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# DIALOGUE-LAW-0006
## The Poison and the Cure — Canonical Draft
### Status: Canonical Dialogue Draft
### Layer: OTIVM (Roman Law)
### Purpose: Scenario teaching fraud suspicion, causation uncertainty, recurring demand, lawful versus unlawful inducement, and the legal difficulty of proving coordinated harm for profit.
### Repository Path: docs/scenarios/DIALOGUE-LAW-0006.md
---
## 0. Design Intent
Rumor spreads through Ostia of a profitable scheme between two cities.
In Capua, a market vendor allegedly sold food and drink that made travelers violently ill. In Ostia, a medicine seller allegedly cured the same symptoms so reliably that merchants joked the road itself carried customers to him.
The signs were memorable: if a man saw double, vomited bile, and begged for water, people directed him to one specific doorway.
No conviction has occurred. No confession exists. No magistrate has ruled.
Yet traders discuss pattern, victims swear certainty, skeptics ask for proof, and sharper minds notice that repeated suffering may create predictable demand even without crime.
Known facts are uncertain:
- whether poisoning truly occurred
- whether illness came from spoiled food or excess drinking
- whether the healer colluded or merely capitalized
- whether symptoms were common knowledge
- whether witnesses exaggerate after recovery
- whether lawful enterprise can imitate demand without wrongdoing
The participant must learn that suspicion, proof, and opportunity are different things.
---
## 1. Scene Constraints
Location: tavern courtyard near the baths in Ostia, early evening.
Primary signals:
- merchants telling road stories
- recovered travelers praising one healer
- scribes noting names for possible complaints
- tavern patrons laughing at symptoms
- vendors wondering what demand can be anticipated lawfully
- no one possessing decisive proof
Selection method: participant chooses whose interpretation to follow.
---
## 2. Opening Scene Draft
The courtyard smelled of wine, onions, wet stone, and confidence unsupported by evidence.
A circle had formed around two road merchants competing to describe vomiting with superior detail.
Marcus Atilius Varro stood near the cistern where he could hear lies arrive and leave.
Lucius Fabius Felix arrived smiling like a man who loved scandal unless audited.
“No fire. No riot. No tax seizure,” Felix said. “Only testimony after supper.”
Varro nodded toward the storytellers.
“Third retelling.”
“Then facts are nearly polished.”
Gaius Licinius Crispus approached carrying sternness sufficient for several jurisdictions.
“What is alleged?”
Felix answered first.
“That indigestion has geography.”
Crispus ignored him.
“A stall in Capua sells cups and sausages,” Varro said. “Travelers fall sick. In Ostia one healer cures them.”
“Evidence?”
“Memory.”
Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor arrived late enough to ask for summary without admitting interest.
“My cousin swears by the healer.”
Felix nodded.
“Then your cousin has survived either fraud or appetite.”
Titus Varenus Secundus came from the kitchen door carrying a clay mug.
“If they drank heavily on the road,” he said, “they needed water more than miracles.”
Varro asked, “You know the cure?”
“Salt broth, watered vinegar, rest, shade.”
A quiet voice came from beside the table of listeners.
“And being charged before improvement.”
Publius Terentius Chresimus sat with a wax tablet titled Complaints and Opportunities.
Felix sighed.
“Even gossip becomes categories.”
A merchant in travel dust raised his hand dramatically.
“I saw two cups become four! Then the road turned sideways!”
The courtyard applauded the image.
Crispus said, “How much wine?”
The merchant hesitated.
“Some.”
Felix said, “Legal measure: some.”
Lentulus frowned.
“But many independent men report the same symptoms.”
Chresimus nodded.
“Which proves repetition. Not cause.”
A second traveler swore the Capuan vendor always smiled when men purchased the spicy sausages.
Felix spread his hands.
“Arrest all smiling vendors.”
Varro asked, “What does the healer sell exactly?”
Secundus answered first.
“Water, broth, herbs, quiet room.”
Felix blinked.
“That is almost respectable.”
Chresimus added:
“Also priority service, fresh linens, and secrecy.”
Felix smiled slowly.
“There it is.”
A tavern keeper nearby muttered that half his best customers visited the healer every market day.
