āš¢š©š¦š¤š¦š¬š« | chapter I
General Marcus Acacius x f!reader
"in her eyes shone the sweetness of melancholy."
summary: In the grandeur of ancient Rome, you are the secret daughter of Commodus, living a quiet life as a servant in the imperial palace. Everything changes when you meet General Marcus Acacius, Romeās honorable and stoic leader.
Though devoted to duty and loyalty to the princess, Marcus is drawn to you in a way he cannot ignore. A forbidden passion ignites between you both, and an affair beginsāone that threatens the very foundation of loyalty, power, and honor. As you fall deeper into your dangerous love for Marcus, each stolen moment becomes a fragile, dangerous secret.
warnings: 18+ only, 14 YEARS AFTER GLADIATOR 1, ANGST, Fluff, A LOT OF SMUT, Unprotected Sex, Exhibition Kink, Age-Gap, Ancient Rome, mentions of violence, Gladiators, Blood, Gore, Politics, Sexism, Forbidden Love, Loss of Virginity,Ā mentions of death, Innocent and pure reader, Loss of virginity, Infidelity, more warnings will be added throughout the story
Chapter I
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The palace is alive with preparation, a beast of marble and gold that never rests. Its veins are the labyrinthine halls, pulsing with servants like you, carrying trays of delicacies, wreaths of flowers, and jugs of wine.
Its heart beats to the rhythm of whispered orders, clinking metal, and the distant echo of the marketplace beyond its gates. Tonight, the beast awakens for another feast.
You adjust the folds of your simple tunic, careful not to brush against the elaborate tapestries that line the walls. Each thread tells a story of conquest, glory, and powerālegends youāve only heard murmured by those old enough to remember.
You are not part of those tales, nor their lineage. You are a servant, a shadow cast by the towering figures who walk these halls.
The kitchen is a tempest. The air is thick with the scent of roasted meats, fresh bread, and sweet figs. Claudia, the head cook, barks orders, her voice slicing through the chaos like the edge of a Roman gladius.
You pass her with a nod, your arms laden with trays of fruitāgleaming apples, plump grapes, the kind of bounty the common people outside these walls could only dream of.
Livia catches your eye from across the room. Her presence is a steady anchor in the storm, her face worn but kind.
āHave you checked the wine?ā she asks, her tone soft but urgent.
You nod. āItās ready, Mother,ā you reply, the word slipping out as naturally as breath.
She is not your motherāyou know this muchābut she is all you have.
The story of how you came to be here is one youāve heard countless times: a baby abandoned at the servants' chamber door, cradled in a basket of woven reeds, with nothing to mark your origin save for a scrap of fine cloth that no one in your station would dare to own.
Livia found you there, swaddled in whispers of mystery, and against all odds, she chose to keep you.
Raised among the laboring hands of the palace, you were given no privilege beyond survival and no legacy but that of work.
The great marble halls and gilded frescoes became your entire world, a place as eternal and unmoving as the gods themselvesāor so it seemed.
The servantsā quarters where you lived were nestled in the hidden bowels of the palace, far from the glittering feasts and marble statues.
You learned to scrub floors and pour wine long before you understood the language of wealth and power that filled these walls.
Your life had been carved out in the shadows, molded by the soft voices and calloused hands of those who raised you.
Today, like every other, begins in service to Rome's ever-churning hunger for spectacle.
The air hums with anticipation, thick with the scent of roasted meat and spiced wine, a stark contrast to the stench of poverty that lingers just beyond the palace gates.
āAre the platters for the atrium ready?ā Liviaās voice cuts through your thoughts.
āThey are,ā you reply, glancing at the polished silver laden with grapes and apples, their skins shining like jewels under the torchlight.
āGood.ā Liviaās sharp eyes soften, though her expression remains tense. āTake the fruit out yourself. And stay close to the kitchen. Today will bring trouble, I feel it.ā
You nod, understanding the weight of her instincts. Years of serving in the palace have taught her to sense the storm before it strikes.
