Ludos Imperiales
Summary: A Princess!Reader x Gladiator!Bat Boys fic that's been swimming around in my head for weeks after watching Gladiator I and II
Content Warnings: Blood and Gore, Mentions of Torture, Slavery, and Assault
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āSo good of you to finally join us, cousin.ā The din of the crowd nearly drowns out the words, the feverish cheers echoing off the massive stone pillars that hold the auditorium seats up and away from the stench of death and decay that permeates from the mud soaked pit beneath the plush outdoor auditorium. There are rows of decadent booths along the pit's edge, each box set with plush chases and golden edged pillows. Slaves with palm fronds fan ornately dressed royals, their faces obscured by gold lined veils. The auditorium oozes wealth and luxury, offers decadent food and drink and deep enough betting pools to make the strictest penny pinchers among the elite crawl out of their caves to try their luck.
The altar for the Mother gleams golden in the afternoon sunlight, the carved statue standing with arms and feathered wings outstretched in welcome. Beckoning those to come and offer a bit of blood in hopes of trading it for some luck. Luck for the gamblers, of course, never the males, and sometimes females, who fight and die in the muddy pit far beneath the first row of booths. My father says they made the Games to punish our enemies, and to reward our soldiers, but both fight and die as equals all the same.Ā
I frown first at the statue, how could our most beloved Goddess reward this kind of brutality? Then at my cousin, who I remember, is still waiting for me to speak. Dagdan sports his military regalia, the glittering medals across his chest all pinned there by my father for his service to our great empire. Service he never actually participated in. Dagdan can wield a sword because of the patience of his tutors, heās never raised it in battle, despite the stories he tells at every possible turn.Ā
āFather said the Games would be impressive this year,ā I reply, trying to keep the bite out of my tone. Mother raised me to be demure, to keep my chin up, to never let an enemy see what I was feeling. She had been good at that, too good, perhaps that was why she had been publicly executed. For all her poise, she had not been able to outmatch my Fatherās paranoia.
Beside him, Dagdanās twin sister Brannagh grins, her pearly white teeth a harsh contrast to her otherwise impassive face. Itās like watching a shark try to grin. āThe Uprising in the Courts made for a lot of candidates this year.ā
My stomach turns. The Empire is vast, spreading across continents and oceans. The Courts in Prythian were the last of the fae to fall in line before Father turned his attention to the Human Lands. Each year, more and more slaves and captives are carted in through the iron gates far beneath the smooth stones we stand on, all tossed into the mud to fight each other for a slim possibility of survival. Some come willingly, chasing fortune and gold; some are sponsors of Fatherās Inner Circle, their armor always pristine, their weapons always sharp. But most of the gladiators are slaves, crammed into dingy cells in the catacombs beneath the arena. Despite the decadence of the auditorium, one visit down into the bowels of this awful place was enough to scar me for life. As Father intended, Iām sure. Our esteemed Emperor had not been shy about his disdain for not being able to produce a son and his paranoia often convinced him that I would one day find a husband crafty enough to steal his Throne before he found a match he thought suitable, he often dragged me to these things to remind me the brutality he was capable of if I stepped out of line. No doubt it was why heād insisted I come out today. I had not been out in public in some time, not after the grief of losing my mother had so thoroughly consumed me. My grief had shamed him; had made some in his Inner Circle suspect I was also plotting against him. My presence here was as much a check into my loyalties as it was to remind me of what fate could befall me if I kept on wallowing away in the dark.
I smooth my hands over my skirts, putting thoughts of my Mother aside. It always feels like a gaping wound in my chest, nerve and sinew exposed and open for every onlooker to see. I must reign it in. For the sake of my future.Ā
āWeāll see a lot of Fae, then?ā There were a lot of elves last year and shifters the year before that. There is no prejudice in the games. Race and gender matter little in a battle of survival.Ā
The twins follow me as I find my way through the bustling crowd to our booth, where I know Father will already be waiting.Ā
āSome humans for the first round,ā Dagdan spits like heās tasted something vile.Ā
āSome half-breeds and mutts for the second,ā Brannagh finishes with far more delight than her brother. Their eagerness from blood is one of the few reasons Father didnāt name their heir in my place. Brutality is necessary, but bloodlust turns a well rounded Empire on its head. Father placates them by giving them titles, parading them around like their important so they remain loyal, but he will never truly give them the power they seek. Theyāre simply not smart enough to see it.
