Obaze_Emmanuel

Chapter 312: Olympus — Fractured Council

Chapter 312: Olympus — Fractured Council


The three gods Poseidon had fought earlier had fallen back into retreat, their immortal forms shattered, scattered into ether that crawled back to their thrones for rebirth. But more eyes now turned to him.


Zephyros.


Nymera.


Seraphin.


And beyond them, the countless watchers of the Pantheon.


Their thrones trembled. Not out of reverence. Out of fear.


---


The Mortal Shore


On the coastline below, mortals cowered. Entire villages had fled inland, watching as waves higher than mountains rose in silence. It was not storm. It was not chaos. It was order—Poseidon’s order. Every ripple aligned to his will, every tide pulled with his breath.


Yet they trembled, not because of the water alone, but because of what lingered within it. Shapes—vast, ancient, forgotten. Leviathans that had not stirred since the world was molten now writhed like infants at his call. Their shadows eclipsed the sea floor, their spines broke the surface like black ridges of jagged mountain chains.


The fishermen, who once prayed to nameless currents, fell to their knees.


"The god has risen," one whispered.


"The drowned lord claims the land," another added, voice breaking.


But Poseidon did not answer them. Mortals were not his enemy.


Far above, the halls of Olympus trembled under the weight of debate.


Zephyros’s wings lashed, scattering sparks of divine lightning as he struck the council table. "He is no longer contained! Three of ours were broken! If we do not end this, he will pull Olympus itself into the sea!"


Nymera, veiled in shadows, only smiled thinly. "Perhaps that is what is deserved. You were too eager to bind the oceans, too eager to starve his kind in the Rift. Tell me, sky-king—do you quake because he is dangerous, or because he is justified?"


"Do not mistake justice for annihilation," hissed Seraphin, flames wreathing her frame. "That... creature is not merely Poseidon. He carries Thalorin’s essence. The abyss walks with him. If he unseals the Forgotten Tides, no god—no pantheon—will stand."


The chamber fell into silence. They all knew she was right.


Yet none dared step forward.


None, except Aegirion.


The young god of tides rose, trident echoing Poseidon’s own in shape, though dimmer, weaker. His gaze swept across the council, voice steady. "Then I will go. He is of the sea. If anyone can reach him—it will be me."


Zephyros snarled. "You will die."


"Then better me," Aegirion replied, "than another who sees him only as an enemy."


---


Poseidon’s Vigil


Back upon the roaring sea, Poseidon stood alone atop the rising spire of water that carried him high above the horizon. His gaze pierced both sea and sky. His enemies were many, their fear palpable. But within, he felt a split.


The tide whispered vengeance. Thalorin’s essence throbbed in his chest, urging him to crush Olympus beneath the waves, to drown the council halls in silence eternal.


Yet deeper still... a memory stirred. A boy’s voice. His own. Dominic.


Do not lose yourself.


His fist clenched, water spiraling tighter around his body until it shimmered like armor. He was Poseidon. And he would decide what that name meant—not the Pantheon, not the abyss, not even Thalorin.


The ocean behind him groaned as leviathans rolled beneath the surface, awaiting command. With a single thought, he could unleash them upon Olympus. With another, he could retreat, consolidate, rise slower.


But hesitation was a weapon his enemies would not allow.


Because as the thought crossed his mind, Olympus struck first.


--


A spear of lightning, thicker than any stormbolt, lanced down from the sky. It carved through the air with screaming fury, striking Poseidon’s sea-spire dead center.


The explosion lit the horizon. Mortals shielded their eyes as the ocean split open, the sound louder than any thunder.


When the light cleared, the sea collapsed inward, waves roaring as if the world itself were cracking. For a moment, Poseidon’s form vanished beneath the foam.


The gods watching above allowed themselves a breath.


But only one.


The sea froze.


Every droplet, every wave, suspended mid-crash. And from the stillness rose a figure wreathed in blue light, eyes burning like abyssal stars.


Poseidon. Unharmed.


"You strike lightning against the ocean?" His voice carried, layered, booming across the world. "Then drown in your arrogance."


The still sea moved. Not outward. Upward. A pillar of water rose like a serpent, jaws wide, and hurled itself toward Olympus itself.


The gods reeled, but Aegirion leapt first. Diving from the council spire, his trident cutting a streak of silver light, he plunged toward the rising water-serpent.


"Brother of tides!" he cried, though the winds swallowed half his words. "Do not lose yourself!"


Poseidon’s gaze snapped to him, unreadable. The serpent froze mid-strike.


The two tridents clashed.


The sound was not metal. It was the crash of continents, the roar of storms colliding. A wave of force blasted outward, scattering clouds, bending the sea. Mortals on the shore were thrown to their knees. Leviathans writhed, uncertain.


"Brother?" Poseidon asked, voice cold.


Aegirion’s grip trembled. "Yes. You were forgotten. You were chained. But I am here now. Not all gods seek your ruin. Let me stand with you—"


But before he could finish, a dozen more divine lances tore from the sky. Seraphin’s flames, Zephyros’s lightning, Nymera’s shadows—all rained upon the ocean lord.


And the choice was gone.


---


Wrath of the Tide


Poseidon roared.


The ocean answered.


Waves like mountains erupted, meeting fire, lightning, and shadow in a cacophony that shook the earth itself. Entire islands cracked apart as the divine barrage clashed with the tide’s fury. The sea boiled under flame, froze under shadow, screamed under lightning.


And at the center—Poseidon stood unbroken, his strikes precise, his will absolute. For every god that fell upon him, the sea rose higher to meet them.


But with each surge, he felt it.


The abyss whispering louder.


Thalorin clawing from within.


More... more... drown them all.


Poseidon gritted his teeth. He would not yield. He would not let the abyss own his name.


But the gods pressed harder.


And the battle for Olympus—and the mortal world below—had only begun.