As you lift the platters, Claudia, calls over her daughter, Alexandra.
āGo with her,ā Claudia orders, waving a ladle for emphasis.
Alexandra groans dramatically but obeys, rolling her eyes as she grabs one of the platters.
āShe canāt let me rest for a moment,ā she mutters, her tone more amused than annoyed.
You chuckle softly. Alexandra has always been like thisābold where you are cautious, quick to speak where you stay silent.
She is your only true companion here, older by four years and infinitely more daring.
As you and Alexandra arrange the fruits on a grand table in the atrium, she leans closer, her voice dropping conspiratorially. āThe Princess will be here tonight.ā
You nod absently, focused on ensuring the grapes cascade just so. āOf course, she will. She is the Princess after all.ā
āNo, I mean, I havenāt seen her in years,ā Alexandra continues, ignoring your tone. āNot since I was a kid. That was ten years ago. You know she moved out of the palace after marrying the general.ā
You donāt reply immediately, your hands steady as you arrange the fruit. Alexandra has always loved to gossip, but you prefer to keep your thoughts unspoken.
āCan you believe itās been ten years, and she hasnāt had a child? Not one with him,ā Alexandra muses.
āMaybe itās their choice,ā you say quietly. āItās not our place to wonder.ā
Alexandra scoffs lightly. āIām just saying, after her sonāwhat was his name? Lucius?āafter he was taken and killed by her brother, Commodusā¦ā She trails off, her voice tinged with something between pity and fascination.
You remember Lucius vaguely, a boy with a quiet demeanor and a sad smile.
You were too young then to understand the weight of his loss, but the servants whispered of curses and tragedies surrounding the imperial family.
āItās not good to talk about the great emperors like that,ā you murmur, hoping to steer the conversation elsewhere.
Before Alexandra can reply, the sound of heavy boots echoes through the atrium.
The guards step forward, their polished armor glinting in the firelight. āMake way for their majesties,ā one announces, his voice carrying over the growing murmur of the guests.
You and Alexandra immediately bow your heads, the platters forgotten as the twin emperors enter the room.
Emperor Geta and Emperor Caracalla are a study in contrasts.
Geta, an imposing figure, commands the space with a cold and calculating gaze. His every step seems deliberate, as if the weight of the empire rests on his shoulders alone.
Caracalla, by contrast, walks with an erratic energy, his pet monkey perched on his shoulder. Dondus, the creatureās name, chatters and hisses, a mirror of its masterās unpredictable moods.
You feel the weight of their gazes as they sweep the room. Getaās lips curl into a smileāor is it a smirk?āas his eyes linger on Alexandra.
There have been whispers, rumors of an affair, though Alexandra denies them with a laugh.
Caracallaās gaze lands on you, and for a moment, his expression softens. Unlike his brother, he has always been strange but oddly kind to you.
When you were a child, he would find you in the halls, offering you small trinkets or asking you to keep him company.
āYour Majesties,ā Alexandra says again, her voice like honeyed wine, sweet but strong.
She curtsies with practiced ease, her eyes cast downward, yet her boldness hangs in the air, unspoken but palpable.
You follow her lead, bowing deeply, but your heart pounds in your chest like the war drums of a distant legion. In the presence of the emperors, the room feels smaller, the air heavier.
To serve Rome, you think, is to breathe in the will of its rulers, no matter how suffocating.
Geta's gaze lingers on Alexandra, traveling from her head to her feet, as though she were a statue he might commission or a possession he already owns.
His smirk deepens, the corner of his mouth curving with an indulgence that unsettles you.
āAlexandra,ā he drawls, his voice smooth as polished bronze. āWhy do I find the table half-dressed? Are my guests to dine on the promise of fruit alone?ā
You glance at the platters, perfectly arranged but not yet fully adorned with the remaining dishes. Your pulse quickens; you know the punishment for displeasing the emperors can be swift, unpredictable.
