# DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0008 ## The Coin Shortage — Canonical Draft ### Status: Canonical Dialogue Draft ### Layer: OTIVM (Roman Merchant) ### Purpose: Prologue scenario teaching liquidity stress, credit substitution, discounting, trust networks, and the difference between wealth and ready money. ### Repository Path: docs/scenarios/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0008.md --- ## 0. Design Intent Trade is active, goods are present, buyers exist, and yet business stalls. Too little small coin is circulating through Ostia this morning. Men have goods but not change. Wages are delayed. Retailers refuse large pieces. Debtors offer promises. Honest inventory sits unsold because settlement cannot be made cleanly. Known facts are uncertain: - recent tax collections drained coin - shipmasters hoarding specie - military payments diverted coin elsewhere - money changers withholding small denominations - panic hoarding after rumor - coin exists, but in the wrong hands The participant must learn that shortage of money can occur amid abundance of goods. --- ## 1. Scene Constraints Location: market square near money tables, food sellers, and porter hiring corner in Ostia, late morning. Primary signals: - buyers arguing over change - wages delayed - sellers refusing large coin - private credit notes circulating - money tables crowded - prices splitting between coin and promise Selection method: participant chooses whose interpretation to follow. --- ## 2. Opening Scene Draft The market was full of goods and empty of completion. Bread stood on boards. Oil shone in jars. Fish smelled certain. Fruit bruised itself in baskets. Buyers touched everything and purchased little. The loudest sound was men explaining why they could pay later. Marcus Atilius Varro stood beside a porter line that had not yet become work. Lucius Fabius Felix arrived smiling like a man who preferred shortage to abundance. “No fire. No blood. No rain,” Felix said. “Yet everyone is miserable. A refined city.” Varro watched two men argue over a single denarius. “Too few small coins.” Felix nodded. “The purest famine.” Gaius Licinius Crispus approached the money tables with visible disgust. “Who licensed these changers?” he asked. Felix answered first. “The gods. They multiply fees invisibly.” Crispus ignored him. “Rates are absurd.” “Rates are honest,” Felix said. “Need is absurd.” Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor arrived carrying no purse visible enough to be vulgar. “My baker refused me credit,” Lentulus said. Felix stared. “Then Rome truly declines.” “He requested settlement from yesterday first.” “Then Rome improves.” Titus Varenus Secundus came from the porter line counting men with no work. “Twelve left already,” he said. “Why?” Varro asked. “No coin for hiring advances.” Felix spread his hands. “There. Labor exists. Need exists. Coin absent. Philosophy complete.” A quiet voice entered from the changer’s queue. “Not absent.” Publius Terentius Chresimus stepped aside holding two tablets and no expression. “Concentrated.” Felix smiled. “There he is. The man who can make arithmetic sound immoral.” Chresimus looked toward the money tables. “Small bronze and asses are trapped behind counters. Silver sits in purses. Debts sit everywhere.” Crispus said, “Then compel fair exchange.” Felix laughed. “With what? More missing coin?” Lentulus looked annoyed. “I have silver.” “No one doubts it,” Felix said. “No one will break it.” “That is different.” A butcher shouted that he would take coin only, not promises. A fruit seller shouted she would take promises from known faces. Half the square turned to watch. Varro said, “Trust is pricing.” Secundus nodded. “And strangers pay more.” Chresimus added: “Or do not buy.” Felix pointed toward a tavern keeper accepting marked tablets. “There. Private money.” Crispus frowned. “Unregulated scribbles.” “Useful scribbles,” Felix replied. “They fail if the writer flees.” “So do magistrates.” Crispus’s jaw moved once. Lentulus asked, “Why today?” No one answered immediately. Then Chresimus said: “Two causes certain. Tax remittances yesterday. Grain ship crews paid in silver this morning.” Secundus added: “And teamsters were paid late last week. Many are already in debt.” Felix brightened. “So three causes. The fourth is fear.” “What fear?” Varro asked. “That if coin is scarce now, it will be scarcer later. Men hold what they have.” Crispus folded his hands. “Hoarding during stress invites scrutiny.” Felix shrugged. “Then scrutinize closed fists.” A money changer announced new rates. The crowd cursed as one body. Lentulus turned sharply. “He charges that much to make change?” “He charges that much because he can,” Chresimus said. Varro watched the porter line. “If wages delayed till noon, work shifts fail.” Secundus agreed. “Unloaders leave for food. Carters refuse distance jobs. Animal feed goes unpaid.” Felix said, “And sellers with wet inventory become desperate.” “No rain today,” Lentulus said. “Every inventory is wet if it cannot turn.” Chresimus almost smiled. “That was nearly wise.” Felix bowed. “I rent wisdom by the sentence.” A fishmonger began offering two prices: one in coin, one higher in credit. Crispus pointed. “Abuse.” “Accounting,” Chresimus corrected. Varro looked at him. “Can this spread?” “It already has. Soon wages quoted one way, rents another.” Secundus spat to the side. “Then confusion costs more than shortage.” Lentulus said, “My family can extend notes.” Felix laughed. “Your family can extend promises. Collection is the expensive half.” Crispus said, “I can enforce notes.” Felix replied instantly. “For a share.” “For order.” “For a share wearing order.” A baker’s apprentice ran through the square shouting: “Copper at the river tables! Last trays!” Half the crowd moved at once. Felix turned. “There.” “What?” Varro asked. “The real cargo today is change.” Secundus said, “And the real line.” Varro had already started walking. “To the river tables.” Felix moved with him. “To buy coin before men buy bread.” Crispus adjusted his garment. “To review rates.” Lentulus followed more slowly. “To secure household settlement.” Secundus nodded toward the porter line. “I’ll hire men with food first, coin later.” Chresimus tucked away his tablets. “I’ll learn whose notes are already being refused.” Felix looked back once. “Six men. One shortage. None of us discussing poverty.” Varro answered without turning. “We are discussing stoppage.” --- ## 3. Choice Presentation > Goods fill the market. Coin does not. Whose reading of the shortage do you trust? | Choice | Background | |---|---| | Follow Varro to restore hiring and movement. | Former Legionary | | Follow Felix to profit from change scarcity and distress sales. | Freedman Trader | | Follow Lentulus to use family credit and social standing. | Noble Younger Son | | Follow Crispus to enforce notes and procedural order. | Failed Magistrate | | Follow Secundus to keep labor working through food and advances. | Camp Logistician | | Follow Chresimus to trace where coin truly sits. | Guild Scribe | --- ## 4. What This Scene Teaches - Money shortage can mean liquidity shortage, not lack of wealth. - Small denominations matter disproportionately in daily trade. - Credit emerges when coin circulation fails. - Trust networks become temporary payment rails. - Dual pricing appears under stress. - Labor markets freeze quickly when wages cannot clear. --- ## 5. Canonical Success Condition If the participant stops asking: “How much money is in the city?” and starts asking: “Who can settle today?” then this dialogue is functioning correctly.