beat of his heart beneath your other hand.
When he finally pulled back, his forehead rested gently against yours, his breath mingling with yours in the quiet that followed. âLoving you,â he whispered again, his voice thick with emotion, âwould be the easiest battle Iâve ever fought.â
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Et tu, Brute?
Pairing: Emperor Geta x Reader x Lucius
Summary: You went by many different names: "Rome's Delight", "The Woman with the Golden Mouth", "Geta's Favorite Whore", and "Julia". None of these were your true name; all used just to dehumanize you as nothing more than a slave. When the General Acacius returns from conquering Numidia, and you meet one of the slaves that was brought from the bloodshed, you hope to reclaim not just your freedom...but power along with it.
Part 1 of 2 (Masterlist)
Warning(s): Depictions of rape and SA [not shown], slavery, cannon typical violence, minor Stockholm Syndrome, major character deaths, historical inacuracy [but I tried my best to make it somewhat accurate] and Spoilers for Gladiator II
I saw this movie once, watched Game of Thrones at the same time, and cranked out a story where you, the reader, know how to play "The Game" (but also not because let's keep it kinda realistic) I'm gonna be honest, this might be a hot mess, and I used a script I found online (but Idk how accurate it is). Also, this first part is just mainly story based with the events of the film the SECOND part will focus on reader and Lucius' relationship (including smut, you sluts {I am also slut, don't worry}.
I do want to say though that the depictions of SA are in no attempt to romanticize them. I also decided not to write out the specific scenes because I myself am a survivor, and wanted to focus more on the protagonist's growth. The trauma still affects her story, but I do not want to write rape scenes merely for shock purposes.
Also, if you name is actually "Julia"...no it's not :)
Word Count: 16.1k
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It was your own fault, that was what they tried to make you believe.
How dare you not wish to participate in the public baths, how dare you desire to bathe in the place you felt most safe.
Foolish, foolish girl. You were not even safe on your own porch in the house you grew up in.
Your father hadnât been the wealthiest of merchants, but before he passed into the Elysian Fields after his death that year, he had made a fortune; so much as to buy a bathtub for your house.
If anything, you had bathed at night when you believed no one could see you not for your own modesty, but to prevent anyone from stealing it.
Yet, one particular night, a man had spotted you.
The Emperor Geta of Rome had watched your naked form glisten in the moonlight as you washed the most intimate areas of your body; sighing at the feeling of being clean after the day, only for your soul to feel tainted once morning broken.
Guards had nearly broken the hinges off the front door to your house, and dragged you to the palace. You had lived in that house for your entire life, the same neighbors beside you, yet as you kicked and screamedâŚnone helped.
You had grown tired once in the palace, and the eldest of the twin emperors stood before you. He cupped your chin.
âWhat is your name, girl?â
You answered him, attempting to speak with venom, but the quaking of your voice betrayed anxiety.
He hummed, repeating your name. âWhy are you all alone?â
You huffed. âMy mother died in the battle that is childbirth, and my father was lost to an ailment in his loins.â
âYou have no brothers?â Geta questioned, his eyes running down your form. âNo husband?â
âThey called my father strange for leaving me his possessions.â
âHe mustnât have passed on so long ago.â
âWhy does the death of my father concern you if you only seek my body?â You questioned.
A smile twisted upon his lips. âPerhaps I like to know my fruit before I devour it.â
And he kissed you.
You had been kissed before, but this was the first time you hadnât wanted to be. You hadn't expected him to be serious about devouring you. His teeth sank into your chin, then your cheeks, until they were finally upon your lips.
It was the first time, in all your life, you felt your body grow cold and freeze despite his hands wandering over you, pulling at the thin fabric of clothing that covered you.
You fell to the floor, clinging to it desperately as he tried to lead you to his chambers. You had expected him to order one of his men to kill you, or have them carry youâŚ
Instead, he took you right there. He simply lifted his own robes then yours and stole what wasnât his to take.
All you remembered of that was counting how many pillars were in the room.
You were one of his several concubines. Yet, despite being the newest, you were his favorite.
��Julia,â he whispered to you in the night a month after he had made you his. A month after he had decided to call you by his motherâs name instead of your own. âare you awake?â
You mewled, sitting up. âI am now, my love. What is it?â
Geta smiled, holding out a stack of parchment. âLook at what some of the men found in Carthago.â
You rubbed your eyes as the lamps in his room brightened before looking down at the crudely written words. Geta looked at you in earnest.
âCan you read them?â
A few days prior at him and his brother Caracallaâs birthday festivities, it was revealed that you spoke five languages: Latin, Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, and Greek. Your father had taught you every single one of them to fend for yourself amongst all kind of people.
Now, it was nothing more than a shameless trick Geta used to his amusement.
âRomeâs Cleopatra,â he deemed you in front of the crowd. âthe Woman with a Golden Mouthâ.
Everyone in that room and all of Rome knew that your ability to speak so many dialects was not the only reason he gave you that title.
Still, as you lay in his bed with crumbling parchment in hands, you forced a tender smile. âYes, I know what it says. Would you like to know?â
He laid his head in your lap without another word.
Months passed, and he had grown kinderâŚonly when it was night, and even so, that was only when the moon was full.
There wasnât a day where your body hadnât ached from the turmoil he put you through. It was hard to discern when he would want you to be small and subservient to him, or confident and commanding in matters of the bed.
The handmaids that were blessed to not be in bed with him would bathe and coddle you as best as they could, for even through your suffering, you tried your best to treat them with kindness.
You didnât even know who you were after the fourth month of being Getaâs slave.
Gone was the girl who had a peaceful life; there was now the Emperorâs Pet.
General Marcus Acacius returned to Rome after overtaking the kingdom Numidia in the emperorsâ names, and it was the first time you were in his presence. It was certainly a surprise that Geta would string you alongside him on personal matters that had nothing to do with sex.
The general would glance at you every so often, and his look of pity felt more violating that any of the times Geta, or his brother, or anyone else in all of Rome had looked at you.
Upon the generalâs return, a series of games at the Colosseum were to be hosted, among parties that would last for the remaining week.
The first was at Senator Thraex's home.
âMy little Julia,â Geta caressed your cheek as you sat upon his lap in the makeshift throne. âmight you fetch me another cup of wine?â
You nodded, taking his cup and kissing his hair. âI shall, my love.â
He ran his fingers down your neck as you got off of him and made your way to the barrels. Yet, as you passed an open door, something caught your eye. Peeking around the somewhat crack in the door, you saw a few men sat in the room, chains around their ankles and their wrists.
One of them, more muscular than the others with brown curls, held his head low. His skin wasnât as dark as other men from Africa Propria, but not as pale as the Germanic lands.
When his eyes met yours, you saw a pale blueness only seen in the sky on a summerâs day.
Gasping, you hid behind the door for only a moment before looking again. His gaze was still on you. Deciding to end the strangeness of the situation, you spoke.
âIâm sorry.â You apologized.
He said nothing; you tried again.
âIâm sorry.â You said in Greek.
The look in his eyes changed to confusion, but he said nothing.
âHebrew?â You questioned. âAramaic? Phoenician?â
âYou speak Phoenician?â He asked as if he hadnât heard it in forever.
You nodded. âI speak five languages.â
âAh,â he answered in your native tongue to your surprise. âRomeâs Cleopatra.â
Your nose scrunched as if you smelt something rotten. âYou understood me the first time?â
âI did.â
âSo why not say anything?â
âWhat am I to say to your pity?â
You hummed. âI do not pity you, I was showing respect.â
He scoffed. âRespect? Am I a man that looks as if I deserve respect?â
âI believe every man deserves respect so as long he is kind.â You glared at him.
The man shook his head, sighing. âYou are a foolish child if you believe that men can be kind.â
âI havenât for quite a while.â you stated. âI pray that it is the hope that kills me.â
He questioned. âAnd not one of the emperors?â
âWhat is your name, slave?â You crossed your arms.
He huffed, drawing his eyes away from you and clenching his fists before relaxing them. âHanno.â
You nodded. âThey call me âJuliaâ.â
âBut that is not your name.â
It was blistering hot that particular day, but you felt your body run cold; the same cold you felt when GetaâŚwhen he firstâŚ
âWho says it is not my name?â You challenged.
âYou are merely a concubine,â he said. âyou are not a part of his lineage, and therefore, your name is not âJuliaâ.â
You do not know why you seethed with so much rage from his words. You did not even spit on him; you merely stomped away from that door, filled up the emperorâs cup, and went back to Geta.
âIt took you nearly a millennium to come back, my sweet.â He scoffed yet kissed your bare shoulder. âI was beginning to worry.â
You shook your head, leaning against him as you sat on the arm of the throne. âYou mustnât over me, my love.â
âYou seem distressed.â Caracalla teased beside you. âThis is a festivity; you should be merry!â
All you did was smile and nod. It was a pleasant change from the parties you were forced to attend in the past; you werenât the center of attention, and this was the first time Geta dressed you in the bright colors everyone else wore instead of white.
You could pretend you were royalty for a day.
Not so long after you came back, both Thraex and Macrinus, a stable master who traveled far and wide for new gladiators, approached with their own champions to fight.
You were not even at the Colosseum, and yet, violence still had to be played for everyoneâs amusement.
Hanno entered from the door you had previously been at, and another man entered from the opposite side of the room. Both were given swords.
âBrother,â Hanno began. âlet us not kill each other for their amusement-.â
The other man struck him without hesitation. You had seen fights before, but none like this. It was ruthless, quick yet drawn out. Hanno lost his sword in the middle of it all, leading to him smashing a flowerpot over his opponentâs head.
The fight was still not done, he rose up on his feet and took his sword from the ground, raising it high above him. Hanno, against all odds, knocked him back onto the ground and took the sword just as they both sood, stabbing his opponent in the chest.
A chorus of cheers and groans echoed in the room. Geta arose from his seat, laughing and applauding as you sat there, eyes as wide as they could be at the bloodied sight before you.
âRemarkable! Gladiator, which part of the Empire do you hail from?â He questioned Hanno. Hanno stood stoically, glaring at the emperors before him. Geta tutted, turning to you. âJulia, open your golden mouth and-.â
â-The gates of hell are open night and day.â Hanno interrupted in the common language. âSmooth the descent, and easy is the way: But to return, and view the cheerful skies, in this the task and mighty labor lies.â
Geta smiled. âAhâŚa poet!â
The rest of the world fell away as you could not tear your gaze away from the man laying on the floor. If he hadnât died from his wounds, he wouldâve from choking on his own blood.
â-You understand, donât you?â Geta asked.
You sat in your own personal chambers that night for the first time in a while. You were never overjoyed to be in his bed, but being sent to your own perplexed you.
Then, he simply told you that you were to be General Acaciusâ for the night.
âHeâs sacrificed so much, my little Julia.â Geta combed his fingers through your hair to soothe you. âI refused him once already; I cannot do so again. Do you understand?â
The emperor had never shared you with anyone. He wasnât delicate with you, but at least you knew what to expect.
He clenched your jaw. âI do not care to ask you a third time, girl.â
âYes,â you squeaked. âI understand, Geta.â
Nodding, he softened his hold, leaning his head against yours. âYou are still mine alone; I promise, it will only be us after tonight.â
You swallowed thickly. âOkay.â
âThere she is.â He kissed your lips before pulling away and standing. âHe will be in right away. Do not fret, I told him to be gentle with you.â
Geta left through your chamber doors without another word. There you were, sitting on your bed, draped in silks you should have known were given to you out of lust and not out of kindness. Your eyes trailed to the empty vase on a table beside your bed.
You didnât know what possessed you that night, but you yanked it off the table, and smashed it on your bed. The handle of the door began to rattle. Quickly pushing the shattered pieces under your bed, you hid a shard behind your back and sat at the head of the bed.
In came General Marcus Acacius, wearing only a thin overshirt that went down to his knees. Youâd done this game of seduction many times with Geta, how different could it be for him? Grabbing the bottom of your night dress, you raised it until it bunched up your thighs, revealing your bare center to him.
He took a hitched breath. âMy lady-.â
â-What troubles you, general?â You asked then smiled with gritted teeth. You felt your hand begin to ache as you squeezed the vase shard.
Marcus furrowed his brow, and as if he already knew, he said. âCover yourself and show me what is behind your back.â
Your eyes dropped along with your heart. Still, as his face turned into a scowl, you cooperated. Handing him the shard and quickly pulling your dress back down, you spoke with intensity.
âIf you will not stab me before you rape my corpse, then I shall throw myself from the nearest window and allow the people of Rome to defile me. I will not lie on my back and take it anymore.â
He took a deep breath, holding the sorry excuse for a weapon in his hand. âIt is unwise to tell the enemy your plans.â
âŚWhat?
âIt would serve you greatly to control the faces you make before harming a man as well. Yet, above all,â He held the shard out to you. âyour enemy is not afraid to kill you; you should feel the same.â
âWhy do you tell me this?â You asked, still not believing it.
Marcus sat up. âI believe we can help each other, my little dove.â
âHow?â
He lowered his voice. âYou have heard of the gladiator Maximus, his dream of a free Rome, yes?â
âYes.â
âA dream that cannot be obtained from the rule of two emperors.â He lamented. âMy wife and I, along with several others, planâŚto fulfill our shared dream.â
They were going to overthrow Geta and Caracalla.
âWhat gives you reason to believe I wonât say a word of this to them?â You asked.
He smiled for the first time since youâd seen him. âThat freedom belongs to you.â
âIâŚIâm still lost. How will I be of any use?â
âEmperor Geta favors you considerably. He is a man, and not a cunning one at that. There are ways to wear foolish men down.â
You nodded, beginning to understand. âThereâs always a woman.â
âThereâs always a woman.â He solidified. âGain the trust of the public; make them love you, and they will not see the emperorâs whore but a woman of the people.â
âAnd how will that dethrone them?
He smiled. âMy wife and I will meet with the counsel tomorrow night. I will send for you.â
You scoffed. âGeta said that after tonight I am just his alone.â
âThen Iâll refuse to give him Persia and India.â
âHeâll have your head.â You berated. âBesides, I donât think heâd believe my cunt would be worth two countries.â
Marcus shrugged. âConsidering he only wants you to himself, I have no doubt that it is worth that much. But I am unable to confirm it.â
You sighed. âEven if heâll allow it, heâll send a guard with me.â
âI am not one to invite a third into the bedroom.â
âThen where shall-?â
â-Little dove,â he interrupted. âthe city was not built in a day, therefore it cannot be emancipated in one.â
Gods help and forgive you for being impatient on wanting to be free. Still, you composed yourself. âAlright.â
He nodded, standing up. âI will be seeing you on the morrow, one way or another.â
âOkay. Thank you.â
âFor what, child?â
You swallowed thickly, avoiding his gaze. âNot forcing yourself upon me.â
Marcusâ face softened, and he lowered himself to your height as you sat on the bed. He took your face into his hands, and you immediately tensed when his face drew closer to yours.
âDonât be afraid,â he whispered. âitâs not that kind of a kiss.â
With a tenderness that reminded you of your father, he placed his lips on your forehead and pulled away. Giving you one last knowing nod, he promptly left your chambers.
You wanted to do nothing more than shed tears of happiness, yet for no reason at all, you could not cry.
Your father had only taken you to the Colosseum to watch mock animal hunting. Even when your friends invited you to watch gladiator fights or other public executions, he had found ways of making you stay far away from them.
There was a strange humor in sitting in the best chair for your very first gladiator duel. That being in the front as Emperor Geta ran his hand up and down your back.
In utter honestly, you tried to stray your attention away from the fights, speaking more with Caracalla of all people. He was more erratic than Geta by far, and it was more difficult to tell when he would be kind one moment, then out for blood the next.
Yet at least he was open about being cruel, unlike his brother.
When you would watch the fightsâŚa familiar face seemed to catch both you and the generalâs wifeâs, Lucilla, eye.
The man with light skin yet hailed from NumidiaâŚHanno.
You hadnât recognized him at first, for it wasnât his mere presence that drew you to finally look at the event before you. No, it was the way he fought.
Most men previously had attacked with brute force; just stabbing the beast and hoping it would die. Hanno fought with wit. Simply using the sand beneath his feet as an advantage, blinding and tricking the rhinoceros to run directly into the wall.
He was cunningâŚhe commanded the men beside him as if it werenât the first time heâd done so in his life.
Then, when it came to deciding his fate when all seemed lostâŚGeta turned to you.
âMy love,â he played with a strand of your hair. âshall I show the poet mercy, or bloodshed for your entertainment?â
Even if it werenât Hanno, your answer would have been the same. âMercy.â
As a hush fell over the crow, Geta rose his thumb up, sparing him. As cheers erupted, Hanno shook his head.
âNo, no mercy.â
Geta furrowed his brow. âGladiator, we have spared your life. No one refuses-.â
â-I would sooner face your blade than accept Roman mercy!â
Thus, the fight continued. An act of defianceâŚPeculiarâŚQuite peculiar.
Both you and Marcus were correct about the night; Geta did indeed allow you to go to the generalâs house, but only if you were escorted by a trusted guard. When you arrived, Marcus immediately draped you in a cloak, practically covering your face and had excused as not wanting the staff to tell his wife of who he was bringing into their house.
Marcus led you into his chambers, and there you saw two people. Apparently, they werenât even apart of the counsel; simply paid to pretend to be both you and the general as the guard would listen outside, assume it was the two of you fucking.
He had certainly thought through every little detail.
Marcus pushed on a stone in his chambers, revealing a hidden door. You had only heard of these within stories, and as he led you down the darkened passage with only a torch in one hand, and the other holding yours, you had never felt more alive since your past life had been stolen.
You were welcomed to a room filled with dozens of the senate you had passed by in the palace. How strange it was to see them all huddled into a dimly lit room, plotting the demise of the men they initially swore to serve.
An arm looped through yours, and it was Lucilla. She whispered into your ear.
âWhatever you have to say, speak it to me, and I shall speak to them.â
You turned. âWhy must I not speak for myself?â
âI only allowed you to be here if Marcus agreed to not let your voice be heard.â
âWhat?â
âI will explain more to you soon after, I vow it.â
Thus the meeting began. In all truthfulness, you were only able to understand the bare minimum: In a few daysâ time, Marcus would lead five-thousand men into Rome to overtake the thrones of the empire, and thus destroy them, restoring the Roman Republic.
When the conversation turned to you, you were merely referred to as an informant who had the closest relationship to the emperor.
It still perplexed you as to why you needed to remain anonymous; there was an excellent chance they would know you as âGetaâs Favorite Whoreâ.
Yet, you did your best to inform the counsel of a plan you had simply created on the spot (they did not need to know the latter part of it).
You would gain more favor from the public, while at the same time, putting Getaâs worries to rest about any uprising or dislike from the majority of the empire.
How you would do thatâŚit was fortunate that they didnât ask you to give specifics.
Once the meeting ended, you were taken back up from the secret passage, yet instead of going back to the chambers, you felt Lucilla take your hand and lead you down another path.
You couldnât even get a sound out before she said. âIt is alright; he knows I want to speak with you in private. We will not take long.â
She led you up into the bath area of the house. It was quite beautiful; the tub wasnât made of porphyry, but that did not make it any less exquisite. There was something about it being lesser of the baths youâve had in the palace. It wasnât entirely reminiscent of the one you had at homeâŚ
But you felt safer.
Lucilla had been gentle in pulling off your robes, and never once did it feel wrong. You were a woman and so was she. She never pulled or scratched your skin, and you knew that she only felt sorrow when she gazed upon the bruises and wounds you had received from Geta.
âHow long have you been at the palace?â She questioned as she carded herbs through your hair.
You glanced at her, sighing. âIâve stopped countingâŚmonths, I know.â
âWere you forced to leave any family? Brothers, sisters, children?â
âNo. My mother died birthing me, and my father was taken half a year ago to an ailment emperor Caracalla also suffers from.â
She hummed. âHave you ever been in love?â
You laughed the most genuine laugh ever since you became a slave. âWhy on earth would you ask that?!â
âI am merely curious!â She teased. âYou are truly beautiful, and there is no doubt that men would throw themselves off cliffs for you; but it matters most of who you would choose.â
Her question scraped your mind. There had been times you were fond of, even lusted over, men both your age and olderâŚbut love? The only one you experienced would be storge; perhaps philiaâŚbut eros? Agape?
âI donât think I have been.â You answered. âHave you?â
She nodded, a forlorn look in her eyes, but smile upon her mouth. âTwice.â
âTwice?â You couldnât help the nervous giggle that left your throat. âIt can happen twice?â
âItâs possible, yes.â
âAnd who have you willingly fell captive to?â
âMarcus is the most recent, though there are days I do not understand what he sees in me. ThenâŚthe father of my child.â
Lucilla poured water upon your head to wash out the soap in your hair, and a silence fell over both of you. One that was broken when you spoke a name.
âLuciusâŚâ
She nodded. âYes.â
âHe-he had gone missing all those years ago, hadnât he?â
âHe had.â She ran the bar of soap over the top half of your body. âI believe he mustâve been around your age when he ran away.â
âAnd there hasnât been any sign of him since?â
âNo.â She answered right away.
You curled into yourself. âI apologize if I upset you my lady-.â
â-No. IâŚI love talking about him.â
You managed a gentle smile to soothe her. âWhat was he like?â
âHeadstrong.â She chuckled. âWanted to become a gladiator more than anything in the world. Yet, he was gentle, and kind as well. HeâŚI believe he wouldâve adored you.â
You shook your head. âMaybe when we were children, but I donât think so now.â
âItâs hard to judge.â
Whilst the air between you turned into more intimate topics, the question that had weighed on your mind was brought to light. âWhy did you not allow me to speak or show my face tonight?â
Lucilla stopped her ministrations. You looked up at her, and the look she wore bore an exhaustion that you had felt recently.
âI know too well the cruelties of men.â She began softly. âMy brother had done everything to keep me from ever resisting himâŚhe had done everything. I had only wished for someone to be there with me at every moment when I faced his abuse.â
Words; simple words that meant everything to you was what made you weep.
There was no warning at all. Once she was finished, tears sprang to your eyes, and you felt your sinus clog up. Even as you tried to tear yourself away from her comfort, she merely wrapped her arms around you in an embrace from a mother you had never felt.
âI donât want to go back.â You begged. âPlease donât let me.â
She kissed your hair. âIâm so sorry.â
âNo!â You sobbed. âI-I donât want to! Please, please, you canât make me. I-I-I-!â
Lucilla shushed you, rocking you back and forth. âDo not weep. You will be free beside all of Rome, and the past months of your life will be nothing more than a distant, horrible dream.â
You pulled away just enough to look at her. âYou-you must promise me something.â
âMy child-.â
â-Promise me and I shall help you overthrow them until my last dying breath!â
She stared for a moment before nodding. âYes. What is it?â
Your lip quivered. âWhen I die, you must bind my legs with chains or ropes when you bury me. I have,â you whimpered. âI have been told of men who dig up the bodies of girls andâŚâ
Lucilla kissed your forehead before holding you once more. âI vow I will honor your wishes.â
All you could do was believe her.