But Alexandra, bold as always, doesnāt flinch.
āForgive us, Your Majesty,ā she says, her tone measured yet edged with defiance. āThe final trays are being brought out as we speak. The delay was unforeseen.ā
Geta arches a brow, his smirk turning sharper, more dangerous. āUnforeseen,ā he repeats, as though savoring the word.
āI wonder, Alexandra, if youāve grown too accustomed to...Ā distractions.ā
You know the meaning behind his words. Everyone does.
The whispered rumors of their affair swirl through the palace like incense smoke, clinging to every corner.
Her mother Claudia knows, though she turns a blind eye, perhaps thinking it wiser not to provoke the wrath of an emperor.
Beside him, Caracalla shifts, uninterested in the exchange. His pet monkey, Dondus, chitters softly on his shoulder, its small, beady eyes scanning the room.
Caracallaās gaze falls on you briefly, but it is not unkind. He has always been more erratic than cruel with you, there is a peculiar understanding in his glancesāa shared knowledge of solitude.
āForgive us, Your Majesty,ā you say suddenly, your voice trembling like a bird caught in a net. The words tumble out before you can stop them, and the weight of the room shifts.
Getaās eyes snap to you, sharp as a blade. For a moment, you wonder if youāve made a grave mistake.
But then he laughsāa low, indulgent sound that sends shivers down your spine.
āAh,ā he says, leaning slightly toward you. āThe little dove finds her voice. How curious.ā
You stiffen under his gaze, your knees threatening to buckle. It feels as though he is peeling back your very skin, seeking something hidden beneath.
āYouāre the youngest servant here, arenāt you?ā Geta muses, his tone light but with an edge that cuts.
āA curious creature, so quiet and unassuming. And yetā¦ā He trails off, his eyes narrowing, as if piecing together a puzzle.
The weight of unspoken rumors presses against your chest.
The whispers about your lineage, the murmurs that you are more than a servantāthat you are the illegitimate daughter of Commodus himself, a shadow of Romeās bloody past.
Youāve heard them before, though never directly. Livia, your steadfast mother in all but blood, dismisses them as lies, the gossip of bored tongues.
But in moments like this, when Getaās piercing gaze locks onto yours, it feels as though the marble walls around you whisper secrets only they can hold.
Secrets of your origin, of what blood may or may not flow through your veins, encased in the silent austerity of Romeās cold embrace. You feel the weight of it, a shroud both invisible and suffocating.
Geta doesnāt believe the rumors entirely, but he cannot ignore them either. To him, you are a thorn he cannot pluck without proof.
If the whispers are true, if you are indeed the hidden scion of Commodus and the only living grandchild of Marcus Aurelius, you would be a danger to his rule.
Rome, after all, has loved its Aurelius lineage fiercely.
The plebeians would rally to your name like vines twisting toward sunlight.
Still, no woman has ever ruled Rome.
The Senate, the soldiers, and the gods themselves would balk at such a notion. But Geta knows that power is not always rooted in precedentāit is rooted in the hearts of the people.
And the people would love a descendant of Marcus Aurelius far more than they could ever love him.
āYou wear the palace well,ā Geta says finally, his tone dripping with mockery. āA little too well, perhaps.ā
You feel the heat rise to your cheeks but keep your gaze respectfully lowered. His words are like serpents coiling around you, their venom lying just beneath the surface.
Caracalla hums softly, breaking the tension. He strokes Dondus, the little monkey perched on his shoulder, as though soothing himself rather than the animal.
āLeave her, brother,ā he mutters, his tone flat but carrying weight. āYou scare the child.ā
Geta casts his twin a glance, his smirk briefly faltering. With that, he straightens, clapping his hands once in finality. āFinish the table,ā he commands, the sharpness of his tone slicing through the room.
āYes, Your Majesty,ā you and Alexandra reply in unison, bowing deeply as the emperors turn and walk away.
Their robes ripple like molten gold, catching the light as though the gods themselves had woven the fabric.
