The long-awaited day had finally arrived — the grand finale of the Gladiator Tournant.
Never before in the vast history of Ro had the Coliseum witnessed such an overwhelming tide of humanity. Every archway, every tier of marble seating was packed beyond belief, a sea of faces glimring under the golden blaze of the noon sun. The roar of the crowd rolled like thunder through the arena, a living storm of excitent and expectation that shook the very stones of the amphitheater.
It was said that people had co from every corner of the known world — nobles from Gaul and Britannia, rchants from the deserts of Alexandria, envoys from the coasts, and even travelers from the eastern kingdoms. They had all co for one reason: to behold the final confrontation between two living legends.
The first, Spartacus, the rebel who had once defied Ro itself, the slave who had dared to raise an army against his masters and now stood reborn as the people’s champion — the symbol of defiance.
And the second, Septimius, a cold and battle-hardened rcenary, known in whispers as the Kingslayer, for he had slain the Pharaoh Ptolemy in Alexandria with his own hands. His na carried both awe and fear across the lands — a man whose sword cared little for crowns or causes.
Ro was alive with anticipation. Today would be rembered for centuries, sung by poets and recorded by scribes.
The gates of the VIP balcony opened, and the restless crowd erupted into wild cheers. Caesar himself entered, flanked by Octavius and his daughter Julia. A handful of high-ranking Senators followed behind, their expressions caught between reverence and unease.
Caesar moved with the calm confidence of a man who owned the world. Draped in imperial purple, a faint smile curved his lips as he took the seat of honor at the forefront of the balcony. Octavius and Julia took their places just behind him, the sunlight glinting off the golden laurels upon Caesar’s brow.
He gazed across the sea of people, his smile widening.
"Remarkable," he murmured, his voice barely audible over the deafening chants. "I’ve never seen the Coliseum so crowded. I suppose I should thank our dear Septimius for that."
A subtle smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth. More spectators ant more chaos when the plan would unfold. To Caesar, every cheer and every heartbeat in that crowd was rely fuel for a grander purpose. The number of victims did not concern him — only the result did.
He leaned back slightly, eyes fixed on the arena’s gates.
"Let’s hope they put on a worthy show," he said, his tone casual, almost amused.
Octavius chuckled darkly beside him.
"Oh, they will," he replied with a knowing grin.
He had made sure of it. Spartacus had been threatened — his beloved Curia would die if he refused to fight with all his might. Whatever respect or friendship he had begun to feel toward Septimius ant nothing now. The rebel would fight not for honor or freedom, but for love — for survival.
Octavius, of course, didn’t care which of them won. In truth, the ideal outco was simple: both n dying in the arena. That would cleanse Ro of two dangerous legends in a single stroke.
Caesar turned his head slightly, his expression unreadable.
"Are they all ready?" he asked, his voice low but sharp with intent.
Octavius understood imdiately. He nodded once.
"They are in position."
He wasn’t speaking of the gladiators — but of the assassins hidden among the crowd and the shadows of the upper galleries and also in the streets of Ro. Their orders were clear: once the final bout began and the SIGNAL, as all eyes were fixed on it and chaos befalls, they would strike. Every Senator who stood against Caesar’s growing power would fall before the day ended.
Caesar’s smile returned, calm and venomous.
"Good," he said quietly. "By tonight, I want no enemies left alive."
As the fanfares blared and the crowd’s chants echoed across the marble stands, Caesar’s gaze lingered on the arena below — the stage of blood and destiny.
When the dust settled and the blades stopped singing, he would stand as more than a ruler. He would be Emperor. The first and only of a new Ro — a Ro where worship would replace loyalty, and obedience would replace freedom.
For Caesar to rise as the undisputed ruler of Ro, one last obstacle remained — those who still dared to oppose him. The Senate, though fractured and fearful, still contained n whose loyalty was not to Caesar but to the Republic itself. Yet even those n were not his greatest concern.
His true obstacle sat far above mortal reach — Athena, the Goddess of Wisdom and protector of Ro.
Caesar’s gaze lifted toward the heavens, where divine light shimred like molten gold above the Coliseum. There, seated upon a radiant marble throne that floated effortlessly among drifting clouds, was Athena herself. Her silver armor glead like moonlight, her eyes calm yet impossibly sharp — the eyes of one who saw through every mortal sche.
Beside her sat Pandora.
Caesar’s lips curved into a sly smirk.
"Perfect," he murmured to himself.
All the key players were here. The goddess who stood as Ro’s protector, Pandora, the Senators who would soon be purged, and the two mortal champions whose blood would christen his new empire. Everything was falling into place.
As if on cue, the crowd’s roar erupted like an earthquake. The air itself seed to tremble beneath the weight of thousands of voices crying out in unison.
The gates of the arena had opened.
From opposite sides stepped the two n the world had co to worship and fear: Septimius and Spartacus.
Nathan — the man known to the masses as Septimius — walked with quiet confidence, his boots stirring the sand beneath his feet. He wore only light leather armor and dark trousers, practical yet dignified. His snowy white hair was tied back neatly, catching the sunlight as he raised his golden sword — the fad blade once wielded by Alexander the Great.
