9.4 KiB
DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0002
The Grain Quay Conversation — Canonical Draft
Status: Canonical Dialogue Draft
Layer: OTIVM (Roman Merchant)
Purpose: Second playable opening scene for SCENARIO-MERCHANT-0000, shifting the prologue from fire rumor to maritime supply interpretation, demonstrating Ostia as imperial intake node rather than local crisis node.
Repository Path: docs/scenarios/DIALOGUE-PROLOGUE-0002.md
0. Design Intent
The first prologue taught that visible disaster creates opportunity.
This second prologue teaches that ordinary arrivals create opportunity.
Nothing burns. No one shouts. No magistrate runs.
Instead, two ships arrive at dawn:
- one deep with Egyptian grain
- one guarded and lightly laden from the eastern sea
- a timber convoy expected upriver has not appeared
The participant must learn that routine harbor movement can contain as much profit, risk, and uncertainty as fire.
1. Scene Constraints
Location: riverfront quay near the warehouses of Ostia, late morning.
Primary signals:
- grain unloading from Alexandria
- guarded luxury cargo rumored from the East
- delayed timber barges from inland routes
Selection method: participant chooses whose interpretation to follow.
2. Opening Scene Draft
Ropes groaned against wet bollards. Men shouted in three accents and swore in six. Grain dust floated in pale sheets where sacks were shouldered from gangplank to quay.
A broad-bellied vessel sat low in the water, still being emptied. Beside it, narrower and cleaner, another ship lay under guard. Its hatch remained closed.
Beyond both, the river channel was open and strangely empty.
Marcus Atilius Varro stood where he could watch the road from the quay and the quay from the road.
Lucius Fabius Felix arrived chewing something he had not paid enough for.
“You chose a cheerful morning,” Felix said. “Bread, mystery, and delay.”
Varro did not look at him.
“I chose visibility.”
“You always choose visibility. It is why subtle men profit near you.”
“You mistake patience for subtlety.”
Felix gestured toward the grain ship.
“Egypt feeds Rome again. How moving.”
“It feeds whoever unloads first.”
“And whoever bought sacks yesterday.”
Varro nodded toward the empty channel.
“The barges from upriver are late.”
Felix smiled.
“There. You do have romance in you.”
A measured voice entered behind them.
“Delay is often more expensive than arrival.”
Gaius Licinius Crispus stepped carefully onto the quay stones, avoiding grain mush and common men with equal discipline.
Felix bowed with insufficient sincerity.
“Crispus. Come to admire abundance?”
“I came because warehouse men become honest when anxious.”
“They become inventive first,” Felix said.
Crispus ignored him.
“The timber convoy was due before first light.”
Varro said, “How many barges?”
“Three expected. Two carrying beam stock. One mixed timber and wheel blanks.”
Felix whistled softly.
“And now every carpenter in the city discovers religion.”
A shadow fell beside them.
Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor had arrived under a cloak too fine for dock spray and too plain to admit how expensive it was.
“Not every carpenter,” Lentulus said. “Only those without contracts.”
Felix laughed.
“And only a Cornelius could hear delayed timber and think first of paperwork.”
“One should think first of paperwork. Timber obeys signatures before saws.”
Varro said, “Wood obeys weight.”
Lentulus looked toward the guarded vessel.
“That ship interests me more.”
“Because it is guarded?” Felix asked.
“Because it is guarded discreetly.”
Secundus, who had approached without anyone noticing until the smell of rope and mule grease gave warning, squinted at the closed hatch.
“If guarded discreetly, your family sent the guards.”
Lentulus’s expression remained almost pleasant.
“Titus Varenus, refinement continues to evade you.”
“And truth continues to catch you.”
Felix grinned openly now.
“What do you think is inside?”
Secundus shrugged.
“Something light enough for profit and dear enough for fear.”
“Pepper,” Felix said immediately.
“Or silk,” Lentulus said.
“Or accounts proving one of you insolvent,” Crispus added.
A quiet voice said, “Accounts travel badly at sea.”
Publius Terentius Chresimus stood near a stack of amphorae, wax tablet tucked under his arm.
Felix frowned.
“You appear wherever money becomes shy.”
“I appear where men speak before calculating.”
Chresimus looked at the guarded ship.
“Pepper is plausible. Papyrus also. Fine glass. Dyestuff. Anything that profits from being rumored more valuable than it is.”
Varro pointed again toward the river.
“The timber matters first.”
Felix spread his hands.
“To you. Because beams do not fit in a purse.”