The moment they are gone, you exhale shakily, the breath you didnāt realize youād been holding slipping from your lips.
The grandeur of the palace, so often a thing of wonder, now feels oppressiveāa prison of marble and ambition.
Alexandra nudges you gently, her smile faint but reassuring. āItās fine,ā she murmurs, though the tightness in her voice betrays her unease.
You nod and return to your work, the routine motions of arranging platters grounding you once more. But the unease lingers, like a storm cloud that refuses to dissipate.
Later, after the feast preparations are complete, you retreat to the servantsā quarters. The hallways grow quieter as the palace begins to prepare for the nightās debauchery.
Your mother, Livia, finds you there, her expression tight with concern.
āAre you all right?ā You nod quickly, not wanting to worry her further.
Liviaās sharp eyes search yours for a moment before she exhales heavily. āStay away from them tonight,ā she warns. āThere will be soldiers, senators, politiciansāmen who think they own the world. And women and men from the brothels to entertain them. It will not be a place for a child like you.ā
āI understand,ā you say softly, though the thought of the gathering makes your skin prickle.
"Go to your chamber and stay there.ā You nod, obedient as always, and Livia cups your face briefly before bustling away.
But as you walk toward your chamber, the stillness of the afternoon draws you elsewhere.
***
The sun bathes the palace gardens in a golden light, soft and warm, like an embrace from the gods themselves.
The sky is a flawless stretch of azure, and the air carries the faintest scent of blooming jasmine.
Unable to resist, you veer toward the gardens, seeking solace in their quiet beauty.
You make your way to the small pond at the edge of the grounds, where the world feels simpler, untouched by the weight of marble columns and imperial decrees.
This is your sanctuary, a place youāve tended with your own hands.
The hedges are trimmed neatly, the flowers arranged in bursts of vibrant colorācrimson roses, golden marigolds, and pale violets that seem to glow in the sunlight.
The pond reflects the sky like polished glass, its surface rippling gently in the breeze.
You settle onto the cool stone bench nearby, pulling out a small parchment and charcoal.
Writing has always been your escape, a way to make sense of the labyrinth that is your mind.
The words flow from you like water from a spring, each line capturing fragments of your thoughts and fears.
To live in the shadow of gods is to forget the warmth of the sun.
You stare at the words youāve written, sentences about Rome and its people, the empireās endless hunger that devours the poor while the rulers gorge themselves on the spoils.
It isnāt rebellion that drives youāat least, not yetābut a quiet, gnawing sense of wrongness.
You have lived your entire life within the confines of this palace, its gilded walls both a sanctuary and a prison.
Outside, beyond the Forum and its grand marble temples, the streets of Rome teem with despair. Youāve seen it, fleeting glimpses on the rare occasions you ventured beyond the palace gates.
Children with hollow eyes and grime-streaked faces.
Men broken by war or taxation, their shoulders bowed under invisible yokes.
Women clutching bundles of rags that you realized, with a sick lurch, were infants too still to be alive.
These thoughts weigh heavily on you as you sit by the pond, the gardenās beauty unable to shield you from the worldās harsh truths.
You lower your quill, pressing trembling fingers to your lips, when the sound of approaching footsteps pulls you sharply from your thoughts.
You stiffen, the air in your lungs turning to stone. It isnāt one of the servants; their steps are lighter, quicker.
This tread is deliberate, measured, carrying a weight of authority. When you glance up, your breath catches.
The man before you is not adorned with the opulence of the Senate nor the ostentatious silk of the emperors.
You know who he is. How could you not?
General Marcus Acacius.
Romeās shield and sword, the hero of distant campaigns whose name is whispered with both reverence and fear.
You have never seen him in the flesh, for he seldom resides in the palace, choosing instead to live with Princess Lucilla far from its labyrinth of intrigue.
But his likeness is everywhere: etched in marble statues, painted in frescoes, immortalized as Romeās protector.
Yet, here he stands, and for a fleeting moment, you wonder if the gods themselves have sent him.
