diff --git a/docs/economy/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0017.md b/docs/economy/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0017.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e390fde --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/economy/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0017.md @@ -0,0 +1,368 @@ +# DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0017 +## The Fire Sale Estate — Canonical Draft +### Status: Canonical Dialogue Draft +### Layer: OTIVM (Roman Merchant) +### Purpose: Prologue scenario teaching distressed assets, debt priority, insider knowledge, hidden defects, liquidation behavior, and how forced sales redistribute power. +### Repository Path: docs/scenarios/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0017.md + +--- + +## 0. Design Intent + +A merchant household has collapsed financially. + +Its estate is being liquidated in haste: furniture, tools, carts, warehouse rights, account books, servants’ contracts, damaged inventory, and anything not nailed down or already stolen. + +No war begins. No ship sinks. No edict is posted. + +Yet rivals circle, creditors argue, buyers pretend disinterest, and every object may be cheap for a reason. + +Known facts are uncertain: + +- true bankruptcy or staged insolvency +- hidden assets removed overnight +- debts larger than declared +- inventory damaged or merely neglected +- books accurate or altered +- politically protected bidders waiting + +The participant must learn that distress sales transfer future advantage, not just old property. + +--- + +## 1. Scene Constraints + +Location: courtyard of a merchant domus and adjoining storage lane in Ostia, late morning. + +Primary signals: + +- auction lots laid out hurriedly +- creditors shouting priority +- scribes recording bids +- buyers inspecting carts and tools +- servants whispering departures +- sealed room not yet opened + +Selection method: participant chooses whose interpretation to follow. + +--- + +## 2. Opening Scene Draft + +The house still looked wealthy from the street. + +That was part of the problem. + +Inside the courtyard, painted walls watched strangers price chairs, lamps, bronze bowls, account chests, and one marble statue nobody wanted to move. + +Marcus Atilius Varro stood where he could see the front gate, the stable lane, and the sealed side room. + +Lucius Fabius Felix arrived smiling like a man invited to dine on another man’s mistakes. + +“No fire. No riot. No rain,” Felix said. “Only collapse. A civilized feast.” + +Varro nodded toward the lots. + +“Two carts already sold.” + +“Then dignity goes quickly.” + +Gaius Licinius Crispus approached with sharpened attention. + +“Who holds first claim?” he demanded. + +Felix answered first. + +“Everyone loudly.” + +Crispus ignored him. + +“Three lenders disputing order,” Varro said. “Widow claims dowry chest. Tax collector expected.” + +“Then the day improves,” Felix said. + +Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor arrived with controlled neutrality that suggested family interest. + +“I knew the owner slightly,” Lentulus said. + +Felix grinned. + +“Then you knew him too much.” + +“He entertained well.” + +“So do jugglers.” + +Titus Varenus Secundus came from the stable lane carrying a wheel hub. + +“Cart axles cracked,” he said. “Painted over.” + +Varro nodded. + +“Useful.” + +“Useful warning.” + +A quiet voice came from beside the account table. + +“The books are newer than the debts.” + +Publius Terentius Chresimus stood reading ledger bindings rather than pages. + +Felix sighed. + +“Even ruin cannot hide from stationery.” + +Chresimus tapped one ledger. + +“Rebound last month.” + +Crispus turned sharply. + +“Altered?” + +“Prepared.” + +A servant hurried past carrying wrapped silver toward the rear gate. + +Varro moved one step. + +“Leaving?” + +Secundus said, “Too light for silver. Tableware plated.” + +Felix smiled. + +“There. Deception in layers.” + +The auction clerk shouted: + +“Lot four! Two warehouse access tokens and one storage lease!” + +The crowd changed instantly. + +Lentulus looked surprised. + +“More interest than the bronze bowls.” + +Varro said, “Because bowls hold food. Leases hold food flows.” + +Felix applauded softly. + +“Education continues.” + +Crispus folded his hands. + +“If lease validity is unclear, bids are