The roar of the Colosseum echoed through the warm Carthaginian night, a lion’s chilling cry tearing through the thunder of the crowd’s bloodthirsty cheers. Neith adjusted the folds of her beige linen cloak, its hem dusted with the golden sands that blanketed the massive arena. Beneath it, the fitted tunic she wore—dyed a rare shade of onyx black and cinched at the waist with a belt adorned with gilded Phoenix medallions—hugged her frame, its elegant lines revealing her status as a woman of calculated importance. Her feet slid into leather sandals, their straps crisscrossing up her calves in ceremonial patterns. The gold torc around her neck glittered under the fiery braziers, catching the flicker of a city built on wealth, dominance, and secrets. Her dark, kohl-lined eyes scanned the throng, so many faces too absorbed by the gladiatorial games below to notice the tension rippling within the marble stands above. Tonight, amidst the opulence of the great city, she was poised to alter its fate forever.
“Do you have it?” murmured a voice beside her. Hanno’s weathered features emerged from the crush of spectators, his reed-thin frame lost within the folds of a simpler, tan tunic. A merchant by trade—but a shadow in purpose—he had lived three lives for every wrinkle that lined his face. Tonight, he wore apprehension like a second cloak.
“Would I be here without it?” Neith replied, her voice smooth as the Nile. She rested a hand on the weighty satchel tucked discreetly into the curve of her arm. Black leather, supple and sleek, yet utterly nondescript. It could have held scrolls, coins, or something far deadlier. She felt its absence of bounce—the telling density of its load. Everything they needed to dismantle the Senate’s corruption pulsed within that bag.
Below them, a gladiator drew his blade, plunging it into the chest of an opponent who crumpled with a gasp of finality. The crowd surged to its feet, roaring for blood and spectacle, waving arms and spilling golden wine onto the steps. Neith’s lips tightened, the corners pulling downward ever so slightly: the vanity of glory had become Carthage’s Achilles’ heel.
“We need to move now before the Consul’s guards grow suspicious,” Hanno muttered as he adjusted the leather strap fastened awkwardly around his shoulder, cradling an amphora that contained far more than olive oil. “This will spark war.”
“There already is a war, Hanno,” Neith whispered, her fingers brushing the delicate gold necklace at her throat, its single sunstone pendant glowing faintly against her dark skin. For a brief moment, she remembered her daughter’s tiny hands tugging at the chain. She remembered a brighter Carthage, and her teeth set hard. “It simply hasn’t burned Carthage yet.”
They descended a set of steps carved from pristine limestone that gleamed under torchlight, descending into the belly of the city. The network of underground tunnels—constructed to allow efficient movement during battles—was sparsely occupied, save for two slaves who met their eyes briefly but said nothing. The slaves would tell no one; Neith bore herself like someone who wouldn’t hesitate to wield a blade, and Hanno’s awkward amphora bore no resemblance to anything worth stealing.
As they emerged into the open air, the sharp tang of salted sea spray tingled against Neith’s skin. The harbor lay ahead, illuminated by moonlight glittering on dark waters, where great Phoenician warships floated lazily at anchor. The curved hulls painted midnight blue reflected back a sky that dripped with stars. Her heartbeat quickened. Somewhere within one of those warships’ greedy holds lay the bribe—gold, jewels, and promises of destruction—meant for the Senate’s foreign co-conspirators. Neith had no intention of letting it depart Carthage’s shores.
A shadow flitted near the edges of the dock. Only one guard patrolled nearby—the luxury of a city that did not yet see threats lurking close to home. Neith flicked her wrist, producing a dagger small enough to remain discreet but sharp enough to silence the man efficiently. Hanno’s arm stopped her, a rare firmness overtaking his otherwise meek posture.
“Let me,” he said, setting down his amphora. He slipped into the darkness with the silence of a panther. The guard’s life ended with a strangled gurgle, Hanno returning to her side moments later, wiping his blade on his tunic’s hem. Neith arched a brow but said nothing, pushing forward through the maze of moored ships.
They found the vessel easily enough. Its deck, laden with crates, was illuminated by two bronze lanterns swinging faintly in the sea breeze. Neith reached into her satchel. From within its hidden folds, she unveiled something magnificent: a compact device of obsidian gears, etched Carthaginian sigils glowing faintly against the night, powered by mechanisms her hands of flesh barely understood and filled with powdered materials from lands far beyond even Rome. A single switch, flipped upward, would ignite ferocity unprecedented in this harbor.
“Hurry,” hissed Hanno, already returning with two dimwitted sailors drunk on spiced mead. He dispatched them quicker than she could draw breath. Sweat glistened on his temples. Time seemed drawn taut, like a bowstring ready to snap.
Neith leapt onto the deck, her agility defying her elegance. The device’s base adhered to the wood as if pulled by magnets—another foreign sorcery. Her fingers worked swiftly, securing its mount. Hanno tossed her another crate. Quickly, she stuffed the incriminating documents from Carthage’s treacherous Senate among the fuel, their inked betrayal about to ignite into ash.
But something must have alerted the gods of vengeance, for there was a shout behind them. Soldiers poured onto the docks, their swords gleaming, their marching thunder tripping alarm through the quiet port. Neith froze for only a fraction of a second before she reached for the gold necklace at her throat and tugged hard, snapping its fragile chain. She hurled it onto the deck beside her device, blinking at the memory of her daughter one final time.
“Run!” she shouted, vaulting back onto solid ground. Hanno staggered after her, feet clumsy but obedient. The soldiers roared toward the ship, closing the distance quicker than Neith anticipated.
A deafening explosion tore into the heavens as the ship erupted in flames—gold, fire, and treason consumed in an instant. Shouts became screams. Wooden splinters rained down, embers dancing manic patterns in the air. Neith spun, her heart thundering, pulling Hanno into an alley as chaos broke loose across the port.
“What now?” gasped Hanno, clutching his side.
Neith’s lips curved. The torc at her throat and the gilded accents of her outfit caught the first pale edges of sunlight. “Carthage might burn,” she said, her voice low and fierce, “but we will forge a new one from its ashes.”
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