Chapter 353: The Pantheon Fractures
The battlefield still stank of brine and burning.
Charred stone pillars leaned like broken ribs, their shadows dancing beneath the blood-red moon. The corpses of gods did not rot like mortals; instead, they leaked fragments of essence — rivers of fire, smoke, and fractured starlight spilling across the ruined plain.
Zephyros, the God of Sky and Judgment, lay shattered where Poseidon’s trident had cleaved him. His once-immortal wings had withered into brittle husks of lightning. Seraphin’s flames sputtered low, ash scattering into the salt winds. Nymera’s shadowed cloak had been ripped apart, its strands devoured by the sea itself.
Three gods. Three eternal names, whispered since the dawn of time. Gone.
Poseidon stood amidst their remains, his chest rising and falling slowly, like waves brushing a shore. The trident in his hand pulsed with a light deeper than oceans. His body bled — ichor dripping like glowing blue threads — but his gaze never faltered.
He stared at the fallen gods, and in the silence that followed their destruction, he felt the shift.
The pantheon would never be the same again.
---
The Mortal Realms Tremble
In the mortal harbors and drowned cities, the people felt it.
Fishermen collapsed mid-prayer as their nets tore open, spilling silver-scaled fish that shimmered with fragments of divine flame. Children woke screaming from dreams of broken wings and endless waves. Merchants in temples felt their sacred icons crack, their faces eroded by invisible tides.
Bells tolled without hands striking them. Rivers reversed their course. Oceans rose and stilled in the same breath.
The world itself whispered a truth too vast to ignore.
Poseidon had killed gods.
Far above, in the halls of Olympus, chaos reigned.
The council chamber once stood as the seat of order — coral pillars, marble veined with starfire, seashell thrones carved for eternity. Now, its walls groaned beneath divine anger.
Gods slammed their weapons onto the floor, voices echoing like thunder.
"This cannot stand!" roared Thaleus, the God of the Forge, sparks flying from his bronze beard. "If Poseidon fells three, what keeps him from felling us all?"
"Then we unite!" cried Callianeira, Goddess of the Silver Tides. "Strike him while he bleeds, before his dominion grows stronger!"
But others did not speak of unity. They whispered of fear.
"What if we fail?" murmured Erynthe, the Weeper of Rivers. "Zephyros was judgment itself, Seraphin fire incarnate, Nymera the shadow that bound balance. If all three are gone... how do we measure our worth against him?"
Their voices fractured the hall like lightning through glass. Half demanded vengeance. Half spoke only of retreat, of hiding in realms Poseidon’s tides could not yet reach.
And watching them all, silent, was Aegirion.
The young sea-god clenched his trident tighter. He had once pitied Poseidon — seen Dominic in him, seen humanity. But now? Now Poseidon’s eyes no longer bore even a flicker of Dominic’s soul.
And yet, Aegirion could not join the calls for vengeance.
Because deep in his heart, he feared the council had already lost.
Beneath the shattered battlefield, Poseidon stood by the sea.
The waters curled around his ankles, whispering. Each wave carried voices of drowned cities, of mortals crying his name not in prayer, but in awe and fear.
"Poseidon," they whispered. "Drowned God. Storm Lord. Abyss King."
He should have felt triumph. The pantheon had sought his end, and instead, he had ended theirs.
But within his chest, there was only silence.
He lifted his gaze to the stars. Once, as Dominic, he had looked to those same stars for hope. Now they recoiled from his presence, veiling themselves behind clouds that weren’t there.
"You’re too quiet," Poseidon murmured.
And from the depths of his soul, Thalorin stirred.
A chuckle, dark as the abyss. Quiet? No, boy. I am listening. And I am pleased.
Poseidon’s grip tightened on his trident. "You think this victory is yours."
Ours, Thalorin corrected. Every drop of blood spilled, every god broken, is the tide’s memory reclaiming what was denied. You are no longer Dominic. You are no longer a vessel. You are the sea unchained. Together, we are inevitable.
Poseidon closed his eyes. He remembered Aegirion’s voice, begging him once to resist. To remain human. To choose mercy.
But mercy had drowned with the bell.
Still, a whisper inside him resisted. It was faint, a remnant, but it was there.
"Then let them come," Poseidon whispered to the horizon. "If they want war, they will see what the abyss truly holds."
The waves surged in answer.
Olympus had not been Poseidon’s only audience.
In the shadow-realms beyond the pantheon, where the Forgotten Tides still writhed in their chains, old gods stirred. They had slept for eons, bound in prisons of silence, exiled when the world was young.
Now, with each god Poseidon struck down, their chains loosened.
They whispered his name, not as enemy... but as herald.
"Poseidon..." hissed one voice, slithering through drowned caverns.
"The breaker of seals..." growled another, echoing from trenches deeper than light.
And in the silence of the mortal night, those who dreamed saw visions not of Poseidon alone, but of what followed in his wake. Leviathans. Abyssal courts. A crown made not of coral, but of broken divine sigils.
The world had gained a god-slayer. But it might awaken something far worse.
---
The Verdict of Olympus
At last, the council of gods forced a decision.
The high arbiter, her face pale as bone, struck her staff upon the floor.
"By decree of Olympus," she intoned, her voice heavy as tides, "Poseidon is no longer one of us. He is anathema. His dominion is exile. His name, curse. From this moment, we are at war."
Her words rolled through the divine halls like thunder. Sigils cracked, breaking Poseidon’s name from the pantheon’s walls.
A war not just of gods against god — but of order against abyss.
On the mortal shore, Poseidon knelt in the water.
His trident’s light pulsed, carrying the echoes of gods he had slain. Their fragments drifted into him — Zephyros’s judgment, Seraphin’s fire, Nymera’s shadow. Not whole, not pure, but shards nonetheless.
The sea accepted them. The abyss welcomed them.
Poseidon felt the surge of strength. Yet he knew the truth — Olympus would not relent. They would come in greater numbers. They would unleash powers not seen since the First Drowning.
And when they did, he would meet them.
Not as Dominic.
Not as vessel.
But as Poseidon — Abyss King, breaker of pantheons.
The silence after the storm would not last.
The next tide would rise higher.