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Now reading: Chapter 457: The Gladiator Tournament: Starting Day! (2) from I Enslaved The Goddess Who Summoned Me, a Action novel by JuanTenorio.

Chapter 457: The Gladiator Tournant: Starting Day! (2)

A few minutes had passed since the gathering had begun, and one by one, more figures filtered into the grand VIP balcony. Each newcor entered with due reverence, bowing their heads and offering formal greetings to the towering presences of Julius Caesar, Marcus Licinius Crassus, and the High Pontiff. These individuals—senators, patricians, and lesser nobles—took their seats a respectful distance away, clearly aware of their rank in the grand Roman hierarchy. None dared encroach too close to the central figures. Their presence was tolerated, not invited. Observers, not players.

Then ca soone who shifted the very air in the room.

Fulvius.

His appearance drew a ripple of reaction, even from the unshakable Caesar. Eyebrows rose. Murmurs echoed briefly before dying in the heavy silence that followed. No one had expected him—least of all Caesar himself.

Fulvius, after all, was no friend. His distaste for Caesar was barely concealed, even in public. He had made no effort to hide his disapproval of anything associated with the dictator: his reforms, his power plays, even this grand spectacle—a gladiatorial tournant that promised to draw gods themselves as spectators. To Fulvius, this event was yet another show of Caesar’s arrogance, a mockery of the Republic’s sanctity.

And yet, here he was.

And more than that—he was here in the very sa balcony, not seated among the crowds or perched on a neutral dais, but inside the sanctum reserved for Ro’s most powerful. That fact alone was enough to quiet even the most talkative tongues.

“Fulvius,” Caesar said smoothly, his expression composed but his eyes narrowing with interest. A smile curved across his lips—calculated, courtly, and sharpened like a dagger.

“Caesar,” Fulvius returned with an equally polished smile.

But it was empty. Hollow. A smile carved from stone. No warmth lingered in his eyes. If anything, it was colder than silence.

Without another word, Fulvius stepped past the great n and settled into a seat just behind the row where Julia, Octavia, and the rest of the inner circle had gathered. His presence was both a statent and a provocation. And when his gaze fell upon the figure standing tall near Caesar, the air around him tightened.

Nathan.

The boy—no, the man—who had killed Marcus Antoinus.

Fulvius still found it difficult to believe. When he had first heard the whispers, he dismissed them outright. It sounded like another one of Caesar’s elaborate misdirections, a narrative built to distract and protect his interests. The official tale, that Antoinus had been dispatched on a covert mission to the Eastern front, was full of holes and too convenient.

But then… the body appeared.

Hung on the walls of Ro for all to see. Broken. Stripped. Unmistakable. Marcus Antoinus.

And the one who had done it—stood right there beside Caesar, dressed not as a criminal, but a lion in man’s form.

When Nathan himself had said to him, Fulvius had listened, barely able to contain his disbelief. Even though he accepted to give his support he hadn’t really believed he was going to pull it off.

But he did it.

Could soone really stand that close to Julius Caesar, stare him in the eye, and still possess the strength to kill his most trusted general?

For the first ti in years, Fulvius felt sothing he hadn’t felt in a long ti.

Hope.

A strange, burning hope.

Perhaps Ro was not as lost as he had feared. Perhaps Caesar’s grip was not as absolute.

Beside him, another figure took her place—elegant, poised, and equally unexpected.

Fulvia.

Her attendance was even more surprising. She was not one for public displays nor did she often participate in events of this nature, especially those orchestrated by Caesar’s circle. Yet here she was, her presence drawing whispers among the seated onlookers.

But to those who knew her, her motive was clearer than politics.

Her eyes sought Nathan imdiately, and when they found him, they lit with unhidden admiration. There was no subtlety to her desire, no concealnt in her expression. In her eyes, he had already been remarkable—but now, with Marcus Antoinus gone by his hand, Nathan had ascended even higher in her imagination. He was no longer a rising star. He was a blazing sun.

She raised her hand to her lips, and with an elegant flick of her wrist, blew him a kiss.

It was bold.

Nathan saw it—and allowed a small, reserved smile to cross his lips. Barely perceptible, a twitch of amusent, a note of recognition. Nothing more.

Fortunately, neither Caesar nor Octavius seed to notice the silent exchange.

But Licinia did.

Seated nearby, she caught the gesture with hawk-like precision. Her expression froze in stunned silence, her eyes moving between Fulvia and Nathan, struggling to process what she had just witnessed.

Speechless.

She knew Fulvia well.

As fellow Roman noblewon, they’d shared countless events, ceremonies, and long evenings filled with veiled barbs and polite posturing. Fulvia was not so wide-eyed maiden easily dazzled by charisma or fleeting charm. She was proud—unyieldingly so. A woman of stature, ambition, and sharp discernnt, the type who demanded greatness not only from others but also from herself.

