7.8 KiB
DIALOGUE-LAW-0011
The Harbor Tremor — Canonical Draft
Status: Canonical Dialogue Draft
Layer: OTIVM (Roman Law)
Purpose: Scenario teaching counterfactual judgment, rebuilding standards, retrospective myth-making, infrastructure resilience, liability after natural disaster, and how later events reprice earlier harms.
Repository Path: docs/scenarios/DIALOGUE-LAW-0011.md
0. Design Intent
Months after the crane disaster, the rebuilt dock stands stronger than before.
The six, now entangled in harbor work and contracts, witness an earthquake strike Ostia. Walls crack, cargo spills, masts sway, and men run to whichever gods are nearest.
When the shaking ends, the new dock still stands.
Everyone immediately swears that if the old crane, old pier, and old unloading lanes had remained, the damage would have been far worse.
No one can prove this. No one can disprove it.
Yet claims begin, lawsuits form, contracts reprice, and the memory of prior destruction changes shape in a single afternoon.
Known facts are uncertain:
- whether the old dock truly would have failed
- whether new engineering saved lives
- whether the broker’s earlier disaster indirectly helped the harbor
- whether men rewrite memory after survival
- whether standards now become mandatory
- whether nature excuses prior negligence
The participant must learn that events are judged differently once later consequences appear.
1. Scene Constraints
Location: rebuilt heavy quay and harbor road in Ostia, midday.
Primary signals:
- fresh reconstruction still visible
- sudden earthquake damage across harbor
- surviving new dock contrasted with older failures elsewhere
- citizens instantly retelling past events
- officials discussing new rules
- merchants recalculating loss and gain
Selection method: participant chooses whose interpretation to follow.
2. Opening Scene Draft
The earth moved without filing notice.
At first it was only cups trembling on a nearby stall. Then ropes danced, gulls rose screaming, and stone remembered it had weight.
Marcus Atilius Varro stood on the rebuilt quay when the first hard jolt struck.
He widened his stance and grabbed the nearest boy by the belt before the boy discovered gravity independently.
Lucius Fabius Felix fell into a grain sack gracefully enough to claim intent.
“No fire,” he shouted over the shaking, “but opportunity!”
The quay lurched again.
“Later,” Varro said.
Gaius Licinius Crispus clung to a bollard with constitutional dignity.
“This harbor was not warned!”
No one answered because no one governed tectonics.
Quintus Cornelius Lentulus Minor emerged from a litter that had tipped sideways, furious at geography.
“My driver is dismissed!”
Titus Varenus Secundus was already inspecting crane braces while dust still fell.
“Do not run under stone!” he shouted to everyone and therefore to no one.
A quiet voice came from beneath an overturned cart.
“I object to location.”
Publius Terentius Chresimus crawled out clutching ledgers first.
The shaking slowed, returned once more, then passed into memory and shouting.
Across the harbor an old warehouse front had collapsed.
Two lesser piers cracked visibly.
The rebuilt heavy quay remained standing.
The new crane swayed, groaned, then settled.
Silence held for one breath.
Then everyone began explaining.
Felix rose from the grain sack dusting himself.
“There. If the old crane stood, it would now be in the sea.”
Lentulus nodded instantly.
“Certainly.”
Crispus frowned.
“Certainly is doing labor there.”
Secundus knelt at the crane base.
“New footings held.”
Varro scanned the road.
“Move injured first. Philosophy later.”
Men carried a bleeding porter past them.
A woman shouted that the broker had saved the harbor from beyond death.
Another shouted that Neptune preferred modern timber.
A third shouted prices for spare rope.
Felix admired civilization.
The harbor master arrived pale and furious.
“All unloading suspended pending inspection!”
Half the merchants groaned as if personally shaken anew.
Chresimus had already begun a list:
Cracked walls
Spilled oil
Broken jars
Invented memories
Crispus noticed.
“You omitted claims.”
“They are approaching.”
Indeed they were.
A marble importer demanded compensation because his cargo slid when tremors struck.
The dock clerk replied that earth movement was not scheduled by office.
Two men nearly fought over metaphysics.
Lentulus pointed toward the old south lane where masonry had fallen badly.
“If the former quay still narrowed traffic there, many more would be trapped.”
Varro said, “Possible.”
Felix said, “Profitable possible.”
Crispus glared.
“We cannot litigate counterfactuals.”
Felix smiled.
“We can invoice them.”
Secundus stood, wiping dust from hands.
“The old crane braces were rotten.”
“You know this how?” asked Lentulus.
“I removed them myself.”
That quieted several prophets.
Chresimus added:
“And charged disposal.”
Felix bowed slightly.
“A patriot’s fee.”
A messenger from the council announced emergency review of all cranes, piers, and load limits.
Crispus straightened at once.
“There.”
“What?” Varro asked.
“Law after fear. As usual.”
The six approved that sentence reluctantly.
Nearby, two men who had mocked reconstruction costs last month now praised prudent investment loudly enough for witnesses.
Chresimus wrote their names down for private amusement.
Varro asked, “Can we know if old dock would fail?”
Secundus answered first.
“No.”
Lentulus said, “But we can infer.”
Crispus said, “And overstate.”
Felix said, “And sell.”
Chresimus said, “And remember selectively.”
They all looked at him.
“Survival edits archives quickly.”
A priest declared public offerings necessary.
A builder declared stronger foundations necessary.
A tax clerk declared both could be assessed.
The harbor groaned again.
Varro pointed to a leaning wall.
“Still danger.”
He moved toward it at once.
Secundus followed.
“I need wedges and six men.”
Felix turned to nearby merchants.
“I need contracts and twelve signatures.”
Lentulus adjusted dust from his cloak.
“I need the council before lesser men arrive.”
Crispus gathered scattered tablets.
“I need emergency authority text.”
Chresimus tied his ledgers.
“I need yesterday’s critics and today’s speeches side by side.”
Before they separated, Felix looked back toward the surviving crane.
“Six men. One earthquake. None of us discussing chance.”
Varro answered without slowing.
“We are discussing what survives.”
3. Choice Presentation
The earth shook once. Memory shook harder. Whose reading of the quay do you trust?
| Choice | Background |
|---|---|
| Follow Varro to secure people, walls, and practical priorities. | Former Legionary |
| Follow Felix to seize contracts, shortages, and fear pricing. | Freedman Trader |
| Follow Lentulus to shape public narrative and council action. | Noble Younger Son |
| Follow Crispus to draft emergency standards and liabilities. | Failed Magistrate |
| Follow Secundus to inspect engineering truth versus rumor. | Camp Logistician |
| Follow Chresimus to record how survival rewrites the past. | Guild Scribe |
4. What This Scene Teaches
- Later events can transform judgments of earlier losses.
- Counterfactual claims are persuasive but hard to prove.
- Fear often produces regulation rapidly.
- Stronger infrastructure is invisible until tested.
- Public memory changes after survival.
- Natural disasters create legal and commercial cascades.
5. Canonical Success Condition
If the participant stops asking:
“Was the old broker blessed?”
and starts asking:
“Can an act be judged before all its consequences arrive?”
then this dialogue is functioning correctly.