There were more times than not the Emperor Geta would talk about filling you with his seed as he bedded you. You never were able to discern if he was serious about wanting to give you a child (they would be his, not yours).
It all became too real when you didnât bleed that month.
Yet, you also did not feel sick in the morning, and your breasts hadnât swelled. You still had urinated on wheat seeds for several weeks, but they had not sprouted.
You werenât with childâŚyet there was nothing stopping you from convincing Rome you were. It would certainly be a risk; for there was no telling how Geta would react. But that was a risk you were willing to take.
Once a week, you were allowed to go outside the palace during the day, and you had chosen then to venture out into the numerous markets. It was nice to speak with the merchants you knew from your childhood. Some were elders who would watch over you when your father was busy, others were friends who had grown up with you.
âNow what would a little empress want with commonerâs food?â A manâs low timbre voice asked behind you.
Turning your head, you saw Macrinus standing before you with a curious grin. You mirrored it. âThatâs not an appropriate title for me.â
âAh, you are correct.â He nodded. âMy apologies, âLady with The Golden Mouthâ. Or do you prefer âRomeâs Delight?â.â
âYou may call me whatever you wish if youâd like.â You forced a laugh and turned back to the merchant you had known since you were a babe. âIâll take a sack of wheat and small bag of garlic, Gaius.â
âOf course, lady Julia.â
Not even a childhood friend could say your real name. A tight smile formed upon your lips when he turned to sack the wheat before you. Macrinus spoke again.
âYou still didnât answer me about why youâre exactly here.â
âI am not an empress.â You turned to him. âI am not a queen from another realm, I am not even a lady. I am a lowly whore that was fortunate enough to be chosen by the emperor. I like to keep my own schedule from before, so I am aloud to bake my own bread.â
He hummed. âIs that so?â
âYes.â
Gaius handed you the sack of wheat and garlic, and you held out three silver coins. He shook his head. âNo, just a copper-.â
â-Please.â Was all you said.
He hesitated, then took them from you, smiling. âMay Fortuna rain a thousand blessings upon your head.â
âAnd unto you as well.â You curtsied and turned on your heel to leave.
Macrinus walked beside you. âHow generous you are.â
âI try to be.â You decided to change the topic. âYou are in charge of Hanno, are you not?â
âI certainly am, why do you ask?â
âJust out of interest.â You shrugged. âThere is talk of him being similar to the one Maximus from years ago. Many admire him already and it has only been a day.â
Macrinus laughed. âIt is my duty to entertain the people. I noticed though that you are more prudish of the games.â
âI must admit, I am not used to the violence.â
âA sheltered girl?â
âAshamedly so.â
âThere is no shame at all. So, it is the Numidian that has captured your affection?â He teased. âHow scandalous for the young empress to fall for a slave.â
You chuckled. âNothing of the sort, I just find him amusing.â
âOh, I am more than happy to let you see him alone if you ever so desire. You donât need to wander upon him at another party.â
Your carefree air fell once he asked that. âI donât know what you-.â
â-Itâs alright.â He interrupted. âThereâs nothing wrong with being curious, I am only concerned for your own safety.â
You stood taller, a shy smile upon your lips. âI am capable of taking care of myself, sir.â
âOf course my lady, why else would you be out here in the streets of commoners without a chaperone?â
Purposefully, you turned onto one of the crowded piazzas where the music and laughter was the loudest. You grinned from ear to ear.
âOh please, donât tell me you volunteered yourself to keep me safe.â
He laughed. âNo, just wanted to say hello.â
You didnât have time to respond, as one of the performers had recognized you. Ah, a girl that lived in the house across from yours when you were children! You still remembered her name, and after you passed your belongings to Macrinus, she pulled you into the circle of performers, dancing with you.
You laughed the most you had that year; in fact, you swore your bruised your ribs just from the sheer joy you felt. You donât know how long you danced and sang with those who were your neighbors and friends, but just as you felt your feet begin to give out, Macrinus put his hand on your shoulder.
âI believe you should go back to the palace and rest.â
Nodding, you said farewell to your companions and took the bag of wheat and garlic back from him. âYou are right, thank you so much.â
He grinned. âLet me escort you back.â
âNo,â you walked ahead of him. âI wish not to bother you anymore. Good day, Macrinus!â
You lost yourself in the crowd, purposefully making it harder for him to follow. Once you were in the palace, you rushed into the kitchen, holding the sack of wheat behind your back, you greeted the cooks and snuck into the small pantry. You set the sack down on a shelf and pocketed two single reeds, along with an onion.
That night, Geta had called you into his chambers. Before going, you had cut the onion and brought it to hover around your eyes. You were crying by the time you were at his door. Immediately, he took notice of your reddened eyes and tear-stained cheeks.
âWhat is it, whatâs wrong?â
You shook your head, only crying more. It was less because of the onion now, and just everything coming down crashing onto your shoulders once more. Geta pulled you into his chambers by your shoulders, sitting you on the bed.
âTell me now what is bothering you.â He commanded.
You shook your head. âI-I canât-.â
â-Now, Julia!â
Taking a deep breath, you reached into the pocket of your breast, taking out the two reeds and setting it in his hand. He furrowed his brows.
âI do not understand.â
You took a deep breath. âThe handmaids have given me wheat and barley seeds ever since I have arrived. If they grow, then that meansâŚthat means I am with child.â
The look on his face spoke it all. You were certain you were dead.
âI-I didnât know how you would feel, and-and so I-.â
He crushed you in an embrace, attaching his lips to your jaw. âJupiter has blessed me.â
It was the first time you felt happiness in his presence. Of course, not because of him, but still joy. You returned his embrace, sighing in relief. âYou are happy?â
âHappy?â He pulled away, holding your face in his hands. âThere is nothing in this world that could sadden me right now. I will have an heir.â
As long as it was a boy (if it were real at all).
You feigned your smile and leaned into his touch. âI am fortunate to give you one.â
âAnd I am most fortunate to have you.â He laid down and brought you with him.
Perhaps, in another life, he was kind to you and didnât only value you until you gave him a child. Perhaps you would be in love with him, and he would make you empress
But you werenât fortunate to be born into that fantasy.
You wished nothing more than to sit with Marcus and Lucilla as you made your way into the emperorâs booth of the Colosseum. The three of you had managed to speak to one another, but only about meaningless things. Still, you just enjoyed their company.
 It would be more exciting that day. A naval battle, the Naumachia. The arena was filled with water and sea creatures you could never even possibly imagine. It was a wonder in and of itself how all the ships managed to fit themselves in the arena.
âCaracalla,â you said to the brother beside you as you were about to take your seat. He looked up upon hearing his name. You handed him the bag filled with garlic. âI finally found some for you.â
He grinned from ear to ear. âAnd you say that if I mix this with myrrh, I shall be cured?â
âIt should treat the lesions on your skin.â You corrected. âThis is what I did for my father.â
He died of the same ailment, but Caracalla didnât ask; simply smiled. âThank you, dear sister.â
You nodded, sitting down on the arm of Getaâs throne that would have put you in the middle of him and his brother. He wrapped his arm around you.
âYouâve been far kinder these days.â Geta pointed out.
âPerhaps that means Iâll be the most agreeable mother.â You jested, kissing his cheek.
He smirked, and as the man on the far end of the Colosseum began to announce the games, Geta stood up and rose his grail.
âI would like to propose a toast!â He yelled. The crowd fell silent, and you felt your skin crawl away from you. Geta continued. âTo the health of wives and to mothers. Especially to my lover, Julia, who carries my son the moment as we speak!"
An eruption of applause and cheers filled the stadium. You blushed upon the praise, and genuinely wanted to hide yourself from the gaze of everyone; especially the ones closest to you. You could feel both Marcus and Lucillaâs eyes on you, attempting to hide their shock and perhaps horror. The worst was that of Macrinus.
He knew. Just from the look of him (or perhaps it was your own paranoia), but he had to have known from the moment you bought the wheat.
Still, they all applauded, and ones the excitement of your supposed pregnancy died down, the enthusiasm for the battle was born.
It was perhaps the one event you could stomach. While you could still clearly see men dying, it wasnât as horribly bloody as the prior. Were you becoming numb to the cruelty of these games because you were pretendingâŚor were you letting the game invade your head?
As several ships collided within the growing chaos, men would either die from their fellow man or would simply fall into the water and be devoured by beasts you had never seen until then. Your eyes had been following Hanno the whole time, whether purposefully or not.
Words could not describe the terror that had been brought upon you as you saw him aim his crossbow at the booth you sat in.
You did not think the arrow would pierce you, but it did. It longed into your right shoulder, and a cry you had no idea you were capable of making tore through your throat.
Tears blinded your vision, but the screams from the whole arena deafened your ears you could not even hear what Geta was saying to you.
You could barely make out Marcusâ in front of you as he snapped the body of the arrow and then hoisted you into his arms. Youâd never been carried like this as a woman; only as a child by your father.
The heat of Rome felt hotter that day as the pain in your shoulder only grew tighter and tighter as if your skin was going to stretch away from you. The next thing you knew, you were laid upon a cold, solid surface, and sound returned to your ears.
âItâs alright, youâre alright.â Geta shushed, brushing your hair. âYouâll be okay.â
Someone stuck their fingers into your wounded shoulder, and you could only scream. A tender hand laid itself on your cheek, and just from touch alone, you knew it was Lucilla.
âDo not touch her!â Geta hissed, swatting her away.
âNo, no!â You whined, reaching out and holding onto her.
Lucilla dropped to her knees, kissing every part of skin that was available, mumbling. âI know, I know. This too shall pass, you are stronger than you believe, my dear.â
Then, just like that, you felt the arrowhead leave your body. The pain was still excruciating beyond belief, but all that was left was for your arm to be wrapped in cloth, and to rest.
One of the guards in charge of the gladiators approached you when you were finally able to sit up.
âMy lady,â he began. âdid you happen to get a look at the man who shot you?â
âSheâs only starting to recover!â Geta snapped. âHow dare you. She carries my child, and-!â
â-Itâs alright, Geta.â You soothed.
You couldâve done it. Told him with full confidence that it was Hanno. There would have been your chance of power; to kill the man who had nearly killed you.
YetâŚyou were vindictive and wanted to do it yourself.
âI have no memory.â You told him. âIt happened so fast.â
How horrible it is that Geta would stop forcing you to pleasure him only when you were supposedly with his child and injured. You assumed that if you were suffering from only one of those ailments, than he still wouldâve held you down and used you.
You thought nothing else would happen that night. You would simply speak to one another, pretending to be completely enamored by his existence, and then lie down to sleep.
Of course, that would be too peaceful.
You were awoken gently, to your surprise, by Geta shaking you. Humming, you rubbed your eyes. âWhat is it?â
âThe general and his whore wife.â He gritted his teeth. âThey planned to kill us.â
You shot right up, forgetting about your injured shoulder, and let out a cry. Geta helped you stand, and that was when you saw Caracalla standing before you, his monkey companion Dundus perching upon his shoulder.
âHow-how do we know?â You stammered, not having to feign your terror.
Neither of them answered, and the three of you were led out into the throne room. There before you in their night clothes just as you were, Lucilla and Marcus.
Geta approached them first, seething. âThe honor, the dignitas that Rome has bestowed upon you. All this you have forfeited by your treachery. Thanks to the civic virtue of men like Macrinus and Thraex your insurrection has been revealed-.â
 â-Torture me if you want,â Marcus shook his head. âbut please, donât lecture me.â
Getaâs face turned almost as red as his hair. âYour name and deeds will be forgotten, lost to history! You are damned to oblivion!â
âYou damn me?â He laughed. âI donât care. Everything is forgotten in time. Empires fall⌠and so do Emperors.â
Caracalla rose from his seat, reaching for his brotherâs sword. âWhy wait? I'll gut him right now!â
Geta grabbed onto him. âBrother! Brother! His death must be public.â
âPublic, yes. Hang his entrails from the city gates!â He pointed at Lucilla. âCrucify her!â
âNo!â
All eyes fell on you after your outburst. Even you froze in place, feeling bile begin to rise up within you. Geta let go of Caracalla. ââNo?â You say? What would you have me do then?â
Swallowing thickly, it was hard to speak as tears began to fall. You held your stomach. âCrucifixion isâŚitâsâŚâ
His face dropped into a scowl. âYou arenât saying I should let them live, are you?â
âNo-!â
â-Then which is it?!â
Your voice fell silent as your chest constricted, and you could barely breathe. Your mouth would move, but nothing came out; not even strangled noises of desperation.
âIf I may, your grace,â Macrinus stepped forward. âI believe she means to bring equal punishments to the crimes committed.â
Geta furrowed his brow. âI do not know what you speak of.â
âPlease, let the rest of them out of the room so I might explain more clearly.â
He considered his words, then turned to his guards. âThe criminals to the dungeons, my brother to his chambers, and my love-.â
â-I wish to be alone tonight.â You stated.
The emperor scoffed. âWhat?â
âThe babe.â You began. âI-I have helped many women deliver their children, and what has always caused an early birth is stress. I-I cannot take any-anymore of it, or I fearâŚâ
Finally, he took in the sight of your fearful face. Sighing heavily, he said. âPut my lady in her chambers for tonight.â
âThank you.â You kissed his hand.
You were led into your own chambers, and once the door was shut, you threw yourself onto your bed and wept. You wept until you were wailing into the night, you wept until your eyes were as red as the sun in the morning, you wept until it hurt to continue to do soâŚ
It was unknown how long you had cried, but the opening of your bedroom door is what alarmed you. Snapping your head over in the direction, you were shocked to see Macrinus.
âThe general and his wifeâs fate has been decided.â He stated.
You held a pillow to your chest, rubbing your reddened nose. âAnd what is it?â
âThe emperor has chosen to let the gods decide, and Acacius will fight against Hanno tomorrow in the arena.â
âYou mean you convinced him to.â You glared.
Macrinus approached you. âMay I try some of the bread you have baked, my lady?â
You held no confusion when he asked you that. Surprise, yes; but you knew what he asked. You took a deep breath. âI believe I donât understand.â
âThe wheat you bought only days ago.â He reminded. âYou said you would bake your own bread. Surely, you didnât use it as false proof of you carrying the emperorâs heir?â
You didnât dare look at him. Even when he laid his hand on our back, rubbing circles over your nightdress. âI wish to help you, my child. You must be willing to help me first.â
That was why he also didnât alert Geta of your betrayalâŚunless, he had no idea of your alliance with Marcus and Lucilla.
âWhat is it that you want?â You asked.
âAll in time.â He soothed. âI wish to give you the privilege to speak to someone.â
You finally looked at him, your eyes wide. âGeneral Acacius?â
âNo.â He shook his head. âI am unable to escort you to the dungeons below the palace. Yet, I can take you to the pit of gladiators.â
âIt is easier for you to take me out of the palace than below it?â
âTake you to the man who nearly overthrew the emperors?â He chuckled bitterly. âNot possible. I cannot grant you the gift to say goodbye, but I can allow you to bargain for his life.â
You blinked. âHanno?â
âCorrect.â
âHow can I leave the palace at this hour, after what has just happened?â
âYou underestimate the silence men will take when it is weighed in gold.â He tutted. âI can only give you ten minutes with him. Will you go or not?â
You were forced to decide quicklyâŚThis could be your chance. He had nearly took your life the other day, and the pain in your shoulder was just a growing reminder of that. If he were deadâŚthere was no way you could overtake him.
Yet, you learned that, in a world of men, you didnât have to be stronger than them: Only smarter, and faster.
âI will go.â
You had hidden a kitchen knife under your bed the moment you had your own chambers. Geta had gifted you several colorful ribbons he loved to see you wear in your hair. He perhaps did not expect you to tie one around your waist under your gown, securing the knife.
Macrinus led you swiftly from the palace to the gladiator pit, which was thankfully not a long walk. You ignored the stares and intrigued calls from the other men as you treaded the halls. You were stopped by a door. Macrinus didnât even warn Hanno who stood shirtless in his cell, only opened the door and let you enter.
âIâll rattle the door when itâs time.â That was all he said and left.
Hanno didnât even seem alarmed. âAnd what is Romeâs Delight doing here?â
Your blood boiled upon seeing him, yet you remained calm. âI have come to make a bargain; a plea.â
That was when the puzzlement appeared on his face. âAnd what is that?â
âThe man you will fight tomorrow, you must spare him.â
âWhy should I?â
Your grief and despair had made itself known to everyone around you for the past few days; yet, in that cell, only with Hanno as your witness, did he see your rage.
âHe is the one who saved my life when you meant to steal it!â
The only change you saw in him was his jaw clenching. Other than that, nothing. âThe general?â
You only nodded.
He sighed, brushing past you and shaking the door. âMacrinus!â
âWhat are you doing?â You hissed.
âI will not have you waste your breath on that man.â
âI will give you anything you desire.â
Hanno faced you. âThen you can deliver his head on a platter for me.â
You gawked as he walked away. âWhat have I ever done to you?â
âWhat?â
âDo you truly hate me that much?!â You turned back to him, getting closer. âKill the man that is the reason I am still here?â
The last thing you thought you would hear left his lips: A laugh. No, not a genuine one. One that you yourself have released on multiple occasions when you have been in disbelief.
âYou truly believe everything that happens is because of you?â He taunted. âHas the emperor been filling your mind with so many delusions of grandeur, you can no longer conceive a world where you are not the center of it?â
âIs it so difficult for you to answer my question because you are a fool, or because you wish to not admit it?â You hardened your tone.
âWhat is your question, my empress?â
âWhy did you shoot me?!â
âThe arrow was not meant for you!â
You felt your shoulders drop upon the confession. Your aggression ceased only because of your bewilderment.
âThen who?â You asked.
He backed away. âThe general you so wish to defend.â
âWhatever it is that he has done, it can be solved with-.â
â-He murdered my wife.â
Hanno said it so easily. No pain, no rage, nothing. It was a fact, and that was what he wanted you to know.
And how stupid you had been. No one in all of Rome was pure of heart; including Marcus. He was a war general; how could you think he wouldnât have committed sins against the innocent?
âWhy so silent, my lady?â He asked. âAre you in disbelief that he has enemies?â
âI didnât know that.â You admitted.
âThat the general is too a monster, or that he killed the only thing in my life worth living for?â
âAnd that is your desire?â You prodded. âTake his life so that he may die knowing his wife will be ravaged by wolves?â
When he charged at you, you barely had enough time to reach in your dress and unsheathe your knife. Hanno stopped himself just in time for the tip to kiss his chest. Nothing to cause any more harm than a scratch.
Even though you were not the one hurt, you breathed as if you were. He stared down at you as you shrunk under his gaze, and the two of you remained frozen. That is, until he grabbed both your wrists, and rose them above your head.
âI am only merciful because the general still breathes.â He spoke so only you could hear. âIf your bastard of a lover had put him to the sword this night you chose to visit me, you would be dead before you could scream.â
Your nose was an inch from his, that was how close he stood to you. His breath caressed your skin, and you turned away in disgust. He let go of your empty wrist, yet still held the one with the dagger.
âDid you believe you could kill me tonight?â He asked, yet you said nothing. Hanno then brought the dagger to his breastbone, angling it upward. âDo not stab head on; stab up.â
Silence and an iron gaze was your reply.
He then hovered it to the pulse point of his neck. âIf you want a quick death, right here; with a thinner blade, preferably.â
Then, he placed the tip just above his brow. âIf you need information out of a rat, and you have the stomach to do so, drag it across. It will make the mightiest of men cry like a child in the night.â
âYou are clever and a skilled warrior,â you finally said. âwhat is it you want me to tell you?â
âThat you will leave it up to the gods and to me if your general lives or not.â
âBut I cannot.â You dared to dig the blade just a little into his skin, and his breath hitched. âMy desire for him to live is stronger than for you to die.â
Hanno finally let go of your wrist, and you immediately retracted the knife from his brow. âSo do you wish to try again to kill me?â
âI wish for you to show mercy.â
âMercy?â He questioned. âMercy upon the man who pillaged my home and killed my wife? Mercy for the one who has made me a slave?â
âI too am a slave and-.â
â-And?!â He cried. âAnd there is nothing! You are draped in silks whilst I in chains and are bathed in clear waters while I in blood, yet you say we are the same?!â
You swallowed your anger, knowing it would bring you nowhere. âYou entertain the horrid creatures of Rome; I am forced to pleasure the emperor. We perform differently, but we are still slaves.â
âYou are with child.â He stated. âWill that child also be a slave though the emperor is quick to claim it is his heir?â
The crackling of the torches in the room only added to the fire th in your soul. If not contained correctly, you would surely burn and take him with you.
 âA childâŚyes.â You relaxed, folding your hands. âA child that I could command to be Getaâs. Perhaps, if I wanted to have the brothers slaughter one another, I could say it belongs to Caracalla. Or, if I despised you anymore than I do at this momentâŚI could say that it is yours.â
Hannoâs eyes dropped in recognition, saying softly. âYou carry an empty womb.â
You nodded. âIt is the same as your honor.â
Moments later, the door behind you rattled, and Macrinus spoke even when you didnât. âThe time is up, my little empress.â
You bowed your head to Hanno, curtsying. âSleep well.â
He said nothing in reply, and you turned on our heel, leaving the cell. You pulled your hood back over your head as Macrinus led you through the darkened streets of the city.
âDid you get what you came for?â He asked.
âNo.â Was your immediate reply. âAnd I do not know truly what I wanted.â
The day was as blistering hot as the others, yet the stare Lucilla gave you as she was being led into the emperorâs viewing box made your blood turn to ice. There was not a hint of wrath upon her face; there was nothing at all.
She already looked as if her soul had been stolen.
âHow does your shoulder fair, dear sister?â Caracalla brushed his fingers over your arm.
A watery smile was upon your lips like second nature. âIt still aches, but it heals, thank the gods. And your overall health?â
He sighed. âI do not know how much longer I have upon this earth.â
âDo not say such things.â You squeeze his hands. âIf the gods will it, you shall live for another hundred years.â
He kissed your hands that held his. âI hope so, my love.â
Your grin fell upon the title, and Geta immediately sat you down on the chair behind him that was beside Lucillaâs. He gave an apologetic look.