āBut the final round will be entertaining,ā Dagdan says, gray eyes twinkling as the wall of guards at attention in Fatherās booth part for us.Ā
Our esteemed emperor sits on a throne made entirely of gold, a goblet of wine already in his hands. A circlet of gold leaf perches on top of his salt and pepper hair, the sharp edges reflecting the light along the crimson curtains that help keep out the summer heat. We all bow to him as we enter, and Father reaches out a hand for mine without ever looking at us.Ā
āIt is good to see you outside again, daughter,ā he says, chapped lips brushing over my knuckles in a brief display of affection.Ā
āIām sorry it has been so long, Father,ā I keep my voice even, unbothered. I will not let any of them see how much I hate all of this.Ā
He guides me to sit on the couch beside the throne, where I have ample view of the uneven floor below. Yesterdayās rain has filled the giant pit with mud. Mud that could have easily been covered and smoothed out to make the playing field fair for all, but that is not how these Games work. Bones still litter the uneven ground, a rib cage protruding from a mound of dirt, a crumbling arrow still caught inside it. Thereās the skull of an animal turned upside down, a stream of muddy water running out the eye sockets like some sort of twisted water fountain. Old weapons lay scattered around the arena floor; a wagon weaves around boulders and mounds of loose earth to scatter more.Ā
āI trust youāre feeling better?ā The question is pointed, for the sake of my cousins. He has been telling people the shock of my Motherās supposed betrayal had been too much on my health and Iād been bed ridden. Itās not entirely far from the truth.Ā
āYes, Father. The sunlight does me good.ā Not far from the truth either. It is nice to be away from the palace and all the chaos that comes with it.Ā
Brannagh sits beside me, a slave scurrying behind her with a fan, a second not far behind with some wine. She stretches her long legs out in front of her with a sigh, the sunlight drifting through the curtains making her pale skin look translucent. āDo you have a favorite to win today, Uncle?ā
My Father sips from his goblet, a bit of wine caught in his graying beard. āJust a favorite to lose,ā he chuckles. Though he is getting older, the gleam in his slate gray eyes is still sharp and youthful. Even with his bouts of paranoia, his mind is still sharp and calculating.Ā
āDo tell, before itās too late for me to change my bets,ā Dagdan quips. Though I doubt it is all in jest, my cousin is far more in debt than he realizes.Ā
Horns blare from the upper rings of the arena, signalling those still milling about placing bets and finding food to get to their seats. The Games will start soon. My stomach twists itself into a new knot. There is no shortage of ways my Father will have found to torment the poor souls who find themselves in the pit today, I am not eager to see what they are.Ā
āThere was some⦠trouble in the mountain regions of the Courts,ā he says carefully.Ā
I force myself not to turn and look at him. Trouble for my father usually means rebellion, or outright war, anything else is too insignificant to mention. In my seclusion, I had not even caught wind of it.Ā
āWe have a few insurrectionists Iād like to see fall today.ā
Few are foolish enough to raise a hand against the Empire. It usually means their provinces go without food and aid in the harsher months of the year. I am curious to see who would be foolish enough to risk the lives of their people.Ā
āThose great wings of theirs would make an excellent trophy on my wall,ā Father finishes.Ā
A shiver runs down my spine. It would not be the first gruesome trophy of his, but still, the outright admittance to such cruelty still makes me tremble. My unease is only heightened by the arrival of my Fatherās General, who enters the booth followed by a handful of male slaves, all barely dressed.
