Chapter 195: "It’s a start. A good one."
The air in the ruins shimmered, not with heat, but with a sudden, oppressive charge. The dust motes dancing in the slanting light seemed to freeze for a moment before the space beside Hades rippled like disturbed water.
Zeus stood there, having shed the simple robes of his throne for the day. He wore the same casual drape over one shoulder, but his presence was anything but casual. It filled the dead space, pressing down on the silence. The faint, clean scent of ozone and high-altitude wind cut through the stink of ash.
He didn’t look at the ruins. His eyes, alive with that familiar, restless storm-light, were fixed on his brother.
"You’re getting sentimental in your old age, Hades," Zeus said, his voice a low rumble, like distant thunder testing its strength. "An old man with a stick. Really?"
Hades didn’t jump. The form of the elderly traveler melted away from him like shadow retreating from a sudden flame. He stood in his true form, the dark, imposing Lord of the Underworld, his expression as still and deep as the waters of the Styx. He brushed a speck of invisible dust from his shoulder.
"It gets me closer than a crown and a thunderbolt ever could," Hades replied, his tone flat, devoid of its previous rasp. "They see you coming from a mile away. They only see the god. They see this," he gestured to himself, "and they see a king, or a threat. They see the old man, and they see... a person. It makes them listen."
Zeus chuckled, a sound without much warmth. He paced a few steps, his sandals crunching on the debris. "So? What grand tale did you spin? Let me guess. You painted me as the villain of your little parable? The proud, lonely king drowning in his own victory?" He stopped and shot Hades a look that was both amused and sharp, like a shard of lightning. "The brother who ’lost himself’?"
Hades met his gaze, unflinching. "I used the truth. Just not all of it. He asked about the brother in the story. I told him he rules a kingdom of light and air, surrounded by sycophants, and that he is the loneliest man I know." A faint, almost imperceptible smile touched Hades’s lips. "Was I wrong?"
Zeus’s playful demeanor hardened for a split second. The lightning in his eyes flashed. "You have a unique talent for making the pinnacle of creation sound like a punishment."
"It is not the pinnacle that is the punishment," Hades said, his gaze drifting back to the path Kratos had taken. "It is the isolation at the top. It is a gilded cage. You know that as well as I do."
He let the silence hang between them for a moment, heavy with the weight of their millennia.
"I thought you wanted me to talk to him about his dead family," Hades continued, turning back to Zeus. "To use them as a lever. To show him their faces in Elysium, to twist the knife of his loss. A more direct approach."
Zeus sighed, the sound weary. He ran a hand through his beard. "I considered it. It would have been... effective. A sharp, quick pain to cauterize the wound of his rage. But watching him just now... sitting in the tomb he built with his own hands..." He shook his head. "A lesson taught with a hammer might stop the action, but it doesn’t change the mind. I wanted him to think. Not just to hurt."
"Plan B, then," Hades stated. "In case the gentle nudge failed."
"Plan B," Zeus confirmed with a nod. "But it seems your ’old man’ routine might have actually worked. He’s thinking. I can feel it. The chaos around him is... quieter. Less like a screaming tempest, more like a confused fog." He looked at Hades, a genuine, measuring look in his eyes. "It’s a start. A good one."
Hades absorbed this, his dark eyes thoughtful. He looked out over the shattered city, seeing not just rubble, but the architecture of a tormented soul. "He is a reflection of what you could have been, brother. If you had let your grief over our father consume you entirely. If you had chosen only the storm, and never learned the calm that must follow."
Zeus didn’t argue. He followed Hades’s gaze, his own expression turning inward. "We all have our storms. I channel mine. He is drowning in his." He clapped a hand on Hades’s shoulder, the gesture surprisingly solid and brotherly. "You did well. Better than I expected. Talking to the living is your... lesser talent."
A dry, humorless laugh escaped Hades. "My talents lie in ruling the countless dead, not in counseling the one living man who could potentially drown the world in blood. It is a strange task you set for me."
"But you did it," Zeus said, his voice firm. "You reached him. Or at least, you chipped a crack in that Spartan armor of his. That’s more than anyone else has managed."
Hades nodded slowly, then turned fully to face Zeus. The mantle of the Underworld seemed to settle more heavily on his shoulders. "I have done my part, Zeus. The seed is planted. Whether it grows in the ash of his soul or is choked out by his rage... that is no longer in my hands. The living, and their choices, are your domain."
He took a step back, and the shadows of the ruins began to coil around his feet, deepening and thickening. The air grew cold. "My kingdom awaits. The dead do not counsel themselves."
Zeus stood alone as the shadows swallowed his brother, leaving only the faint, cold scent of damp earth and stone. The charge in the air dissipated, leaving the ruins to their grim silence once more.
He looked toward the horizon, in the direction Kratos had walked. The God of Thunder, the King of Olympus, felt a strange, unfamiliar pang—not of pity, but of a grim understanding. He saw the long, hard road ahead for the Spartan, a road he himself had narrowly avoided.
"He has his gaze already," Zeus murmured to the empty wind, repeating his earlier thought about Persephone and Hades, but now with a new, darker meaning. "And now, he has his first doubt."
A single, dry lightning bolt crackled high in the clear sky above, a silent, unseen promise of storms yet to come. Then, he too was gone, and the dead city was left with only the whispering dust as a witness.