I Enslaved The Goddess Who Summoned Me - Chapter 471: New Gladiator: Septimius Enters! (4)
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Chapter 471: New Gladiator: Septimius Enters! (4)
The second day of the gladiatorial tournament unfolded with even greater frenzy and splendor than the first.
Rome, under the pale silver glow of the moon, refused to sleep. The city was alive, buzzing with feverish energy that coursed through every street and alleyway. Torchlight flickered along the stone roads, shadows danced across the marble facades of temples, and the laughter and shouts of feasting citizens rolled like waves through the night. The air carried the smell of roasted meat, wine spilling from overflowing cups, and the raw anticipation of violence yet to come.
At the heart of it all stood the Colosseum, a titanic beast of stone and blood, its stands packed to the very brim despite the late hour. Tens of thousands roared as one, their voices shaking the air, their cries echoing far beyond the arena walls and into the very bones of Rome itself. The cheers, the stomping of feet, the beating of drums—it was as if the whole city pulsed with the rhythm of gladiatorial combat.
The second day had already exceeded the wildest expectations. If the first had been a spectacle, this was a revelation. And much of the excitement centered around a single man—one who fought not with the brutality of a mindless killer, but with the poise and composure of someone entirely different.
Septimius.
He moved across the sands with a strange serenity, as if the chaos around him were nothing more than background noise. He entertained the crowds not with a slaughter, but with his presence, his skill, his refusal to play the game in the way everyone demanded. It was infuriating to some, yet captivating to many more.
Even the gods themselves could not look away.
From their high vantage, the divine gathered—watching as the mortals tore into each other, watching as Septimius defied the expectations laid before him.
“Do you know him, Athena?” Dionysus asked suddenly, his usually mischievous eyes narrowed with rare seriousness. His gaze lingered on the lone figure in the arena, whose sword had yet to claim a single life despite half an hour of blood and dust.
The god of revelry, who had dismissed the participants of the previous seven groups with casual disinterest, now found himself intrigued.
Athena, goddess of wisdom and war, tilted her head slightly, her expression unreadable. “No,” she replied softly. Yet her sharp blue eyes did not leave Septimius. She too was drawn to him—not merely for his strength, but for the unusual restraint he showed.
To refuse mindless killing in a tournament built upon it—this was not cowardice, but discipline. Patience. Strategy. It marked him not as a brute, but as a thinker, and Athena found such qualities rare and valuable.
At least, she thought, he is no simple beast driven by bloodlust and she appreciated that trait.
“What about you, Hermes?” Dionysus asked next, turning to the ever-watchful messenger god. “Surely you’ve heard of him.”
Hermes gave a sly smile, his golden eyes glinting with the satisfaction of knowing more than the others. “Hm. I know this much—he fought in the battle of Alexandria, under Cleopatra’s banner.”
“Cleopatra?” Dionysus arched a brow, his smile returning in an instant. “Isn’t she Isis’s cherished protégé? Some even whisper the goddess treats her as a daughter.”
“Indeed,” Hermes confirmed. “Septimius fought for Cleopatra and Caesar both. In fact, he slew Pharaoh Ptolemy himself—though that was not what Caesar intended, curiously enough. Regardless, he bent knee to Caesar afterward and now serves him faithfully.” Hermes leaned back with a casual shrug. “That is the tale as it reached me.”
Dionysus frowned, his fingers tapping restlessly against his goblet. “So he has fought in real battles, spilled the blood of kings, and yet here—where every man slaughters to prove himself—he refuses to kill?” He shook his head in disbelief. “Does he truly think this is how he will win Pandora’s hand? By restraint?”
The tournament was more than a spectacle. It was a trial, a gauntlet to determine who among mortals was worthy of touching the divine, of earning Pandora—the first woman, a being who stood as both mortal and goddess. To win her was to bridge the worlds. Every warrior here fought with desperation, eager to carve their worth in flesh and bone.
And yet, Septimius stood apart.
“It is as if he does not care for Pandora at all…” Dionysus muttered, his brow furrowing deeper.
Hermes chuckled lightly at the absurdity. “Then why would he enter such a perilous contest, if not for her? What else could he seek?”
Dionysus stared once more into the arena, into the calm eyes of the gladiator who had chosen patience over slaughter. A mortal who, unlike the others, seemed unshaken by the expectations of gods or men.
“Who knows…” Dionysus said at last.