The crimson cloak draped over his broad shoulders glints faintly in the golden light, its hem embroidered with intricate patterns that seem to tell the story of the empireās conquests.
His tunic, simple yet stately, is cinched with a polished belt, a gleaming buckle bearing the proud insignia of the wolf of Rome.
Unlike the ornamental decadence of the Senate or the twin emperors, his attire speaks of purpose and practicalityābeauty tempered by utility.
And his faceāby Jupiter, his beautiful face.
It is a map of victories and sacrifices, weathered yet noble. The lines carved by years of sun and battle only enhance the sharpness of his features, as if the gods had personally molded him for their own designs.
His hair, dark and streaked with silver like the gleam of moonlight on a blade, curls faintly at his temples.
His beard, neatly trimmed, frames a mouth set in the hard line of a man who has spoken a thousand commands and swallowed a thousand regrets.
But it is his eyes that strike you most: deep, piercing, soulful-brown eyes.
They are the eyes of a man who has seen the best and worst of humanity and bears the weight of both.
Your breath catches as his gaze sweeps over you, taking in the sight of a young servant clutching a parchment like a shield.
He regards you with a sharp, assessing gaze, his eyes like iron tempered in fireāunyielding yet reflective.
His presence is commanding, a gravity that draws everything into its orbit. You are struck by how different he is from the emperors.
Where Geta and Caracalla exude indulgence and cruelty, Acacius carries himself with the disciplined grace of a man who has known the weight of true responsibility.
āNot many choose the gardens for their thoughts,ā he says, his voice deep, steady, and tinged with curiosity.
It is a soldierās voice, devoid of the honeyed pretense of courtiers.
You scramble to your feet, clutching your parchment to your chest. āGeneral,ā you manage, your voice trembling despite your best efforts.
He raises a hand, the gesture more commanding than any shout. āAt ease,ā he says, a faint flicker of somethingāamusement, perhapsācrossing his face. āYou are Livia's daughter?"
His question hangs in the air like the distant clang of a bell. You nodded, your name feels small in your mouth when you finally say it, barely audible against the rustling of the gardenās leaves.
Acacius nods, as though filing the information away. His eyes flick to the parchment in your hands. āA poet?ā
You hesitate, āI... I write, sometimes. Thoughts.ā
He steps closer, his presence overwhelming yet strangely grounding. He does not reach for the parchment, but his gaze lingers on it as though he could read its contents by sheer will alone.
āThoughts on Rome, perhaps?ā he asks.
His tone is even, but there is an edge to it, a subtle weight that suggests he already knows the answer.
Your throat tightens. To speak of the empireās flaws to a general of its armies feels like standing on the edge of a blade.
Yet something in his bearingāa quiet patience, a restrained curiosityācompels you to answer honestly.
āYes,ā you admit softly. āAbout Rome. And its people.ā
Acaciusās expression shifts almost imperceptibly, a shadow crossing his face. He looks away, toward the pond, his gaze distant now, as if seeing not the still water but something far beyond it.
āThe people,ā he repeats, almost to himself. āThe heart of Rome. And yet, the heart is always the first to be sacrificed.ā
The words are spoken quietly, but they carry the weight of experience, of battles fought not just with swords but with conscience.
You watch him, your earlier fear now replaced by a cautious curiosity.
"Do you... believe that?" you venture, your voice barely above a whisper, the words trembling like a fledgling bird daring its first flight.
Marcus halts, his crimson cloak swaying like the banner of a legion stilled in the wind.
He turns to you, his eyesāsharp as a polished gladiusāsoftening for the briefest moment, as if your question has reached a part of him long buried under layers of duty and steel.
āBelief,ā he begins, his voice low and steady, carrying the weight of a man who has lived lifetimes in service to an empire, āis a luxury in the life of a soldier. I deal in action, not faith. But I have seen enough to know that Romeās strength lies not in its emperors, but in its people. And we are failing them.ā
The honesty in his words strikes you like the tolling of a great bronze bell, reverberating through the quiet garden and deep into your chest.