reckless.” + +Felix stared. + +“You hear profit and imagine caution. Exotic.” + +A creditor began shouting that the deceased owner had pledged the same cargo twice. + +Chresimus did not look up. + +“Likely true.” + +“How do you know?” Lentulus asked. + +“Because he is shouting the wrong month.” + +The crowd laughed without understanding. + +A carpenter inspected a set of tools and quietly bought them all. + +Secundus noticed. + +“There.” + +“What?” Crispus asked. + +“The first smart man.” + +Felix nodded. + +“Tools before furniture.” + +Varro watched the sealed room. + +“Why unopened?” + +“Either valuables,” Felix said. + +“Or mold,” Secundus said. + +“Or evidence,” Chresimus added. + +Lentulus looked toward the upper gallery. + +“Family portraits remain.” + +Felix replied, “Portraits are hardest to collateralize.” + +A woman claiming kinship demanded her linens. + +Three unrelated women supported her instantly. + +Crispus sighed. + +“Documentation?” + +Felix said, “Excellent question to ask linen.” + +The clerk announced a pair of mules. + +The yard surged. + +Secundus frowned. + +“Thin.” + +Varro said, “Still movement.” + +Chresimus said, “Still feed cost.” + +Felix said, “Still sellable by sunset.” + +A broker whispered that the sealed room contained imported glass. + +Half the crowd drifted closer. + +Prices elsewhere softened immediately. + +Varro watched the motion. + +“Rumor redirecting bids.” + +Chresimus nodded. + +“Cheapens tools while men chase fantasy.” + +Secundus moved toward the tool piles at once. + +Lentulus asked, “Could the glass be real?” + +Felix shrugged. + +“Reality is optional until the door opens.” + +The tax collector finally arrived. + +The courtyard groaned. + +Crispus straightened happily. + +“At last, order.” + +Felix said, “At last, fees.” + +The collector demanded pause on all lots pending review. + +The crowd shouted. + +Varro asked, “What matters now?” + +Secundus answered first. + +“Movable lots before freeze.” + +Lentulus said, “Influence with officials.” + +Crispus said, “Priority recognition.” + +Felix said, “Distracted bidders.” + +Chresimus said, “Which debts survive review.” + +They all looked at him. + +“If taxes outrank others, panic begins again.” + +The sealed room door opened a hand’s width. + +The smell escaped first. + +Secundus smiled faintly. + +“Mold.” + +Half the hopeful crowd cursed. + +Felix laughed aloud. + +“There goes imported glass.” + +Chresimus said, “And there go foolish bids elsewhere.” + +Varro stepped toward the lease table. + +“I’ll secure useful rights before paper freezes.” + +Secundus moved toward the tools. + +“I’ll buy what still works.” + +Lentulus adjusted his cloak. + +“I will speak to the collector.” + +Crispus drew himself up. + +“I will establish lawful sequence.” + +Felix turned toward the disappointed crowd. + +“I will buy dreams at markdown.” + +Chresimus tied his tablets. + +“I will learn what vanished before dawn.” + +Felix looked back once. + +“Six men. One ruined house. None of us discussing tragedy.” + +Varro answered without turning. + +“We are discussing what remains.” + +--- + +## 3. Choice Presentation + +> The estate is collapsing into lots and claims. Whose reading of the courtyard do you trust? + +| Choice | Background | +|---|---| +| Follow Varro to secure rights, movement assets, and practical value. | Former Legionary | +| Follow Felix to exploit panic, rumors, and weak bidders. | Freedman Trader | +| Follow Lentulus to use status access with officials and heirs. | Noble Younger Son | +| Follow Crispus to dominate procedure, priority, and claims. | Failed Magistrate | +| Follow Secundus to identify durable tools, carts, and usable stock. | Camp Logistician | +| Follow Chresimus to uncover hidden assets, altered books, and surviving debts. | Guild Scribe | + +--- + +## 4. What This Scene Teaches + +- Forced sales transfer strategic assets quickly. +- Debt priority can matter more than hammer prices. +- Rumors redirect bidding and misprice real value. +- Distressed goods may hide defects. +- Operational assets often outperform decorative goods. +- Collapse rewards those who know what can still produce. + +--- + +## 5. Canonical Success Condition + +If the participant stops asking: + +“What can I buy cheaply?” + +and starts asking: + +“What still earns after the courtyard empties?” + +then this dialogue is functioning correctly.