Chapter 318: Free...
The ocean was too quiet.
It was not the quiet of calm seas, nor the hush of morning tides. It was the kind of silence that made even the gods hesitate — a pause before something inevitable broke loose. The storm Poseidon had called weeks ago no longer raged with winds or lightning. Instead, the clouds hung like bruises above the horizon, waiting, watching, listening.
Deep beneath that silence, the abyss stirred.
Poseidon stood at the edge of a trench so deep it had no name in mortal tongues. His trident pulsed faintly, resonating with the heartbeat of the world. The water pressed around him not as an enemy but as a cloak, folding into his breath, his blood, his bones.
Behind him, the sea-dwelling host he had summoned waited. Leviathans coiled like mountains in the shadows. Armored warriors — not mortals, not gods, but beings sculpted from brine and will — hovered in disciplined silence, each gaze fixed on their lord. Even the currents bent toward him, every eddy pulling into alignment, every fish stilled in anticipation.
Poseidon was not Dominic anymore. That fragile boy, that fleeting mortal shell, had long been drowned. What stood here was a god reborn, sharpened by wrath, tempered by betrayal, and bound no longer by Olympus’s decrees.
And yet, even as he ruled the sea, Poseidon’s thoughts darkened. He knew Olympus had not been idle. Since the battle with the three gods — since his declaration before the Council of the Azure Seat — they had been mustering their might. Zeus’s storms had begun to choke the skies above mortal kingdoms, Hera’s whispers turned rulers against one another, and Ares sharpened his sword for the inevitable war.
Olympus was preparing to strike.
But Poseidon would not wait for their blade.
---
The Abyss Trembles
The trench beneath Poseidon groaned. It was not stone that shifted, nor water, but something older — chains, vast and rusted, straining against an ancient lock. From the darkness below came a sound that rattled even the leviathans: the sound of breath. Slow, labored, colossal.
A single word rippled upward, carried in bubbles of black:
"Free..."
The abyss wanted release.
Poseidon lowered his trident, and the sea responded. Currents swirled downward, spiraling into the trench. The chains glowed faintly, sigils of Olympus shimmering across them. He knew what was bound here. He had known since the night the Forgotten Tides had whispered his name.
The abyss did not merely hold monsters. It held the gods’ sins — those they had cast down, chained, and buried beneath the world so they could reign unchallenged. Titans too dangerous to kill. Primordials too vast to control. Beasts too hungry to leash.
And now, the abyss strained toward him, like a prisoner recognizing its liberator.
Poseidon’s jaw tightened. "Not yet," he murmured, though his voice echoed like thunder in the deep. "You will rise when I command it — not before."
The abyss growled back, but it obeyed. For now.
---
On Olympus
Far above, Olympus blazed with light.
Zeus stood at the peak of the storm-crowned mountain, lightning shivering across his frame. His council gathered beneath him, every throne filled, every god watching the dark horizon where the seas no longer moved by their will.
"He’s stirring the Abyss," Zeus said flatly.
Hera narrowed her eyes, her fingers curling around her scepter. "Impossible. The seals are layered with a dozen divine decrees. Not even Thalorin could—"
"It is not Thalorin," Athena cut in, her grey eyes sharp as steel. "It is Poseidon. Reborn, renewed, and unbound by the pacts of the old age. The chains weaken because the sea itself bends to him. The longer we wait, the more those locks corrode."
A murmur rippled across the gathered gods. Some were eager, their blades already half drawn. Others were wary, remembering how Poseidon had shattered the last triad sent against him.
Zeus raised his hand, silencing them all. "War is no longer optional. If Poseidon unseals the Abyss, he will not merely rule the seas. He will unleash what we buried — and none of Olympus will stand."
The decree was spoken.
Olympus would march
Far below, mortals already whispered Poseidon’s name in both prayer and dread. Fishermen along the coasts left offerings of salt and blood. Sailors carved tridents into their hulls for protection. Kings sent priests to temples begging the seas for mercy.
But Poseidon did not answer prayers. Not anymore.
His silence was worse than his wrath. It told the mortals that their gods above could not shield them. That their fates were already tilting, as inevitable as the tide.
And still, the sea rose higher each day.
Poseidon lifted his trident again, and the ocean obeyed. A wall of water rose around him, not as a wave but as a throne, carrying him upward until he stood above his army, above the leviathans, above the very trench.
His voice thundered through the deep, carrying miles beyond mortal shores:
"Olympus readies its war. But I am the sea. I do not fear their fire. I do not kneel to their thunder. I am the abyss they chained and the tide they feared. And I say this: when Olympus strikes, we strike harder. When Olympus bleeds, we flood their mountains red."
The ocean roared with him. Leviathans bellowed. Tides surged. The abyss growled in hunger.
Poseidon lowered his trident, and in its reflection he saw not Dominic, not the fragile boy who had once begged for life, but the god he was always meant to become. His eyes burned with blue flame, and the water bent around him like living armor.
The war had not yet begun.
But the Abyss was opening.
And Olympus would soon learn what it meant to wage war against the sea itself.
The night over Olympus was not like mortal night. No stars dared to move unless the gods permitted them. No winds shifted unless they were commanded. But on this night, the sky itself quivered, dimming to a bruised twilight.
And beneath the marble spires of the godly realm, the abyss stirred.