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# DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0019
## The Public Lawsuit — Canonical Draft
### Status: Canonical Dialogue Draft
### Layer: OTIVM (Roman Merchant)
### Purpose: Prologue scenario teaching litigation economics, witness markets, settlement leverage, reputation risk, procedural delay, and how courts become commercial arenas.
### Repository Path: docs/scenarios/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0019.md
---
## 0. Design Intent
A commercial dispute is being argued publicly in Ostia.
No ship sinks. No warehouse burns. No festival begins.
Yet crowds gather, rivals listen, witnesses become valuable, scribes sell summaries, debtors pray for precedent, and merchants calculate whether judgment or delay serves them better.
Known facts are uncertain:
- plaintiff truthful or strategic
- defendant guilty or merely disliked
- witnesses bought, frightened, or mistaken
- judge competent or distracted
- settlement already negotiated privately
- verdict important or only symbolic
The participant must learn that legal conflict is also a market.
---
## 1. Scene Constraints
Location: forum court space near basilica steps and market edge in Ostia, late morning.
Primary signals:
- crowd around hearing
- advocates speaking theatrically
- witnesses waiting nervously
- scribes selling notes
- side wagers on outcome
- traders pausing business to listen
Selection method: participant chooses whose interpretation to follow.
---
## 2. Opening Scene Draft
The loudest trade in the forum was speech.
Men sold olives, sandals, and opinions in equal measure. At the center, before the magistrates bench, two merchants attempted to destroy one another politely.
Marcus Atilius Varro stood where he could see the bench, the witness queue, and both exits.
Lucius Fabius Felix arrived smiling like a man who preferred justice by entertainment.
“No fire. No flood. No plague,” Felix said. “Only rhetoric. A rich city.”
Varro nodded toward the plaintiff.
“Grain contract dispute.”
“Then famine of honesty.”
Gaius Licinius Crispus approached with professional hunger.
“Who presides?”
Felix answered first.
“A man who wishes lunch.”
Crispus ignored him.
“Magistrate Decimus Naso,” Varro said.
Crispus inhaled approvingly.
“Capable enough.”
Felix said, “Then today may be disappointing.”
Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor arrived in clean sandals suitable for being seen near law.
“My cousin knows Naso,” Lentulus said.
Felix smiled.
“Then your cousin knows where verdicts are born?”
“He knows procedure.”
“Same cradle, finer blankets.”
Titus Varenus Secundus came from beside a wagon of waiting witnesses carrying a rope measure.
“Plaintiffs grain sacks undersized,” he said.
Varro turned.
“You checked?”
“I listened. Then checked.”
A quiet voice came from the scribe benches.
“The defendants books are newer than his memory.”
Publius Terentius Chresimus sat with purchased copies of both submitted ledgers.
Felix sighed.
“And now justice acquires margins.”
The plaintiffs advocate thundered that Rome itself depended on honest contracts.
Felix applauded once.
“Rome depends on volume.”
Crispus frowned.
“Advocacy has its place.”
“It usually rents it.”
A witness was called.
He swore certainty, then forgot the month.
The crowd laughed.
Varro said, “Weak.”
Chresimus said, “Expensive.”
Lentulus asked, “Bought?”
“Or coached beyond capacity,” Chresimus replied.
A vendor nearby hung a sign:
VERDICT CAKES — SWEET IF LIABLE
Felix pointed.
“There. Civic genius.”
Secundus watched the defendant.
“He is not worried.”
Varro nodded.
“Too calm.”
Crispus said, “Innocent men can be calm.”
Felix replied, “Not in public.”
The magistrate demanded silence.
No one improved much.
The defendants advocate rose and produced a damaged grain sack with torn stitching.
The crowd leaned forward as one body.
Secundus muttered:
“Old tear.”
“How do you know?” Lentulus asked.
“Rot pattern.”
Felix looked impressed.
“Never become my enemy.”
“I charge by hour.”
Chresimus turned pages.
“Interesting.”
