Chapter 293: Olympus Prepares
The night sky above Olympus was blacker than ink, a void where stars seemed too afraid to shine. The silence that hung over the mountain was not peace, but anticipation—a tension that came when even gods knew something larger than them had awakened.
Far below the summit, temples trembled. Mortal priests scattered, carrying torches that flickered as if the flame itself feared suffocation. The mountain’s rivers, once serene, churned upward as though pulled by some unseen tide. And in the depths of the earth, Poseidon stirred.
Not the gentle lord of seas painted in old hymns.
Not the patron deity of sailors, worshipped with wine and salt.
But the new Poseidon. The one reborn through mortal blood, forged in the abyss, carrying with him the hunger of Thalorin’s drowned eternity.
The world no longer knew whether to call him savior or calamity.
On the high throne of marble and fire, Zeus himself stood with eyes like storm-lanterns. The king of the skies had long commanded thunder, but tonight, for the first time in centuries, the lightning at his fingertips flickered uncertainly.
Behind him gathered the gods of Olympus. Athena, her spear gleaming with runes etched in cold logic. Ares, armor dripping with the scent of blood and war. Hera, robes flowing, her face carved from stone. And others—Hephaestus with hammer in hand, Apollo clutching his lyre that burned like the sun, Artemis cloaked in night-hunt shadows.
But the gods were not unified.
"He has drowned another city," Artemis whispered, voice sharp as an arrowhead. "Do you not feel it? The tide is climbing past mortal shores. He isn’t hiding anymore. Poseidon claims dominion."
Ares snorted, slamming his spear against the obsidian floor. "Good. A war worth fighting at last."
Athena cut in, eyes narrowing. "Fool. This is no battle of blades. This is ideology made flesh. Poseidon has become something older than Olympus itself. If we treat him as a mere rebel, we will drown with the mortals."
Zeus raised his hand. Sparks danced between his fingers. His voice carried like rolling thunder:
"Enough. Poseidon is one of us. He was once my brother. But he has chosen another path. If he comes for Olympus, he will find not mortals to crush beneath waves, but gods armed with storms."
The council chamber vibrated with his words, but beneath the bravado, each deity felt the same weight. Poseidon had broken the walls of the Forgotten Tides. He carried within him an abyss none of them had ever conquered.
And already, the sea was climbing Olympus’s roots.
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The Mortal Realm
Far below, in the city of Eleusis where pilgrims prayed to the gods of harvest, chaos reigned.
The earth split open, not with fire, but with water. Wells gushed rivers that clawed through streets. Statues of Demeter toppled as their bases drowned. Mortals screamed as their homes tilted, pulled by the weight of a tide that came from nowhere.
But amid the panic, some knelt. Some raised their hands to the blackened sky.
"Praise Poseidon!" a sailor cried, chest bare, saltwater dripping from his beard. "At last, a god who answers!"
And there it was—the most dangerous shift of all. Worship. Not through temples of Olympus, but through terror, through awe, through inevitability. The sea gave no choice but surrender. And mortals, desperate and afraid, chose to kneel to the tide.
With every voice that called his name, Poseidon’s presence thickened, a crown of pressure wrapping around the earth.
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The Abyss Awakens
Deep beneath the mountain’s veins, Poseidon opened his eyes.
They glowed with abyssal blue, like lanterns at the bottom of a trench where no light should ever reach. His body was not bound by flesh as mortals understood it—he was water given form, salt and sorrow woven into muscle and will.
But it was not just him anymore.
Something else whispered in the marrow of his being.
Thalorin.
The drowned god, the abyss without end.
Though Poseidon had claimed dominion over his rebirth, the echo of Thalorin lingered. Not as master. Not as parasite. But as inheritance.
And tonight, as Olympus stirred above, the whisper grew louder.
"Claim them," it urged. "Drown their thrones. Shatter their skies. The world was water before their fire. It will be water again."
Poseidon stood. The cavern shook as if the mountain itself recognized its undoing. When he stepped forward, water followed, veins of the sea bleeding into rock. He was no longer waiting. No longer leaning.
The tide was rising.
On Olympus, Zeus raised his hand. Lightning speared the sky, tearing it open with brilliance that blinded mortals for miles. The mountain shone like a beacon of wrath.
"Brother!" his voice thundered across realms, heard even in drowned cities and trembling temples. "If you still call yourself Poseidon, then come forth! Prove you are not yet lost!"
And Poseidon answered.
The sea surged upward in a single colossal wave, higher than the mountain itself. For one breathless moment, mortals across the world looked up and saw a wall of water blotting out the stars.
It did not crash. It did not break.
It simply stood, as though the ocean itself had chosen to climb Olympus like a beast returning to its den.
At its peak, Poseidon stepped from the crest. His trident gleamed, forged from abyssal pressure and storm. His gaze cut across Olympus’s marble halls, unblinking, unyielding.
"I am no longer your brother," he said, voice resonant as the sea in every ear. "I am no longer chained to your council. I am the tide. I am the abyss. I am Poseidon—reborn."
The mountain quaked. Gods gripped their weapons. Mortals screamed prayers.
And Olympus prepared for war.
The battlefield smelled of iron and salt.
Ash fell from the sky like gray snow, drifting across a landscape that no longer resembled mortal soil. The sea had swallowed whole cities in Poseidon’s advance, and now the land where the armies of gods and mortals clashed had become something between earth and ocean—marsh, reef, drowned ruins. Every step squelched in mud that bled brine. Every breath tasted of storm.
At the heart of it all stood Poseidon
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Author’s Note
This Chapter sets the stage for Poseidon’s first direct confrontation with Olympus—the gods gathered, the mortals drowning, and Poseidon ascending the mountain with Thalorin’s abyss whispering inside him.