âHe only grows more confused by the day.â He caressed your cheek. âYou are well?â
You were far from it, but you could not say that. âYour son feels better now.â
Geta smiled, lowering his head down to kiss your womb. âHe will need all his strength.â
The announcer on the other side of the arena yelled to gain everyoneâs attention. âFrom the vanquished city of Numidia, the victor of three contests in the Colosseum, the barbarian Hanno!â
You watched as he ran up from the pit, sword in hand. On the other side, you watched at they brought in Marcus. You could barely look at his already beaten figure. The announcer continued. âWill challenge General Marcus Acacius for his treason against the lives of the Emperors and the enemy of the State!â
The two approached one another on the sandy field. Even from where you sat, so close to them, you could barely make out the look in their eyes. You assumed their was hatred, but your own eyes must have deceived you, because you swore you saw a hint of regret within Marcusâ own gaze.
You blinked and the battle between the two had begun. It was a different level of insanity at how they fought. Marcus was decades older than Hanno, and yet, there were moments where the Numidian had to keep up with him.
Than, the roles would be reversed.
Blood stained the floor of the Colosseum as they fought. Then, when all feel silent between them, and Marcus could barely stand, his lips moved as he spoke to Hanno, then raised his hand.
He yielded.
The patrons of the arena began to mumble amongst themselves, growing louder and louder. Geta rose to his feet. âRomans! What say you?â
In an instant, choruses begging him to be spared overpowered the few that wanted him to be killed. Geta shut his eyes, raising his hand, and they were silenced.
âThe gods have rendered their judgement.â
His thumb pointed downward, and the crowd erupted in dissent. Your heart was forcing itself to beat out of your chest as you could only stare at the sight of Hanno glaring down at the general before him.
He tossed his sword to the side.
You hadnât even noticed Caracalla stood until you heard him yell. âKill him, kill him!â Like an angered child.
âIs this how Rome treats its heroes?!â Hanno shouted, staring at the audience all around him and pointing his sword. âIf his life has no value, what are yours worth?â
Geta stepped up onto the barrier, balancing between the viewing box and a fifteen-foot drop into the arena. He held his arms out to his side, his sleeves dropping to the ground, and his pale face was red. âThe gods have spoken! Kill him!â
From all sides of the stadium, hundreds of archers aimed their bows at the center of the battleground. Yet, none fired. Caracalla jeered.
âIn the name of Jupiter, kill him!â
The arrows were released, and they screamed like none other as they fired into the center. As they pierced Marcusâ body, you did not know you had been wailing in fright until Geta had slapped you.
âYou mewling cunt!â He cursed. âYou wish to weep over the man who nearly had you killed?â
Blood fell upon your tongue from your bruised lip, and you did not dare to look at him nor Lucilla.
âDeath will be too good for you!â She cried with all of her heart.
The noise from the crowd died as if the people themselves had done so. Then, just like the confused murmurs when Marcus yielded, the same began to grow and grow into a call of rebellion.
It was all in your ears. Lucillaâs weeping, the curses from the crowd, the panic of the emperorsâŚbut you stood absolutely still.
With hooded eyes, they drifted up to see that Geta stood just on the edge of the barrier, his back turned to you. Your gaze fell to the ground below you, and it was only then you realized how high up you truly were.
You do not know who or what willed you to, but you then looked at Hanno still the center, covered in blood. As if he knew what you would do, he shook his head.
âAh, ah, ah.â Macrinus grabbed your arm roughly when you took one step towards Geta.
The emperors turned to him upon his appearance, and Macrinus loosened his grip on you before saying. âFor our safetyâs sake, we should leave.â
âYes.â Geta stepped down, wrapping his arms around you. âWe should.â
You never knew there was a safe house in Rome until you were forced into it. Perhaps that was the reason for it being a safe house, so that no one knew of it. Yet, apparently, almost all of the roman citizens found it that night. Or, they were simply rioting wherever a free patch of land was.
The cries played in your ears despite them being behind heavy walls of the safe house, and you dared not to peek out the windows as the several fires would temporarily blind you. In the house was you, Macrinus, Dondus (Caracallaâs pet monkey, although heâd call him his other half), and the twin emperors.
âHow is the babe?â Geta asked as you sat with your head hanging low.
Of course he would ask that. You didnât look at him. âHe is in fear for his life.â
âI understand,â he sighed. âbut there-.â
â-But what?â You finally looked at him, hissing. âChaos has fallen upon the city because of your actions.â
âThere was nothing else to do.â Geta glared at you. âHe and his bitch were plotting to kill us! If Iâd let him live-.â
â-Donât you hear them?â Caracalla cried out from his seat, holding Dondus. âTheyâre calling for our heads! She is right, you brought this upon us!â
Geta placed his hands on him. âCalm yourself, brother. The Praetorians will put down this crowd like they have others-.â The money upon Caracallaâs shoulder chirped out in anxiousness from the people outside. âKeep the ape still!â
âBeware of how you speak to Dondus!â His brother berated.
âPerhaps,â Macrinus finally intervened. âyou should take Dondus and Julia elsewhere. The noise outside is too much for them; you should comfort one another someplace quieter.â
Caracalla nodded, gathering up Dondus and moving to help you stand, but Macrinus reached his hand out first. You took it, and as you stood, he said into your ear.
âI will find you on the right side of the hall.â
This was not the time nor place for riddles, but you could not react in any sort of way. You looped our arm through Caracallaâs and walked out of the room, hoping to find somewhere quieter.
âIâm afraid,â you confided in him, truthfully.
âI am as well.â Was all he could say.
You stopped in the middle of the hall once he found an open door. âIâŚI need time with my own thoughts. Please.â
He nodded, cradling Dondus closer to his chest before entering the room, shutting the door tightly. Within the minute, you watched as Macrinus approached you from the other side of the hall.
You spat. âWhat do you want?â
âI know I stole your moment of vengeance, and for that, I apologize.â He stood before you. âBut let me make it up to you.â
âHow could you possibly?â
From his cloak, he brandished a knife, holding the handle out to you. You took it without hesitation, yet question was still upon your face. âI do it myself?â
âYou could,â he shrugged. âor, you could have his own brother do so.â
âCaracalla? He is senile.â
âThen I have a proposition for you.â Macrinus pointed to the door Caracalla was behind. âConvince him that Geta will destroy all of you if he is not disposed of. Convince him that, as the new emperor of Rome, he will need more trusting subjects. I shall be his second in command, and you shall be free.â
You furrowed your brow. âWho shall be first?â
âThe monkey.â He smirked. âDo you believe he would put me above him?â
It sounded so simple; too simple. Yet, as the crowd began to die down, and you could no longer hear their protests from outside, the quietness brought to you what you had always known: You would never be your own person again so long as Geta breathed.
You held the dagger to your heart, saluting him. âI shall do my duty.â
He nodded. âMay the gods be with you when you do, Brutus.â
An insult to most, and while it shocked you, you took it in stride as you stood outside the door. You made yourself look smaller, more afraid, and hid the dagger within your cloak as you entered the room.
There, sitting upon the floor, was Caracalla and Dondus. Like a scared child, he held the monkey close to him, grooming one another as if it was the only thing to bring comfort.
âCaracalla?â You whispered.
He stared up at you, and you noticed he had been crying. Immediately, you sat before him, bringing him into your arms.
âNothing was ever mine.â He cried, embracing you. âEverything was âoursâ, always. Even in the womb, he gripped the umbilicus in his tiny fist to deprive me of air.â
âHe did?â
âCertainly, one cannot forget.â
You pulled away only to hold his face tenderly in your hands. âYou must listen to me, for what I tell you is dire. Your brother wishes to blame you before the Senate; for what happened, for the chaos in the streets-.â
â-That is a lie!â He tore himself from you. âI didnât do it!â
âI know that, but they donât. No testimony is more damning than that of a brother against another.â
âHe lies! He always lies!â He sobbed.
âHeâs very persuasive.â
âWhat will they do to me?â
âI donât dare imagine, butâŚgods above, I donât wish to know what they will do to Dondus.â
His jaw quivered with the rest of his body. âWhat-what shall we do?"
You sighed. âIâŚI have a proposition, but it is most outrageous and-.â
â-Julia,â he begged, grabbing your hands. âdear, sweet sister, please tell me.â
Breath shuttering, you reached into your cloak and held the blade out to him. âSlay your brother tonight. You shall be crowned the sole emperor of Rome when morning comes, and Dondus, the child I carry, and I will be safe.'
He took it, yet still had that look of terror. âThisâŚIt has always been he who led everything. I do not know who to trust or-or who to command.â
âThen let me-.â You stopped yourself, eyeing the monkey that lay at his legs. You held your hand out to him, and Dondus climbed into your arms. âLet us help you. Claim Dondus as your first in command, and I your second.â
You wished the same as Lucilla and Marcus; to have Rome be a free empire. Yet, you would have to free Lucilla yourself before that happened.
Caracalla nodded yet said. âYou-you are with child. You will become delirious as time progresses.â
And he was the epitome of having a clear mind.
âI will need a third.â He settled.
You shook your head. âThat has never been done before-.â
â-I will be emperor!â He screamed. âIf it is to be done, it shall be done!â
Raising your hands in surrender, you pleaded. âIt shall, it shall! For a thirdâŚMacrinus. He has been loyal and informed us of the generalâs betrayal.â
âYes, yes Macrinus will do.â He grabbed your face and pressed his lips against yours. It didnât even truly feel like a kiss, yet it shocked you nonetheless. âYou are the wisest woman I have ever met, dear sister.â
You nodded, forcing a smile. With that, he stood on his feet and left the room. IT would have been easy to stay in there and wait for his returnâŚ
Yet, you wanted to be the last thing Emperor Geta saw.
No fear toiled within your body as you approached the throne room, not even when you hear the cries that you knew belonged to Geta. You walked through the doors, watching as Geta held his hands up in fear, begging his brother to spare his life as he was forced onto his knees, trying to stop the knife in Caracallaâs hand.
âI love you!â Geta squealed, staring up at him through tears âYou are my brother, I love you!â
You moved to stand behind the younger twin, glaring at the man before you. Getaâs eyes dropped in relief.
âMy love, my love, please help me!â
There was nothing uncertain about how you grabbed Caracallaâs hand that held the dagger. With eyes unblinking, you guided the blade into Getaâs throat, pushing it further and further as blood drained from his mouth.
The emperor was dead, and you would sleep like a child once more that night.
There was something inside of you when you awoke that morning. Not the child you had lied to all of Rome about; it felt like a parasite. You threw up an hour after you woke up, but when you checked with the healers, they said that there was nothing ailing you.
Was itâŚguilt? No, no it could not be.
Was it possible to feel guilt for the act of killing someone, but not feeling it for who was killed?
You had no time to debate these issues as if you were a philosopher.
Dressed in your finest silks, you made way into the room where the hundreds of senators met, carrying a hefty sack beside you. You sat in a chair next to Macrinus.
âYou have done well.â He said softly.
You smiled. âOnly because of you.â
Your gaze turned to Caracalla, who sat in one of the two thrones that were there for him and Geta. He looked like the worst you had ever seen him be. A blood rag had been placed at his feet.
âNow I am the only one.â He began, voice low. âI was the true us, and he was the false me. We were always âwe,â all our lives, but now I am only I, me, alone.â
The senators look at one another in silent terror. The only ones to not feel fear were you and Macrinus.
Caracalla continued. âMy hand held the blade, but my fatherâs hand guided mine. I was the puppet, dancing on his string. As Emperor, I have convened the Senate to appoint my First Consul and bestow upon him the power to administer the military and civic functions of the Empire.â
He tossed his hand to the second thrown, revealing his fury companion. âI name Citizen Dondus!â
Where the senators were beyond terrified, they were now confused. Macrinus was the first to rise, applauding. âHail Dondus!â
You repeated his sentiment, clapping with vigor. Caracalla and the rest of the mortified senators applauded all repeating âHail Dondus!â.
Once the excitement died down, Caracalla resumed. âAs is custom, I am naming a Second Consul to advise the First and to assure his integrity. Though you will find that Dondus is incorruptible! As Second Consul, I nameâŚâ
Macrinus took one step forward.
âThe mother of the future heir to the throne, Julia!â
All eyes fell upon you, standing taller than you ever had done in your life. How strange it was though, that the same reaction to a monkey being assigned first in command, was to you, a woman.
Utter silence, until Caracalla applauded enthusiastically. Like sheep, the senators followed; all but Macrinus.
âYet, as mother to the heir,â the emperor said after finishing. âit is apparent she shall be incompetent for majority of her advising. So, for the first time in the history of Rome, I name Citizen Macrinus as my third!â
Even with this third twist in a counsel, the senators seemed more so relieved at the decision. Macrinus did not smile or even acknowledge the honor, simply stared ahead. Caracalla gathered Dondus in his arms.
âThere will be a triumphal parade to celebrate. There will be games and mass executions! Long live the Empire!â
âLong live the Emperor!â You and the senators all yelled.
The Emperor Caracalla carried the First Consul Dondus sweepingly out of the hall, to the Senateâs terrified silence. You picked up the sack that had been beside you this whole time, then making your way to the center of the room.
You opened the sack, and out fell Getaâs decapitated head. The Senate gasped and gagged at the sight of the former emperorâs head. You almost felt sorry for the horror they felt that whole time. Yet, there horror is what would bring you fortune.
âThis is what befell your emperor.â You pointed to the head at your feet. âHe was slaughtered by the one who shared a womb with him. Tell me, senators, is this who we must trust to maintain the greatness of the Roman Empire?â
They did not glance at one another in uncertainty; no, no they were listening to you.
You continued, your heart stammering. âI am not the one who will stand with you for the rest of my days, it is the son I carry within me. And if it is my son who will become emperor, then there must still be an empire for him once he is born. Hysteria has poisoned the streets for decades now, it is time to put an end to it!â
Murmurs and nods of approval began to echo amongst the counsel.
âEvery single one of Romeâs children matters; from the beggars to the emperor himself. If one falls, so shall the rest of the Empire. I have walked beside the lay people of the city, and they feel betrayed by the former emperor for the murder of their beloved general. To right this wrong, I call for the release of Lucilla, daughter of Marcus Aurelias.â
Not one of the hundreds of senators made a sound. Deep within you, you knew that there wouldnât be much rejoicing over Lucillaâs freedom, but you still had to try.
âThe people adored her for far longer than they adored the general!â You pleaded. âIf we kill her only for the amusement of the elites, then the children of Rome-!â
 â-Shall live.â
You turned to Macrinus, who finally stepped all the way forward.
âForgive me,â He bowed mockingly. âmy lady, but for a woman complimented to have a golden mouth, you have no idea what you are saying.â
A few of the senators chuckled.
âYou wish to free the woman who mean to have you, and the emperors killed?â He questioned.
You refuted. âI wish to show the world that Rome is capable of forgiveness.â
âA desire so foolish, only the emperorâs favorite whore could have it.â
âAnother word of slander out of your mouth, and I will have your tongue removed!â You stood toe-to-toe with him.
He grinned like the devil, and just from your outburst alone, no matter how warranted it had been, he had you. Macrinus stepped away, looking around at the senators.
âMe thinks the little girl believes she is Marcus Aurelius himself born again.â He straightened his tone. âWhat say you, senators? All in favor of releasing a traitor to the Empire, speak.â
Not one of them said âayeâ. If you werenât under a sheer amount of duress, you wouldâve seen perhaps a few faces of inner turmoil, debating on calling for Lucillaâs release.
Yet, no one said a word because they shared the one thing that will contribute to the death of humanity: Cowardice.
Macrinus tutted. âNow, dear Julia and I happen to have, through good fortune and not a little skill, the remaining emperorâs ear. We can speak reason in it and tame the madness in the street. Yet, I will leave the domestic work of calming the emperor to his second in command. As for myself, to restore order to Rome, I will need power over the affairs of the state. Including command of the Praetorian Guard. The decision is in your hands. Ballot or hand?â
One hand rose immediately. Another followed, then ten, then thirty, and then, all of them. He provided no evidence for his causeâŚyet there was a unanimous decision.
Macrinus held his hand out to you, and you could only stare up at him in question.
âI believe we shall take the seats that are rightfully ours.â He said lowly.
Carefully, you slipped your hand into his, and he led you up the stairs to sit upon the chair that belonged to Geta, while he took Caracallaâs.
This would be the first and the last time a woman ever sat upon the emperorâs throne.
After being embarrassed that morning, you paced around your chambers. Perhaps you could have found Caracalla and gave him the same reasonings the senate did not listen to. Perhaps he could somehow see to the logic that would be in setting Lucilla free.
No, of course he wouldnât. Even if his mind was sound, he still knew she was apart of the coup to try and have him dethroned; killed in his mindâs eye.
As your mind grew heavy with existential possibilities towards the future, the door to your chambers opened. Stopping where you stood, you watched as Macrinus entered.
âNow, try to make me understand this," he shook his head. "I let you have your vengeance on the man who used you as a slave, I promised you freedom, and yet you wasted it.â
You clenched your jaw. "How dare you-."
â-How dare I?â He tensed his voice. âHow dare I keep silent about your lie? How dare I give you the privilege to take your revenge? I have saved you more than you believe I have harmed you, lady Julia."
The name had always bothered you, but with one emperor dead and the other incapacitated, you assumed it would stop.
Now, it only enraged you more; or perhaps that was just because it was Macrinus saying it.
You glared. âIt was your own mistake to believe you were the only one who desired power.â
He took a deep breath, then moving to sit on your bed. âSit beside me, Romeâs Delight; I have a story to tell you.â
âI am not a child, you may tell me in short.â
âYou are not the only slave wishing to be free.â He pulled back the collar of his clothing, revealing a branded âM.Aâ âYou are lucky enough to not carry your masterâs mark, but were a slave nonetheless. Marcus Aurelius spoke of peace while still using violence against those who served him.â
Swallowing your pride thickly, you said. âIâm sorry.â
âYou have learned now, that is all that matters.â
âBut Lucilla will still be dead.â You tried to keep your voice steady. âShe wanted the emperors to be gone as much as you, but she will-."
â-Her father enslaved me.â
âHer father is dead; and if taking his empire wasnât enough, than killing his last child will satisfy you?"
Macrinus clutched your arm, fingers tightening with every word. âI would be careful with how you speak to me. I wish to offer you one last ounce of kindness before I regret it. Now tell me, Brutus, will you accept me as Romeâs new emperor?â
You had all the right to say it was Caracalla, but you thought better of it. So, with the softening of your entire person, you nodded. âI accept you.â
He dropped your arm. âIâll let you say goodbye this time.â
Macrinus led you down into the dungeons of the palace, and he was right; somehow it was more heavily guarded than the gladiator pit. Even when the worst of the worst prisoners sneered or jeered at you, your sorrow and anger could not stir your fear.
The door to one of the cells was open, and you ran in just as Lucilla turned to see you.
âFive minutes.â Was all Macrinus said before locking the door and leaving.
You embraced one another when he left. Neither of you said anything, just clung to each other as if the world itself would tear you apart.
âForgive me, mother Lucilla.â You choked up.
Lucilla pulled away, taking your face into her hands. âSweet child, there is nothing to forgive.â
âI failed you.â The tears finally came. âI was right there in the senateâs room, I-I told them the chaos that would befell Rome if-.â
â-You were in the senateâs room?â She sounded as if her breath had been stolen.
You nodded. âYes, but they wouldnât listen!â
âMy dear girl,â she smiled. âif you were able to even get half a sentence in, than they listened! My father but sixteen years ago said that it was a shame I had been born a women, for I would have been a magnificent emperor. Yet, here you stand; you who had been once a slave, rose above into having a sear in the senate council.â
Still, no matter how much pride she held, your own shame outweighed it. âI still have failed you.â
âI have already accepted my fate.â She whispered. âI must take care of those who matter to me before I leave this earth.â
âDo not say such things!â You cried. âIâll still find a way to save you.â
âHanno is my son.â
You expected her to deny your attempts at rescuing her, you even expected her to coddle you, curse youâŚbut this?
âWhat?â You uttered.
âHe is Lucius Verus Aurulius,â she said gently. âsecond of his name, but the first son of Maximus Decimus Meridius.â
âThe-the gladiator?â Was somehow the first question you asked.
âYes.â She nodded. âLucius didnât run away, I sent him. With him as heir to the empire, I know many would not rest until he was dead. How was he to fight for a claim he knew nothing about? Now, he is here; and I am no longer frightened of dying.â
âThat doesnât mean you have to!â
She shushed you, combing her fingers through your hair. âI can speak to you until the earth is burnt by the sun of how I have made peace, but I know that will not work. So, I have two final requests for you.â
âAnything.â
Lucilla walked to the small desk she had in her cell, then picking up a scroll loosely wrapped in twine. She handed it to you. âMy first is to give this to my son before tomorrow. ItâŚexplains a great deal of things I do not have the time to say to him.â
You took it, holding it to your heart. âAnd the second?â
She smiled, wrapping her arms around you and kissing the side of your head. âTo take care of him as I intend him to take care of you.â
It was not the first time that day your eyes had grown. âHe despises me.â
âIf the gods are merciful, then I truly believe you will both come to see eye to eye as the only two who remain.â
âI nearly killed him.â You admitted. âThe night before his duel with Acacius, I brought a knife with me and stabbed him; wellâŚnot enough to harm him.â
Lucilla shook her head, giggling. âHe will need someone who disagrees with him.â
You found yourself laughing along with her, even through your sobs. She pulled away from you, wiping your tears. âHe is a good man. He may deny it but believe me when I tell you.â
âI trust you.â You nodded.
She took a deep breath. âI will be with you, even when Iâm gone.â
âIâŚI know.â
âNow go before I beg you to stay.â
You forced yourself away from her before you could change your mind. You could not even look at her as you left her cell and went up the hall. Just in time, you remembered to hide the scroll as Macrinus approached you.
âLeaving so soon?â He asked.
Sighing, you said. âSheâsâŚinconsolable. I couldnât bear another moment with her.â
Macrinus nodded. âYou should rest for the remainder of the day. It has been quite exhausting.â
âYes,â you agreed. âit certainly has.â
It was the first time that night you were forced to sneak out of the palace on your own. Fortunately, you remembered the route you took to the Gladiator pit and managed to dodge any of the guards on patrol that night.
The pit proved to be more difficult as the overseers of it had less space to watch over, yet you still somehow managed to maneuver them.
Perhaps the gods were on your side.
âHanno.â You whispered once you found his cell.