Meanwhile, Pandora—the very prize over which men bled and gods schemed—sat quietly in her high seat, hidden behind her veil of shimmering silk. The world called her the reward, the living treasure, yet she felt no joy in being watched, desired, or fought over like a piece of gold.
Her eyes, unseen behind the veil, followed Septimius with cool detachment. Unlike the crowd, unlike the gods murmuring above, she was not captivated. No flicker of admiration stirred in her heart. If anything, there was only confusion and disappointment.
Why? Why did he refuse to kill?
He stood in the arena like a contradiction, a gladiator who held his blade but denied its true purpose. To Pandora, this was not noble restraint, nor clever strategy—it was weakness. And weakness she could not abide. She had already known what it meant to be bound to a weak man. Epimetheus had been foolish, blind, soft-minded—and the entire world still bore the scars of his failure.
Her lips pressed together faintly beneath the veil. Perhaps others saw mystery and greatness in Septimius’ mercy. But she? She saw hesitation where there should have been resolve. She saw restraint where there should have been fire.
Her heart, long imprisoned as her body had been, ached with the weight of disappointment. For countless years she had been bound, locked away because of the gift—no, the curse—Zeus had thrust upon her: the accursed Box. She had dreamed, in that endless confinement, that perhaps one day a man would come, strong enough to break her chains, bold enough to stand with her, fierce enough to protect her not only from the world but from the gods themselves.
But staring down into the arena tonight, she realized with a cold pang—perhaps she had expected too much of mortals.
Perhaps she always had.
Still, not all was lost.
There was Spartacus for example. His defiance burned like a flame.
But in this group there was another man, the one with striking blue eyes, whose sword did not hesitate. He moved quickly, ruthlessly, cutting down those who sought his life, and though Pandora sensed he was holding back, the power within him was undeniable. He was, at the very least, interesting.
But interesting was not enough. None of them, not yet, had sparked that certainty in her heart.
With a faint exhale, she leaned back into her seat, her delicate hands tightening over the armrest, her expression masked by the veil. Her whisper was carried away in the noise of the Colosseum, heard by no one but herself:
“Someone… take me away.”
It was not simply a wish—it was the aching cry of a woman who yearned for freedom. She longed to walk the earth, to see its wonders, to laugh beneath its skies and touch its seas. Yet instead, she was treated as a possession, a tool, a goddess to be bound and passed from one man to another. The gods, she knew, were not searching for her true partner. No—they were searching for a caretaker. Someone strong enough to cage her for a time, to keep her power under control, until they deemed it necessary to replace him with another.
It sickened her.
She loathed it.
She loathed Zeus most of all, for forcing this upon her. For placing the Box in her hands. For twisting her existence into one long chain of sorrow and suspicion. And yet… she did not hate the world itself. No, she loved it too deeply to destroy it. She wished only to walk within it, unshackled, unfeared.
But as the tournament dragged on, the excitement she had felt at first began to fade, leaving only dread behind. Dread that none of these men would be enough. Dread that the gods, disappointed as always, would cast her back into a prison of silence and shadow.
No. She would not endure that fate again.
Her nails dug faint crescents into her palms beneath the veil. If they tried to cage her once more, she would not go quietly. She would not submit. She would not be a docile lamb led to slaughter.
Her thoughts burned within her chest when suddenly a voice cut through the air, sharp and triumphant.
“Finally!”
The Roman soldier announcing the matches raised his arms and bellowed for the crowd. “We have our ten survivors—our champions of the eighth group!”
The Colosseum erupted. Tens of thousands cheered, their voices thundering like an ocean storm.
It was an ironic sight. Nearly fifty still breathed upon the sand, groaning in pain, limbs broken, sprawled in defeat—but alive. Alive because Septimius had spared them. Mercy had been his weapon, even as he claimed victory.
And now, standing among the chosen ten, Septimius released his gladius, letting the sword fall with a dull thud into the sand. Slowly, he lifted his head. His crimson eyes, sharp, swept in the sky.
Pandora blinked. For the briefest heartbeat, when his gaze aligned with her seat, she felt her chest tighten just a very bit, as though her heart had skipped a beat. The veil could not shield her from that moment, nor could her practiced detachment.
But then, just as quickly, she realized.
He had not been looking at her.
His eyes had locked instead upon Athena.
A fleeting second passed before he moved on, walking forward into the roar of mortal adoration, into the praise of a city chanting his name.