“To everyone,” Varro said. “Late timber means cart repairs delayed. Wheel repairs delayed. Roof repairs delayed. River cranes delayed. Handles delayed.”
Secundus nodded.
“And axle wedges. Men forget wedges until wheels depart.”
Lentulus said, “Rome will not stop because one convoy is late.”
“No,” Secundus said. “Rome stops one missing piece at a time.”
Crispus folded his hands.
“If contractors default, petitions begin by noon.”
Felix looked delighted.
“There he is. If wood does not arrive, Crispus can still sell signatures.”
“I sell remedies.”
“You sell delay to one side and speed to the other.”
“Then I sell judgment.”
“No,” Chresimus said softly. “You sell queue position.”
Crispus’s jaw moved once.
The grain line kept moving. Porters bent, rose, bent again.
Varro watched them.
“How many unloaders?”
Secundus counted without turning his head.
“Forty-two visible. Twelve slower than they should be.”
“You counted slower men?”
“I counted men carrying left shoulder low. They tire first.”
Felix said, “And people call me strange.”
Lentulus pointed toward the grain vessel.
“That cargo lowers panic. Bread rumor ends when sacks appear.”
Chresimus shook his head.
“Only partly. Arrival lowers fear today. It raises storage pressure today. It lowers some prices. Raises porter wages. Raises theft temptation. Raises warehouse fees if capacity is tight.”
Felix turned.
“There. That is why I keep him alive.”
“You do not keep me alive.”
“Then I encourage conditions favorable to it.”
Crispus said, “The guarded ship has not opened because customs men are being selected.”
“Selected?” Felix asked.
“Bribed carefully enough to seem appointed.”
Lentulus said, “Your cynicism grows vulgar.”
“My realism grows accurate.”
Varro said, “If pepper, prices fall?”
Felix answered at once.
“For pepper sellers, yes. For tavern owners boasting of pepper, no. Vanity holds value longer than supply.”
Secundus added, “If papyrus, scribes cheer.”
Chresimus said, “Scribes never cheer. We merely postpone complaint.”
Felix pointed at him.
“There. Humor. Mark the date.”
A horn sounded upriver.
All six turned.
Nothing appeared.
A second blast followed, then shouting carried on the wind.
Varro spoke first.
“Grounded barge.”
Secundus listened.
“Or broken towline.”
Crispus said, “Or staged distress to excuse shortage.”
Felix smiled slowly.
“Or truth, which would be novel.”
Lentulus looked toward the road leading inland.
“If grounded, buyers ride now.”
“If broken towline,” Secundus said, “buyers need draft animals, not horses.”
“If staged,” Crispus said, “buyers need witnesses.”
“If genuine,” Chresimus said, “buyers need cash.”
Felix bowed slightly.
“And if uncertain, buyers need me.”
Varro had already started walking.
“Where?”
“Towpath.”
Secundus moved with him.
“I’m coming.”
Felix followed half a pace behind.
“To buy what slips loose.”
Crispus adjusted his garment and sighed.
“To prevent barbarism.”
Lentulus smiled thinly.
“To be seen preventing it.”
Chresimus tucked away his tablet.
“To learn who owes whom if the cargo spoils.”
Felix looked back once.
“Six men. One delayed convoy. None of us interested in timber.”
Varro answered without turning.
“Wrong. We are interested in everything timber touches.”
3. Choice Presentation
The river is uncertain. The ships are real. You cannot follow every lead. Whose reading of the quay do you trust?
| Choice | Background |
|---|---|
| Follow Varro to the towpath and count movement failures. | Former Legionary |
| Follow Felix to buy confusion before prices settle. | Freedman Trader |
| Follow Lentulus to learn which names control contracts. | Noble Younger Son |
| Follow Crispus to exploit claims, delays, and permissions. | Failed Magistrate |
| Follow Secundus to map shortages before others notice them. | Camp Logistician |
| Follow Chresimus to uncover obligations beneath the cargo. | Guild Scribe |
4. What This Scene Teaches
- A normal port day can be economically dramatic.
- Grain arrival lowers some pressures while raising others.
- Luxury cargo creates speculation before opening.
- Missing timber can affect carts, roofs, tools, cranes, and transport chains.
- Different backgrounds read the same quay differently.
- Opportunity often exists during ambiguity, not certainty.
5. Canonical Success Condition
If the participant stops asking:
“What is on the ship?”
and starts asking:
“Who needs what now that it has—or has not—arrived?”