An expansion and revision of Cleopatra's second interlude:
The waves flowed in their ancient tidal rhythms, like the beating of an enormous heart, washing up on the sandy beach again and again.
"This is the ocean," Cleopatra said after a long moment of silent contemplation. "I never saw the ocean in life, you know. The wine dark sea of ours, but not the great water that lay beyond it. I spoke with those who had, though. There was this Samothracian who had the strange idea that ... well, now I know that he was right, of course, but then ..." The last of the Pharaohs let her voice fall silent.
It was not, Ritsuka decided as she stood a few paces behind Cleopatra, the place of a secretary to fill the silences that her employer left behind. She had, after a series of costume changes, taken on the garb of a chiton and sandals that would have been appropriate for a secretary of Cleopatra's era, and had to admit that it was more comfortable than the micro-mini, stiletto heels and blouse one size too small that she'd been wearing at the start, even if she missed the fake spectacles Mash had slipped her.
"Why am I doing all this?" Cleopatra asked, without looking back at Ritsuka. "Why am I putting myself through so much strenuous exercise? Why couldn't I be satisfied with Pharaoh Nitocris' workout, or the desert's? I'm sure those questions have crossed your mind at least once or twice, my secretary. Why am I working so hard to improve a body that is already perfect?"
Ritsuka opened her mouth to answer that.
As usual, Cleopatra didn't bother to pause long enough to let her do so. "I don't blame you for wondering. You must find it more intriguing than any of the Seven Wonders of the World." She nodded in sober certainty, and Ritsuka found herself thankful that clairvoyance was not among her employer's many talents, for the worst Caster in the Throne would have been able to see Ritsuka's eyes rolling. "I doubt that even that famous detective could understand," Cleopatra pressed on. "The truth is --"
"It's Caesar, right?" Ritsuka dared, deciding on a whim that anticipating the boss was part of a secretary's duties.
Cleopatra made a series of rather excited coughing noises before whirling around to gaze at her. "H-how did you know?" she gasped.
"Wow," said Ritsuka, blinking. "I was right? Shoot, I thought this conversation was going to be Bechdel-compliant. Oh well."
"I knew you were a hard worker, Master," Cleopatra said, staring at her secretary in undisguised awe. "But I didn't think you were actually one of the greatest sages of all time!"
"Well, you learn a thing or two when you save all of reality from terrors beyond imagination, a few times," Ritsuka said humbly, with a faint shrug.
"A-ahem," Cleopatra coughed. "I suppose that it is obvious by now, but yes, you are in fact right. This is all for my darling Caesar. The ideal workout routine is not to help me achieve an ideal body, but to help Lord Caesar slim down! What sort of arduous battle will best ensure he gets into shape? That's why I've been going to such great lengths. And now," she added, looking over her shoulder with a sigh, "I've ended up at the ocean. A virtual ocean that can't possibly lead back to Alexandria." She glared at the ocean in a rather accusatory manner.
"Eh," Ritsuka said. "This is a simulation of the Roman Empire in the 1st century CE. I suspect it could, actually. But never mind that, now," she added as Cleopatra turned back to give her such a look. "Do you really want him to lose weight so badly? Do you dislike his look that much?"
"It's not just about looks," Cleopatra answered her. Then spoke very quickly, "Though I will not deny that they are very important to me, and I will not apologize for that. But when I fell in love with Caesar, I loved his mind and his spirit and ..." She trailed off again, and when at last she spoke, there was a tremor in her voice that Ritsuka had never heard that. "It's my son. Caesarion. My firstborn child, who faced off against all of Rome, alone, after I was gone." Her sea-green eyes closed then. "And lasted all of a few days, they tell me."
Again, Ritsuka chose not to fill the silence that Cleopatra left vacant.
"What story do they tell of how I met my end?" the Pharaoh asked at last.
After waiting a moment to see if this was yet another rhetorical question, Ritsuka answered. "The one I've usually heard is that you let an asp bite you when it was clear that you had no other option."
Cleopatra laughed then without opening her eyes. "The asp is a sacred animal. Do you really think one of them would kill a Pharaoh, even a pathetic failure of a Pharaoh who'd delivered all of Egypt into Roman bondage?" This time it was a rhetorical question, for her eyes opened as she continued to speak. "I had no other option, true. All that living any longer would mean would be that I would go back to Rome and live in house arrest until they needed a victim to be ritually strangled before someone's triumphal procession, and that would not have taken very long. All I had was a fruit knife. When they gave me a moment in private, I put it against my heart, closed my eyes, and pushed it home."
"Did it hurt?" Ritsuka asked, surprising herself.
"Oh, very much," Cleopatra answered, in a tone that was almost mocking. "Somehow, despite having studied anatomy, I managed to miss any vital organ. There I was, on the privy, knife in my chest, too weak from blood loss to pull the silly thing out, and that was when the soldiers came in to see what the matter was. And then the bastards started to laugh at me, because what could possibly be funnier to their minds than the great seductress trying and failing to escape what Nemesis ordained for her. And then one of them figured that I was going to die anyway, so they might as well make a game of it, and --"
"Please, stop," Ritsuka said, eyes shining with tears.