āAmarantha!ā It is no secret that my Father has always wished I shared the temperament and constitution of his beloved General. If he had to be cursed with a female for an heir, he wanted ruthlessness, cunning, and a smile that could peel paint. All things the red headed fae oozed in abundance.Ā
All things my Father was convinced I lacked. Iād take it. His disdain was better than being exactly like her. I canāt help the way my nose crinkles at the sight of her. Brannagh moves closer to the edge of the couch, in hopes of ending up in her line of vision, eager to swap stories before the Games officially start. Brannagh wants to be just like her, the gaggle of pleasure slaves included. The two of them would unleash hell on the world if my Father ever put the two of them together.Ā
āYour Highness,ā Amarantha bows, the loose fabric of her nearly sheer gown spilling to give my Father ample view of her cleavage. I stopped allowing myself to question the nature of their relationship long ago; my stomach turns thinking about it.Ā
āIt is a good day for betting, donāt you think?ā She asks. Her voice is like gravel, fitting since its the color of her eyes. A finger bone dangles from her neck, an eye encased in glass sitting atop her finger; though she is lean, she is stronger and more deadly than most people assume at first glance. Everything about her is dangerously sharp.Ā
āI was just telling Dagdan the same thing,ā my Father says.
Those dark eyes flick briefly to my cousin, who puffs up his chest, but she ignores him entirely as her gaze settles on me. āPrincess! I didnāt know youād be joining us today. What a monumental occasion!ā
āI thought the fresh air would do me some good,ā I say simply. What else is there to say to Evil Incarnate? Perhaps I should put more energy into being clever, I know that if Amarantha saw a benefit to cleaving my head from my shoulders, sheād take it--power is all she cares about, so far we havenāt faced each other because she doesnāt think I have enough to steal--but I cannot summon the energy. Ever since the incident with my Mother, I have not managed to find much in me at all. Especially not for Amarantha and her social climbing.Ā
āNothing like a little blood sport to invigorate the mind,ā she purrs as she lowers herself into the seat at my Fatherās right hand. One of her slaves perches on the arm of her chair, bare chest glinting with oils in the harsh sunlight. Another sits at her feet, and her nails, sharpened to points, drift harshly through his thick curls.Ā
I watch my cousin run her tongue over her lips at the sight.Ā
āDid you place any bets, Princess?ā Amarantha continues as someone brings her a goblet of wine. She sniffs suspiciously at it before instructing one of her slaves to test it first. Perhaps poison would be a mercy.Ā
Never admit weakness. Never admit that my solitude has kept me out of the loop and left me ill prepared for whatever is about to happen in the Pit beneath us. Instead, I say, āWe have several days of entertainment, I prefer to observe on the first day.ā
To his credit, my Father does reach over and pat my shoulder in approval.Ā
āClever,ā she says, but thereās enough bite in it to not make it a compliment.Ā
āMy money is on your Attor, as always, General,ā Brannagh says with the eagerness of a child with a crush.Ā
Amarantha huffs in annoyance, as if my cousin is a fly buzzing around her ear, āHeās too good, its almost boring at this point.ā
Brannagh deflates, but before she can come up with something witty in response, the final warning horn blows from the rafters. The Games will begin.Ā
I turn my attention away from my company, watching brightly dressed royals rush to their booths. There are all sorts of creatures here to watch: Elves and Fae and Fawn, a few Goblins and Giants, observing from a standing platform opposite us. There is room for most, save for humans, within the Empire, as long as they prove their usefulness. That is my Fatherās crowning achievement, the Hybern Empire has room for all, if you play your cards right and never step out of line.Ā
The groaning of the gates draws my attention away from the spectators and down into the Pit beneath us, where a whole cart of humans appears from the gloom of one of the entrances. They look small; mud and blood splattered as several Praetorian guards usher them out of the cart with spears bigger than most of their heads. The guards do not remove their shackles, leaving all twelve of them tethered together in the center of the Pit.
