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Imperator: Resurrection of an Empire-Chapter 410 - 405 -
Sleep found me quickly.
I barely remembered slipping into the royal bed, barely remembered Serena resting her head against my shoulder, or Yuri curled silently beside her—still quiet, still fragile, still healing.
A very PG night, one i only agreed to slightly begrudgingly, but one used guilt as her weapon while the other used weakness.
Practically demanding to sleep in my bed, and be near me.
Yuri because she had lived through the horror of Francia, coming out with a now dormant second personality.
While Serena was now beginning to lose herself, the promise was made afterall and Yuri had been resuced now which meant a proper courtship of the two could formally begin just as i had told her.
Though i repeatedly had to tell her we were just sleeping.
Yuri afterall was recovering, no way i was going to rescue her from a tramatic experience only to then press her straight into another extreme emotional experience.
~
When morning came, the soft glow of dawn filtered through the silk curtains, brushing against my face.
I opened my eyes expecting weight—paperwork, petitions, military reports, diplomatic summaries, the mountain of duties waiting for a returning emperor.
Instead... I felt light.
Light enough to make a decision that would horrify my entire council.
I wasn’t doing paperwork today.
Not a single page.
Not after everything I’d done last night.
Not after reshaping half the known world in my study.
Today, I wanted to see it.
Not through a system map.
Not through a glowing projection.
But with my own eyes.
I rose quietly, careful not to disturb the two women sleeping beside me.
Serena, for once, looked peaceful—no stacks of ledgers beside her pillow, no stress-line between her brows.
Yuri, even with her fractured mind, seemed calmer now.
For a moment, I allowed myself to simply watch them.
My future empress.
My beloved lost bride now returned.
Both precious.
Both burdens I carried willingly.
I brushed a stray lock of hair from Serena’s face, kissed Yuri’s forehead, and slipped out to prepare.
Today, the emperor would go riding.
~
By the time the sun fully crested the horizon, the Eternal City was already awake—bakers lighting ovens, merchants shouting greetings, legionaires finishing dawn drills in the distant courtyards.
I stepped out into the courtyard in formal riding attire, not imperial robes.
And somehow, that already felt liberating.
When Serena and Yuri emerged a short while later, both dressed for riding, Serena lifted an eyebrow.
"Skipping the morning court, my emperor?" she teased, though there was a small note of curiosity.
"Absconding," I corrected cheerfully. "The empire will survive for a few hours without me. I want to see the city."
Yuri tilted her head. "You mean... for inspection?"
"No." I smiled. "To actually see it. With both of you."
Yuri’s eyes softened.
Serena’s... narrowed just slightly.
Interesting.
Our horses were brought to us—Serena’s spirited rose-gray mare, Yuri’s gentle chestnut, and my own tall white stallion whose breath steamed in the morning air.
No escorts.
No attendants.
Only Sabellus trailing discreetly a distance away on orders to "pretend he wasn’t there."
We rode out from the palace gates into the open city.
And the changes hit immediately.
~
As we trotted down one of the newly widened boulevards of Latinium, Serena began pointing out the new improvements—confidently, smoothly, as if giving a tour:
"Julius, look there—see how the street drains curve? They redirect water toward the lower channels now. Much cleaner for travel."
"And the waste canals beneath were expanded again," she continued, waving lightly to a cluster of workers clearing debris. "Last night, no since you’ve been gone they’ve upgraded all the old tunnels. Efficient design, truly."
I froze—momentarily.
Last night?
Yes.
She said last night.
Yuri perked up, intrigued. "So those new buildings—those three-story homes—were part of your plan as well?"
"Yes," Serena said. "Though they practically... appeared. The workers themselves said even as complex as the structures are they just flew through the work and got them done in preparation to receive the new residents coming in from Achae and Francia."
Her tone was casual.
But her eyes—when she glanced at me—were not.
There was something sharp there.
Something calculating.
Something knowing.
I masked my reaction with a pleasant smile, continuing our ride through the bustling districts.
Children darted between stalls.
Merchants wheeled carts of produce fresher than any they’d ever had access to before.
Bakers were stunned by the quality of newly milled flour.
The empire was transforming around us.
But Serena’s commentary didn’t stop.
"Those new fertilizer mills outside the eastern gates are admirable," she added. "They must have taken months of planning. It’s incredible how swiftly the construction was... finalized."
Another glance at me.
Not accusatory.
Not frightened.
Confused.
Curious.
Uneasy. 𝐟𝚛𝕖𝚎𝕨𝗲𝐛𝚗𝐨𝐯𝐞𝕝.𝐜𝗼𝗺
As if she could see cracks in reality.
As if she sensed the System adjusting the world around her but couldn’t understand why everyone else acted like it was normal.
As if she were outside whatever veil the System cast.
That...
...was a problem.
But not one for the moment.
~
We rode along the riverbank where fishermen lowered nets into water cleaner than it had ever been in living memory.
Serena slowed her horse beside mine, letting Yuri trot ahead for a moment.
Her voice lowered, soft enough that only I could hear.
"Julius... this city has changed overnight."
I kept my tone casual. "Progress is faster when the people are unified."
She stared straight ahead. "This is more than progress."
She tightened her grip on her reins.
"I walked these streets for a year as regent." She lifted her chin, eyes sharp as steel. "And I notice when something is different."
My heartbeat changed—barely.
"So tell me, my emperor..." she said softly.
"...What exactly happened last night?"
For a brief moment, I allowed myself to meet her gaze fully.
Serena Carthaginia—queen, empress-to-be, brilliant, perceptive, unyielding.
She was seeing through the fog of the System.
Yuri looked back at us just then, smiling faintly. "Are we stopping?"
Serena immediately lifted her voice to normal brightness. "Just admiring the new orchards."
But she kept her gaze on me for a fraction longer—
And there was no misunderstanding it.
She knew something was wrong.
And she was waiting for answers.
As we continued riding, the tension eased; Yuri delighted in the river breeze, Serena pointed out new structures with forced normalcy, and the Eternal City rolled out before us in vibrant proof of last night’s work.
But the moment Serena’s eyes had narrowed—
That was burned into my mind.
I would have to speak with her alone tonight.
Carefully.
Honestly—perhaps partially.
Strategically—undeniably.
Because if Serena was not affected by the System’s perception filter...
If she could see the changes...
Then that meant only one thing.
She was more dangerous—and more important—than I ever realized.
And I needed to know why.