It is not what you expected from a man like himāa hero to some, a sword-arm to the empireābut here he stands, speaking not as a general but as a man, his voice laced with something unguarded. Regret, perhaps. Or hopeāfragile and faint, but alive nonetheless.
āDo you believe in Rome, little one?ā His question falls like a stone into still waters, and you startle, unprepared to have the conversation turned toward you.
āIāā Your words falter, and you look down at your hands, clutching the parchment that now feels like an accusation.
But then, something inside you stirsāsomething that refuses to shrink back beneath the weight of his gaze.
You lift your eyes to meet his, the courage in your chest kindled like a flame drawn from embers.
āI believe in what Rome could be,ā you reply, your voice steadier now.
āI believe in the Rome that lives in the hearts of its peopleāthe ones who work its fields, who build its roads, who kneel at its altars not out of fear, but out of love. That is the Rome worth fighting for. But the Rome I see nowā¦ā Your throat tightens, but you press on.
ā...has forgotten its people. It worships marble statues and golden coins while the streets crumble and the people starve. How can an empire endure when its foundation is so neglected?ā
Your words spill forth, unchecked and unmeasured, and it is only when you see the faintest flicker of something in his expressionārespect, perhaps, or surpriseāthat you remember who stands before you.
The weight of your boldness sinks in like a gladiator realizing theyāve overstepped in the arena.
āForgive me, General,ā you murmur, lowering your gaze. āI forgot myself.ā
But Marcus shakes his head, a wry smile playing at the edges of his mouth. āDo not apologize,ā he says, his tone gentler now, though no less commanding.
āYou are young, but your words carry the wisdom of one who has not yet been corrupted by power. Few speak with such clarity, and fewer still with such courage.ā
His gaze lingers on you, searching, and you feel it like the sun breaking through storm clouds.
āYou remind me,ā he says, his voice quieter, almost reverent, āof someone. He believed, as you do, in the strength of Romeās people. He would sit in gardens much like this one, speaking of justice and duty, and wonder aloud whether the empire could ever live up to its ideals.ā
Your heart quickens, the weight of his words settling over you like the cloak of a goddess.
The way Marcus looks at youāas though he sees not the servant, but the soul beneathāmakes you feel for a fleeting moment.
āI am no philosopher,ā you say softly, your fingers tightening on the parchment. āBut it is hard to remain silent when I see so much suffering.ā
āA Roman citizen has every right to speak of their empireās failings,ā he says, stepping closer now.
āDo not mistake me for a politician, child. I am a soldier. My loyalty is to Romeānot to the men who rule it."
You nod, the words settling over you like a cloak woven of both gravity and reassurance.
The air between you feels charged, alive with the kind of understanding that is rarely spoken but deeply felt.
You watch him, his form cast in the golden hues of the setting sun, the crimson of his cloak vivid against the muted greens of the garden.
There is something about him that draws youānot merely his reputation, not the legends whispered in the palace halls of his valor and victories, butĀ him.
The man behind the titles and statues.
You swallow, your heart a restless bird in your chest. You should not linger, not with him, not now.
And yet, you find yourself unable to walk away.
Words rise to your lips, hesitant at first, but then they spill forth, tentative and careful, like a child offering a wildflower to a god.
āForgive me, my lord, but shouldnāt you be inside?ā you say, your voice trembling under the weight of its boldness. āThe palace is bustling with your celebrationāwishing you fortune for your campaign, for Romeās glory.ā
He turns his gaze to you, the faintest flicker of amusement playing at the corners of his mouth. āRomeās glory,ā he repeats, as though tasting the phrase on his tongue, finding it bitter.
He lets out a soft chuckle, low and warm, a sound that feels oddly out of place amidst the solemn grandeur of the garden. āLet them feast. Let them toast. Iāve no appetite for gilded words tonight.ā
You blink, surprised by his candor. He is not what you imaginedānot the marble statue immortalized in the Forum or the hardened general whose name echoes in the chants of soldiers. He is⦠more human than that.