Crispus said, “Can collusion be proven?”
“No,” Chresimus said. “Only narrated.”
Lentulus asked, “If not criminal, why discuss it?”
Varro answered.
“Because pattern matters.”
Secundus pointed to three men already drunk beside the fountain.
“There.”
“What?” Lentulus asked.
“Tomorrows customers.”
The courtyard laughed.
Felix stared at the three men thoughtfully.
“That may be the wisest sentence spoken here.”
A woman selling watered figs said she now kept extra jars on festival mornings because people craved sweetness after drink.
Chresimus wrote that down.
Crispus noticed.
“You are listing lawful responses.”
“I am listing recurring human weakness.”
Felix admired him openly.
“Scholarship advances.”
A retired soldier declared that on campaign the cure for seeing double was seeing less wine.
No one bought his remedy.
Varro asked, “Suppose Capua vendor innocent. Suppose healer merely observant.”
Crispus replied:
“Then accusation harms trade unjustly.”
Felix said, “And still teaches demand.”
Lentulus looked around.
“You mean one need not poison anyone to profit?”
Secundus snorted.
“One need only wait near taverns.”
The courtyard went quiet for a useful moment.
Chresimus said, “Consider after-feast broth stalls.”
Felix said, “Morning water carts outside gaming dens.”
Varro said, “Shade benches outside courts.”
Crispus said, “Queue scribes outside offices.”
Lentulus said, “Fresh garlands outside funerals.”
All five looked at him.
He adjusted himself.
“People grieve decoratively.”
Felix laughed until honest.
A messenger passing through shouted that the Capuan vendor had been beaten, not convicted.
Crispus frowned.
“There. Disorder replacing proof.”
Varro nodded.
“Common.”
Secundus said, “If innocent, next man sells no food there.”
Chresimus added:
“If guilty, next man poisons more carefully.”
The courtyard disliked that sentence because it fit.
Felix asked, “What matters now?”
Varro answered first.
“Can cause be shown.”
Crispus said, “Can complaint be filed properly.”
Lentulus said, “Can reputation be restored once stained.”
Secundus said, “What cure actually works.”
Felix said, “What demand repeats predictably.”
Chresimus said, “Where law permits service before fraud.”
They all looked at him.
“If suffering recurs naturally, sell relief honestly.”
A drunk patron staggered, asked for water, then vomited into a shrub.
Felix pointed.
“There. Market research.”
Varro stepped toward the road merchants.
“Ill sort witnesses from performers.”
Secundus moved toward the kitchen.
“Ill price real cures.”
Lentulus adjusted his cloak.
“I will ask discreet houses what they pay for discretion.”
Crispus drew himself up.
“I will examine whether any complaint can stand.”
Felix turned toward the fountain.
“I will inspect tomorrow mornings customers tonight.”
Chresimus tied his tablet.
“I will list lawful demand hidden inside vice.”
Felix looked back once.
“Six men. One rumor. None of us discussing morality.”
Varro answered without turning.
“We are discussing proof.”
---
## 3. Choice Presentation
> Men are sick, a healer profits, and no one can prove why. Whose reading of the courtyard do you trust?
| Choice | Background |
|---|---|
| Follow Varro to separate witnesses, rumor, and fact. | Former Legionary |
| Follow Felix to identify profitable recurring weakness. | Freedman Trader |
| Follow Lentulus to gauge elite demand for discreet remedies. | Noble Younger Son |
| Follow Crispus to test whether accusation can become law. | Failed Magistrate |
| Follow Secundus to distinguish real treatment from theatre. | Camp Logistician |
| Follow Chresimus to map lawful demand hidden in predictable suffering. | Guild Scribe |
---
## 4. What This Scene Teaches
- Repeated stories do not automatically prove causation.
- Fraud suspicion and proof are different things.
- Some profitable demand is naturally recurring.
- Reputation can be destroyed before judgment.
- Law struggles when harm is diffuse and evidence weak.
- Honest services can emerge from common vice.
---
## 5. Canonical Success Condition
If the participant stops asking:
“Was it a conspiracy?”
and starts asking:
“What suffering repeats predictably without crime?”
then this dialogue is functioning correctly.