“What?” Crispus asked.
“The plaintiff sued another carrier last year using the same witness.”
Felix smiled broadly.
“There.”
“What?” Varro asked.
“A reusable citizen.”
Crispus said, “Prior litigation proves nothing.”
“Repeated coincidence proves theater,” Felix said.
The magistrate called for submitted weights and measures.
Half the grain merchants in the crowd became suddenly attentive.
Varro watched them.
“Precedent.”
Chresimus nodded.
“If undersized sacks count as fraud here, ten stalls reprice by sunset.”
Lentulus said, “Then this one case matters widely.”
Felix replied, “All small cases dream of becoming large.”
A clerk whispered to the plaintiffs advocate.
The mans confidence dimmed slightly.
Crispus noticed.
“Settlement offer.”
Felix admired him.
“Good eye.”
Secundus said, “Or unpaid fee.”
The crowd laughed at nothing in particular.
A woman witness stepped forward carrying her own tally tablets.
Chresimus sat straighter.
“Dangerous.”
“To whom?” Lentulus asked.
“To liars.”
She recited delivery dates, mule counts, and broken seals without flourish.
Varro nodded once.
“Strong.”
Crispus said, “Excellent witness.”
Felix said, “Intolerably competent.”
The defendant finally looked worried.
Secundus noticed first.
“There.”
The magistrate ordered recess for private consultation.
The forum exploded into side conversations.
Vendors doubled prices instantly.
Felix spread his hands.
“There. True law begins in recess.”
Lentulus said, “Will they settle?”
Chresimus replied:
“If both are rational.”
Felix said, “Then perhaps not.”
Crispus asked, “What matters now?”
Varro answered first.
“Who leaves smiling.”
Secundus said, “Which witnesses are retained.”
Lentulus said, “Who is seen speaking to Naso.”
Felix said, “How cheaply panic sells.”
Crispus said, “Terms of settlement and enforceability.”
Chresimus said, “What precedent survives private payment.”
They all looked at him.
“If they settle secretly, the crowd learns less than the city needs.”
The plaintiffs advocate emerged sweating.
The defendants advocate emerged serene.
Felix smiled.
“There.”
“What?” Varro asked.
“Price discovered.”
Varro stepped toward the witness yard.
“Ill learn who was dismissed.”
Secundus moved with him.
“Ill inspect the sacks and measures.”
Lentulus adjusted his cloak.
“I will discover who spoke with Naso.”
Crispus drew himself up.
“I will obtain the settlement terms.”
Felix turned toward the worried merchants.
“I will buy fear from every undersized bag in town.”
Chresimus tied his copies shut.
“I will learn which fact was too expensive to hear publicly.”
Felix looked back once.
“Six men. One lawsuit. None of us discussing justice.”
Varro answered without turning.
“We are discussing consequence.”
---
## 3. Choice Presentation
> The hearing pauses. The market now trades on what judgment may mean. Whose reading of the forum do you trust?
| Choice | Background |
|---|---|
| Follow Varro to track dismissed witnesses and practical truth. | Former Legionary |
| Follow Felix to exploit fear, settlements, and market reaction. | Freedman Trader |
| Follow Lentulus to trace influence and visible access. | Noble Younger Son |
| Follow Crispus to obtain terms, rulings, and procedural leverage. | Failed Magistrate |
| Follow Secundus to inspect sacks, measures, and material evidence. | Camp Logistician |
| Follow Chresimus to uncover precedent, books, and hidden facts. | Guild Scribe |
---
## 4. What This Scene Teaches
- Litigation can move markets beyond the parties involved.
- Witnesses and evidence have strategic value.
- Recesses and settlements may matter more than speeches.
- Reputation damage can exceed damages awarded.
- Public rulings create precedent expectations.
- Courts are commercial theaters as well as legal forums.
---
## 5. Canonical Success Condition
If the participant stops asking:
“Who will win?”
and starts asking:
“What changes if this argument becomes example?”
then this dialogue is functioning correctly.