āIām waiting for my wife,ā he adds, his tone casual, though his eyes seem to linger on you as if measuring your reaction.
Princess Lucilla.
The name hangs in the air, heavy with the weight of legend. Romeās Princess. The only daughter of Marcus Aurelius, the philosopher-emperor. Youāve never met her, though her shadow looms large over your life.
āShe was delayed,ā he continues, glancing toward the palace, though his stance is relaxed, unhurried.
Princess Lucilla, her legend precedes her, a name spoken with reverence, and sometimes, in hushed tones, with fear.
Your mother, Livia, has served her since she was but a girl.
Livia, who moves through the world with a quiet dignity, has always spoken of the princess with unwavering loyalty. āShe carries Rome on her shoulders,ā your mother would say, her voice tinged with both pride and sorrow. āThe weight of a crown rests on her brow, even though it does not sit there.ā
Your thoughts drift, but his voice pulls you back to the present.
āYour mother,ā Marcus says, his tone shifting to something softer, more contemplative, āsheās a loyal servant to our household, isnāt she?ā
You nod, feeling a strange warmth rise to your cheeks. āShe is, my lord. My mother adores the princess. She always speaks highly of her.ā
At this, Marcus smiles faintly. His expression, though guarded, carries a warmth that feels rare, as if heās allowing himself a brief reprieve from his usual stoicism.
āLivia is wise, then. Lucilla is⦠more than most know. Rome sees her as Marcus Aureliusā daughter, but to meāā He pauses, his voice lowering to something almost reverent.
āShe is a woman of strength, far greater than any man Iāve known. Her loyalty to Rome and its people⦠it humbles me.ā
For a fleeting moment, his mask of a hardened general slips, and you glimpse something deeper.
A man bound not just by duty but by love.
His words hang in the air, gilded with affection, and you feel a pang of longing, though for what, you cannot say.
āIāve never met her,ā you admit, your voice quieter now.
He turns to you, curiosity flickering in his gaze. āLucilla?ā
You nod, feeling suddenly self-conscious beneath his scrutiny. āIāve only heard stories. My mother always told me about her strength, her grace. But weāve never crossed paths.ā
Marcus regards you for a long moment, as if seeing something in you he had not noticed before. āShe would like you,ā he says at last, his voice steady, though something lingers in his tone, a note of intrigue.
āAre you coming to the feast tonight?ā he asks, the question catching you off guard.
You hesitate, glancing toward the palace where the distant hum of celebration filters through the evening air. āServants are not permitted to attend such events, my lord,ā you say, lowering your gaze. āI am only a servant after all,"
His brows furrow slightly, as if the answer displeases him. āRome is built on the backs of those it calls servants. Do not diminish yourself.ā
You blink, unsure of how to respond. Thereās a weight in his words, one that feels both heavy and freeing.
Before he can say more, hurried footsteps echo through the garden. You turn, and there stands Alexandra, one of the palace attendants, her expression tight with worry.
āMy lord,ā she says, bowing her head quickly as her wide eyes catch sight of Marcus.
The respect is immediate, almost reflexive. General Acacius commands not just authority but admiration.
Men respect him, but women⦠they speak of him in hushed tones, a figure both distant and impossibly magnetic.
āForgive me for interrupting,ā Alexandra continues, her voice trembling slightly under the weight of his gaze. āYour mother is looking for you,"
Marcus looks at you, his expression softening. He steps aside, the movement graceful despite his formidable frame, as though making room for your escape.
"Tell Livia my apologies for keeping her daughter here," he says, his voice low yet deliberate, as though each word is a promise carved in stone.
His gaze lingers on you, longer than it should, and it feels as though he is reading something beyond the surfaceāa map of your heart, perhaps, etched in the lines of your face.