The man turned over his shoulder once he heard your voice and approached with a scowl. âWhat are you doing here?â
You wasted no time, holding out the scroll. âYour mother told me to give you this.â
He paused for only half a beat. âMy mother died when-.â
â-Your mother is Lucilla, daughter of Marcus Aurelias.â You whispered fiercely. âAnd you are Lucius, the lost son.â
His eyes didnât leave yours as he reached down to the latch of the door, and cracked it opened. âGet inside.â
Though you wished to, you didnât question how he had unlocked it and only walked in. He shut the door tightly, then took the scroll from you. You stood there as he unraveled it to read. His face changed every few seconds, ranging from distress to downright confusion. When he was finished, he looked at you.
âShe gave this to you?â You nodded. âWhy?â
âI was allowed to say goodbye to her.â
âFrom Macrinus?â He tested. âWas this before or after you attempted to steal his power?â
âI was cruel to you.â You admitted. âEven after discovering Acacius had pillaged your home and murdered your wife, I expected you to show mercy. I am astounded you did, but as I look back, I wouldnât have blamed you if you didnât. My desire for the general to live extends to your mother; if not more. She did not give up my name at any moment despite the fact I too was apart of the coup to try and overthrow the emperors. I cannot simply let her die.â
Lucius stared at you, his gaze intimidating yet at ease. He approached you. âYou wish to save her life?â
âMore than anything.â
âIt is a rumor that Macrinus was the one to puppeteer Caracalla in slaying his brother. ButâŚit wasnât him, was it?â
Breathing deeply, you looked at the floor. âIt was I.â
âLook at me.â He commanded softly, and you did. âWould you kill again if it meant protecting her?â
Your mind said âyesâ without a momentâs hesitation, but your heart only sunk into your stomach at the thought. It must have been apparent on your face, for he said.
âThere is no shame if you are unable to.â
âI will be with him in the emperorâs box.â You said, determination in your eyes. âI will simply need you to buy me time in the arena. It shall be done.â
Lucius nodded, and released along breath before saying. "I treated you harshly. I...I don't believe I would have survived what you have been put through."
You picked at your fingers. "I think you would have."
"No." He solidified. "I wouldn't."
A silence fell between the two of you. There wasn't a hint of discomfort; as if, for the first time, you felt seen.
âYou never told me your name.â Lucius uttered.
You pressed your lips together, shrugging. âIt was never important.â
âIt has been,â he said. âand it is now. You know my true name, if I am to understand you as how my mother wishes I do, then I must know yours.â
Your mouth parted to speak the first syllable, but even that had felt foreign. You instead lied. âI do not remember it.â
As he looked at you, the steely gaze you always knew began to disappear. âYou must remember how it sounded from your motherâs mouth.â
âShe died before she could hold me.â
âThen your father.â He walked closer to you, yet you felt no fear. âIt does not matter if he was wretched or kind, he spoke your name and your name alone. What did it sound like?â
Like he loved you. Even when he was cross, he never raised his voice. You hated more than ever how tears started to build within your eyes.
âGeta had beaten me until I could no longer use it.â you confessed. âIt will feel like poison upon my lips.â
âThen whisper it to me so you will scarcely have to move them.â
You had been lain down on a bed and had every bit of a man touch and invade your body. Even before the emperor, you had lain with people in the past of your choosingâŚ
But none of that amounted to the intimacy you felt in that cell as Lucius stood nearly chest-to-chest with you, hovering his ear over your mouth as you finally (finally) spoke your name aloud.
If the heat of his body lingering over yours did not set your entire being aflame, it was the breath he released once he said.
âItâs a kind name.â
It was all too much for you, so you pulled away from him, drying your eyes. âIâŚI will pray for your safety.â
He outheld his hand to you. âStrength and honor.â
A saying you had overheard people use as they entered the stadium. You shook his hand. âStrength and honor.â
You didnât expect to be in the parade Caracalla raved about the day prior. Yet, there you were, draped in the finest and most colorful silks with jewelry in your hair. Inside your sleeve, youâd hidden the same kitchen knife you attempted to stab Lucius with.
You were sat beside Caracalla, who had Dundus upon his shoulder, and who had only grown more delusional since the day prior.
âWhere is my brother?â He pulled on your sleeve like a child as you were escorted from the float and into the Colosseum.
A watery smiled pulled upon your lips, and you soothed him. âHe feels most unwell today.â
âHe should be here.â He sulked as you walked. âHe would be happy for me.â
âAnd he is.â You lied. âYou will see him again shortly.â
That managed to ease him, and you both were seated in the emperorâs box with Macrinus. It didnât escape your vision how hundreds of Praetorians also circled the entire arena. As the time to the match grew closer, you did your best to calm your own nerves. This would be for the good of Rome. Once it was done, you would be able to rest easily again.
It was then you watched as, on one side of the Colosseum, a wagon was rolled out into the center of it. Tied to a pole, dressed up as if she were Venus herself, was Lucilla. All that attempt at soothing yourself was gone once you saw her eyes.
âMust we kill Lucilla?â Caracalla questioned.
You couldnât even snidely repeat his question to Macrinus you were in such a state of anxiety. Macrinus responded.
âUntil she is dead, you will never know peace.â
Thus, the event commenced. The announcer himself even sounded guilt-ridden as he spoke of the crimes Lucilla was being charged with. Treason, betrayal, all of it only anguished the spectators even more to see her being prepared for execution.
âLet it not be said that the Emperor is not merciful!â He yelled. âThe queen will be granted a champion to defend her!â
Out from the other side of the arena came Lucius. Half of the Praetorians held their weapons to the man, while the other half faced the civilians as if expecting them to riot. Once again, at the sight of the scene before them, it would not surprise you.
You had been taught one a many myths by your father, mainly belonging to the Greeks. You were Cassandra; blessed by Apollo to speak of prophecies but cursed to not be believed.
When it seemed that hope was goneâŚLucius rose his sword, and hundreds of gladiators sprinted from all sides.
The crowd and Caracalla were in an uproar at the excitement. Pandemonium ensued as the gladiators began to climb the barriers and civilians were attempting to enter the arena. The sound of arrows screaming entered your ears; so much so you could not hear what Macrinus was saying to another man, and why Caracalla was screaming.
You simply blinked, and once your eyes were open, you watched as Macrinus dove a needle into the side of Caracallaâs neck, killing him.
Only a gasp tore through your throat, having no ability to scream. Your body soon found reason to move, and you rose to your feet, remembering your duty. Macrinus had acquired a crossbow, aiming it towards Lucilla and Lucius now at the center of the arena.
You rose the knife from your sleeve, charging towards the man. The arrow was fired, and you leapt upon his shoulders.
He moved wildly, trying to force you off of him. You made attempt to slash his throat, but it made contact with his eye instead.
StillâŚhe overpowered you. Flipping you over him, you dropped down into the arena, your head colliding with the ground.
The sky was orange above you when you opened your eyes. Your head had never felt so awful before, and you were surprised you could even sit up. All around you, bodies littered the Colosseum floor. If there was not blood laid before you, there were swords and shields.
Your eyes drifted to the center, and now sunken to the floor, was Lucilla on her wagon. You forced yourself to stand and walk towards her.
When you could see the arrow sticking in her chest, you began to run.
Climbing atop the wagon, you untied the ropes around her hurriedly.
âMother,â you begged. âmother, can you hear me?â
âI am still here, sweet child.â She whispered weakly.
âSave your energy now.â You managed to free her, and then pulled her to your lap.
âI will be seeing my beloveds now.â She smiled.
âNo,â you hissed. âyou are going to live.â
She reassured. âIt is alright. I have fulfilled everything that was asked of me, and what I wished for.â
âMother-!â
â-You will look after him, wonât you?â
You wanted to cry; you wished that sadness was the first thing you felt. But no, it was anger. Still, you nodded. âI will, but you will be there to make sure he takes care of me too!â
âHe shall.â Was all she said.
âYou will live, just please stop talking.â
âI love you.â
âLucillaâŚâ Your voice broke.
âTell Lucius I would do this all again for him.â
You opened your mouth, but nothing came out. Lucilla rose her hand to your cheek, brushing it tenderly one last time.
Her eyes were held open as she went limp in your arms. You closed her eyelids, knowing her gaze would haunt you.
You did not move for the first hour, nor did you cry out in despair. It was when the sun was completely gone, and you tore yourself away from her corpse did you collapse into a fit of sobs.
The ugliest sounds were released from your mouth as you could barely stand. You do not know how long you cried, but when you could finally move again, you crawled to the nearest sword, and trailed it behind you before climbing back up onto the wagon.
You tied the rope from her body around her legs, and brought her back into your lap, sword in hand.
There was no rest for you that night. You would nearly drift off into sleep, but you couldnât bring yourself to give in until you could bury her properly. You also couldnât bring yourself to bury her at the same time.
When you had lost time altogether, and the sky was purple as twilight broke, a gentle hand shook you.
Raising the sword in surprise, you felt your body relax once you saw Lucius. You should have asked how he survived, what happened to Macrinus, anything elseâŚbut all you said was.
âI wouldnât let anyone touch her.â
He nodded, tears threatening to fall as he gazed upon his dead mother. He took a deep breath. âMay I take her?â
You handed her to him, and he took her into his arms. You scooted off the wagon, your eyes reddened and exhausted.
âWhere,â you cleared your throat. âWhere should she be buried?â
âIâŚâ He heaved. âI know where my fatherâs grave is.â
âOkay.â Was all you managed.
And you walked by his side, neither of you knowing what your fate would befall in Rome.
YetâŚonce both slaves, you were now free.
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| emperor geta
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pairing: emperor geta x fem!reader
summary: the fates spin the thread of destiny, and mortals have no choice but to follow its path. you have other plans.
âşâthe fates, who give men at their birth both evil and good to have, and they pursue the transgressions of men and gods⌠until they punish the sinner with a sore penaltyâ - theogony, hesiod âşâwhatever happens to you has been waiting to happen since the beginning of timeâ - marcus aurelius
A/N: i watched gladiator ii, devoured all the geta fics i could find (ty writers for feeding me <3) and iâm still ravenous. the man is gnawing at me from my insides so i had no choice but to get typing. havenât written for like a yr so bear with me. if this flops it never happened xx
warnings: mention of miscarriage (not reader's), period-typical misogyny, morally ambiguous reader bc sheâs fighting for her life out here. sheâs just a girl fr :( YOU try being a girlie in ancient rome :/ enjoy !!
w/c: 5.9k
latin translations: fatum - fate, carissima - dear, domina - my lady
As the moon ascends in wake of the sunâs descent, the gilded walls of the imperial palace glint softly in the moonlight. Glorious tapestries line these walls, each one telling the tale of hallowed heroes, of terrible tyrants and of revered rulers. The history of the Roman Empire.
Their patterns, depicting stories of both rise and ruin, are woven by none other than the three Fates. One Fate spins the thread, and an heir is born. Another Fate weaves it, and a battle is won. The last Fate cuts, and an emperor meets his end.
As three pairs of hands work nimbly in the heavens, another tapestry begets itself in the mortal realm, where our story takes place.
From a tender age, you had been taught to believe in fate.
Fatum.
You had first learnt the word as a little one.
Youâd been a curious creature, like most children are. Sheltered from the terrors of the world, your appetite for life was insatiable. Youâd wake up with a hunger for new knowledge about the world around you, and go to bed still hungry for more, no matter what had transpired during the day. Thus, you found it impossible to go to sleep of your own accord - you relied on your motherâs bedtime stories to satisfy your appetite, and lull you into slumber.
Perched by your bedside with a gentle hand stroking your hair, she regaled you with the tale of Romeâs beginnings. A tale of abandonment, wolf-mothers and fratricide. Enough thrill to tire you out, she hoped. To her chagrin, she looked down to find widened eyes, without a trace of sleep in them, staring up at her expectantly. Instead, your eyes shone bright with the excitement of unanswered questions.
She sighed fondly before prompting you to talk. âYes, carissima?â
And so the floodgates opened. You fired her with questions with all the sternness of a Roman general, and she listened intently with all the patience of a loving mother.
Why did the king try to kill the babies? Why didnât the wolf eat the babies?
And finally, taking great care to be gentle, you placed a tiny hand on her rounded belly and asked the most burning question. Why did Romulus kill his brother? Your innocent mind struggled to comprehend it. You hadnât even met your little sibling yet, and you already couldnât fathom the idea of bringing harm to him. Or her, you thought, but your father had insisted that all refer to the babe as the male heir he so desperately desired it to be.
âFatum,â was the simple answer she supplied. âWithout the kingâs cruelty, without the wolfâs mercy, without Remusâ death, our great city would never have been built.â
Eyes shining with knowledge yet untold, her gaze held yours. âWhatever happens to you, has been waiting to happen since the beginning of time,â she quoted, a tone of finality in her voice.
As well-loved children do, youâd lapped up your motherâs answer as readily as the twin babes lapped the wolfâs milk.
You had first witnessed fatum some years later, at the age of twelve.
On the brink of adolescence, much about you had changed compared to the little girl having bedtime stories told to her. Much except one. Age hadnât quelled your curiosity - if anything, it had grown.
Youâd exhausted all the resources available to a girl of your standing. Youâd read enough philosophical texts to debate with Aristotle himself, asked questions faster than your tutors could find answers and yet, you knew there was much more that the world had to offer. So, you decided to take matters into your own hands.
With age had also come a newfound deviance. Observant as you were, youâd learned that there was much to be gained with certain types of information - if you knew how to use it to your advantage.
As such, youâd taken to eavesdropping on your fatherâs meetings with his fellow senators from behind a pillar. For weeks on end, they had spoken of a play becoming popular amongst patricians and plebeians alike. Oedipus.
At the centre of their discussion was a ploy to ban the play from being performed. Abhorrent, they had called it. A threat to their authority, if the people are led to believe that even kings are subject to a thing as fickle as fate. At that statement, your eyes twinkled with mischief and a devious smile found its way to your face - you were determined to see this for yourself.
So, on the fateful night you caught your older cousin in the arms of a man bearing no resemblance to her betrothed, you knew youâd struck gold.
Desperate to protect her reputation and far too embarrassed to berate you for sleuthing around when you should have been asleep, sheâd hastily agreed to the terms of your silence. She would sneak you into the cityâs amphitheatre to watch the next production of Oedipus, if you swore to secrecy.
And so your plan commenced. Hidden under the large folds of her toga, you observed the story unfolding before you. The mighty king of Thebes brought to his knees by the tragic fate heâd tried to escape, to no avail.
A real spectacle, the performance elicited emotions from you that were both old and new. In a short two hours youâd been perplexed, horrified, scandalised. Youâd learned quickly why you had to be sneaked in - fate wasnât the only mature theme you were educated on that night.
But you only came to understand fatum when it took the person dearest to you, two summers ago.
Pregnant again, the fifth time that you could remember, your mother had taken ill. Perilously ill. After years of unsuccessful attempts to produce an heir - one daughter, two miscarriages and two stillbirths - she had breathed her last. In her womb? The son your father demanded of her. The son he had longed for. Prayed to the gods for. What else could bring forth such a tragic end, if not the hands of the Fates?
Now a grown woman, the beliefs your mother had impressed upon you would soon be tested. Left with no living sons to continue his legacy and no living wife to bring forth such living sons, your fatherâs lofty political aspirations could only be fulfilled through his daughter. You.
Your father wasted no time in advancing his plans.
After a long day spent praying at the temple of Pluto, you had been ready to wind down and relax. A good distance away from the centre of the city and situated atop a number of hills, a trip there takes up the whole day. You had set out at dawn, and as the sun set over the Tiber river to bring forth dusk, your shadow darkened the entrance of your family villa.
Exhausted both emotionally and physically, your body went through the motions of preparing yourself for supper, but your mind remained absent - occupied with thoughts of what could have been and what will never be.
After your bath you called for your maid and allowed her to dress you, head still in the clouds. It was only when you caught a glimpse of yourself in the bronze mirror atop your vanity that you noticed something was amiss.
Your eyes squinted as you inspected the image reflected on the polished surface.
âWhy have you dressed me in these garments? I wish to wear my usual attire.â
You wore a tunic, the draped garment secured by an ornate brooch resembling an owl, with eyes made of precious gems. Nothing out of the ordinary.
What was out of the ordinary, was the saffron yellow hue of the tunic â since your motherâs passing you had been in mourning and thus only wore dark colours. A fact well-known by your maid, who dressed you day and night.
The hands fastening the brooch faltered as she gathered a response.
âMy apologies, Domina.â She stepped back, head bowed in deference. âI assumed you would revert to your previous wardrobe, seeing as yesterday marked the end ofâŚâ She trailed off meekly, allowing you to fill in the blanks.
The previous day had marked a year since your motherâs passing, and thus the end of the customary mourning period. As such, it would be socially acceptable for you to appear happy and content again, reflected in the abandonment of deep plums and drab greys for sunny yellows and bold blues. You supposed it was not odd for her to assume you desire to don brighter colours.
But upon closer inspection, your suspicion rose again. Detailed with beautiful patterns and made of the smoothest damask money could buy, the tunic was much too elaborate for a simple family dinner in the villa. The last time you wore it was to a relativeâs wedding, where your father made a point of telling anyone who would listen just how much it had cost to import the material from China.
You poised yourself to question her further, but the words died on the tip of your tongue when you saw the pleading look she gave you.
âPlease, Domina.â
She offered you no further explanation, but the fear in her eyes was explanation enough. She was not doing this of her own accord, but under instruction. And if you knew your father well, under strict instruction.
Whatever plans he had for you, you knew you would have little to no choice in the matter.
Wordlessly, you acquiesced and allowed her to continue. You did not protest when she brushed, braided and pinned your hair into an elaborate updo. You were compliant when she lined your eyes with kohl and blotted your lips with mulberry juice.
Primped and primed like a prized show horse, you dismissed your maid, sat by the window and awaited your fate.
Not long passed before the sound of a male timbre filled the room.
âIt appears your outfit is missing something.â
You turned to the direction of the voice to see your father standing in the doorway. Instinctively, you stood to your feet - less as a show of respect and more because you were used to being on guard in his presence.
In his hands he held a translucent, gauzy material, sheer in nature and vibrant in colour, that was all too familiar to you.
Your motherâs favourite veil.
Usually fixed firmly atop her head during special occasions - festivals, birthdays, weddings and the like - you could recognise it from a mile away. Growing up, you had associated this veil with womanhood itself. You would traipse around the corridors of the villa with it wrapped around your head haphazardly, the excess fabric trailing behind you as you ran as fast as your little legs could carry you.
What a foreign sight it was to see it in the hands of your father. And what a foreign sight it was to see him in your chambers.
Following your motherâs passing, the two of you had not conversed beyond what was formally required of you, your already fragile relationship fracturing completely. Yet here he was, extending a peace offering. An olive branch.
Pleased as you were to receive it, you were not foolish enough to believe this to be a genuinely affectionate gesture. A politician through and through, your father was no stranger to symbolic gestures, and he had made no attempts to mend your relationship prior to this moment. This sudden generosity, paired with your extravagant dressing, could only mean one thing.
He wanted something from you.
Now, you had two options. Comply with his request, or comply with his request begrudgingly. You chose the latter, of course. Even if obedience was your only option, you werenât going to make this easy for him.
You casted him a quick look of derision. âIf you wish to barter for my forgiveness with a piece of cloth, I am afraid your efforts have been wasted.â
Unphased, he stepped further into the room. âNow, now, peace, dear daughter. Let us be civil.â The faux humility in his tone was almost comical.
âPerhaps you feelâŚwronged by me for holding your mother to a certain standard. But, you must understand that I was simply fulfilling my duties, by encouraging her to fulfil her own. I have particular responsibilities to this family. As do you, now.â
You levelled him with an icy glare, wise enough not to express your discontent verbally, but too headstrong not to express it somehow.
âAnd even if I have, in some unfathomable way, wronged you; to err is human, to forgive, divine.âÂ
After knowing him for as long as you did, you knew this was the closest thing to an apology you would get. You also knew your father was a talented orator - itâs how he gained a large enough political following to join the Senate, after all. And so you prepared yourself to be subjected to one of his moving speeches.
âIt is common knowledge that women are the weaker sex,â What a great way to start, you snarked to yourself. âYet, I have always seen a unique strength in you. Not physical strength, of course, but a mental fortitude. Since you were a young girl you have been willful, stubborn,â he took a step closer to you with each word, purple-lined toga brushing the floor as he advanced.Â
As he said the last word, he gave you a knowing look. âNosy.â
You failed to hide your shock. âOh yes, I saw you slinking around behind the pillars.â He waved a hand dismissively. âIt matters not, now. In fact, whatever dregs of information you picked up from eavesdropping on my discussions may soon prove useful.â
His face was a picture of smugness, with an eyebrow cocked and the corners of his mouth upturned as if he knew something you didnât. With just a few sentences he had complimented you (even if it was backhanded), revealed that he knew your secret, and teased you with a nugget of information. The perfect combination to make you anticipate his next words.
Silence filled the room as he kept you in suspense, mind whirring as you mulled over his cryptic words.Â
One hand held your motherâs veil in front of him, while the other caressed its folds delicately. His eyes had a faraway look in them that suggested his mind had travelled to another time.
âYour mother was a strong woman. Not strong enough in the end, regrettably, but strong nonthele-â
âDonât.â You interjected. âYou will not sully her memory with your caustic words.â
His lips spread into a diplomatic smile, but the twitch of his eye betrayed the irritation he felt. Belligerent as he was, he ignored your outburst and continued.Â
âUnlike her, you have the makings of a lady of great influence. Much like me, you have the mind for politics. That potential lies latent within you.â
With a gentleness you wished was also reflected in his words, he draped the veil over your head. âI advise you not to waste it, dear daughter, and suffer the fate of lesser women.â
You scoffed at his words, readjusting the veil so it rested perfectly atop your head and shoulders. âAnd how do you suggest I fulfil thisâŚpotential? The Senate is not exactly welcoming of women.â
Well-pleased that your interest had been piqued, he finally reveals his true intentions.
âAccompany me to the imperial banquet tonight. We will celebrate the successful conquest of Britannia.â
âI do not care for banquets, nor do I spare a thought for conquests.â
âYou may not care for military conquests, but this banquet itself is a conquest of the political sort. In my experience, much more is won with words, than with swords. And tonightâs event presents an opportunity for much gain.â
Again with the cryptic words.
âAllow me to present you to the Emperors. Your face is comely enough to garner their attention, and for some reason unbeknownst to me, some men find opinionated girls like you to be charming.âÂ
Is he insinuating what you think he is?, you thought incredulously. Surely not.
âThe Senate may not be the place for women, but the Senate is not the only facilitator of politics. Why not practice your politics from Palatine Hill?â
There was no mistaking it. He intended to make an Empress of you. Equally as curious as you were sceptical, you decided to test his logic.
âBeauty is fleeting. Charm wanes with time. How would I maintain their favour?â
âThat, dear daughter, is up to you. I am certain you will find a way, formidable as you are.â
While it pained you to admit it, he was right. You and your father were more alike than different, what with your scheming and blackmailing. Besides, you were formidable. You were cunning. You were capable.
