In an alternate Jerusalem, fate crafts a stark tale. Pontius Pilate, the iron-fisted Roman prefect of Judaea, falls victim to a conspiracy of betrayal. His secret meeting with Jesus of Nazareth, meant to quell Pilate's intrigue about Jesus’s influence, disastrously backfires. Their conversation, reaching the Sanhedrin and Rome, kindles accusations of treason. Soon, a swift plot frames Pilate as a usurper to Caesar’s throne, claiming he aspires to become the 'king of the Jews.'
Rome's response is brutal. Caesar, sensing a mutiny, orders Pilate's crucifixion—a brutal fate for traitors. Betrayed, Pilate endures a torturous march amidst the scorn of Jerusalem, once his spectacle to command, now his stage of torment, upholding the Empire's ruthless justice.
Pilate, crucified, becomes a tableau of penance against a merciless sky. The crowd's reactions vary—some smug, others, touched by Jesus's spared teachings, feel unexpected pity.