For a moment, the world narrows to just this: the garden bathed in the golden light of a setting sun, the faint murmur of the distant feast, and the weight of his eyes, heavy yet strangely gentle.
There is something about you, his expression seems to sayāsomething unspoken but undeniable.
You feel it too, a spark that flickers to life beneath the layers of duty, expectation, and fear.
āIāll see you at the feast tonight,ā he says, the words more a statement than an invitation, leaving little room for protest.
There is a finality to his tone, yet also a quiet insistence that stirs something within you.
Before you can respond, he dips his head ever so slightlyāa gesture of respect, or perhaps acknowledgmentābefore turning and striding away, his crimson cloak flowing like a banner in his wake.
You bow reflexively, watching him disappear into the shadowed corridors of the palace, his figure swallowed by the grandeur of Rome itself.
Yet even as he leaves, his presence lingers, an echo in the air, a weight in your chest.
As soon as the sound of his footsteps fades, Alexandra is at your side, her face alight with barely contained awe.
āWas that⦠the general?ā she whispers, her voice tinged with something between disbelief and reverence.
āYes,ā you reply, though your own voice feels distant, as though it belongs to someone else. Your thoughts are still tethered to the garden, to the quiet intensity of his gaze.
āBy the gods,ā she breathes, clutching your arm as though you might disappear. āHeās⦠heās even more handsome up close.ā
You chuckle softly, shaking your head. āCareful, Ale,ā you chide gently, though thereās no malice in your words.
āIāve heard so much about him,ā she continues, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper.
āAbout his loyalty to Maximus Decimus Meridiusāthe late generalāand how he served under him during the great campaigns. They say he adored the princess even then. Some even whisper that his loyalty to Maximus was why he stayed so close to her after his death, marrying her to protect her.ā
You glance at her, your brow furrowing slightly. āYou know far too much for someone who spends their days in the laundry.ā
She grins, unrepentant. āThe laundry is where all the palaceās secrets come to dry.ā
You shake your head, though her words gnaw at the edges of your mind.
Youāve heard the stories too, in bits and pieces from the older servants: tales of Lucillaās love affair with Maximus, and Marcusās steadfast devotion not only to his commander but to the empire itself.
A marriage born of loyalty, they say, not love. And yet, thereās something in the way Marcus spoke of Lucilla earlier that makes you wonder.
As Alexandra chatters on, her words a tide of gossip and speculation, your thoughts drift back to Marcus.
To the way he stood in the garden, his form framed by the soft glow of the setting sun. To the depth in his eyes, like wells carved by the gods themselvesādeep enough to drown in, and yet you couldnāt look away.
You feel a strange restlessness in your chest, a stirring you canāt quite name. It isnāt admiration, nor fear, but something more complicated. Something heavier.
Marcus is unlike anyone youāve ever knownāunlike the indulgent senators with their honeyed words, unlike the cruel twin emperors whose laughter carries the sting of a whip.
He is a man of iron and fire, tempered by years of battle, yet beneath that hardened exterior lies something softer. Something⦠human.
And perhaps thatās what unsettles you most.
Youāve spent your life surrounded by women: your mother, Livia, with her quiet strength and unshakable loyalty; the other servants, who taught you to navigate the palaceās labyrinthine halls.
Men were distant figures, their power felt but never seen up close. Fathers, youāve only heard about in storiesāabstract concepts, not flesh and blood.
But Marcus is no abstraction.
He is real, tangible, a presence that feels larger than life yet undeniably mortal.
To see him, toĀ feelĀ him, is to glimpse a side of the world youāve never knownāa world shaped not by whispered orders or silent sacrifices, but by action, by conviction, by the weight of decisions made on the edge of a blade.
You shake your head, trying to banish the thoughts, but they cling to you like the scent of blooming jasmine in the garden. āItās nothing,ā you tell yourself, though your heart betrays you with its restless rhythm.
āNothing at all,ā you murmur, though even the words feel like a lie.














