Chapter 306: The Prison Tartarus
The skies above Olympus were restless.
Clouds that should have been white and radiant were heavy with ash-grey swirls, drawn not from storm but from unease. The mountain itself groaned as though the weight of divine presence pressed harder than usual. Every god had been summoned—every seat in the great hall was filled.
The Olympian Court had not convened in full since the Titanomachy. That it did so now could only mean one thing: war among themselves.
Zeus sat at the center, thunder cracking faintly across his bronze cuirass. His storm-grey eyes moved from face to face, lingering on those who looked hesitant. A ruler could smell hesitation more than he could smell fear, and both were dangerous in council.
The gods of Olympus waited in silence until Zeus rose. His voice, when it came, rolled like a decree of the sky itself.
"The time for hesitation has passed. Poseidon—" he spat the name like venom, "—has grown beyond restraint. He floods harbors, bends the mortal world into his tide, and undermines the order we bled to build. Already, the whispers of Thalorin ripple beneath his waves. If we do not act, Olympus itself will drown."
A rumble went through the hall. Some gods nodded grimly. Others, like Hestia, frowned, her flame wavering uncertainly.
Athena stood. Her armor shimmered faintly in the flickering light. "We cannot ignore the truth. Poseidon is no longer merely our brother. He has become something else—part god, part abyss. If his essence is allowed to fully merge with that ancient drowned power, then even Olympus will not withstand him."
Ares slammed a fist on the table, his eyes alight with eagerness. "Then enough talk. Let us take up spear and sword and strike him down now. Give me but a legion of my war-hosts, and I’ll drive him back into the sea!"
"Fool," Athena snapped. "Have you not seen the tides? Entire cities swallowed without storm or quake. He does not fight as we do. He bends the world itself. Armies would drown before their blades left their scabbards."
"Then what?" Hera’s voice cut across them, sharp as a knife. She sat with her crown gleaming, her gaze heavy on Zeus. "Do you propose to kill him? Your own brother?"
Silence.
The word lingered like smoke in the air. Kill.
Even the thought seemed to make Olympus uneasy. The gods could feud, they could strike, they could bind—but kill one of their own? That was something none said aloud.
Zeus’s face hardened. His hand clenched around the haft of his scepter. "If he leaves us no choice, then yes. But before blood, there is stone. Before blade, there are chains."
"Chains?" Hephaestus rumbled, his voice like fire grinding against an anvil. He leaned forward, one eye gleaming with curiosity.
"Yes." Zeus turned to him. "You will forge bindings unlike any wrought before. Shackles drawn from the bones of the earth, tempered in the flames of Olympus, sealed with our combined might. Chains fit to hold even a god."
"Tartarus," Hera whispered, realization dawning in her eyes.
The hall went colder. Even the bravest gods shifted in their seats. Tartarus—the abyss within the abyss. Prison of titans, monsters, and nightmares that not even death could claim. To consign one of their own to Tartarus was unthinkable.
But Zeus spoke as though the decision was already made. "We will not slay him. Not yet. We will cast him down. Imprison him where his waves cannot reach, where his voice cannot ripple into the mortal world. Only there will Olympus know peace again."
Hermes, ever the sly one, raised an eyebrow. "And you think Poseidon will walk willingly into these chains?"
Zeus’s eyes glimmered with stormlight. "He need not walk. He will be brought."
---
Dissent in the Court
Hestia stood, her flame wavering brighter, almost pleading. "Have we forgotten what we are? We are gods of balance, of domains that weave the world together. Poseidon is the sea itself—how long do you think the world will stand if we tear him from it? The ocean is not an enemy to be caged. It is life. Without it—"
"Without it, we will drown," Hera snapped.
"Athena is right," added Apollo, his eyes glowing with restrained light. "The vessel he has become is unstable. If the abyss within him consumes him fully, it will not matter that he is our brother. He will be no different than the titans we cast into the pit."
"Perhaps worse," Artemis murmured. "The titans were destruction. But he—he is patience. He is inevitability. Already the tides bend to his moods. What will the world look like in a hundred years if he is left unchecked?"
The council broke into murmurs again, voices rising, echoing against marble walls. Hephaestus stroked his beard, already turning in his mind the shape of chains that could bind a god. Hermes whispered to Demeter, whose green eyes blazed with worry of crops failing when coastlines were swallowed. Dionysus simply drank, his silence speaking louder than words.
Finally, Zeus lifted his scepter and slammed it against the floor. The sound silenced all others.
"It is decided." His voice shook the rafters. "By decree of Olympus, Poseidon is to be bound. He will be struck down, chained, and cast into Tartarus. Any god who stands in the way of this judgment will be treated as his ally, and share his fate."
Lightning crackled across the chamber, sealing the decree.
---
The Plan
When the council dismissed, the plotting began in earnest.
Athena drafted strategies, maps of coastal cities, and points where Poseidon’s influence was strongest. She marked them as traps, not battlefields—ambushes where the gods might descend together.
Hermes would serve as the lure, carrying false omens and whispers into mortal lands, steering Poseidon’s attention where they wanted him to look.
Ares rallied his war-hosts, not to fight directly, but to die as distractions, mortal shields to thin the drowned god’s focus.
And Hephaestus withdrew into his forge, the mountain trembling as he hammered and roared, drawing sparks of forgotten fire into shackles whose links weighed heavier than mountains. Each blow echoed with divine finality.
All while Zeus stood above, gazing out from Olympus into the stormless seas below.
"Brother," he murmured, his voice swallowed by the wind. "You think yourself tide, inevitable and eternal. But even tides obey the moon. And I am the sky."
Thunder rumbled, not in anger, but in grim certainty.
---
In the Deep
Far below, where no god’s eye yet reached, Poseidon opened his own.
The waves whispered to him. The harbor he had drowned still slept in silence, its ruins cradled in salt. But his awareness stretched further now, beyond coastlines, beyond seas. He felt Olympus stirring, felt the weight of eyes upon him.
And deep, deep beneath, Thalorin laughed.
"They fear you, vessel. They plot against you, as they always did. They dress their fear as law, their hunger as justice. Do you not see? This is what they are. This is what they always were."
Poseidon’s grip tightened around his trident. The ocean around him quivered in response.
"I see them," he said softly. "I see the chains they dream of. I see Tartarus in their minds."
"And will you let them bind you?" Thalorin whispered, voice like currents dragging a shipwreck.
Poseidon’s eyes gleamed with abyssal light. "Let them try."
The sea surged outward with his words, waves hammering distant shores, a silent promise carried across every tide.
War was coming.
And Olympus had chosen chains.