The cart rolls away, the guards with it, only once their out does another gate open to let out the challenger: Amaranthaās hulking Attor. The creature is battle scarred, lines criss-crossing over its leathery skin. Its giant wings flutter on the breeze behind it as it stalks into the center, Amaranthaās crest painted in blood red over its chest.Ā
The crowd goes wild as it enters the pit, clawed hands swinging wildly around its hulking body. āATTOR! ATTOR! ATTOR!ā The monster has always been the crowd favorite.
Amarantha yawns. Sheāll make thousands off the creature, but that is nothing to her. Money is trivial, unless it can buy her the power she craves.Ā
I glance at my Father as the Games Maker starts addressing the crowd and explaining the match up. āWould it not be more entertaining to unchain them?ā Theyāre all going to die anyway, surely this gives them a fighting chance to die with some honor. āWe all know the Attor will win, why make it easy for it?ā
Amarantha nearly spits out her wine, a gurgling sound coming out of her as she tries to maintain her composure.Ā
I do not let myself grin at the victory.
Father runs a hand over his graying beard in thought. āPerhaps your solitude did you some good, Daughter.ā
I do not shutter. I cannot save any of them, as pitiful and helpless as they look alongside the Attor. It will give them all gruesome deaths purely for the fun of it. But perhaps the Mother will take pity; may the chance to die fighting grant them peace in the afterlife.Ā
Father stands and motions for the Game Maker to quiet. āLet the humans be unchained!ā
The crowd erupts into varying shouts of surprise and approval.Ā
āLet us test the skill of the Attor!ā
This pleases the crowd, but it makes Amaranthaās cheeks flush crimson. She hides a grimace behind her wine as my Father returns to his seat.Ā
A single guard returns with keys, and the crowd falls into a hushed silence, waiting for chaos to ensue. I force myself not to look away; to face what I have done. One of the humans cranes its head to look up at our box and flashes us his middle finger.
Dagdan bristles in his seat next to his sister. āHe should pay for that!ā
They will. There will be no rescue. There is none to be found. The Empire comes for all of us eventually, best that we can do is go into it with our heads up. I am trying to accept my fate in this, what other choice do I have, lest I end up dead or locked away.Ā
Once the guard is clear, the horns once again blow, telling the Attor he can start his hunt. Those great wings at his back kick up loose dirt as he launches into the air with a roar that makes the arena tremble.Ā
The crowd cheers, leaning forward in their seats to watch as the monster swoops down and gets its great jaws around the head of the first human. Brannagh giggles at the splatter of blood that erupts from the poor creatureās neck.Ā
I clench my hands in my lap.Ā
The second human tries to run, scrambling for purchase in the thick mud. It doesnāt help that theyāre all barefoot. The Attorās claws tear through the humanās back like butter, the poor thing going down with a wail that makes my heart lurch painfully in my chest.
The third manages to find a sword, the blade rusted from the rain; the man gets a good swipe in, nicking the inside of the Attorās palm before it gets shredded to pieces.
Each human tries a little harder than the last, getting further each time. One manages to weave around the debris and avoid being swooped down on like the first, but the uneven terrain catches her ankle, sending her sprawling down with a shout as her leg is left twisted and broken. Another manages to get an arrow into the Attorās back, but not deep enough to do damage. They all go down fighting, and each new one has me saying a mental prayer to the Mother on their behalf, but none survive. Much to the crowdās glee.
āWonderful!ā Brannagh says, clapping as the Attor roars in victory.Ā
Amarantha shrugs. āBoring.ā
The Attor exits the Pit, ever the victor. The bodies it left arenāt even carted away. No one comes to pick up the pieces. No one will bury them. Their bones will rot and decay into the Pit floor.
I ask one of my Fatherās servants for some wine to try and settle the nausea that rolls in my stomach, but even the smoothest of wine does not dull it.Ā
My Father watches me carefully, calculating every move. I do my best to keep my features neutral.Ā
āWhat did you think, Daughter?ā
I take another sip of wine before speaking, giving myself time to collect my thoughts. āHumans donāt make very good gladiators.ā
He laughs at that and my cousins join in, as if it was the funniest thing ever.Ā
āHumans donāt make good anything,ā Dagdan says.
