The Laurel Wreath Circuit

A thousand feet above the gridlocked carnage of Nova Roma, I waited in the emperor’s rooftop garden, my wet boots squelching on imported moss. The air stank of ozone and jasmine—someone had hacked the rainclouds again, probably for dramatic effect. That was the city: all spectacle, zero subtlety.

I checked my reflection in the mirrored plastron of a marble centurion statue. My hood was askew, lips wine-stained. Most people wouldn’t notice. But tonight, detail mattered. Tonight was about revenge.

My name’s Livia Acquilla. Officially: fixer, information broker, professional eavesdropper. Unofficially: survivor of one too many betrayals. I fingered the tennis bracelet on my wrist—21 carats of natural diamonds set in rose gold. I’d inherited it from my mother, along with her sharp tongue and sharper instincts. It was heavy, cold—a reminder that beauty could also be armor.

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The party slithered around me: senators in bioluminescent togas, augurs leaking blue static from their ocular ports. Everyone here owed someone something; everyone thought they were safe among the laurels.

Except Junius Cassianus.

Junius owed me more than a favor—he owed me blood. Last solstice, he’d framed me for the drone hack at the Pantheon Sky Vaults. I spent three months in a penal data mine while he sipped aquavit on his penthouse terrace. But he’d made one mistake: he loved shiny things even more than he loved power.

As if conjured by spite, Junius arrived through a curtain of hanging vines, his smile slick as olive oil. “Livia! Looking positively regal tonight.”

“Don’t make me laugh,” I said. “Regal’s out of fashion.”

He reached for my wrist with performative reverence—always one for drama—and his eyes widened at the bracelet.

“Is that...?” He trailed off, greed flickering in his pupils. “That’s not just jewelry.”

“No,” I said sweetly. “It’s my inheritance.”

His gaze lingered a beat too long on the diamonds’ icy fire. Here was the first hook—he’d always been a magpie for premium collection pieces.

Across the garden, torch drones hovered near an ornamental pool where digital koi swam in lazy geometric patterns. I nudged Junius toward them with casual malice.

“I heard you’re bidding on Aulus Maximus’s seat next quarter,” I said.

He preened. “You hear everything.”

“That’s why you should be careful what you leave lying around,” I replied.

He laughed—a brittle sound—but his hands trembled slightly as he straightened his toga clasp. The bracelet caught the lamplight again; even amidst neon and nanoglass, its old-world sparkle cut through like truth serum.

“Care to make a wager?” Junius asked suddenly, desperate to regain control. “If I guess how you got out of the mines before your sentence ended... you give me that bracelet.”

I smiled wolfishly. “And if you’re wrong?”

He hesitated just long enough for me to know he hadn’t considered losing.

“I’ll owe you a favor.”

There it was—the opening I needed.

He leaned in conspiratorially, breath thick with spiced wine. “You bribed the praetors with that bracelet, didn’t you? Only way out early.”

“Wrong,” I said lightly. “They tried to confiscate it, but couldn’t prove it wasn’t just clever costume jewelry.”

I unclasped the bracelet and held it out for him to inspect—just long enough for his greedy fingers to graze real diamond before I snapped it shut again around my own wrist.

Junius’s face darkened; losing never sat well with him.

“You play dirty,” he muttered.

I grinned. “Nova Roma doesn’t reward saints.”

For a moment we stood in tense silence under genetically modified olive trees swaying against the storm-lit sky.

Then—like clockwork—a servant bot rolled up bearing drinks atop its gleaming chassis. Junius snatched two glasses, handing one to me with uncharacteristic graciousness; perhaps he hoped to distract me while plotting his next move.

I raised my glass but let my other hand rest on the cool weight of diamonds at my wrist—a silent signal to anyone watching that some treasures weren’t up for grabs without consequences.

That was when Valeria emerged from behind an ivy screen, cloak shimmering holographically against her copper skin. She gave Junius an appraising glance before fixing her gaze on my bracelet.

“I see your luck hasn’t run out yet,” she said softly—a coded phrase among fixers meaning: do you have what we need?

I turned so only she could see what was etched along one tiny gold link—a micro-engraved confession chip from Junius himself implicating him in half a dozen high-profile data thefts. If sold to the right buyer—or handed directly to Tribune Severus—it would end Junius’s career faster than a power surge through his neural implant.

Valeria winked and handed me a napkin embossed with circuitry: our agreed-upon signal that Severus was waiting by the elevator core below.

As Junius downed his drink (and tried not to glare), I toyed idly with the bracelet once more—21 carats reflecting city lights and digital rain alike—before stepping away from him forever.

Later that night, as Valeria and I watched police drones escort Junius away in stunned silence, she nudged me gently:

“Gutsy move using your mother’s bracelet as bait.”

“Sometimes luxury is just another tool,” I replied dryly. “But damn if it doesn’t look good catching villains.”

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