Chapter 278: The ocean dome
The battlefield was no longer mortal.
Above the ruins of the drowned coastline, the sky itself had cracked, spilling threads of celestial light across black waters that churned endlessly below. Stars flickered in and out, as though Poseidon’s awakening tides were devouring their reflections before they could shine.
The gods had sent no heralds, no warnings. They came themselves.
Three deities stood across the water’s surface, their feet never sinking, their divine radiance resisting the pull of the abyss. Each one bore centuries of dominion, their names whispered in temples and carved into the bones of empires.
Zephyros, the Lord of Sky and Judgment, his wings stretched like thunderclouds, eyes burning with daylight fire.
Seraphin, the Flame Queen, her skin traced in molten cracks, her hair a crown of eternal embers.
Nymera, the Mistress of Shadows, her body cloaked in absence, every step swallowing sound.
Together, they were execution.
And they had come for him.
Poseidon rose from the ocean as if the water itself built his body anew. Salt cascaded from his shoulders, his eyes like abyssal chasms lit with drowned stars. Every movement bent the sea to his will—waves froze mid-crash, then peeled away as though bowing.
"You three think yourselves storms," Poseidon’s voice thundered, rolling like a tidal quake, "but you are nothing but ripples cast by frightened gods."
Zephyros lifted his spear of lightning, his voice booming with decree. "You are no god. You are corruption wearing a mortal’s husk. You will fall here, drowned one."
Poseidon smiled—not mockery, but hunger. "Fall? I am the ocean. Tell me, Judge of Skies... how do you strike what lies beneath your clouds?"
Before the words finished, the sea erupted.
Zephyros dove first, lightning ripping across the sky, his wings scattering bolts like shattered suns. The air split with roaring cracks as he hurled his spear downward.
Poseidon raised one hand.
The water obeyed.
A column rose, swallowing the lightning spear whole. The electricity burned through it, hissing steam into the night—but the sea only grew larger, twisting around Zephyros like a living coil.
Seraphin joined, flames tearing across the horizon, turning the very air into wildfire. She did not hurl her power recklessly; her fire bent inward, shaping into spears that hardened like volcanic glass. They rained upon Poseidon.
He did not dodge.
The ocean rose to meet them. Each spear hissed and boiled, turning the battlefield into a curtain of fog. From within that steam, Poseidon’s silhouette loomed, vast and unbroken.
"Do you not see?" Poseidon’s voice echoed through the mist. "Your fire feeds me. Your storms stir me. Even your shadows, Nymera, will drown in me."
Nymera moved at last. She slipped into the fog, her form dissolving into void. Her blades, forged from the absence of light itself, whispered against the water as though cutting silence.
From behind Poseidon, her shadow dagger struck toward his spine.
It pierced water.
But the water was his flesh.
The dagger dissolved into the tide, swallowed whole, and Nymera found herself staring into eyes blacker than her own shadows.
"You hide in absence," Poseidon whispered, close enough that her breath caught. "But the sea has no absence. Even in its depths, it holds weight, pressure, silence that crushes."
The wave struck her. A single gesture, and a wall of water blasted her form across the battlefield. She staggered, her shadows unraveling under the sheer density of his tide.
Yet they did not relent.
Zephyros’s lightning rained again, this time searing through the sea, evaporating waves before they could form. Seraphin unleashed her infernos at boiling intensity, flames carving space within the ocean’s grip.
For every wave Poseidon raised, they broke two. For every strike he unleashed, they countered with divine wrath sharpened by centuries of mastery.
The sea roared with each impact, salt spray and steam turning the battlefield into a storm without wind.
But Poseidon’s grin only widened.
"Three gods," he said, stepping forward through fire and lightning as though walking through mist. "Three gods to bind one ocean. Do you not see how pathetic that is?"
He raised his hand high. The horizon bent.
The sea lifted—not as waves, not as spray, but as an entire wall of ocean, miles high, curving into a single vast dome above them. The battlefield drowned in shadow beneath it. Mortals far away would later call it the night the sky itself turned into water.
Zephyros shouted. "Break it! Now!"
The three unleashed everything—thunder, fire, shadow. Their powers tore through the air, colliding with the dome. Lightning split oceans, fire boiled miles of water, shadow gnawed at its edges.
But the wall did not collapse.
It descended.
The gods were buried in sea.
There was no sound, only the crushing silence of abyssal weight.
Zephyros’s wings faltered, lightning dimmed under pressure. Seraphin’s fire sputtered, her molten aura reduced to dull glow. Nymera’s shadows scattered into nothing—down here, there was no room for absence, only density.
Poseidon swam among them like the abyss given form.
He moved not as a man, but as the current itself, everywhere at once. His hands reached, and tides followed. His voice echoed in the water, not as sound, but as truth.
"You breathe borrowed air. You wield fire stolen from creation. You dance in light and shadow, pretending at power."
His eyes blazed like abyssal lanterns.
"I am power. I am the first womb. The last grave. The ocean."
He struck.
One motion, and Zephyros was hurled upward, breaking through miles of water only to crash into the shattered sky, his body sparking with broken lightning.
Another sweep, and Seraphin’s fire was quenched. Steam poured from her lungs as she screamed against drowning flames, her molten armor cracking under pressure.
Nymera tried to flee into shadow. Poseidon closed his hand. Her shadows collapsed like shattered glass, leaving her gasping, naked in the tide’s weight.
The ocean dome collapsed back into the sea.
Zephyros fell like a broken star, slamming into the waves. Seraphin floated, her flames guttering like dying candles. Nymera crawled onto a drifting mast, coughing brine.
And Poseidon stood, towering upon the waves, untouched, unbroken, his hair dripping salt and his eyes glowing like abyssal stars.
"This," he declared, his voice shaking the heavens, "is not a battle. This is reminder. Your reigns are fragile. Your temples false. And your thrones carved upon my bones."
He spread his arms, and the sea answered—thousands of voices rising in a chorus that was not sound but tide, not prayer but inevitability.
"I am awake. And I do not kneel."
The horizon itself seemed to tilt as his words spread. Mortals in distant lands woke screaming of the sea’s call. Ships in far harbors listed as unseen currents dragged them. Storms rose where no clouds stood.
And the gods, broken and gasping, realized the truth.
This was no vessel. No corrupted husk.
This was Poseidon reborn.
And he was no longer hiding.