"You're a kind person, you know," Cleopatra noted in passing. "Too kind for your own good, I think. Anyway, I died somewhere in the middle of that. Pharaoh Ozymandius tells me that Octavian was furious at the soldiers who did all this, and they decorated crosses soon after, even before he had poor Caesarion strangled. That was a comparatively noble death compared to crucifixion, which was what you did to the lowest of the low. I guess that makes up for it, sort of," she added somewhat dubiously.
"Anyway," she continued. "I want Caesar to proclaim Caesarion as his rightful son and heir. And I want him to do it as he was when he fathered him on me. I know it's too late," she added after a moment. "I know it will change nothing. But I need to hear it, just once, for my own pride. I think if that happens, then both my son and I will be able to rest in peace."
"Are you sure that's what you want?" asked a familiar voice. "Wouldn't being at peace mean you no longer need to materialize in this present world?"
"Lord Caesar?!" Cleopatra gasped with a guess, or maybe the other way around.
"Ah, I was wondering when he was going to show up," said Ritsuka, rubbing a forearm over her eyes to get rid of the last of the tears.
"You knew he was --" Cleopatra started to gasp some more.
"Well, no, but like other people who dress in red, when you talk about him long enough, he has a tendency to show up," she explained, glancing at the First of the Empire with a rather jaded expression.
"I'm just going to ignore the implications of that," Caesar declared with his traditional clemency, before returning his attention to Cleopatra. "You've finally found a Master you trust enough to accompany you wherever you choose to go," he declaimed. "Do you really want to throw that beautiful bond away just because of something I said?"
"I -- oh Caesar, don't say such things," Cleopatra asked, her face showing abject remorse. "I just had this idea when I was washing my face this morning! Please don't make me second-guess my amazingly beautiful decision to see it through now!"
"Yes, I get ideas when washing my face, too," Ritsuka agreed, nodding soberly. "Why, once I even thought about getting Ishtar and Ereskigal together to --"
"Exactly!" Cleopatra interrupted, with a 'stop trying to make Caesar jealous' glare. "They just come to you as though they were a revelation from the heavens or something!"
Caesar regarded her with an expression of equal parts sorrow and admiration. "Cleopatra, Master there is the only person you have ever known that you have been willing to accept as your secretary for longer than a single day."
"Oh, wow, really?" Ritsuka asked, looking between the two of them.
He ignored her, just like Cleopatra usually did. They were so alike, sometimes. "Unlike us, you two had no existing bond to speak of. It was destiny that brought you two together. I promise, I'm not going anywhere," Caesar assured Cleopatra with great gentleness. So I urge you to cast your mind back and remember once again. Surely you don't need to hurry to your death so swiftly, do you. Yes, the shimmering thread of your life was cruelly cut so very short, but does that mean it has to happen again?"
"Lord Caesar," she murmured, uncertainly. "I never knew you cared so much for me. Or her," she added, with a glance at Ritsuka ... who appeared to be quietly counting downwards.
"That is the reason, beloved Cleopatra -- that I will never lose weight," he declared passionately.
"Annnnnd zero," Ritsuka concluded her countdown, nodding quietly.
"That is all," Caesar continued in the manner of one ending a great oration. "Master, I grant you permission to shrine brightly at my Cleopatra's side."
"Gee thanks."
"I understand the bond you share is special, and not at all cheating. And anyway the two of you are so very hot together. So I will allow it! In turn, dear Cleopatra, you will surely allow me a little freedom of my own, which will also not at all be cheating. That is only right, after all!" he declared with a brilliant smile.
Cleopatra gazed at him.
He gazed back him.
"Hell no," she said at last.
"Shoot."
Battle ensued.
"Incredible," Caesar gasped at last. "To have seen a way past my Crocea Mors! Perhaps you're right, and this form does limit the motions of my body despite the perfection of my swordsmanship." Golden lights began to glow around him, streaming up in a slow trickle towards the evening sky. "Well done, Cleopatra. I leave her in your care, Master. Ahh, wait for me, Caesarion, my son and heir! I'm coming to you!"
"Ah, that's okay, I'm good, thanks," said a voice of uncertain origin.
And then Caesar was gone.
"No!" Cleopatra gasped, dropping to her knees. "H-how -- nonononono! Caesar is gone? This cannot be! I-I-I -- what have I done!" she shrieked to the heavens.
"Uh, that was just him turning into his spirit form," said Nitocris, who'd been watching in silence from a bit further up the beach. "He's fine. We're in the simulator, remember. Things have to get pretty bad for someone to actually disappear in here."
"Mm-hm," Ritsuka agreed, nodding.
"But -- but the lights, and and the voice, and --" Cleopatra stammered.
"Well, I think it's just a case of him having picked up the same sparkling charm that you do?" Nitocris offered weakly. "Like he picked it up from you? Somehow?"
"Actually, I think he's probably just hacked the simulator to produce special effects like that," Ritsuka offered.
"Oh," the two Pharaohs chorused, disappointed in different ways.
"But, um, it could be the whole communicable charm thing, too," the Master of Chaldea added after a moment, picking up on the subtext. "What do I know?"