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I Rule Rome with a God-Tier AI-Chapter 187: The Wolves and the Lions
The island rose from the center of the Danube like a forgotten piece of the world, a tangle of ancient oaks and dense, thorny undergrowth perpetually shrouded in the river’s clinging mist. It was a place of secrets, accessible only by boat, its shores hidden by reeds and shifting fogbanks. This was the crucible where Alex’s new weapon, his impossible hybrid strike force, would be forged.
Titus Pullo arrived first, his jaw set in a line of resentful granite. He stood on the muddy bank as the flat-bottomed barges delivered his fifty best men, the elite of his elite. They were the Devota, the lions of the Emperor’s holy war. Each man was a veteran of the brutal, one-sided slaughters at the new forts, their eyes holding the cold, dead light of soldiers who had become masters of a new and terrible kind of warfare. They were disciplined to a terrifying degree, their movements precise, their faith absolute. As they disembarked, they formed perfect, rigid ranks on the shore, their new, lightweight repeating crossbows held at a precise angle, their gazes fixed forward. They were a living wall of Roman steel and zeal.
Moments later, a different kind of craft slid silently out of the mist. A dozen shallow-draft river boats, paddled with a quiet, fluid grace, beached themselves further down the shore. From them emerged a hundred men who were the antithesis of the Devota. These were Lucilla’s Exploratores, the wolves of the Norican Alps. They were wild, bearded men, clad in a patchwork of furs and dark, hardened leather. They carried not the weapons of a modern army, but the ancient tools of the hunter and the raider: short-hafted axes, long, bone-hilted knives, and powerful yew longbows. They did not form ranks; they flowed from their boats like a wolf pack, gathering in a loose, wary circle, their eyes constantly scanning the trees, their movements fluid, predatory, and utterly silent.
The immediate hostility between the two groups was a palpable, physical thing. It was the ancient, instinctual animosity between the farmer and the wolf, the builder and the wildness. The Romans, in their perfect, ordered lines, saw a rabble of undisciplined, untrustworthy barbarians, mercenaries whose loyalty was bought with coin. The Noricans, in their loose, wary circle, saw arrogant, rigid conquerors, city-dwellers who would be as clumsy and helpless as newborn lambs in the true, deep woods.
"Look at them," a young Devota legionary, his face a mask of contempt, muttered to the man next to him. "Savages. They probably pray to trees and fornicate with their livestock."
Further down the beach, a Norican scout with a scarred face and eyes the color of a winter sky watched the Romans’ rigid formation and spat on the ground. "Stone-dwellers," he growled to his companion in their rough dialect. "Look how they stand. They think the forest is a paved street. They will be crying for their mothers after a single day in the deep woods."
The two groups stared at each other across the misty shore, a hundred yards of damp earth that might as well have been a chasm a mile wide.
The man who stepped into that chasm was not what either side had expected. He was not a grand legate in a plumed helmet, nor a charismatic chieftain in a bearskin cloak. He was Caelus, the man who had been Valerius’s shadow, his second-in-command. He was of average height and build, his face plain and forgettable. He wore a simple, unadorned leather cuirass, and he moved with a quiet, unassuming grace that made him seem more like a shadow than a man. He carried no grand symbols of authority, only a profound and unsettling stillness.
He did not shout or give a grand, unifying speech. He knew it would be useless. Instead, he approached the two groups separately, speaking to them in the language they each understood.
He went to the Devota first. He stood before their perfect ranks, his gaze sweeping over their hard, zealous faces. "The Divine Emperor has chosen you," he said, his voice quiet but carrying a surprising weight. "He has chosen you because you are the most disciplined soldiers in the world. He has armed you with his divine fire." He gestured to the repeating crossbows they held. "But your discipline was forged for the shield wall. For the open field. In the forest, that discipline is a cage. It is a loud, clumsy trap that will get you all killed."
He saw the flicker of pride and anger in their eyes and pressed his point. "These men," he nodded towards the Noricans, "do not know your discipline. But they know the silence of the forest. They can read a broken twig like a scroll of papyrus. They can smell a hidden enemy on the wind. They will be your eyes and your ears. They will teach you how to become ghosts. Your sacred duty, your first test of faith to the Emperor, is not to fight, but to listen. To learn."
He then walked across the beach to the loose gathering of Norican scouts. He addressed them not in Latin, but in their own rough, guttural dialect, a gesture that immediately earned him a measure of grudging respect. "You are the wolves of the north," he said, his tone one of plain, unvarnished fact. "The greatest hunters in these lands. But you hunt deer and boar. We now hunt a demon-god that hides at the center of a walking plague."
He gestured to the rigid lines of the Romans. "Those men are not hunters. They are lions. They are clumsy in the forest, yes. But they carry the thunder of a god in their hands. They are the spear tip that can pierce this monster’s heart. Your job is not to fight their way. Your job is to do what you do best. To guide that spear, unseen and unheard, through the shadows and directly to the monster’s throat. Do this," he concluded, his voice dropping, appealing to the core of their motivation, "and the silver, the land, and the Roman citizenship the Emperor has promised you will make your families richer and more powerful than any chieftain for ten generations."
He had spoken to both groups’ pride, addressed their weaknesses, and given them a clear, interdependent purpose. Now, he would break them.
He immediately began their first training exercise. He selected a single Norican scout, a wiry young man with the eyes of a hawk, and gave him a simple task: run. The hundred and fifty men of the new strike force were tasked with hunting him down on the small, densely forested island.
It was a brutal, humiliating lesson for the Romans. Filled with arrogant confidence, the fifty Devota crashed into the forest in a perfect checkerboard formation, their heavy boots snapping twigs, their leather armor creaking, their movements as loud as a rockslide. They were a force of disciplined order in a world of chaotic, tangled nature.
They found nothing. The Norican scout toyed with them. He left false trails, circled back behind them, and at one point, silently dropped a pinecone from a high branch into the very center of their formation, a gesture of profound contempt for their lack of awareness. The Noricans, moving in their own silent, fluid wolf packs, simply watched the Romans’ noisy failure with grim amusement.
By midday, the Romans were exhausted, frustrated, and utterly defeated, their pride in tatters. They had not laid eyes on their quarry once. That evening, as the two groups gathered around their separate, sullen campfires, the first crack in the wall of their animosity appeared. A young Devota legionary, his face flushed with shame, swallowed his pride, walked over to the Norican camp, and approached the scarred scout who had spit on the ground earlier. "Teach me," the Roman grunted, his voice low. "Teach me how you move without a sound."
The Norican looked up, surprised, then a slow, wolfish grin spread across his face. He nodded.
Caelus stood apart from both camps, a shadow in the twilight, watching the first, grudging interactions. The proud lions were humbled. The wary wolves were intrigued. He had broken down their pride and forced them to acknowledge a simple, brutal truth: alone, they would fail. Together, they might just have a chance. The weapon was not yet forged, but the two essential, volatile metals were now in the crucible, the fire lit beneath them. The quiet scout had begun the impossible task of turning lions and wolves into a single, deadly chimera.