āExcept for a snack,ā Brannagh adds.
āWorms,ā Amarantha spits.
Father raises his cup in salute to me. āMay the next match be more exciting for you.ā
I ignore my revulsion and return the gesture. I cannot wait for this to be over. I shall retire back into my gloomy quarters with the curtains drawn and try to scrub the gory images from my brain. Perhaps my solitude would be more comforting than this.
The horns blow announcing the next match and the Games Maker drones on and on about where these next gladiators hail from. One side are all sponsored by royal families, all males trying to make a name for themselves and some coin to feed their families. Theyāre all well trained and well equipped for the task. Theyāre a filler spot, to give the rest of the Game Makers time to prepare the next victims of the Empireās wrath. Beneath the Pit floor, in the dark of the catacombs, the next round of war captives are likely being hauled out of their cells and prepped. I canāt help but wonder if they can hear the roaring of the Bogges and Gladiatorās alike from down there. Do they understand what is about to happen? Are they saying their final prayers to the Mother?
I canāt help but glance at Her altar. What kind of world is this that we live in? Brutal and cruel and blood splattered. If we are so favored, how could our lives look like this? It is thoughts like these that have kept me sequestered in my room. I do not know what I am supposed to live for, or who I am supposed to be any more. My life feels like it is stretching out before me, and someone else is pulling on the strings, making me a puppet that moves at their will. I no longer have the protection of my Mother. Father will soon throw me to the wolves if I am not smart or careful or cunning. The world is different and dark and I have utterly lost my way.
I am so wrapped up in my thoughts I barely register the fight. One of the males gets eaten by the terrifying Bogge, his screams echoing off the great walls. The crowd eats it up, cheering and screaming and jumping from their seats. The more blood that flows the louder they yell and cheer. These are my people? These are who I am to rule one day? What does that make me?
Dagdan huffs about his losses as the gladiators exit the arena, the Bogge all dead. He drowns his sorrows in his cup as if the solution to his terrible gambling habit might lie in the bottom.Ā
āFinally, now we can get to the part Iāve been waiting for!ā Amarantha declares.Ā
Father grins. āI take it they gave you trouble on the way here?ā
She spits again, a nasty habit that doesnāt bother anybody but me, apparently. āDamned Illyrians! Had to use faebane on them the whole way, otherwise they tore through the damn chains!ā
Father shakes his head. āI have to admit they surprised me-ā certainly a feat few have ever accomplished in his lifetime ā-usually their kind throw themselves on their swords before they get caught. Makes you think, doesnāt it?ā
Iāll chalk that up to his paranoia talking, but I have to admit, I am intrigued by the conversation. Anyone who can surprise my Father must be very skilled. Despite my disdain for these Games, I find myself leaning forward to get a better look into the arena when I hear the grates open for the third time.Ā
āWhat is there to be surprised about?ā Amarantha counters, but her words feel farther away as I catch sight of movement from the dark tunnel behind the entrance of the arena. āTheyāre rebels, their deaths will make martyrs out of them. They want a public execution.ā
The world feels as if it has narrowed into this moment. The din of the crowd starts to fade in and out of focus. I am suddenly very aware of the roaring of my heartbeat in my own ears.
The first male steps out of the tunnel, stripped to the waist, his bronze chest smattered with cuts and scrapes and bruises so dark theyāre nearly black. Dark twisting tattoos trace their way up his broad chest and over his shoulders and back, until they meet great, leathery wings like that of a batās. Long, dark hair, matted with mud and what might be blood, clings to his face, but despite the disheveled state, his hazel eyes remain clear and bright.Ā
The crowd boos when they see him. A few people hurl food at him.Ā
āCassian,ā Amarantha scoffs. āThe rebels call him their General.ā
Father frowns. āAs foolish as their militia was, do not forget how many of our soldiers he killed.āĀ
I cannot take my eyes off him. Heās taller than the guard that leads him by his bound wrists into the Pit. Larger too. Those broad shoulders and defined abs speak volumes about how skilled in swordplay he must be.
