In the shadows, a cryptic message flutters on the wind. Who’s watching who now? For Lucien, ex-military tribune of Avidius Cassius and heir to the largest grain empire in Alexandria, it is the beginning of the end - one final, hallucinatory descent into paranoia. As voices claw at his sanity; a silent assassin steps from the moonlight, and the last threads of his attempt at retribution unravel.
Meanwhile, the Eternal City prepares for a triumph unlike any other. There are no chained kings; no rivers of barbarian gold, only the hollow spectacle of victory over a war that refuses to end. Emperor Marcus Aurelius; stoic philosopher and weary conqueror, parades his golden-haired son Commodus before a roaring crowd that has already chosen its hero. The senators who once dreamed of a different future now watch in humiliated silence, their plots exposed, their allies vanishing into the night. Gaius, Tarquin, and the remnants of Vibanius’s cabal nurse their wounds and their night terrors, while in the north a threat grows.
Commodus; restless and struggling to be the son Marcus needs him to be, finds solace only in the wrestling ring, where he grapples with his own thoughts, dreams and desires. He laughs at victory columns, scorns endless slaughter, and dreams of a different Rome. But his father is dying, the council is desperate, and the barbarians are broken, beaten, but yet refuse to yield their way of life. As Marcus’s final breath approaches, the young heir must decide whether to honour his father’s brutal legacy or forge his own path, one that will shake the foundations of the world.
From the blood-soaked arenas of the Danube to the marble corridors of the Palatine, The Die is Cast is a sweeping, visceral tale of power, madness, and the merciless weight of empire. Here, gods walk among men, voices whisper in the dark, and every choice echoes through centuries.