diff --git a/docs/economy/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0016.md b/docs/economy/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0016.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..462dae5 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/economy/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0016.md @@ -0,0 +1,368 @@ +# DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0016 +## The Timber Auction — Canonical Draft +### Status: Canonical Dialogue Draft +### Layer: OTIVM (Roman Merchant) +### Purpose: Prologue scenario teaching bidding behavior, storage limits, construction demand, future expectations, and how bulky inputs create strategic competition. +### Repository Path: docs/scenarios/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0016.md + +--- + +## 0. Design Intent + +A large timber lot has arrived unexpectedly and is being auctioned in Ostia. + +No ship sinks. No law changes. No patron dies. + +Yet builders gather, cart rates rise, sawyers are booked instantly, speculators appear, warehouse men refuse bulky loads, and men who need wood tomorrow must decide today. + +Known facts are uncertain: + +- quality better or worse than claimed +- fresh-cut or seasoned +- stolen, seized, or legitimate surplus +- hidden rot within outer beams +- one lot or more still incoming +- civic works contract about to be announced + +The participant must learn that raw materials create markets before they are processed. + +--- + +## 1. Scene Constraints + +Location: riverside yard near cranes, saw pits, and storage sheds in Ostia, late morning. + +Primary signals: + +- stacked beams and planks +- crowd of builders and brokers +- auction clerk shouting lots +- carts scarce +- sawyers taking deposits +- prices changing with rumors + +Selection method: participant chooses whose interpretation to follow. + +--- + +## 2. Opening Scene Draft + +The yard smelled of sap, rope, mud, and impatience. + +Long beams lay stacked like sleeping giants beside shorter planks already being touched by too many hands. Men thumped wood, squinted at grain, lied confidently, and called it expertise. + +Marcus Atilius Varro stood where he could see the stacks, the road gate, and the cart queue. + +Lucius Fabius Felix arrived smiling like a man who loved anything sold in haste. + +“No fire. No riot. No rain,” Felix said. “Only timber. Civilization persists.” + +Varro nodded toward the beams. + +“Thirty carts worth.” + +“Then forty men pretending not to need it.” + +Gaius Licinius Crispus approached with visible suspicion of splinters. + +“Whose property?” he demanded. + +Felix answered first. + +“At current shouting volume? Everyone’s.” + +Crispus ignored him. + +“A contractor defaulted,” Varro said. “Cargo seized, now liquidated.” + +“Then liens remain possible.” + +“Then you are happy,” Felix said. + +Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor arrived brushing sawdust from a cloak that had not yet touched any. + +“My uncle mentioned repairs to two townhouses,” Lentulus said. + +Felix nodded. + +“And now family duty smells of pine.” + +Titus Varenus Secundus came from the rear stack carrying a shaving curl. + +“Mixed lot,” he said. “Some seasoned. Some green. Some warped.” + +Varro asked, “Useful?” + +“Very.” + +A quiet voice came from beside the clerk’s table. + +“Especially if sold by average quality.” + +Publius Terentius Chresimus stood reading lot tallies upside down from the buyer’s side. + +Felix sighed. + +“Even lumber becomes mathematics.” + +“It was mathematics before it was cut,” Chresimus said. + +The auction clerk shouted: + +“Lot three! Twelve roof beams! Payment today!” + +Hands rose instantly. + +Lentulus looked surprised. + +“So quickly?” + +Secundus said, “Roofs leak whether men are ready or not.” + +Felix added, “And winter bids in summer.” + +Crispus folded his hands. + +“If seized goods, title clarity matters.” + +Felix stared. + +“You hear bids and desire paperwork. Remarkable.” + +A builder nearby split a beam end with his knife. + +The interior showed dark streaking. + +The crowd murmured. + +Secundus nodded. + +“Water sat in it.” + +Varro asked, “Bad?” + +“For spans, maybe. For doors, carts, wedges, fuel—fine.” + +Felix smiled. + +“There. Nothing useless except hesitation.” + +A sawyer hung a sign: + +BOOKED THREE DAYS + +Then crossed it out and wrote: + +FOUR DAYS. + +Chresimus watched calmly. + +“Labor