That was precisely why her infatuation with Marcus Antoinus had always made sense.

He had been a paragon of Roman masculinity—bold, eloquent, and formidable on the battlefield. He embodied everything Fulvia admired: strength, cunning, ambition. A man carved from the sa stone as Caesar, but less tempered, more wild. Fulvia had once told Licinia, in a rare mont of unfiltered honesty, that she would only ever bow her heart to a man who could shape history with his bare hands.

And now?

Now she was blowing kisses to Nathan?

In front of her father, no less?

Licinia’s hands clenched against her lap, her knuckles pale beneath her gloves. What was this absurdity? Fulvia, the untouchable, the unimpressed, casting flirtations like so lovestruck girl?

And the most outrageous part…

Fulvius said nothing.

No stern glance. No reprimand. No flicker of disapproval crossed his face. He let it slide—as if it were beneath his concern, or worse, expected.

Licinia’s eyes narrowed, and her gaze darted back to Nathan. She needed to see his reaction. Needed to understand.

And there it was.

A smile.

Subtle. Reserved. But undeniably there.

He’s never smiled like that to …

It burned even though she shouldn’t care about it!

And she wasn’t the only one who noticed.

Sitting a seat away from her, Julia—innocent, ever-sheltered Julia—watching with wide, flushed cheeks, blinking rapidly as if unsure of what she had just seen. The girl was young, but even she could feel that sothing about that exchange was not proper.

Servilia, seated next to her, remained motionless, her expression unreadable. But her fingers fidgeted, twisting the hem of her sleeve ever so slightly.

All eyes turned to Nathan again.

But his attention had already shifted—his gaze was locked forward, sharp and focused.

Caesar was rising.

The Emperor took a step toward the front of the balcony, every movent radiating gravitas. He stood tall and unchallenged, like a statue carved by Mars himself. His hand rose slowly, gracefully.

The crowd obeyed without hesitation.

Roaring voices began to die down, like a great tide receding at the pull of the moon. An eerie, reverent silence fell upon the coliseum, broken only by the fluttering banners overhead.

Such was the power of the man who ruled Ro—not through fear alone, but through awe.

Then, his voice echoed through the arena, deep and resonant, carried on the wings of magic that projected his words with divine clarity.

“People of Ro,” Caesar began, his tone rich with imperial pride, “I am honored to stand before you on this glorious day, surrounded by so many loyal citizens, in the heart of this sacred arena—an arena that has birthed legends, mourned heroes, and witnessed the fire of Ro’s indomitable spirit.”

The crowd roared again, a thunderous response that shook the very foundations of the arena.

“Great n have stepped foot upon this sand!” Caesar continued, his voice now rising like a tide. “They have bled and triumphed for glory, for honor, and for you, the people of Ro!”

Another wave of cheers erupted, swelling into a chorus of patriotic fervor.

“But today,” Caesar declared, his eyes gleaming with pride, “we begin a tournant unlike any in the annals of our history! Today, warriors from every corner of the known world shall clash—not rely for survival, but for legacy! And for the first ti ever—”

He spread his arms wide, his voice rising to a crescendo.

“—the Gods themselves shall grace us with their presence!”

The entire coliseum exploded in euphoria.

The roar of the crowd reached a fever pitch, thousands upon thousands on their feet, waving, shouting, chanting. The re idea of divine spectators ignited sothing primal within them—a bridge between mortals and immortals.

“And so!” Caesar cried, his arms still outstretched to the heavens, “Let us welco she who has blessed Ro with her divine favor—the protector of wisdom and war—the Goddess Athena!”

And then—

The sky tore.

A jagged rupture split the perfect blue like a blade through silk. Blinding light spilled forth from the breach, casting radiant beams across the arena like the rays of Apollo himself. The shadows fled. Ti seed to still.

From within that scar in the sky, a golden shimr erged—slowly, majestically.

A figure descended.

She glided as though gravity had been tad beneath her, cloaked in light and glory. As the brilliance receded, the details of her form beca visible: a woman of impossible beauty, draped in a flowing white chiton that whispered with each movent. A golden helt crowned her head, casting her noble features in divine splendor. In one hand, she held a long golden spear, the tip glinting with celestial energy.

Her hair was like woven sunlight—long strands of golden silk tumbling past her shoulders. Her eyes, a piercing blue, radiated wisdom and command, calm yet devastating in their clarity.

A divine presence.

There was no question, no doubt in any heart present. This being was no illusion, no mortal pretender. This was a Goddess.

The entire arena fell into stunned silence.

Mouths parted. Eyes widened. Knees trembled. For a heartbeat, Ro forgot its pride and power, and simply gawked at the manifestation of divinity before them.

Even Caesar tilted his head in reverence.

Nathan, too, narrowed his eyes, his expression unreadable.

“Athena,” he muttered beneath his breath.

There was no awe in his tone.

Only recognition.

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