There may be greater things in store for you yet.
And those greater things began with this banquet.
Upon arrival, you were met with the most magnificent sight you had ever seen. Sat proudly upon Palatine Hill, the palace looked like the image your mind conjured when picturing Olympus. After ascending the intimidating number of steps that led to the entrance, you truly felt like youâd ascended to the land of the gods. Wherever you looked there was amazing artwork that instilled equal parts awe and fear in you.Â
Look up, and there were grand arches to behold. Look to the side, and the spectacular frescoes offered a feast for the eyes. Look down, and there were beautifully designed floor mosaics you almost felt bad for stepping on.
As you passed through into the atrium, it was much the same. Ostentatiously decorated, it boasted gilded walls and glorious tapestries, each feature a testament to the Emperorsâ opulence, and Romeâs riches.
But it was impossible to focus fully on the artwork with the room heaving as it was. Eyes darting from one person to another with every passing second, you were captivated by the spectacle the hoard of partygoers presented. Something seemed to be happening in every square foot of the room, each guest having their fill of whatever their vice of choice was for the night. Wine was in abundance, giving way to loose lips, and scantily-clad whores prowled about in the shadows, giving way to loose purse strings.
You had been to your fair share of lavish affairs, but this was a whole new world of revelry.
Between the loud percussion of the musiciansâ instruments, the aroma of the heavily seasoned foods and the leering gazes of overexcited men, you began to feel overstimulated. You stuck close to your father as he led you into the heart of the throng, finding comfort in the familiar when surrounded by the foreign. Better the devil you know.
Oblivious to your discomfort, he reprimands you under his breath. âStop clinging to me like a child, lest our venture fail before it has even begun.â
Youâd been so taken by your surroundings that you hadnât registered where your father was leading you to. Now you stood in front of the two men at the centre of this affair, who were seated majestically upon a golden threaded couch. You prayed you didnât look like the bewildered little girl you certainly felt like.Â
With a grand, sweeping gesture of his hand, your father bowed.Â
âImperators, what an honour it is to partake in theseâŚwondrous celebrations with your Majesties.â
âSenator,â one of them said, voice smooth like honey but with an edge that demanded caution. His face bore a smile, but his tone was calm and measured. âWhat a pleasure it is to see you.â The twitch of his eyebrow suggested otherwise. âIn a more agreeable mood, might I add.â The man beside him sniggers.
More agreeable? Whatever could that mean? For the second time in one night you found yourself deciphering cryptic words. Father must have angered the Emperors, somehow.Â
âAnd youâve broughtâŚâ He trailed off, looking at your father expectantly.
âYes, Emperor Geta, Emperor Caracalla,â with a single clap and an officious clearing of his throat he stepped to the side, no longer obscuring their vision of you. âMay I present my daughterâŚâ
You managed to regain your composure, exhibiting a grace only a lady of the upper echelons of society could possess when you sunk into a deep curtsy. Lifting your gaze, you were met with the hair-raising sensation of being observed. Not just observed â scrutinised. Â
A pair of eyes, deep brown like rich soil, trailed over your form. The man that addressed your father with contempt - Geta. His brows furrowed as he took the sight of you in. Lined with kohl much like yours, his eyes were smouldering in their examination.
Another pair, red-rimmed and cloudy with the haze of inebriation, were the perfect contrast. The man that sniggered - Caracalla. With irises of a cold blue hue, they would have been intimidating if they belonged to a face other than his, what with his rosy rounded cheeks and seemingly perpetual impish grin.Â
Despite their differences, the relation between the men was clear as day. Flaming locks of hair and the gold laurels that circled their heads confirmed their identities. These were the infamous twin tyrants.
But it wasnât just the weight of their eyes that you felt. Lounging around the couch in various positions and in varying states of undress, was an entourage of courtesans. You did your best to avert your gaze, as theirs bore into you.Â
And what a pleasant sight you were. Adorned with ornate jewellery and clad in the finest of silks, you were easily one of the best dressed at the banquet. Before a word had been uttered, your appearance relayed a message â you were a lady of fine stature, more than accustomed to luxury and thus, would be well-suited to palace life.
Well-suited to be Empress.
Not taking any chances, your father decided not to leave anything up for interpretation.
He began listing your virtues as if reading from a handbook - 100 Things to Look For in a Roman Wife. He spoke of your piety, your beauty, your fertility. With every trait of yours that was mentioned, you grew increasingly more irate and keeping the docile smile on your face became increasingly more difficult.Â
â...and lest I forget, she is most gifted with the lyre-â
âHow quaint.â Caracalla interrupted, a peal of childish laughter bubbling from his lips. âHe presents his daughterâs hand as if he is lobbying for a law to be passed!â
Geta scoffed, âOr a conquest to be forfeited.â
At this, Caracalla doubled over in laughter, the overfilled cup of wine in his hand threatening to spill over the rim with every jostle of his frame. Clearly thereâs a joke youâre missing here.
Thereâs a wicked glint in Getaâs eyes that tells you this joke has guile.Â
âThree sennights have lapsed since you last stood before us, spewing nonsense about abandoning our pursuit of Britannica.â The vitriol that coated his voice strung a discordant note in the mellifluous tune of his brotherâs continuous laughter. âYet here you stand in your Emperorsâ palace,â he gestured at the ongoing frivolities. âDrinking and making merry with spoils from the very war you so vehemently opposed.âÂ
Ah. It finally clicked. From what you had picked up from your father and his associatesâ discussions, you knew that this conquest had long since been under contention among the Senators. The campaign was taking longer than anticipated, and required more reinforcements than expected. The Roman force was fatigued. At home, the starving plebeians of Rome were one famine away from revolting, and without the full support of the army, politicians relied on empty promises to appease their constituents and maintain order. Yet, the Emperors were adamant on expanding Romeâs borders.
For whatever reason, at the last Senate meeting three weeks ago your father had been the unfortunate soul to suggest that the troops should draw back. And now he stood before them at the celebration of the successful conquest, presenting you as a bargaining chip to secure his pardon. Opposing the Emperors was costly, and he decided you were going to pay that price on his behalf.
Geta leaned his head on his hands as he asked, âTell me, Senator, what makes you think you will triumph this time?â
You watched your fatherâs reaction with bitter disbelief. For the first time in your life, your silver-tongued father, the man that had landed you this fate, floundered for words.
Fine. If this was the hand dealt to you, so be it. But you were going to do this your way.
âYour Majesties,â At the sound of your sweet voice, Getaâs gaze affixed itself to your face. Instantly, he was beguiled. âIf I mayâŚâÂ
With the slow incline of his head, you were permitted to speak.Â
âI know little of war,â you feigned ignorance. âBut I do know that defying the odds to bring glory to Rome is no small feat.â Preening at your praise, Geta leaned forward in his seat, a silent encouragement for you to continue. âRome and her citizens are fortunate to be led by you, Imperators, and I am grateful to be in the presence of such wise rulers.â
His mouth spread into a self-satisfied smirk. âI bask in your praises, my lady. It pleases me to see that someone in your family has a semblance of loyalty to the powers above themâ A pointed look was shot at your father. âYou see, all those that oppose their Emperors,â His venomous gaze roved over the group of Senators shifting uneasily as they watched this ordeal. âWill soon learn that there is only one way for a man to wield power.â He held up his index finger for emphasis and paused for suspense. âWar.â
With all the self-assurance of a man that has never truly been challenged, he stalked towards you.
âWhat other power can bring a man to his knees and cause him to surrender?â
âI can think of nothing greater than war!â Caracalla piped up from behind him.
âYes, brother.â Geta held his cup of wine up in agreement. âBy no other means can a man wield such power. I am sure my lady agrees?â He offered his right hand, each finger as bejewelled as the next.
The ultimatum he presented you with was clear. Kiss the ring, let all be forgiven and allow this encounter to end pleasantly. Refuse the ring, andâŚwell, donât refuse the ring.
But compliance was predictable, and would only get you so far. Your beauty and charm had ignited a spark of interest in him, but that wasnât enough. You needed that spark to burst into a flame.
With swan-like grace you knelt before him and took his hand, smiling inwardly when his eyes followed your descent with rapture. You didnât miss his quick intake of breath when you halted your movements to look up and meet his eye, lips an inch away from the stunning signet ring.
âUpon second thought,â You tilted your head as if considering his words. âThere exists another power great enough to make a man kneel in surrender.â At your bold words, the hand you held tightened around your fingers until he had a firm grip of your hand. âA power so great, even Emperors are not immune.â
Gasps of shock came from the onlookers sober enough to process what they had heard.
âImpertinence!â Caracallaâs cry of protest tore you from the captivity of his brotherâs gaze.Â
âForgive my daughter, she oversteps her bounds.â Your father spat the words out and fixed you with a look of warning, a late and unappreciated attempt to de-escalate the nightâs proceedings.
With a wave of Getaâs hand, his words were dismissed. For the sake of keeping your resolve, you pretended not to see the Praetorians return their drawn swords to their scabbards.
You returned to the intense stare of brown eyes narrowed in⌠intrigue? Suspicion? You werenât sure, but you had his attention.Â
âAnd what power would that be?â
Your gentle smile had him entranced. âThe strike of a drum, the strum of a lyreâs strings. Music, my Imperator, holds much power.â
See, while your father was busy waxing lyrical about you, you had been studying Geta closely. As he listened to others speak, his fingers unconsciously tapped the thigh of the courtesan perched on the arm of the couch. But they were not tapping any old rhythm â they tapped to the beat of the percussion in the background.
The ring your lips had puckered up to kiss was not embossed with an imprint of Mars, the god of war, but Apollo, god of music. Geta the Emperor championed conflict and violence, but Geta the man held music dear.
Rich eyes twinkled as his laugh rang in your ears. âAh, yes. Your father mentioned your skill with the lyre. He failed to mention your humour.â He didnât believe you.
âI assure you, Imperator, my lyre-playing is unparalleled.â You indulged him with a coy smile.
âYou believe you would best our most talented musician? That your playing would put your Emperorsâ finest to shame?â He challenged your claim.
âGiven the chance, I would outplay each of the Nine Muses,â you asserted boldly. You rose to his challenge.
His eyes gleamed with ardour as he regarded your statement with a raised brow. âI await the day I hear you play with baited breath, my lady.â
âIt would be my pleasure, my liege.â
Not risking any more excitement, you curtsied and took your fatherâs arm as he guided you towards the outskirts of the atrium, and away from watching eyes. He wasted no time expressing his displeasure.
âHave you lost your senses, girl? Has some strange plague come over your mind?!â He released an exasperated sigh. âYou should have held that tongue of yours.â
 âOh, and left you there, stammering like a bumbling fool? Father,â you uttered the paternal term without an ounce of familial affection. âYou entrusted this ploy into my hands, so leave it there.â
Anger flashed across his face like a clap of thunder. Before he could berate you for your indolence, however, a piercing shriek stole the moment.
You pushed through the crowd to see the commotion, weaving past bodies stilled with shock at whatever it is they were witnessing. When you got to the centre, you were met with a most harrowing display of fraternal discord.
Geta lay sprawled out on the marble floor, the corded muscle of his limbs tensing as he strained to hold back the man towering over him, wielding a dagger above his head. Caracalla.Â
At first glance one may have supposed this fray was borne of anger, but with the spittle flying out of gritted teeth that gnashed and snarled like those of some inhuman beast, the incoherent stream of words and the crazed look in his eyes, it was clear that he did not have full agency of his person.
The rumours were true. He was having one of his infamous episodes.
Your eyes darted from Praetorian to Praetorian, waiting for one of them, any of them to take action. Their hands rested on the hilt of their swords, hesitation rooting them to their spots. To raise a hand against Caracalla would be treason, punishable by death. To ignore the distress of Geta would be treason, also punishable by death. They were at an impasse.
The chatter of mingling guests and the ambience of the musiciansâ instruments had long since stopped, leaving the grunts of the brothers to take their place. All watched on in stunned silence, revelers turned horrified spectators.
Their scrambling continued. Geta managed to hook a leg around Caracallaâs ankle, toppling him over to join him on the cold marble. Wine cups clanged as they were knocked to the ground, collateral. The cacophony of sound nearly masked the sound of Getaâs desperate plea.
âBreak the spell! Break the spell!â
Moved by an impetus you couldnât explain, you barreled further through the crowd until you reached the musiciansâ corner. You grabbed the lyre from the hands of the bard (who was too focused on the ongoing tumult to protest), and started strumming the tune of a nursery rhyme favoured by Roman children both rich and poor.Â
Dulcet tones and sweet symphonies echoed through the chamber as you sang of Romeâs rolling hills, of fair maidens awaiting the return of brave soldiers, of the Tiber Riverâs ebb and flow.
Those around you listened intently, enraptured. They stepped aside, clearing a path for you towards the quarreling brothers. You walked forward as you sang, and as you reached the last verse you stood a few feet away from where they squirmed, limbs akimbo.Â
From your position you saw the exact moment the muscles in Caracallaâs face relaxed, and his body went limp. He released a weak whimper better-suited to an injured animal than the tyrannical emperor he was rumoured to be.
Eyes fixed on you over his brotherâs shoulder, he dropped the dagger as if compelled. Tears began to run down his face as he wailed, balling himself up into a foetal position. When they noticed his change in disposition, his entourage took the chance to spirit him away from the room.Â
The final note of your song rang out. A beat passed as everyone came to, as if they too were held captive in a trance. Then, a slow, steady clap from one became a roaring applause, your fellow guests lauding your performance as if it had been planned.Â
Chest heaving from exertion, Geta used a three-legged (formerly four-legged) stool to pull himself from the floor and adjusted his toga. At the raise of his hand, the clapping stopped. Flopping back to sit on the couch, he gestured for you to come forward. His expression was inscrutable.Â
Before you could scrape together an apology, or some sort of explanation, you were utterly disarmed by the grin that spread across his face.Â
âMy lady,â He huffed between words, still catching his breath. âI stand corrected. It appears your flair with the lyre is equally as bewitching as your looks.â Â
Your cheeks heated up at his confession of attraction towards you. âIt pleases me that you think of me so, my Emperor.â
âMmm.â He hummed, dark eyes taking their time to appraise you. âThe power to bring a man to his knees can be very dangerous, you know. I believe it would be in the best interest of Rome and her citizens if such power was⌠managed by the capable hands of their Emperor.â
The chill of deja vu ran down your spine when he extended his hand in your direction. A second invitation to kiss the ring. Most people only get one.
âWouldnât you agree?â
As your lips made contact with the cold metal of Apolloâs face and you sealed your fate, you closed your eyes and said a silent prayer. When you opened them again, you found eyes the colour of rich soil searching yours.Â
He turned the hand that gripped his and pressed a surprisingly sweet kiss to the back of it. His kisses travelled up your arm, growing more and more fervent, the plush of his lips leaving warmth on every spot they pressed against. He used his hold on you to pull you towards him until you were close enough to smell the heady scent of patchouli mixed with the subtle musk of perspiration, and count the freckles on his speckled cheeks, peeking through the layer of makeup.Â
His palm ran up and down your arm repeatedly, inching further up each time.
âYou will make a home for yourself here, in these palace walls.â Brown eyes gazed into yours, full of a veneration you couldnât fathom. âAnd you shall be my little Muse.âÂ
As if the troubles of your life thus far had not been a sufficient allotment of suffering, the Fates had now tasked you with weathering the twin tempers of the Emperors Geta and Caracalla. And surviving.
Gods help you.
A/N: thank you ever so much for reading ! i'm working on part two so let me know if you want me to post it when it's done <3
likes, comments and reblogs are appreciated x
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All Real
Emperor Caracalla x Reader
Summary: Driven by madness and manipulated by Macrinus, with a blade in his hand, Caracalla heads to Geta but he finds you instead.
"My Love? What are you doing?" you asked with a worried tone as you noticed the blade in his hand.
"I'm going to kill him. Where is he?"
"Why would you?" but just as you asked you noticed a shadow behind him. "Macrinus... I always knew it."
"She must be sleeping with your brother." you heard him whisper to Caracalla.
His eyes looked foggy and filled with tears. It worried you.
"Is it true?!" Caracalla yelled.Â
"If you believe his words, you might as well kill me. I have been nothing but loyal to you, My Love. I have always been there for you and I will continue even if you kill me right now but please I have to ask you to come back to me and realise what is happening here. You are being manipulated." you begged but neither of you moved.
"You lie! You love him!" his hands frailed as he cried and yelled.
"You own my heart and soul. I belong to you, Caracalla. Please, My Love, put the knife down."Â
Caracalla's eyes filled with fresh tears but so did yours.
"Please." you begged with a whisper.Â
Your sweet voice seemed to break the curse he was under as he turned and stabbed Macrinus in the neck. It all happened so fast.
You watched as he looked at his shaking hands.Â
"Wife, I'm so sorry. He... His words- He manipulated me. Oh, look what I have done." his hand reached out to you. Silently begging you to forgive him.
You took a step towards him and allowed him to hug you.
"I told you to always remember when you feel like you are losing it." you reached up and cupped his cheek, your thumb cleaning his tears. "I know Geta threw a drink at you and yelled at you, My Love. But killing him will not fix it all. I'm here to help you."
"I'm sorry." he said it again.
This is when Geta bursts into the room.
"What happened here?" he asked as he looked at the two of you with worry filled eyes.Â
"Macrinus attacked me. Caracalla saved me." you explained.
"I will take care of this, go and rest." Geta said.
The two of you retired to your chambers.
"Why didn't you tell him?" your husband asked.
"He doesn't need to know."
"Do you hide things from me too? Things I don't need to know?"
"Of course not. You are my beloved Husband. I do not have anything to hide from you." you took a deep breath before looking at Caracalla. "I won't tell Geta what your true intentions were today because it will not achieve anything but hate. Tomorrow I will speak to the people in hopes of calming them. It will ease your mind as well as Geta's."
"What will you say?"
"I will tell them Lucilla sent Macrinus to kill me. The people will be on our side again."
"I didn't know my wife lied so much."
"To protect you? I would kill. I would lie to the Gods themselves because I love you."
"I'm sorry for doubting you."
"It wasn't you. It was Macrinus playing with your mind. I'm glad he's dead."
"You never liked him."
"But I love you." you said and just as the people outside quieted down, Caracalla embraced you in a feverish kiss.
The two of you spent a night of passion allowing your bodies to become one.
While it was true, you might lie, but you never lied to him. You never faked your love for him.
It was all real.
Gladiator II Collection
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The Gladiator PT.2 18+
Part One
pairing- hanno/lucius x fem! oc 1790 words
(⥠synopsis)- general acacius's daughter became intrigued by the violent gladiator she saw perform in the games and just had to meet him. (lucilla is not her mother)
warnings- p in v, dirty talk, oral (f receiving), fingering
âââ ââ
âźâ
â âââ
Sabina quietly moved around the pillars of her home, careful not to make a sound but gave up when she saw Lucilla sitting on the edge of the fountain dipping her fingers into the water.
Sabina walked forward and removed her hood, âI hope you were not waiting for me.â
Lucilla softly gasped and turned to face the young girl. âI didn't see you in your chamber. I waited for your return.â she stoodÂ
Lucillaâs eyes looked watery and Sabina took note of how her hands shook, âWhat is troubling you?â
The older blonde smoothed out her wrinkly dress and took a deep breath before responding, âThat gladiator he did something that made me reminisce of a memory long ago.â she paused and brought her bundle of herbs to her nose smelling for comfort, âIt's him Sabina, it's my boy, my Lucius.â she gave a teary smile.
Sabina couldn't believe what she was hearing. The man whom she just had sex with was her step-mothers long lost son. She had heard tales of the boy ever since Marcus married the woman. âAnd you're sure of this?â she reached for the woman's hands.
âHe has those same bright blue eyes I remember and he performed just as his father would have.â she sobbed, âYour father and I have created a plan to free him.â she looked around before continuing, âMarcus shall move into the gladiator quarter with a select group of trusted soldiers.â
The General's daughter took the information in and nodded, âSounds of a solid plan.â she backed up taking in all of the information she had received.
âWhere did you run off to tonight?â Lucilla asking with furrowed brows.
Sabina bit her cheek, âRavi asked for my assistance after the games, I didn't want to keep him waiting.â
Lucilla smiled, âI'm sure.â she said in a taunting tone before pinching the girls cheek, âSleep asks of me, I will see you in the morning.â Bidding the girl a good-night she disappeared into a dark hallway making Sabina let out a relieved sigh, thankful for her not prying.
A short few days later Sabina sat to Lucillaâs right in the colosseum for yet another day of games. She nervously looked at the water containing bloody thirsty sharks.
âToday will be an entertaining game.â Geta smiled proud of his idea, bringing a goblet of wine to his lips
Caracallaâs laugh boomed out, âThat it will brother.â his eyes moved behind him to the General's daughter. âSabina, come sit next to me, keep your emperor company.â
Her eyes shot up to him before moving her eyes to her father who only gave her a silent nod not to disobey the mentally unwell man. âIt'll be my honor.â She took the seat next to him and almost immediately he threw an arm around her shoulder bringing her in close.Â
The Roman people watched in excitement and nerves as Hanno was announced, coming out on a boat. Sabina sat straight up, curtly clapping in support.
Lucius moved around the back of the boat shouting orders at his men to take the other boat out, fighting his eyes who only seemed to be focused on the emperor's box where a certain woman resided.
Sabina nervously shook her leg as she watched the two boats crash into each other. Ignoring the howling emperor's next to her. Caracalla turned his attention to her and leaned his lips to her ear. âYou do not look entertained. Do your emperors not put on a good show for you?â he questioned with fury burning in his gaze.
She fought to roll her eyes, âMy features cannot express the astonishment I feel.â she answered in a clipped, sarcastic tone..
Before she could blink Caracalla landed a sharp slap to her cheek, âDo not answer in such a tone!â Behind them Lucila gasped while Marcus gripped his chair tighter.
Lucius heard the commotion and looked up to see the red mark now plastered on Sabina and the emperor yelling in her face. His blood began to boil and before he knew it he grabbed the bow in front of him and aimed his shot at the pale emperor, letting go of the arrow.
Sabina watched as a stray arrow shot into the booth, planting itself into the wood pillar, mere inches from Caracallaâs head, âPRAETORIANS!â Geta yelled for his guard who swarmed into the booth.
The girl looked towards the center of the ring and saw the gladiator throwing the bow back down before giving her a nod and returning to fighting.