Opposite him, Spartacus erged to a deafening roar. His bare torso glead with sweat under the sun, muscles coiled like steel beneath tanned skin. He wore only a shoulder guard, bracers, and a warrior’s strap across his chest. In each hand, he carried a gladius, the twin swords gifted back to him by Octavius — a gesture ant to ensure his best chance of victory... or so it seed.
The crowd chanted both their nas, the sound blending into a single, thunderous rhythm that shook the very heart of Ro.
"Spartacus! Septimius! Spartacus! Septimius!"
Nathan’s eyes found his opponent’s across the vast expanse of sand. His tone was calm, almost conversational as he closed the distance between them.
"So that’s it then?" he said. "You’ve chosen to fight after all?"
Spartacus’s jaw tightened. For a long mont, he said nothing, his gaze heavy and conflicted. When he finally spoke, his voice was low, edged with bitterness.
"Your signal," he said. "You promised to burn Caesar’s statue. That was supposed to be my cue — the sign to strike."
Nathan’s smirk widened faintly.
He rembered that conversation well — the promise made in whispers, when he had visited Spartacus in the Dominion. The plan was simple: once Nathan burned Caesar’s statue in the heart of Ro, Spartacus would rise, assassinate Octavius in the Senate Castle, and chaos would consu the Empire.
But that had not happened.
"Well," Nathan said at last, "circumstances have changed since then."
Indeed they had. Caesar had discovered his true identity, and Nathan had adapted — reshaping the plan.
He chuckled under his breath and tilted his head.
"Tell , why ask that now? I thought you made your choice long ago. Didn’t you refuse ? Didn’t you decide to stay Octavius’s slave until the end?"
His words struck like a blade. Spartacus’s fists clenched so tightly that the veins on his arms bulged.
He had refused. He’d convinced himself he could survive in servitude a little longer, that he could protect Curia — his only light in this pit of cruelty. But Octavius had shattered that illusion. The mont he threatened to torture Curia, all sense of restraint vanished.
Now Spartacus had no choice.
If he did not kill Nathan, Curia would die.
"I have to win..." he muttered, more to himself than to his opponent.
Nathan’s eyes glinted, calm and unreadable.
"That," he replied softly, "depends on what kind of victory you’re hoping for."
"If circumstances were different," Spartacus said quietly, his voice trembling with a bitter calm, "I would have accepted your offer. But I can’t. I won’t. I don’t want to lose the only good thing left in my life."
Nathan’s expression softened for just a heartbeat as he studied the man before him. There was a raw, human pain behind those words — the kind of pain he understood all too well. His gaze drifted to the dirt beneath their feet, then back to Spartacus, whose calloused hands tightened around his twin gladius.
He didn’t need to ask who Spartacus ant.
He already knew.
Curia.
The slave girl who had sohow beco the rebel’s last fragnt of light — the one fragile thread that tied him to the world.
Nathan tilted his head slightly, his tone calm yet cutting.
"Tell , Spartacus... do you really think Octavius will keep whatever promise he made? That he’ll release her if you kill ?"
His golden sword glead in the sunlight as he raised it slowly, letting the words sink like poison into Spartacus’s mind.
"You know what kind of man he is. A ruthless, sadistic bastard who takes pleasure in breaking those he owns. Do you really believe he’ll give you back the one thing that still keeps you sane?"
Spartacus’s jaw clenched. His breathing grew heavier, but he didn’t answer. The silence between them was filled with the distant roar of the crowd, the rhythmic chant of thousands calling their nas — unaware of the tragedy unfolding beneath the spectacle.
Finally, Spartacus spoke, his voice low but firm.
"It doesn’t matter. It’s my only hope."
There was no conviction in his tone — only resignation. Hope, even a false one, was all he had left. With Curia’s life in Octavius’s hands, he had beco nothing more than a weapon, a pawn forced into obedience by love and desperation.
Nathan said nothing. But behind the cool stillness of his expression, a faint smile tugged at his lips — a quiet, knowing smile.
If only you knew, he thought. Curia is no longer in his hands.
But now wasn’t the ti to reveal that.
The sand shifted as a Roman arbiter strode between them, clad in polished armor that reflected the blazing sun. Even he, hardened by years of bloodsport, could feel the weight in the air — the suffocating tension that hung between two n destined to clash like gods.
The crowd grew silent.
Tens of thousands of Romans, nobles and slaves alike, leaned forward in perfect unison. The air itself seed to hold its breath. Not a whisper escaped the stands. Even the distant banners, once fluttering proudly in the wind, hung motionless — as though the world itself awaited the spark.
The arbiter raised both arms high, glancing from Spartacus to Nathan — two warriors separated by barely ten ters of sand and fate.
For an instant, the sun glared off Nathan’s golden blade and Spartacus’s twin swords, painting their figures in fire.
Then the arbiter’s voice split the silence.
"START!!!"
The cry thundered through the Coliseum.
The crowd exploded into deafening cheers, a wave of sound so imnse it seed to shake the heavens themselves.
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