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Chapter 4 - The List

"...within the next seventy-two hours."

Lyra's final words echoed in the sudden, profound silence of the tent. The 43% probability wasn't just a number on a screen anymore; it was a living, breathing monster squatting in the corner of the room, its presence sucking all the warmth from the air. Seventy-two hours. Three days. Alex's mind, accustomed to mapping out projects in neat, orderly quarterly sprints, struggled to process the timeline. He didn't have a quarter. He had until Thursday.

Outside, the camp was oblivious. He could hear the distant, rhythmic thud of legionaries drilling, a burst of rough laughter from a nearby campfire, the clang of a blacksmith's hammer shaping steel. To the ten thousand men on this frontier, the world had changed, but it hadn't stopped. An emperor was dead, another was crowned. Life went on. For Alex, life had shrunk to the confines of this tent and a three-day countdown to a statistically probable death.

His first instinct was primal, a jolt of pure, unadulterated terror that originated in his 21st-century soul. He wanted to run. Just bolt from the tent, steal a horse, and ride until this entire impossible nightmare was a distant memory. But where would he run? Into the frozen Germanic wilderness? He wouldn't last a day. The thought was so absurd it was almost funny, a hysterical giggle bubbling in his chest.

"No, no, no," he whispered, pacing the small space like a caged animal. He ran a hand through his—Commodus's—thick, curly hair. "Forty-three percent? Lyra, that's a coin flip with a loaded gun! Who? Who is it? How are we supposed to find one traitor in a camp this size? I can't just lock myself in here and wait for the axe to fall!"

"Panic is a suboptimal survival strategy, Alex," Lyra's voice replied from his earbud, her synthesized calm a stark and infuriating contrast to his own spiraling fear. "Probability is not a guarantee of outcome; it is a tool for focusing our resources. The percentage is high because we are currently operating with incomplete data. To identify the specific threat, and therefore neutralize it, we must acquire more information."

"Information?" Alex scoffed, his voice a harsh whisper. "What am I supposed to do, put up a notice board? 'Suspected assassins please form an orderly queue'?"

"A more subtle approach is required," Lyra stated, ignoring his sarcasm. "We must leverage your current public persona: the grieving son. This provides us with the perfect cover for intelligence gathering."

Alex stopped pacing, forcing himself to listen. The project manager in him, buried under layers of terror, began to stir. A problem. A deadline. A need for a plan. This, at least, was familiar territory.

"You have publicly declared a three-day period of mourning," Lyra continued, the logic crisp and clear. "It would be entirely natural for a new emperor, a son who has just lost his father, to wish to understand the burdens he has just inherited. You will request access to all of Marcus Aurelius's personal effects. Not for yourself, but to 'commune with his spirit.' Specifically, you require his campaign journals, his private correspondence, and, most critically, his confidential personnel assessments of the senior command staff."

The brilliance of it struck Alex immediately. It was plausible, non-suspicious, and would give him a direct window into his father's mind. Marcus Aurelius would have been a keen judge of character. His private thoughts on his generals would be an information goldmine.

"Okay," Alex breathed, his panic beginning to recede, replaced by the cold focus of a man with a mission. "Okay, I can do that. But who are we looking for? Who are the main suspects?"

"I have already run a preliminary analysis," Lyra said. The screen of the laptop, which he'd set on the small table, flickered to life. It displayed three portraits, painstakingly reconstructed from historical data—Roman busts, coin profiles, and written descriptions. "Based on historical precedent, psychological profiles, and situational opportunity, I have narrowed the list of high-probability threats to three individuals."

The first portrait appeared, dominating the screen. It was the granite-faced visage of the man he had just met. General Gaius Maximus.

"Suspect number one: General Maximus," Lyra announced. "He is the most obvious candidate, and therefore must be considered. He possesses the authority, the unwavering loyalty of the Danube legions, and a rigid, almost fanatical sense of Roman honor. Your unexpected change in character may have been interpreted not as wisdom, but as dangerous unpredictability. In his mind, an emperor who does not follow tradition is a threat to the state. He might believe he is saving Rome from you, an act he would see as a painful but necessary duty."

Alex stared at the image. He remembered the general's cold, assessing eyes. The man was a zealot, a true believer in the Roman ideal. An ideal that Alex, an imposter from the future, was currently desecrating with his very presence.

The screen shifted. The second portrait was of a handsome, younger man with sharp features and an air of smooth, calculating intelligence.

"Suspect number two: Praetorian Prefect Tigidius Perennis," Lyra said. "Historically, Perennis becomes your de facto regent, ruling the empire in your name while you indulge your appetites. You eventually grew paranoid and had him and his entire family executed. He is ambitious, cunning, and commands the Praetorian Guard—your personal bodyguards. He has the means, the closest access, and the strongest motive of personal gain. By eliminating you now, he could potentially manipulate the succession in favor of a candidate he controls, or even make a bid for power himself."

The Emperor's own bodyguards. The irony was so thick Alex could taste it. The men paid to protect him were led by a man who might be plotting to kill him.

The final portrait appeared. It was a man with a severe expression and a perpetual sneer.

"Suspect number three: Legate Cassius Varus," Lyra identified. "Commander of the Legio IV Flavia Felix. He is a lesser-known variable, which makes him dangerous. My records indicate he is a fierce political and military rival of General Maximus. He sees your ascension not as a crisis, but as an opportunity. A successful assassination that could be plausibly blamed on the 'overly ambitious' General Maximus would remove both you and his chief rival from the board in a single stroke, leaving him as the most powerful general on the frontier."

Maximus, who might kill him for honor. Perennis, who might kill him for power. And Varus, who might kill him as a pawn in his own game. Alex looked at the three faces on the screen. It felt like a twisted version of a corporate reshuffle, except instead of getting fired, he'd get a knife in the back.

The plan was clear. The suspects were identified. The clock was ticking. Seventy-one hours and counting. He had to move.

He strode to the entrance of the tent, his movements now filled with a desperate, newfound purpose. He pulled back the canvas flap, letting the cold night air wash over him. A young, nervous-looking legionary standing guard nearby snapped to attention, his eyes wide with a mixture of fear and awe.

Alex straightened his shoulders, pulling the invisible mantle of Emperor Commodus around himself once more. He fixed the guard with a gaze he hoped looked imperious and commanding.

"You," he said, his voice a low command. "Find me my father's chief scribe, the Greek, Theron. Bring him to me at once."

The soldier's eyes widened further at the direct order. "At once, Caesar!" he stammered, before turning and hurrying off into the bustling darkness of the camp.

Alex let the flap fall, retreating back into the relative safety of the tent. He had made his first move. The game was afoot. He glanced at the laptop. The battery icon glowed faithfully. 64%. He was trading time for information, burning his only lifeline to stay alive. It was a gamble he had no choice but to take.

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