âââ ââ
âźâ
â âââ
After sneaking out of the panicked crowd Sabina made her way to the holding cells. She entered and made it to stand in front of Ravi, âMay you?â she gestured to the locked cell which contained her gladiator
The older man gave her a sly smile, âTo what does he owe your company.â He got up and maneuvered his keys to the correct one and pushed it into the hole on the door.
Sabina only blushed and gave him a curt nod after he had opened the door for her. Lucius sat at his desk, back to her. She didn't say anything until she heard the door lock being her.Â
âMarvelous job today, almost assassinating the emperor was by far the best part.â she joked and put her hands on his shoulders before moving them to his chest making him lean his toned back into her legs.
Lucius grunted, âHe should not have put his hands on you in the matter in which he did.â He turned his head to face her looking at the red mark that only had seemed to get worse.Â
âAll is well, it'll fade.â Sabina moved around him to place herself in his lap, âShould I call you Hanno or Lucius?â
The gladiator let out an airy laugh rubbing his eyes. Hearing his birth given name come from her lips felt right. âLet's try Lucius out, hm?â Suddenly without warning he swung Sabinaâs leg over his lap and had her straddling him.
The girl softly gasped, holding his shoulders for support. âEager are we?â she joked, lightly grinding on his hardening cock.
âYou looked like a goddess sitting up there. I could hardly contain myself.â he gritted his teeth and pulled her closer to him by her waist. âWhat do you want my beautiful girl?â
Sabina softly gasped, âYour mouth, fingers, anything please.â
Lucius chuckled, âHow about both.â He lifted her up with ease onto the desk and spread her legs open before him revealing her bare cunt, dripping with arousal. âYou came bare?â he darkly asked, swiping his fingers over the wet mess.
âUnneeded layers.â she answered with hooded eyes, arms propped up behind her to see what intend to do.
The gladiator hummed and lowered his lips to pamper kisses along her thigh, making her let out a soft groan. âWho do you belong to Sabina? Say it.â
âYou Lucius, only you.â she groaned, letting her head roll back.
His lips continued their fiery trail up to her cunt, bringing his fingers to toy with her entrance. Her clit swollen and thumming with need. He pushed one finger slowly in and began to pump it while he took her bud into his mouth softly sucking it. Sabinaâs fingers made their way to his head where she gripped his hair for dear life. Arousal gushed out of her, dripping from his finger to his wrist before falling onto the desk under her. âReady for another?â he questioned in a teasing tone.
She covered her mouth and nodded, not trusting herself to stay quiet with the way he was playing with her. Lucius added another finger curling them into her and attaching his mouth to her puffy clit, savoring the flavor. She tried closing her legs at the overwhelming pressure building up but his strong rough arms held them agaisnt the wood.
Just as she was about to let go he pulled away with a smirk, âAs i've said..â he trailed off and stood getting his hard cock from under his loincloth giving it a few pumps, âYou shall only come on my cock.â Grabbing her thighs he pulled her to the edge of the desk and lined up with her entrance and pushed in with one single thrust, covering Sabinas mouth simultaneously. Her legs wrapped around his middle while his other hand went to her neck adding pressure to it.
She moaned agaisnt his hand, nails raking down his musical arms, trailing the veins that lined them lie threads, âYou like being fucked like a whore? My personal whore who congratulates me after a fightâŚâ He looked down where he thrusted in and out of her and watched her juiced coat his pubic area. âWant to cum?â she nodded feverishly, eyes locked onto him.
He let go of her neck and rubbed her clit with his thumb, "Cum on my cock beautiful, you can do it.â she squeezed him with vice grip making him spill deep into her. He took a moment to catch his breath before pulling out of her with a wince.Â
Sabina held the hand he had over her mouth, kissing it before he pulled it back. âYou continue to surprise me with your skills.â she said breathlessly sitting up.
Lucius smiled and stepped between her legs, cradling her face. âWhen I find myself to be free of this placeâŚI'd like you to run with me. Anywhere you'd like.âÂ
Her jaw dropped a little before regaining her composure, âMy whole life is planted in Rome. To leave would be betraying my family. I cannot leave my father and Lucilla to fend for themselves.â she watched this disappointment flood his face.
He nodded, âI understand.â
Suddenly Ravi came to the cell door and hit it lightly with the key, âSomething has happened Sabina you need to go now!â he whispered harshly.
The pair shared a look before she stood and walked out of the cell, watching as Ravi locked Lucius back in. âThe plan?âÂ
Ravi gave her a grave look, âYour father and his men were blitz attacked. He was caughtâŚLucilla as well from what the whispers have said.âÂ
Sabina gasped and the gladiator behind the cell door gripped the bars, âWhat does that mean, what are you both whispering of?â
She rushed to the door and wrapped her hands around his, âI'm afraid something horrible has occurred I have to go.â she kissed him before rushing out of the chamber, pulling her hood up.
Lucius watched as she ran before turning to Ravi with a questioning gaze.
The doctor kept his head down, âI suggest you sleep Lucius. You will need it for what the morning brings.â
âââ ââ
âźâ
â âââ
part 3?
Reblog and Like âĄ
also just saw the movie for a 3rd timeâŚ
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Gladiator II - Thoughts (SPOILERS)
I was fortunate enough to watch Gladiator II at the Royal Global premiere at Leicester Square last night (Wednesday 13th November) and I NEED to share some thoughts but there are definitely some spoilers, soâŚ
I cannot stress this enough:
THERE âď¸ ARE âď¸ SPOILERS âď¸ BELOW âď¸ THE âď¸ CUT âď¸
Once again
â ď¸ DO NOT CLICK THE READ MORE IF YOU DO NOT WANT SPOILERS FOR GLADIATOR II â ď¸
Thereâs probably things Iâm missing/forgetting right off the top of my head, and I might be paraphrasing/summarising some dialogue. I definitely need to rewatch it when Iâm NOT super close to an IMAX cinema screen because I spent the whole movie with my neck craned backwards and my eyes darting everywhere because I was trying to take it all in.
Anyway, without further ado:
The opening credits were very beautiful, it recounted the plot of the original film but kind of like in the style of the opening credits of Pillars of the Earth? I donât know if that makes sense đ
If I remember correctly, Joseph is billed third behind Paul and Pedro, and Fred is billed fourth đĽšâĽď¸
The film opens with a huge battle where the Roman army, led by Marcus Acacius, conquering the last free city of Africa (I think?), which is what Lucius and his wife are trying to defend
I cannot for the life of me remember what Luciusâ wife was called but she seemed nice, we only had her for a few minutes though before she got killed đ
Okay so Iâm going to start right off the bat by talking about the Emperors as they were the ones I was most looking forward to seeing, and I want to give them their own section!
We NEED to talk about Fred as Caracalla - this isnât even me being biased, Iâm being as unbiased as I can when I say that he was AMAZING
By the way, for months Iâve seen people talk shit about Fred, complaining about how they wish it was Barry Keoghan, whinging because âwe could have had Joe and Barryâ - to those people I say, shut the fuck up âşď¸ I will NOT tolerate any hate for my boy Fred!
Fred actually had a much meatier part than Joe which was pleasantly surprising. Iâm not saying Joe wasnât unhinged or good, but he was way more sane than Fredâs character and you got the feeling that he was trying to hold their rule together and keep his brother from bringing down the whole empire
Caracalla surprised me because he was so much more softly spoken than I anticipated; in so many scenes he was childlike and almost pitiful to watch. For example, there were times where you could see him pouting or fidgeting like a bored toddler, at one point he essentially threw a tantrum and Geta had to hold him back from killing Acacius and Lucilla (and then in the background you could see him playfully swing the sword about like a child would with a toy) He would grin and get excited like a child whenever there was fighting or bloodshed, bouncing in his seat, he looked surprised and excited in the beginning when Geta handed him wine etc.
In the last coliseum fight scene, this was literally Caracalla getting excited when the fighting started - a literal child đ
Honestly it was just fascinating to watch Caracalla because you could never tell if he was going to be childlike and almost-innocent or if he was going to start screaming and get violent
So apparently the reason that Caracalla is unhinged is because (to quote Geta) âthe disease from his loins has spread to his headâ (to paraphrase) which makes me think heâs got syphilis or something.
Also both of the emperors are briefly seen with concubines (as in the trailer), and Caracalla has both male and female ones hanging around him đ we love a bisexual Emperor!
Caracalla seems to have memory problems (probably as a result of his STI) because he doesnât remember seeing Lucius fighting in front of them from just a couple of days ago at their party (the scene with the concubines) and Geta tries to remind him, âitâs the poetâ but Caracalla just sits down and says he doesnât remember
Thereâs a scene where Marcus and Lucilla are brought to the emperors in the middle of the night after being caught in a conspiracy to overthrow them, and youâve got Geta in that red robe from the trailer whilst Caracalla is basically just wearing a fucking bedsheet toga style đ you know that shot in White Lotus where Fred/Quinn has a duvet around himself? Kind of like that
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/a7128c77e176da8959cd7e5a60f02464/9ff3d0429744e82f-e0/s540x810/4e898bf8457a0d39515204e656ea5cbbae106944.jpg)
Contrary to that Letterboxd review calling the twins âBJ brothersâ, there is NO incest in this film, and no hint of incest between the twins. I know a screenshot is circulating of Joe in the red robe where you could see what looked like the top/side of Fredâs head as if heâs on his knees, but they were absolutely NOT doing that đ the scene shows them both entering the room (Geta in his robe, hastily put on) and Fred in his bedsheet toga thing. I definitely didnât get the vibe of incest at all, I got the vibe of âitâs the middle of the night and theyâve both been woken up because these two traitors (Marcus and Lucilla) were caught plotting against themâ
I love that Caracallaâs weakness is Dondas (or Dundas? Different magazines are using different names so Iâm so confused), his pet monkey (WE FUCKING LOVE CHERRY AND SO DOES FRED đâĽď¸) Like heâs got Dondas/Dundas wearing a fucking dress and on a little chain lead, eating sweets from a bowl, and I have to applaud Fred for being able to act with a straight face while he had the monkey crawling over his shoulders, touching his hair, and at one point when the monkey moved the chain lead literally went right around/over his face
While thereâs riots going on outside the palace, Caracalla is freaking out and has Dondas/Dundas the monkey on his shoulder, and Geta straight up threw wine at both of them before saying that maybe Dondas (or Dundas, whatever the fucking name is) go and calm down in another room đ
Thereâs a scene where Macrinus finds Caracalla hiding under a table with the monkey and it made me think they were almost playing hide and seek đ truthfully I think he was just under there crying and hiding
Itâs the fact that Macrinus was able to manipulate Caracalla into killing Geta by using his love of Dondas/Dundas against him; the people of Rome protest against their emperors, and Macrinus basically tells Caracalla that Geta is going to throw him to the plebs outside to be killed - and Dondas/Dundas. âThink about what they might do to Dondasâ (or Dundas) - and thatâs what pushes him over the edge.
NOT CARACALLA AND MACRINUS SAWING GETAâS FUCKING HEAD OFF LIKE THAT đ IT WAS STRAIGHT UP LIKE A HORROR FILM WITH MACRINUS COMING UP BEHIND CARACALLA AND HELPING?!?
Also Caracalla made the monkey a fucking consul of state (I think) after he killed Geta?!?! đ Absolutely fucking UNHINGED I TELL YOU
âALL HAIL DONDAS! đâ (or Dundas - again, someone please tell me the fucking monkeyâs confirmed name)
They showed Getaâs head for WAY too long đ and Macrinus just showing it around like that?!? NASTY
Reeling over the fact they airbrushed out Getaâs head for the trailer because in this shot in the film Getaâs head is clearly visible on the table behind Denzel đ
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/a1414bb9306fd613244e4a330719311b/9ff3d0429744e82f-a2/s540x810/af4cb4fd39a0f9b862db06ef3e45b4bfd6135794.jpg)
Sorry but Fred looked damn fine in that purple outfit near the end đ
I feel like Caracalla had a little bit of a soft spot for Lucilla but the two sides of his personality were warring with each other: the sadistic bloodthirsty side wanted to murder both her and Marcus right away, but then near the end he whispers to Macrinus âmust we kill Lucilla?â and he sounded a little hesitant or unsure which was interesting
Seeing Fred as Caracalla without Geta in that last coliseum battle scene? I canât help but love him, Fred is seriously too good in this role. The shouting, the childlike excitement when the fighting started (see gif above)
Fred was definitely playing up the childlike side of Caracalla in his last scene when the people started revolting, he was literally curling up in his seat, snivelling and crying like a baby until Macrinus killed him from behind (he put something in his ear, i think he stuck a pin in his ear to impale his brain?) Truly pitiful end for Caracalla.
Once again: Fred Hechinger for Best Supporting Actor at the 97th Academy Awards campaign!! đâď¸
Okay so now Iâve talked about the Emperors, I can talk about the rest of the film:
Ridley Scott truly said fuck historical accuracy in this film đ which is not surprising to be fair if you know him and his movies
This film was, expectedly, VERY bloody and violent from start to finish
NOT LUCIUS TAKING A BITE OUT OF THE BABOON đ¤Ż
At one point where theyâre bringing the slaves into Rome, they show statues of a wolf feeding two human children from her teat and Lucius recounts the story - this is obviously a reference to Romulus and Remus, twins raised by a wolf mother. This is actually really fitting because from earth on, Ridley AND Fred and Joe have mentioned the idea of the twins being based on this Romulus/Remus story?
DAMN, Paul Mescal was super beefy in this film like holy fucking shit dude
Honestly I adore Pedro but his role was way smaller than I thought it would be. His role is essentially to be Lucillaâs decent and loyal husband who also happened to lead the invasion that killed Luciusâ wife in the beginning of the film, something he did not want to do, hence why Lucius wants to kill him so badly (family drama, eh? đ) and who is part of a plot to dethrone the twins
MATT LUCAS AS THE MASTER OF CEREMONIES?!? đ I wonât lie, at first it distracted me because I was like âwhy the fuck is Matt Lucas hereâ but he got a few laughs out of the cinema screening so his tiny parts added a little bit of humour to the film when it got tense
As I said above, thereâs no incest shown - there is a MENTION, however, of a rumour that Luciusâ real father wasnât Lucius Verus(?) but rather Commodus (obviously Lucillaâs brother/Luciusâ uncle from the first film). However, itâs not true because they make it very clear that Luciusâ father is Maximus. They do however briefly mention that Lucilla was a child bride at the age of 14 which is a bit fucked up
I was probably the only person in my screening who noticed this but at one point I saw graffiti on one of the walls on the outside/entrance to the coliseum that said something like âIrrumbo Imperatorsâ - according to Google, that translates as âI attack the emperorsâ. However, it could have also been âIrrumabo Imperatoresâ, and if you ask Google to give you the Latin word for âfuckâ? Itâs âIrrumaboâ. So essentially there was graffiti in the film that either said âattack the emperorsâ or âfuck the emperorsâ đ
I thought that maybe Lucius had somehow forgotten that Lucilla was his mother despite being 12 when she sent him away but nope, heâs fully aware of who he actually is and who his mother is, heâs just angry at her for sending him away and never seeing him again đ
NOT THAT SERVANT TATTLING ON LUCILLA AND MARCUS?!? đ¤
They killed Marcus off WAY earlier than I thought they would by the way. The trailers give the impression that the final battle is Lucius vs Marcus but itâs actually Lucius vs Macrinus which is WILD to me
You know that scene in LOTR where the orcs shoot Boromir full of arrows? That is basically what happened in this film to General Acacius but with about 20 more arrows đ I had major Boromir flashbacks watching this scene
Iâm glad that Lucilla and Lucius got to reconcile before the ending, given what ended up happening
âBecause Emperor Caracalla is generous, he will allow Lucilla to have one Gladiator to fight to defend herâ - ONE. ONE AGAINST ABOUT 30 TRAINED GUARDS đ
Iâm still reeling over the fact Derek Jacobi spoiled his own characterâs death on the red carpet a mere hour before the film screening in front of THOUSANDS of people đ that man did NOT give a fuck quite frankly and I think thatâs kind of hilarious of him
THE GASP THAT EVERYONE IN THE SCREENING COLLECTIVELY LET OUT WHEN MACRINUS KILLED LUCILLA BY SHOOTING HER IN THE CHEST?!? HE KILLED CARACALLA AND LUCILLA IN 60 SECONDS FLAT đ
That said, this shot from the behind the scenes featurette about Ridley Scott is ten times funnier to me after watching the film and realising that not only is Ridley showing Denzel how to shoot the arrow that kills Lucilla, but Fred is also supposed to be dead in the chair at this point since Macrinus takes the bow and fires the arrow straight after killing Caracalla đ
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Poor Lucius has now seen his father, his mother, his uncle and his wife all die right in front of him, the man CANNOT catch a break đŤ
That final battle between Lucius and Macrinus was GRUESOME đł Lucius cut off his hand and slashed him - Iâm not sure if he actually cut him in half or if Macrinus just crumpled in the river in a heap but DAMN
This film used footage from the first Gladiator film so they gave the actor who played Lucius in the first film a credit which was nice!
That said, I know obviously itâs been 24 years since the original film so of course the child actor from the original is no longer 12 and so could not be in the flashback scenes showing young Lucius, but damn the difference was a little jarring to be honest, especially when it went from footage of the original film to new footage with the new child actor
Ridley Scott spoiled the ending of this fucking movie by saying he wanted to have Paul back to play Lucius again as the main character in Gladiator III đ so yeah, I already knew Lucius was surviving this film
Some final summary thoughts:
Letâs be honest, it would be impossible to top the first Gladiator and so while I loved Gladiator II and think it was amazing, it was obviously never going to quite reach the same level as the original
I know I just made the comment about nominating Fred for Best Supporting Actor but I have to be honest, I truly think Denzel deserves the nomination - if thereâs only one actor from this film who gets that nomination, it has to be Denzel because he was by far the standout of the whole film. If I had to rank it personally Iâd say Denzel and then Fred is a close second, then maybe Joseph and Pedro?
^ This isnât me saying Joe and Pedro were bad at all, they were all really amazing, but this film just had so many characters and quite frankly Fred, Joe and Pedro had WAY less screentime than Denzel so they didnât have nearly as much to work with as he did.
Again; Iâm biased because I went in the most excited to see the Emperors, but I wish weâd had more of Caracalla and Geta. Fred and Joe did their best to work with what they were given, but they didnât have that much and pretty much all of their scenes were shown in trailers or TV spots etc.
GIVE CHERRY THE MONKEY A FUCKING OSCAR
I obviously wasnât expecting Paul Mescal to fight real baboons, rhinos and sharks but the CGI was⌠not great. It was quite obvious that it was CGI for the baboons and sharks, I think the rhino was slightly better though (Fred mentioned in an interview his first day involved âthe mechanical rhinoâ so it was somewhat partly practical as well I suppose)
The pacing of this film was a little all over the place, if Iâm being honest. I want to rewatch soon, from further back in the screen because, as I said, I was craning my head back the whole time and it ended up giving me a neck and headache so that probably added to me being uncomfortable (plus Iâd had a long day and was thoroughly burned out by the time the screening started), but there were times where I was like âoh⌠weâre back here then đâ
^ What Iâm trying to say is that some of the storylines happened so fast and had very little build up (eg. The emperors in general) whilst other plots were so slow burn in comparison.
The music was so good! I know people are going to compare it unfavourable to Hans Zimmerâs original score from the first film, but I LOVE Harry Gregson-Williams (he did the soundtrack for the first two Narnia films so Iâm biased đ
) and I thought he did a great job with the score here. The fact he had Hans Zimmerâs approval and praise made me confident the score would be great anyway
I feel like people are obviously going to compare Paul Mescal to Russell Crowe which⌠letâs be honest, has gotta suck for him because how the fuck do you live up to Russell Crowe?!? Some people have already said that they didnât like Paul in this film, which⌠okay, fair enough. I honestly donât think comparing him to Russell Crowe does him any favours. I enjoyed watching him personally, and I think given that this whole film rests on him, he did great. Not quite Russell Crowe but I have no complaints about his performance personally.
People are also going to compare Joe and Fred to Joaquin Phoenixâs Commodus, and I think they both did a great job given that they didnât actually have nearly as much screen-time as Joaquin did in the original film. Itâs almost unfair to compare them because in the first Gladiator, Commodus was the main antagonist - in this film, Macrinus is the main antagonist overall whilst the Emperors are more secondary antagonists that serve as obstacles for Macrinusâ rise to power. But they both did great with what they had.
Overall, my opinion of the film?
This film NEEDS to be seen on a big screen at the cinema! Go and watch it!
#gladiator ii#gladiator ii spoilers#gladiator 2#gladiator#paul mescal#pedro pascal#fred hechinger#joseph quinn#connie nielsen#denzel washington#ridley scott#spoilers#lucius verus#marcus acacius#emperor caracalla#caracalla#geta#emperor geta#macrinus#lucilla#dondas the monkey#dundas the monkey#(WHICH IS IT?!)
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SPOILERS
Gladiator II: these young Emperors are depraved and evil
Gladiator II movie: two mentally ill young men being manipulated by everyone around them that actually love each other until Caracalla gets too sick and Geta loses his grip on him
Sorry but I just felt bad for them?? Geta tried so hard to keep it together like he literally says he always protected his brother and voices his worries to Macrinus and Caracalla was probably dying at that point and couldn't make logical choices anymore. The only 'evil' thing they did was enjoy the violent Gladiator matches but that was everyone
Macrinus is actually the real villain, manipulating these sheltered and paranoid young Emperors and setting up Marcus Acacius to be killed, then killing Geta by forcing Caracalla to do it, then killing Caracalla to attempt to take over full control. He is getting rid of everyone one by one, including trying to kill Lucilla, an unarmed innocent woman whose only crime is who her father was. You literally even see Caracalla say he doesn't want to kill her.
And yes you see Geta war mongering but that is EXPECTED of a Roman Emperor. He is trying to fill his role and may think he is doing Marcus Acadius a favor by giving him much to conquer and to prove his considerable skill
Idk I just think they're not THAT evil. Messed up, yes. Sick, yes. But I don't see them doing truly evil acts like raping women, killing women and children etc all they do is watch Gladiator games and Caracalla cuts Geta's hand when he's very sick, bc Macrinus actually slits his throat and I guess Geta throws some wine at Dundus the monkey but ??? he didn't even hurt it he was just annoyed but these are not acts compared to Commodus killing his own father or forcing his sister to sleep with him or going around killing Maximus' wife and child, in MY opinion.