āWill you keep his wings when he dies, Uncle?ā Brannagh asks.
The wine threatens to come up at the thought of having to see such beautiful wings pinned to a wall in Fatherās study. The male clearly cares for them. When the guard gets too close he flicks them out of reach. While there are some nicks in the leathery membrane, the wings are the least scarred part of him. He has to take good care of them for someone so battle hardened to keep them looking like that.
āHappily,ā Father says.
Even if I wanted to look at him, I couldnāt, not as the second male enters the arena. Heās a little shorter than the first, his hair shorter, the dark onyx locks curling gently around his forehead. Blood still drips from an open gash across his temple, staining his cheek and neck crimson. Like the first, his chest is bare and marked with the same swirling tattoos, but unlike the first, his great wings hang limp behind him. One drags along the mud like a cape, the leathery membrane ripped open and bleeding, the other is twisted at an angle sharp enough to make me wince at the sight. The urge to run down to him is overwhelming. My hands drift down to the seat cushion and hold tight to keep myself still.
The crowd continues to boo and throw things as he tries to keep his head up and meet the other male in the center of the Pit.Ā
āAzriel,ā Father says to Amarantha, ā was quite a challenge for you, I hear?ā
His beloved General frowns. āThe shadow wielder managed to get a few good blows in, Iāll admit. But surprise only gets you so far.ā
My eyes drift from his broken wings to his hands, covered entirely in scars, like someone burned him. The thought makes my chest heavy.Ā
I donāt know whatās happening to me. I have never been so obviously shaken by the Games, not since the first time Iād come. Father had made me sit through weeks of slaughter, watching as gladiator after gladiator fell prey to a magic storm and a slew of magic beasts. Even then I had managed to hold it together until Iād made it home to vomit, but now I feel as if I cannot keep my body in its seat!
The magic that lives caged beneath my, usually, pristine facade cracks through, a bit of dark mist seeping out from between my fingers. I unfurl my fists and take my hands carefully into my lap, using a bit of my skirts to hide the errant flow of power. Iāve been neglecting my studies, have not given myself an outlet, this is a terrible time for a flare up! I try to focus on my breathing, the pounding of my heart isnāt helping. I need to remain calm. I need to remain in control.Ā
A feat that feels utterly impossible as the third and final male exits the tunnel. Time comes to a grinding halt, every footfall against the Pit floor a drumming, haunting echo in my ears. I have utterly forgotten how to breathe; how to think. The male is by far the most beautiful male Iāve ever seen, violet eyes twinkling with a thousand glittering stars. He sports the same tattoos as the others, the same bronze skin and battle hardened muscle, but it is the expression on his face that gets me. He is as battered and bloody as the second male, cheek split open, a slash mark clean down the middle of his chest; most of his body is a bruise, but he doesnāt wince at all. He keeps his chin high, high enough to look Father right in the eyes with every step he takes into the Pit. Thereās a clear challenge there, unhindered by the chains around his neck and wrists. Those gorsian stone chains donāt often make an appearance, unless the person attached to them is exceptionally skilled with magic.Ā
āRhysand,ā this time Amaranthaās voice is an excited purr and the power trying to escape through my fingers slips faster from my palms. I dig my nails so tight into my palms they bleed.Ā
āI do admit, itās a shame you have to kill him,ā she continues. āHeād make such a pretty addition to my collection.āĀ
It is all I can do to not turn and hurl a blast of dark, obsidian power at her. I keep my gaze on the Pit instead, as the final rebel joins the others in the center. Its only once heās there that something clicks into place in my mind. If Amarantha still speaks I canāt hear her. Time freezes again, the only signal of its passing the pounding of my heart in my ears.
Theyāre my mates!
And Iām about to watch them die.Ā