shortage begins.” + +Lentulus said, “Can more sawyers not be hired?” + +Secundus looked at him. + +“Can more Lentuli be carved?” + +Felix laughed loudly. + +Crispus said, “If civic works are imminent, private bids may be foolish.” + +All five turned. + +“What civic works?” Varro asked. + +Crispus adjusted himself slightly. + +“Rumor only.” + +Felix grinned. + +“There. The sweetest species of fact.” + +Chresimus said, “If true, prices rise after noon.” + +“If false?” + +“Prices rise until noon.” + +The auction clerk announced another lot: wheel blanks and axle stock. + +Varro stepped forward slightly. + +“Transport parts.” + +Secundus nodded. + +“Worth more than beams to the right buyer.” + +Felix smiled. + +“Then let the wrong buyers chase roofs.” + +Lentulus said, “My family needs appearance more than axle stock.” + +“Your family needs carts to move appearance,” Varro said. + +Felix applauded once. + +“Growth.” + +A warehouse keeper shouted that no more bulky storage would be accepted without premium fees. + +The crowd groaned. + +Chresimus said, “There. Real scarcity.” + +“Wood?” Lentulus asked. + +“Space.” + +Crispus looked toward the clerk. + +“Terms of payment?” + +“Today or guaranteed note.” + +Felix brightened. + +“There. Men without coin may still become foolish.” + +A broker whispered that another raftload was already upriver. + +Half the bidders hesitated. + +Prices dipped at once. + +Secundus narrowed his eyes. + +“No raft visible.” + +Felix said, “Then he owns none and wants cheaper lot six.” + +Chresimus nodded. + +“Likely.” + +Varro watched who stopped bidding. + +“Three men left the ring.” + +“Cash thin,” Chresimus said. + +“Courage thinner,” Felix replied. + +A carpenter ran in shouting that nails had doubled at the iron lane. + +The yard changed mood immediately. + +Secundus said, “There.” + +“What?” Lentulus asked. + +“The timber is not the timber.” + +Varro nodded. + +“It is what timber requires.” + +Felix smiled. + +“At last, poetry in boots.” + +Crispus said, “What matters now?” + +Varro answered first. + +“Cart access, road priority, fast loading.” + +Secundus said, “Cut list, drying time, true dimensions.” + +Lentulus said, “Future repairs and visible prestige.” + +Felix said, “Mispriced lots and frightened bidders.” + +Crispus said, “Title certainty and enforceable purchase.” + +Chresimus said, “Who can store until shortage returns.” + +They all looked at him. + +He shrugged slightly. + +“Patience has warehouses.” + +The clerk shouted final call on axle stock. + +Varro moved. + +“I’ll secure movement lots first.” + +Secundus moved with him. + +“I’ll inspect hidden defects.” + +Lentulus straightened. + +“I will acquire visible beams before rivals do.” + +Felix turned toward the hesitant bidders. + +“I will buy their nerves cheaply.” + +Crispus drew himself up. + +“I will verify claims and liens.” + +Chresimus tied his tablets. + +“I will learn who started the upriver raft rumor.” + +Felix looked back once. + +“Six men. One timber yard. None of us discussing trees.” + +Varro answered without turning. + +“We are discussing what stands because of them.” + +--- + +## 3. Choice Presentation + +> The timber is here. The future price of building is being decided now. Whose reading of the yard do you trust? + +| Choice | Background | +|---|---| +| Follow Varro to secure movement lots and transport advantage. | Former Legionary | +| Follow Felix to exploit fear, rumors, and weak bidders. | Freedman Trader | +| Follow Lentulus to buy prestige materials and family advantage. | Noble Younger Son | +| Follow Crispus to verify title, liens, and lawful claims. | Failed Magistrate | +| Follow Secundus to inspect quality, defects, and practical uses. | Camp Logistician | +| Follow Chresimus to trace storage, cash strain, and strategic patience. | Guild Scribe | + +--- + +## 4. What This Scene Teaches + +- Raw materials create secondary shortages immediately. +- Bulky goods make storage and transport decisive. +- Quality variation changes value dramatically. +- Rumors alter bidding before facts arrive. +- Inputs like nails, sawyers, and carts may matter more than the lot itself. +- Patience can outperform urgency when others must buy now. + +--- + +## 5. Canonical Success Condition + +If the participant stops asking: + +“How much is the timber worth?” + +and starts asking: + +“Who needs it before tomorrow?” + +then this dialogue is functioning correctly.