#gladiator 2#gladiator ii#gladiator#emperor geta#emperor caracalla#macrinus#emperor commodus#maximus#lucilla
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Et Auream - Act II : The Gladiator
A/N: well, here we are! :3 I started writing this chapter back in July, right after the trailer for gladiator ii dropped, and I have since then gutted it completely and rewrote it start to finish đ I have to give a HUGE thank you to @sinsofsummers for being one of my many cheerleaders and for betaing. I love you so much pookie đŤśđť
word count: 3.2k
Summary: Itâs been 5 years since the passing of the late emperor Septimius Severus, who was succeeded by his sons, Geta and Caracalla. General Octavius and his forces continue their campaign against the Caledonians, and Acacius, one of the most fierce gladiators that Rome has ever witnessed, feels nothing but bitter resentment towards the emperors.
Pairing | Marcus Acacius x f!oc
Warnings: canon typical violence, brutality, enslavement, domestic abuse, power imbalance, violent punishment, language, alcohol consumption, +18 minors dni! Please let me know if I missed anything.
series masterlist | playlist
Translations: Dominus - Master voluit vivere - he wanted to live Praetorian - bodyguard of a Roman emperor
THE COLOSSEUM - five years after the death of Emperor Septimius Severus April, 216 AD
The thunderous chants from the crowd echoed deafeningly in his eardrums. Steel bars that imprisoned gladiators from the spectators in the Colosseum shook wildly from the crescendo of voices shouting in unison; KILL! KILL! KILL!
A hush fell over the crowd at the emperorâs silent command of a raised hand and thumb leveled to the side.
A manâs life hung in the balance between two young emperors. Caracalla was the younger counterpart by two years to his brother, Geta, and mercy would be granted only if they felt it was earned. But in reality, it depended solely on their moods.
The games were nothing short of barbaric, and the people of Rome loved the thrill of a brutal fight. The suspense, the bloodshed and sacrifice. This was entertainment for the poor and rich, young and old would flock to the Colosseum to watch men, women, and beast fight to the brutal death.
Emperor Geta pointed his thumb downwards, signaling another life ending, and the crowd erupted in deafening applause.
Acacius chanted a silent prayer under his breath to grant the soul whose life had just been snuffed out, safe passage to the afterlife. He flipped his sword in his hand and awaited the gates to open once more.
Geta reclined back on his golden throne with a satisfied grin plastered on his face.
âI expected there to be more blood,â Caracalla muttered alongside him, a pout formed on his thin lips. âHe should have been gutted, his innards should have fallen to the ground!â he groaned in disappointment.
âYou and your obsession with gore,â Geta responded with a roll of his eyes at his brotherâs complaining. He reached for his chalice and brought the rim to his lips, but before he could take a sip, he was stopped by one of his advisors looming at the entrance of the viewing platform.
Cassius, one of Getaâs trusted advisors and a member of the senate, bowed quickly and reached into his tunic and pulled out a sealed scroll; a letter from the general.
âCaesar,â his nasally tone grated Getaâs ears.
âCassius,â he responded flatly.
âThis just arrived. A letter from general Octavius,â Cassius informed him.
Geta carefully tore the ruby colored wax seal off and began to read the written scripture. He had only reached the first sentence when he noticed that Cassiusâs presence was still lingering. He waved him off, his eyes stayed glued to the parchment. âYou are dismissed.â
Cassius bowed once more and turned on his heel quickly, leaving Geta to read in peace.
âWhat news does our general bring us today?â Caracalla asked.
Caesar,
Our latest battle was successful, but I have lost a few hundred men, and I myself have been injured, but the medicus assured me that it is not grave. The Caledonians have retreated, but I fear this is only temporary. My age begins to show and my bones grow tired and weak. My men will not continue to follow me if they feel that I am unfit to lead them. Discuss with Caracalla in regard to finding a man worthy enough to succeed my position as general when my inevitable death arrives.
I wish you and your brother fair health and prosperity,
General Octavius
âOur recent battle against the Caledonians was successful, but we have lost a few hundred men. The general was wounded, but not gravely,â Geta recited with a sigh.
Caracalla scoffed and shook his head. âWe should abandon the campaign entirely like I had suggested after Father died. We are wasting precious resources and able bodied men, and for what?â
âAbandoning the campaign would disappoint our late father greatly. We promised him that we would not cease our attack until the Caledonians are defeated, brother,â Geta said in a low tone.
âHe is dead, Geta. What does a dead man care about a campaign that was a disaster from the start? And now with the general wounded, our soldiers could turn on us at any moment! They will become unpredictable and restless without a leader,â Caracalla seethed.
âGeneral Octavius suggested that you and I find someone worthy to succeed him when he inevitably passes either from injury or old age. I have a man in mind for the position, but you will detest it I am certain.â
âDonât tell me youâre thinking of turning that gladiator scum into a general, brother. If anyone should succeed Octavius, it should be a worthy soldier in his ranks. Acacius is unworthy and unfit for the position,â Caracalla waved his wrist animatedly in disgust. Golden bangles that adorned his arms made a short, sharp, ringing sound from the sudden movement.
âAnd yet you love to watch him fight. He is one of our strongest and resilient gladiators. He is just as worthy as any soldier. The people love him, Caracalla. I intend to turn him into one of the greatest generals Rome has ever seen,â Geta countered swiftly.
âOf course I love to watch him fight!â Caracalla snapped. âHe is one of the best that we have, but he will never be a general as long as I am still breathing.â
Before Geta had the chance to respond with something snarky, his attention was drawn to the start of the next fight.
The sun blinded Acaciusâs vision as he stepped out into the arena when the gates were opened. The sun was scorching, and sweat already began to drip down the plane of his brow. His opponent was larger, broader than he was, but Acacius was swift, and able to recover in half the time. The crowd roared his name, stamped their feet and cheered at his entrance. His face was stoic, void of emotion to the wild chanting of his name.
His opponent, however, basked in their cheers like a preening peacock. A thirst for blood is what many of Acaciusâs opponents experienced, but he was simply doing what he must do to survive another day. They thought that volunteering to be a gladiator would bring them riches and fame beyond their wildest dreams, until they would meet the cold kiss of his steel in their gut. Maybe he would feel the same swelling pride as they did if he had been given the option to volunteer.
The two gladiators walked to the middle of the arena and faced the viewing platform where the emperorâs and their subjects were seated. Their swords were brought to rest against the breastplate of their armor and they recited the words, âHail Caesar, those who are about to die salute you!â
In another viewing box below the emperorâs, she was feeling the same level of disgust as Acacius was towards the brutality of the games. And like him, she was forced to participate by her Dominus, Cassius, who was enthralled by the games and even more-so when he knew that the sight of blood and violence nauseated her.
Her name was Aurelia; the golden one, although her life wasnât very golden at all. She was Senator Cassiusâs prized possession, his property till the day that she would inevitably die.
âIf you keep your head hidden between your thighs any longer, youâll miss the entire fight, Aurelia,â Cassius said condescendingly alongside her. His chalice of wine filled to the brim, and nearly spilled down the front of his tunic.
Aurelia bit down on the soft flesh of her inner cheek at his words. She gnawed on it until she tasted copper on her tongue. That is the whole point. Is what she wanted to say, but she remained silent in her distress.
Cassius rolled his eyes, not appreciating the way that she ignored him and he placed his hand around the back of her neck, his fingers slipped into the small space between the iron collar that was fit snug around her neck and tugged harshly, enough for her to wince from the uncomfortable tightness.
âI said,â he snarled against the shell of her ear, âyouâll miss the entire fight, my pet. It will please me if you watch. Do as your Dominus commands,â he released her neck from his unforgiving grip, finally. No one in close proximity to them batted an eye at the mistreatment she experienced.
Aurelia forced herself to watch the brutal fight. The sounds of steel clashing rang in her ears and from the viewing box, she could make out the details on one of the gladiatorâs faces. His dark hair was cropped short and curled around the top of his ears. His skin, sun-kissed in gold, was littered with old and new scars traveling up the expanse of his arms.
She could not help but wonder how old he must have been when a sword was thrust into his hands and he was forced to kill another man and the emotional turmoil he must have felt after the adrenaline would inevitably wear off. She found herself gasping with the crowd when his opponent's blade grazed Acaciusâs bicep, slicing the skin there just enough that beads of crimson wept through the laceration. Acacius gritted his teeth together, letting out a growl that was nothing short of animalistic and charged forward, his eyes set ablaze with determination.
Caracalla was seen smirking over the rim of his chalice. He was foolish to believe that a minor cut on Acaciusâs arm was enough to deter him, but unlike his brother, Geta was locked into the fight. He leaned forward in his seat, his demeanor stiff and rigid.
The shield belonging to Acaciusâs opponent was suddenly knocked from his grip, shattering from the sheer force of Acaciusâs sword colliding with it. His opponent stumbled back, and dug his heels into the sand to keep himself upright, but without a shield to defend himself, he would have to rely on his strength alone.
Acacius flipped the hilt of his sword in his calloused palm and charged forward again with vigor. The sting from the cut along his bicep, and the dull ache in his shoulder drove him forward. He would not die today, this was certain.
Their swords met again and again until his opponent began to tire and Acacius went in for the kill, and with one swift kick to the abdomen, his opponent fell to the sand with a dull thud.
The crowd cheered, their fists raised towards the heavens as they chanted, âKILL! KILL! KILL!â
Geta rose from his seat and raised his hand above his head, and the crowd fell into a hushed silence at the sight of the emperor's thumb turning to the side.
Acacius could hear the blood that pounded in his ears as he stood towered over his fallen opponent. His brows were pinched together, his armored chest rose and fell rapidly from the energy he exerted.
His opponent awaited his fate, exhaustion written across his bloodstained face.
Acacius saw a boy when he looked into his opponentâs eyes. A frightened boy who isnât yet ready to die, and he sees himself all those years ago. When the crowd erupted into cheers once more, Acacius did not need to see the Emperorâs hand to know what was being demanded of him. His fingers twitched around the hilt of his sword and he raised it above his head as if he were to bring it down upon his opponent for that final, devastating, fatal blow, but he stopped midway, and threw his sword to the side in defiance.
Aureliaâs eyes widened in shock. Out of every fight that she was forced to attend, never did she witness a gladiator defy an emperorâs demand so boldly. His defiance sent her pounding heart ablaze with a new sense of hope that she had not felt in ages. Acacius the merciful, they chanted.
âKill him!â Caracalla cried out wildly in protest, his body lurched up from his throne. His shrill tone was like that of a child throwing a tantrum. The eldest emperor did not react, but Acacius could feel Getaâs harsh, disappointed glare burning holes into the back of his skull when he bent down and offered his hand to his fallen opponent who stared up at him in bewilderment.
âTake my hand,â Acacius whispered through the deafening cheers.
Carcalla leaned over to his brother and whispered, âwhat was that you said earlier about Acacius being worthy to succeed general Octavius?â
Geta could hear the grin appearing through his tone, but the eldest emperor gave no indication that he was unnerved by his brothers jabbing words, or Acaciusâs defiance, except for the slight flare of his nostrils, and his left eye twitching, rimmed in darkened makeup.
The defeated opponent reached up with a grunt and clasped his hand around Acaciusâs firmly. He lifted him from the ground with ease. When he looked up at the emperorâs viewing box, Geta was no longer standing there and looking down at him and a sinking feeling of dread for what was to come washed over him.
Aurelia watched the way he turned on his heel, his teeth gritted together in pain when his bad shoulder began to flare up and bother him. He subtly leaned his weight to his left side for some reprieve, though temporary. He did not reach down for his sword and walked past it in the direction of the open gates, disappearing behind them a moment later.
She paid no mind to Cassius muttering beside her about how blatant defiance should be punished and âroguesâ like Acacius should be terminated as quickly as possible.
Acacius was not even granted the luxury to even attempt to remove his armor when he heard the approach of many heavy footsteps through the corridor. He felt the sharp tip of a spear pierce the side of his neck, and before he had the chance to fight back, a hand harshly clasped down on his bad shoulder and the sudden, sharp pain that felt like a thousand knives were stabbing him at once, sent him falling to his knees.
Geta promenaded through his appointed guards and crouched down to Acaciusâs level. His expression was placid, lacking emotion. Internally, he was furious, but he did a good enough job to hide it.
âLook at me, Acacius,â he said, his voice low and dangerously calm.
Acacius refused and he let out a sharp cry of agony when the Praetorian guard dug his fingers deeper into his shoulder and he finally drew his gaze from the ground and to the emperorâs hardened stare.
âAre you going to punish me?â he spat.
âNo,â Geta said with a slight shake of his head.
âI defied you. I deserve to be punished, so fucking punish me,â he snarled through gritted teeth and the emperor couldnât help but let his mask fall briefly. A smirk crossed over his lips.
âAnd do you believe that your deliberate display of defiance will shorten your servitude and grant you your freedom faster than the rest?â He gestured with his hand.
âNo,â Acacius said grimly and his eyes lowered their gaze back to the floor.
âLook at me when Iâm speaking to you,â Geta demanded.
Acacius glared up at him, his brows were pinched together and his lips were set in a harsh line. âHe didnât deserve to die. He fought just as hard as I did. That is why I chose to spare his life.â
Geta chuckled at this. âAnd yet, your opponent is out there right now, boasting that he won. Do you think that he is grateful for your mercy?â
âI do not care if he boasts that he won. I saw the fear in his eyes, Geta. He did not want to die. voluit vivere.â (He wanted to live)
âEveryone wants to live, Acacius. But you cannot save every person from their predestined fate,â He sighed and stood up and dropped his hands behind his back. âDo you remember the day that we met?â
âUnfortunately.â
âI asked you what you desired most in this life, and you told me that all you wanted was to be a free man, Acacius. Caracalla believed that you wouldnât defy the odds that were stacked against you. He claimed that you wouldn't survive your first fight, but you proved him wrong. You showed strength, bravery, and resilience. Your courage has not gone unnoticed, and it is most admirable. I can make you a free man, I can turn your lifeâs legacy into something greatâbeyond your wildest dreams, but I require your trust and loyalty.â
Acacius wanted nothing more than to laugh in his face, but he wouldnât give Geta the satisfaction. Instead, he steeled his expression and despite the pain in his shoulder, he sat up straighter, his nostrils flared and his jaw clenched, âyou will never gain my trust and loyalty for as long as I live.â
âI pity you, Acacius. You refuse to see the potential for greatness that you possess. Your hatred for Rome, and the man that tore you from your mother and the life you knew, into a life shackled in servitude, clouds your judgment. I granted you mercy five years ago. I could have casted you aside, let you fend in the streets like some feral beast till your spirit eventually fades, and still you refuse the hand that I am graciously offering you.â
âMercy?!â Acacius barked out a strained laugh. âThatâs what you believe that you granted me?! If you were merciful, you would have freed me! Instead, you have forced me to fight for your own entertainment. The games are a spectacle for the people of Rome. You bring them bloodshed and brutality and they love you for it.â
âThey donât just love me, Acacius. The people of Rome love you. Do you not feel a sense of pride when they chant your name? Acacius the great! Perhaps even the greatest gladiator that Rome has ever seen!â Geta exclaimed.
âI never wanted to be a gladiator. I never wanted to spend my life killing men who share the same circumstances as I. I-I wanted my life to be different. I donât want greatness. I donât desire wealth or materialistic pleasures,â He whispered solemnly and Geta imagined a boy, no older than thirteen, and already so broken when he looked at the man kneeling before him.
âThen I implore you to rethink your strategy to gain your freedom. Defy me all you choose, but if you continue down that route, you will either die in that arena, or rot in a cell till you inevitably die. The choice is yours, and for your sake, I hope you choose wisely. Nothing is permanent, Acacius. Remember that.â
âIf the gods wish for me to die in the Colosseum, or bound in the chains that you put me in, so be it.â
Geta said nothing more, and he turned on his heel to walk away. His guards awaited his command, but he did not address them. Thatâs all Acacius could think about when the guards surrounding him took it upon themselves to punish him. His wrists and ankles were shackled in iron, and he didnât make a sound, or flinch when the crack of a whip rang loudly in his ears as it was brought down against his back and shoulders. His already tarnished tunic had been ripped down the middle, exposing his scarred skin. The pain was soothing, in a morbid fashion. The feeling of his flesh being marred, and blood dripping from the open wounds should have caused him to cry in distress, but he took his punishment in complete and utter silence.
He did not give them the command.
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Fallen Empires - Chapter 5
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Pairing: Geta x OFC
Summary: Having done the unthinkable to secure his throne, Emperor Geta rules with ruthlessness and paranoia. Now, after escaping an assassination attempt, a badly injured Geta is saved by Daphne, a young widow, who takes him back to her remote village without knowing his true identity. As Daphne nurses the former emperor back to health, attraction blooms between them, and Geta discovers a soft side he didn't know he possessed. But can their love survive his thirst for revenge and his desire to reclaim power?
Chapter warnings: domestic violence, physical abuse
Chapter word count: 3.7k
Prologue + Chapter 1 - Chapter 2 - Chapter 3 - Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Daphne watched her patient across the table. He was bending over two flat boards, gouging out a shallow square in each of their centers with a chisel she'd borrowed from her youngest brother, Mikkos, claiming she needed it to fix a window. Mikkos, ever the dutiful sibling, had offered to fix the window for her, but she insisted she could do it herself, saying she didn't want to take him away from his regular carpenter work. It was such a bad lie that she feared Mikkos might turn up anyway, but it looked like he believed her.
Romulus was trying to make a wax tablet. It had all started the other day, when Daphne came back from her usual rounds in the village to find out her goat, Amalthea, had broken into the garden and was contentedly munching on some of the seedlings she'd just planted. Daphne had given Amalthea a stern talking-to and planned to raise the garden wall so the goats couldn't jump over itâshe didn't have to worry about Midas, who was a good boy and knew the garden was off-limitâbut what really worried her was that she didn't know what Amalthea had eaten exactly. Some of the medicinal plants were poisonous or at least harmful to a goat, and the poison could pass into Amalthea's milk, harming the kids as well.
"Don't you remember what you've planted?" Romulus asked, when he heard her scold Amalthea.
"Wellâyes, usually," she stammered. "But I've been busy taking care of you so I wasn't paying attention." She ran an irritated hand through her hair. "Time like this, I wish I knew how to read, so I can label my plants and medicines."
Romulus stared at her. "You don't know how to read?"
Now it was her turn to stare at him. "Of course not. Around here, one doesn't need letters to be shepherds." The only person in the village who knew how to read and write was the chief, Master Kavos, and even then, only enough to write down thei villagers' names in the tax roll. Daphne had always wanted to learn, but she knew she shouldn't get ideas above herself. She had once been courted by a scribe in the nearby town of Adala, and when she suggested to him that she should like to learn to read, he had only laughed at her, thinking it was a joke.
Thankfully, Amalthea was none the worse for wear, but Daphne had a stressful day watching the goat for signs of poisoning or bloating. That evening, over their meal, Romulus suggested casually, "I can teach you to read, if you want."
"Why?" Daphne asked warily.
"It'll be something to do," he said with a careless shrug.
In the end, Daphne had agreed. She could see no harm in it, and she rather liked the idea of having neat rows of labeled jars and jugs, like the apothecary's shop in Adala she often visited. And Romulus was right, it would be something to do in the long hours when it was too hot to work outside. He was still pushing himself too hard with his exercises, and often Daphne had to remind him to go into the shades and rest or he would have a sunstroke. He struck her as a restless sort of person; no doubt he was tired of being cooped up inside. This would give them both something to fill their time.
So now he was making a wax tablet for their lessons. She could tell he was not used to woodworking, as he held the tool awkwardly and his chiseling was uneven, but he seemed determined to get it done. He frowned over the chisel, sweat dripping down his forehead, the tip of his tongue poking out between his teeth. The expression contrasted with his usual scowl, giving him a rather childish look, and Daphne had to turn away to hide a grin.
She wondered why she kept him around for so long. It had been a month since she brought him back, half-dead, from the Balikh, and he had made a remarkable recovery. Perhaps not enough to walk all the way to Edessa, but certainly enough to leave on a cart or a wagon. Yet she kept putting off his departure, telling himâand herselfâthat something could happen to him on the road, that his wounds could open up again, that his fever could come back. She could never live with herself if she let her patient die from negligence. But other than professional pride, there was another reason she kept the soldier around, the same reason she'd saved him in the first placeâfor companionship.
In the years since she received the message that Galen was not coming back from Caledonia, and since she moved into the hut following her grandmother's death, Daphne had been on her own. Of course, the villagers were always around, but they never stayed for long. The only time Daphne had had a patient stay with her was when Ione, the little girl who lived on the next hill, broke her leg running down the hill after her father's goats. After Daphne had set the bone, the little girl had become so taken with Amalthea that she'd insisted on staying, and for the next three weeks, Daphne had had a rather chatty housemate who hobbled around, got underfoot, and made a mess of all her herbs and potions. Daphne had rather enjoyed it. Even now, whenever she had to leave the village for longer than a few days, she still entrusted the care of Amalthea and her kids to Ione.
It was hard being alone. It was the one thing that her grandmother, for all the wisdom she had imparted to Daphne, had failed to teach her. When she first moved into the hut, Daphne had thought she would enjoy it, after years of growing up with two younger brothers and never having a moment to herself. But the novelty had worn off quickly. Sometimes, on winter evenings, when dusk fell early over the hills, her own fire giving up little warmth, she would sit and watch the smoke from the huts down in the valley blend in with the gray clouds, feeling so lonely that she might even risk her father's wrath to come back to the village. But in the end, fear of her father always won out, and she remained in her hut, wondering how her grandmother had managed it all those years.
Now, it was a comfort to return to the hut after a long day to another person, who was waiting for her. It was a comfort to hear a voice other than her own and see another face across from the table during mealtimes. It was a comfort to fall asleep knowing there was another person just on the other side of the wall. A simple sort of comfort, perhaps, and it would not last, but she would take it for as long as she could.
One might say that an irascible, arrogant, and quarrelsome legionary did not make for a very good companion, but Daphne didn't mind. Had he been courteous and good-humored, had he asked for her help with politeness and accepted it gladly, it would have made her nervous, afraid that she would offend the noble patrician with her coarse peasant ways. His roughness put her at ease. It was simply that he, like most men, was used to having his every order followed and his every whim catered to. His undoubtedly high status only made it worse. She had had her fair share of men like him, men who insisted they were perfectly fine until the moment they tumbled over from pain. Patrician or plebeian, at the end of the day, they were all the same. She knew how to deal with them.
The only thing that bothered her was Romulus's reticence. After a month, she knew nothing about him except for his name, and that may not even be real. To all of her questions, he answered none and only gave questions of his own. He'd stopped making her taste his food and medicine, but she knew he still slept with his dagger under his pillow. Well, she couldn't blame him for being suspicious after having so narrowly escaped death. Who was she to judge anyway? She hadn't been exactly open with him either.
That day he walked around and got himself lost on the hillside, it had been on the tip of her tongue to tell him about Galen. When she turned around and saw him sitting at the door with his back to her, dressed in Galen's old tunic, for a heart-stopping moment, she'd thought he was Galen. They had the same build, sturdy and broad-shouldered, the same dark curls and eyes. The difference was that Galen had been quick to jest and to laugh, while Romulus was always scowling. But for some reason, she felt shy about mentioning Galen to Romulus, and so she had kept those memories to herself.
After the boards had been chiseled out, Daphne melted some beeswax and poured it into the hollows, while Romulus fashioned two styli out of twigs, and the lessons began. Daphne took to it with an enthusiasm she didn't know she possessed, and soon learned to write her name, the names of her animals, and the common names of the medicinal plants in her garden. Romulus seemed to enjoy the lessons as well, and she often caught him watching her with a curious expression, without his usual wariness. When they tired of the writing and reading lessons, Romulus made another board, marked off a series of squares on it with his knife, and gathered a handful of pebbles from outsideâhalf of them black and the other half whiteâand placed each of them on a square. It was a Roman game called latrunculi, or draughts, he said, and proceeded to teach Daphne to play. In this, she proved to be a quick learner as well. Once she'd grasped the rules, it only took her five games to beat Romulus. This brought on another scowl, while Daphne laughed at him for being a sore loser.
With such occupations, the long, hot days of early summer went by quickly. Romulus seemed calmer, though he remained wary, watchful of every little movement outside the hut. One afternoon, Daphne was coming in from the garden with some vegetables. She had just stepped through the door when an arm yanked her into a corner and a hand clamped over her mouth, cutting off her half-formed scream. It took her a moment to realize it was Romulus, who was standing with his back against the wall. His eyes were enormous in the dimness of the hut, and sweat was pouring down his face. Daphne tried not to notice how tightly he was holding her, how his arm was circling her, pressing her back to his chest. He smelled of sweat and leather, and for a confused moment, she was reminded of evenings when she went to the edge of the pasture to meet Galen coming back with the goats. They had been courting then, though they had always known they would marry, so it wasn't as if Galen had to do anything to woo her. She would throw her arms around him and press her face into his neck, and he'd smelled just like this...
She twisted out of Romulus's arm and hissed through his fingers, "What in Hades are you doing?"
"Shh!" He held up his dagger, precariously close to her face. "There's a man coming up the path." His breath was hot against her ear.
"One of the villagers?"
"No. I've never seen him before. He looks shifty."
"Stop being so damned suspicious!" she snapped. "You haven't seen everybody from the village. Just go into the bedroom and let me see who it is."
Reluctantly, he lowered the knife and let her go. Once the bedroom door had closed behind him, Daphne picked up the vegetables that had fallen out of her basket and looked out the door to see who the mysterious visitor was.
Her stomach dropped. Staggering up the path was her father, Timon. His robe was disheveledâmore disheveled than usual, his head bare, his face bruised. Each of his feet was having a very different idea of where it was going, and she could practically smell the wine on his breath from where she was.
Silently cursing, she went out to meet him.
"What are you doing here?" she asked.
"Chaire to you too," said Timon, sounding friendly for once. "You're looking well, daughter."
Her guard was instantly up. Whenever her father was being nice, it was because he wanted something. She eyed his bruises and had a pretty good guess what it was he was after. She asked anyway. "What do you want?"
"Can't I just visit and see how you're doing?" He sat down by the front door and looked up at her with bleary eyes. "Your mother misses you. When was the last time you came to see us?"
"I just saw Mother the other day," she said coldly. She wished he would just get on with it and leave.
Timon peered into the hut. Daphne followed his gaze warily, hoping Romulus hadn't left the wax tablet or the latrunculi board lying around. She knew her father would come down on her with all the wrath of Zeus if he found a man living with her. There were two cups on the table, but thankfully, Timon didn't seem to notice.
"Looks like you're doing well," he said. "Lots of patients, lots of coins..."
"What coin? When have you ever seen any coin around here?"
"I don't need much." And there it was. She knew it had to come out sooner or later. "Just a few coins to tie me over." Always the same. If she had saved all the coins she'd given her father "to tie him over" throughout the years, she would've been rich by now.
Daphne sighed. "How much do you owe?"
"Ten drachmae," said Timon. Daphne groaned inwardly. Ten drachmae was a large sum even by the standard of a sizeable town, where a man could subsist on half a drachma a day; here in their village, where they lived by bartering and some had never seen so much as an obol, it was practically a fortune. "Those snakes at the nomad camp tricked me!" her father snarled. "They said it was just one game, for fun, and before I knew it, they've taken everything I got! It wasn't my fault!"
"It's never your fault, is it?" Daphne snapped. "Mother and Mikkos work their fingers to the bone, and Attikos sends home everything he can, but it's never enough for you, because you insist on falling in with every low-life and criminal you come across!"
"You're one to talk!" Timon stood up, and Daphne had to turn her face away from his wine-sour breath. "You'd never have this place if it wasn't for me! And here you are, living in the lap of luxury, while your family starves!"
Daphne grimaced. Her father's drunken insults were nothing new, but they never stopped grating. He made it sound like she was dining on roast mutton and fresh fish every night. "Go home," she said. "I have nothing for you."
"We'll see about that!" said her father. He stormed into the hut and started going through her herbs and potions, searching for where she might have hidden some money. Jars clattered to the ground. They didn't break on the soft earthen floor, but their contents spilled out, leaves and roots scattering everywhere. Daphne trembled in terror, not of her father's wrath, but of him opening her bedroom. If he burst upon the knife-wielding Romulus, it would be catastrophic.
"Stop it!" she shouted, trying to shove him outside.
"Perhaps I ought to take your goats," Timon said, staggering out the door. "Or that donkey. They should fetch a pretty sum."
"No!" Daphne went cold all over. Knowing her father, her animals would end up at the butcher's right away. She grabbed the back of Timon's robe, and he went sprawling on the ground.
"Is this how you treat your father, you ungrateful whore?" he slurred, scrambling to his feet.
"I will treat you as a father when you start acting like a father!" she shot back.
This earned her a backhanded slap across her face. Timon was so drunk that it didn't hurt much, yet Daphne could feel hot blood dripping down her cheek. Putting her fingers up, she realized the slap had caused the cut on her cheek to open again. She glared at her father. This was routine for him. Once he failed to appeal to her sense of filial duty, he would resort to violence. It had always been the same way in their family, even when she was a child. When one of them didn't do what he wanted, he would hit their mother or one of the children until they submitted to his will. Her grandmother had been the only one standing between them and Timon's beating, and it was only after she took on her grandmother's mantle that Daphne found the strength to start standing up to him. In fact, Daphne was surprised her father had made the trip up here himself. Usually, he would force her mother to go in his stead, knowing Daphne could never refuse her mother anything. Perhaps this time he had realized, and rightly so, that her mother's bruised and battered face would only infuriate Daphne and get him nowhere.
Daphne pressed a corner of her stole to her cheek. If there had only been herself, she would have fought harder to drive her father away. But she wasn't alone. No doubt Romulus had heard their struggle. She had to get her father out of the hut before Romulus became even more agitated and did something foolish.
Going back inside, she gathered up some amphorae of wine that she'd just picked up from the village, a payment for curing a shepherd of his toothache. She dumped them into a basket and pressed the lot into her father's arms. "Here," she said. "It's the only thing I have that is worth something. Take it. Treat your gambling pals to a drink and maybe they'll give you an extension on your debt. Or you can drown in it for all I care."
Timon raised his hand again, but this time Daphne had foreseen his intention and ducked. Losing his balance, her father had to hold on to a boulder to keep from falling over. It took the fight out of him, and he took the basket from her with a brightening face.
"You're a good girl, Daphne," he said as if nothing had happened. "I know you'll take care of us." He reached out to pat her cheek. She flinched away. "Speaking of which, have you given Izkur's proposal another thought? He's very keen, you know."
"No," she said, trying to keep calm. "I've told you, I'm not going to marry again, and certainly not to that old lecher. Go home now. And try to stay out of trouble this time," she added, knowing it wouldn't happen.
Daphne watched until his stumbling figure disappeared down the path, before returning to the hut. She was cleaning the blood off her face when Romulus emerged from the bedroom, still holding his dagger.
"That was your father?" he asked.
She sighed. "Unfortunately, yes."
"You've never mentioned him."
"What's there to mention?" she said with a shrug. "He's the terror of the village. If it wasn't for my grandmother, our whole family would've been driven out of this place years ago because of him."
"Is that why you insist that I hide?"
"Yes. I would not have him accuse me of misconduct." She didn't say that the secrecy was for her father's protection as much as hers and Romulus's. Then suddenly she realized what she was implying by "misconduct", and her cheeks grew hot even as the pain from the cut subsided. Romulus didn't seem to notice.
"What did he mean when he said you wouldn't have this place if it wasn't for him?" he continued.
Daphne wrung out the bloody cloth and hung it up. "This was my grandmother's place," she explained. "She left it to me on her deathbed, even though I can't inherit. My father is her only son, so it should've gone to him. But I convinced him to let me stay here and continue my grandmother's work."
Romulus was quiet for a moment. "I have some money," he said. "You could've given it to him."
"I'll not touch your money!" She had seen the pouch on his belt since the first day and heard the clink of coins inside it, but had refused to even open it on principle. Then she added, in a softer voice, so he wouldn't think her ungrateful. "Besides, it wouldn't be enough. It would never be enough for my father."
Romulus looked at her strangely. She turned away, not wanting him to see the bruise forming on her cheek, and started gathering up the spilled jars.
"My fatherâ" Romulus began.
Daphne turned back to him with interest, for this was the first time he had ever mentioned anything relating to his personal life. Only whatever it was he had to say seemed stuck in his throat. She waited, but he closed his mouth again. With a sigh, Daphne returned her attention to the jars.
Without another word, Romulus put the dagger away, got down on his knees, and helped her.
"Thank you," she said with a smile, as he handed her a jar.
Her smile seemed to startle him. And then, slowly, hesitantly, a corner of his mouth lifted in return. It was the first smile she'd ever seen from him, and brief though it was, it still lit up his face and wiped away his scowl. It made him look younger and friendlier, and Daphne no longer wondered why she kept him around.
Chapter 6
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/148c9d70aec5fb70fde46b9e1122c8f6/7b756a48267b059f-b5/s540x810/bb561e56f7c5c50d855121490437f4aa317c5fdb.jpg)
As you may know, in the "Gladiator II" script, there is a deleted line that reveals Geta and Caracalla's father was abusive. While this has no basis in history (same as much of the movie), it does align nicely with what I already had written about Daphne's own abusive father, so I had to add a little moment between Daphne and Geta as a nod to that. I'd like to think that Geta's childhood trauma made him more sympathetic toward Daphne, though he may not be ready to admit that yet.
Taglist: @sheneedsrocknroll92, @justnobodynothingmore, @barcelonaloverf1life, @myotakureprieve, @flawssy-227, @itsrainingbisexualfrogs (if you want to be tagged or removed, let me know!)
#joseph quinn#joseph quinn fic#gladiator 2#emperor geta#gladiator 2 fic#emperor geta fic#geta#emperor geta x ofc#geta x ofc
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this is my offering to the powers that be. i ask little in exchange. i read on the archive that there's a discord server for those who imagine twin emperors caracalla and geta in love. an invite link to said server in my inbox or messages receptacle would be delightful. assuming, of course, said powers are comfortable with myself joining the server, and i fully understand if not.
under the cut is 444 words of geta's thoughts as he (literally) sleeps with his lovely caracalla. i saw gladiator ii less than 24 hours ago, so please forgive me if it's unpolished. i warn you, dear reader, it contains mentions of unsavory things. particularly: canon-typical incest, mention of necrophilia, and implied chronic illness (specifically advanced syphilis)
enjoy, dear reader. and do not hesitate to send criticism- i am unashamed of human error. it's what separates us from animals. ave res republica.
Geta didnât mind Caracallaâs novel interest in sharing a bed. It was nice to have a warm body with him. (Of course, heâd let concubines into his bed, but it wasnât the same. They were only warm in touch, not in sentiment.) He would go so far, in the safety of his own mind, to say he liked sleeping with Caracalla. However, he did not like sleeping with the monkey.Â
Dondas was curled up in the crook of Caracallaâs neck and Geta was locked in a staring match with the creature. He wondered what Dondas was thinking of. Geta was thinking of how easy it would be to accidentally roll over and crush her tiny body. He grimaced- he could think of little less appealing than primate innards in his quarters. Well, he appended to the thought, I would readily accept Acaciusâ disemboweled corpse dumped in my bed, if only to deflower his traitorous body.Â
Frankly, he worried just as much about injuring his fragile brother with his weight as he did Dondas. Caracalla was delicate, and only more so as he became sicker. Geta was cautious when Caracalla insisted nightly on Geta lying over him like a heavy blanket in bed. Caracallaâs bones had too much give for Geta to feel comfortable putting his weight over him, no matter how much he insisted the warm pressure helped calm his mind and body.Â
Geta still couldnât shake the image of their soirĂŠe last market day. Caracallaâs favorite party trick was to hook a finger under his lowest rib and wiggle it like a loose tooth. It was never amusing to anyone but himself, but even less as of late. Whenever he pulled his robes aside, it revealed the necrotic blemishes on his torso, and it was all others could do to smile politely as his stubby fingers disappeared behind his ribcage.Â
Geta was brought out of the memory when he heard Caracalla quietly snore. Geta slowly raised himself up from Caracalla, hovering above him on all fours like a hungry predator. Caracalla stirred slightly. Geta held his breath for a moment, but slowly released it in relief as Caracalla curled into himself. Geta carefully eased himself into the bed, lying adjacent to Caracalla.
Now that Geta had moved off Caracalla, Dondas moved to lap at a sore on Caracallaâs newly exposed chest. She suckled the leaking serous fluid, blood, and pus from the granuloma like milk from a teat. Caracalla mumbled something in a dream and brought his hand to cradle Dondas. He would let Dondas suckle his milk if he could, Geta thought idly as he watched his twin and his pet.Â
#gladiator ii#emperor caracalla#emperor geta#carageta#getacalla#tw necrophillia#tw inc*st#caracalla reminds me of the woman from chimp crazy that docuseries about insane chimp owners#i feel like geta and dondas have the same dynamic as frasier and eddie where geta is annoyed by dondas to no end but can't get rid of him#because someone he loves loves him and dondas does nothing to geta except get in staring contests with him
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Gladiator II - Second Screening Review
SPOILERS BELOW READ AT YOUR OWN RISK I GET RIGHT INTO IT.
Yall know I was too busy panicking the first time around to really pay attention during the death scene but ugh. (Iâm happy to report that while my heart was still thumping it only reaching 121BPM instead of 136BPM đ¤Ş)
That entire scene leading up to his death was pretty fucking heart breaking. I think that leading up hes realizing that maybe he went too far with Acasiusâ death & that it might have been the final act where the Praetorian Guard wonât be able to handle the crowd.
When it came time for his actual death & I was paying attention ugh rip my heart out. All while bleeding all over the place from nearly having his hand chopped off (which made literally everyone in my theater gasp this time around) begging Caracalla to âcome backâ & âbreak the spellâ & telling him that he loved him, instead begging him for his life (I mean he kind of was). Maybe that was all a ploy but ugh just rip out my heart the way JQ acts made it feel sincere that he just wanted his brother to come back.
Fuck Macrinus for real. He knew he needed to get rid of Geta first because Caracalla was clearly not the one in charge & deteriorating fast. Also the fact that Geta asked him for help with his brother but instead got his throat continuously slash & his head lobbed off. UGH.
The relationship between Caracalla & Geta wasnât normal in anyway, but I think they needed each other. I know that Caracallaâs cognitive function was already declining but I can only just imagine how bad he wouldâve been if Macrinus didnât kill him too. I donât think he full realized that Geta was gone. I mean he did it with the help of Macrinus but did he fully realize & understand that his brother was dead?
Fred & Joseph were really the stand outs for me in this. Their performances I think were the most impactful, with Joseph edging out Fred just a bit. I really hope this opens more doors & leads to more roles for Fred because I think he did superb in his role.
Everyone else was kind of blah & one note. I donât think Pedro had enough screen time to really make an impact, but his acting scenes were just kind of âoh thereâs Pedroâ. If we basis his performance alone off of his fight scenes then sure he did great. Connieâs fake crying kind of killed me a lot I kind of wish she just didnât because her not producing tears was painful 𼴠Paul & Denzel are the obvious leads so you expect them to have commanding roles.
The movies good but itâs very apparent Iâm just watching for Joseph & Fred.
Hail Dondus though!
#gladiator ii#joseph quinn#emperor geta#gladiator ii spoilers#fred hechinger#emeperor Caracalla#pedro pascal#general marcus acacius#paul mescal#lucius verus#connie nielsen#lucilla#denzel washington#macrinus#tell me he doesnât know how to act#Iâll punch you square in the face
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Gladiator II Review (Spoiler-free mostly) under the cut!) Viewing #1
âď¸đď¸đđ¸ I would say on my first Gladiator 2 viewing⌠itâs definitely not as smoothly paced as the original film. The editing was fairly choppy where it moved quickly to the next scene and thereâs not much time to breathe after something big happened, so I could tell there were definitely deleted/extended scenes, which is typical of Sir Ridley and hopefully we may see an extended cut in the future đšđšPaul was very good as the leading role, giving a brooding performance where you feel for him and he carries subtle mannerisms of Russell Crowe without doing an impressionâŚand Pedro doesnât have a whole lot of screen time as the promos make it seem but heâs compelling as always and fits the Roman era and he has a touching dynamic with Connie Neilson, who I felt sadly was given less to do than in the first film⌠I did notice Richard McCabe playing the announcer of the Colosseum and Tim McInnery as a senator whoâs connected to Denzel Washingtonâs character. Poor Derek Jacobi was kinda wasted in his returning role as Senator Grachuss from the first film as he only has a handful of lines and just a couple small scenes. Denzel was an entertaining aspect to the film, kinda a Shakespeare Othello/Iago type where he has his own agenda⌠and last but not least, Joseph as Emperor Geta and Fred Hechlinger as Caracalla, the twin brother emperors⌠the film doesnât really explain why they are chosen to rule after the fall of Commodus but they certainly are entertaining to watch, using every moment theyâre onscreen (which isnât as much compared to Joaquin Phoenix) to keep you guessing what theyâll say and do next, definitely standouts as villains and JQ most certainly shows his range in the same year he played a gentle mannered law student in Quiet Place Day One⌠Iâll most likely see it once more on Saturday for a second go around⌠thereâs also references to Greek and Roman mythology that I appreciated đâď¸đđď¸ Not as spotless as the original but a good continuation of the story we all know and love from 25 years ago đşđş and the opening credits scene instantly grabs you with beautiful paintwork with images from the first film and the rousing music đ¤đ¤âď¸âď¸
#joseph quinn#gladiator ii#gladiator 2#emperor geta#lucius verus#paul mescal#marcus acacius#pedro pascal#connie nielsen#gladiator 2 spoilers#ridley scott
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Soulmates
Emperor Caracalla x Reader
Summary: In which your soulmate is the perfect opposite of you.
Much like Geta, Caracalla loved violence. He enjoyed the games even as a young child.Â
He and his brother grew up to be Emperors.Â
Ruthless and fierce Emperors.
You were the Princess of a conquered empire.Â
Your marriage to Caracalla was supposed to save your people from Rome however your trust was soon betrayed.Â
Your parents were killed in the war and you just stood there.
Hearing the news that your people were defeated, parents dead and yet there you stood, in a gold and red dress.
"And now, you are only the Empress of Rome." your husband told you and you looked at him in horror.
But said nothing.Â
You uttered not a word of your parents' death. You silently cried in your room.
Days passed but you refused to leave your room.
All you did was sleep and eat.
You mourned the loss of your family.
"The Emperor called for you." one of your servants said.
But you knew better than to keep your husband waiting, so you got dressed and headed to the gardens where you knew he would be waiting.
He always met you in the gardens.
Bringing Dondus along with him, you two often walked in there, surrounded by flowers.
You didn't talk much. He did most of the talking, you just politely smiled at him as he kept on talking.
"I thought you would be happy," he said as soon as he saw you. "Everyone always called you Princess. All the Senators, even the people. I thought by melting your home into Rome, your title would finally be as it was promised, Empress." so he did it for you. In his own weird and twisted way. He murdered or rather got your parents murdered for you.
In his own sick and twisted way.
You must have spent too much time with him because you actually find his action to be sweet.
"I just thought I should mourn them. People might find me heartless if I didn't."
"Never!" he yelled suddenly. "People dare not talk about you in such a matter! My Sweet Wife." you offered him a kind smile as he ran his fingers down your face.
You must have gone mad.
You spent two years with Caracalla as his wife, he must have driven you to insanity.
He always spoke to you with such sweetness, such kindness. You have never felt so happy.
You knew of his illness, Geta warned you about it before.Â
"We have a form of medicine. Where I'm from. My uncle was sick with the same sickness, he found a way to treat it." you told them both one day about a year ago.Â
That is when Caracalla fell in love with you.
His Empress saved him and healed him with the medicine of her people.
After that, Caracalla noticed many things.
One of such was the fact that everyone seemed to call you Princess.
Why did they call you as such when you were the Empress?
It was a clear disrespect.
It was something he needed to make sure never happens again.
After your parents' death, there was a game held in the Colosseum.
"A tribute to my wife." Caracalla said as he sat down next to you.Â
You watched as two Senators walked out.
You immediately recognised them.
Both were ones that questioned your marriage to Caracalla and called you Princess.
Your eyes moved to your husband who was watching you.
He didn't say anything as the fight began.
The Senators never stood a chance.Â
You watched and smiled at their deaths. They deserved it, you know they did.
"No one disrespects My Wife."Â
A hand grabbed yours and you felt his thumb rub the back of your hand.Â
Oh yes, Caracalla drove you to insanity. And you absolutely loved him.
Gladiator II Collection
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#x reader#fanfiction#x female reader#gladiator ii#gladiator 2#gladiator movie#gladiator ll#gladiator x reader#gladiator ii fanfiction#gladiator ii fic#emperor caracalla x reader#emperor caracalla x you#emperor caracalla x female reader#emperor caracalla imagine#emperor caracalla imagines#emperor caracalla#caracalla x reader#gladiator caracalla#caracalla x you#caracalla imagine#caracalla imagines
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asked my brother why he and my dad did not wait one week so i could see gladiator ii with them and he said âyou just want to see it for pedro pascalâ and i said âno i want to watch for the plotâ to which he said âyeah, pedro pascalâ
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imagine being called out by your little brother (heâs not little heâs actually taller than međ)
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