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Alright — I’ll make Chapter 172 — The Leaning Sea in full webnovel style, 1500 words, with Poseidon already nad as such and his influence beginning to manifest in large, undeniable ways.

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Chapter 172 — The Leaning Sea

The first thing the harbor guards noticed was the waterline.

It was wrong.

The tide had not just co in early — it had co in sideways. Instead of rising evenly along the seawall, the surface tilted, as if so colossal hand were pushing the whole harbor toward the east. The ships at anchor groaned and leaned in their moorings, their hulls straining against ropes that had never been tested like this.

The guards called for the dockmaster, who ca running, but by then the angle had shifted again. The water swayed like a great bowl being moved across a table, sloshing from one side to the other without wind or wave.

And yet, beyond the breakwater, the open sea was calm.

---

In the markets, people began to feel it in their bones.

Seasickness in the middle of dry streets. A slow, dizzy pull in the stomach, as though their bodies were trying to sway with a motion they couldn’t see. Old sailors sat pale and silent, their hands gripping the edges of tables.

The magisters’ apprentices ran to the upper towers to check the wards on the harbor, but all were intact. The spells that repelled storms and steadied the tides had not been disturbed.

Yet the sea moved anyway.

---

In the Vault of Currents, Veyrus stared into the scrying pool.

The surface was no longer perfectly black. Thin threads of silver light curled upward from its depths like strands of hair drifting in water. They wove together in slow spirals, never breaking the surface, but bright enough to illuminate the vaulted ceiling.

"You’re pushing," he muttered.

Poseidon’s voice ca smooth and cold. I am breathing.

"This city will resist you."

A low chuckle, like distant thunder beneath the waves. You say that as though the sea ever asked permission to enter the land.

Veyrus gripped the rim of the pool. "If you breach the Seal—"

If? The word rolled like a tide, patient and inevitable. I do not need to break your Seal. The sea cos when I call. The land will lean into until it cannot stand without my hand to hold it.

---

Offshore, the spiral storm had doubled in width.

It was no longer a perfect circle. Long, curving arms of cloud reached outward like grasping fingers, stretching over shipping lanes, blotting out the sun. The air beneath those clouds was not hot or cold — it was heavy. Sailors said breathing there was like inhaling through wet cloth.

Birds refused to cross it. Even the great albatrosses that followed ships for hundreds of miles wheeled away at the boundary, their wings shivering.

---

By midday, the fishern who had dared the near waters ca back with empty nets — not because there were no fish, but because the fish swam in perfect spirals beneath the hulls, following invisible currents too strong to fight.

One boat returned with a broken mast, not from wind, but from being pulled in a slow circle until the strain tore the wood apart. The crew swore they heard singing from below, deep and resonant, like the call of a whale, but in a rhythm that was not natural.

The Watcher of Tides went pale when she heard it.

---

In the council chamber, panic finally began to outweigh stubbornness.

rchants demanded answers. Fishern demanded safe routes. Nobles whispered of evacuating the lower districts.

Veyrus spoke without raising his voice. "The na you will hear on the wind is Poseidon. Rember it well. He is not a storm. He is the sea itself, and he is leaning toward us."

One of the guildmasters slamd a hand on the table. "Then seal him tighter!"

Veyrus gave a thin smile. "Would you tell the mountains to grow taller because a shadow falls on them?"

The Watcher’s staff struck the floor. "It is already too late for tighter seals. This is not an escape. This is an invitation."

---

That night, the harbor lights burned until dawn.

And still the sea leaned.

Water climbed the seawalls in unnatural pulses, then drew back so far that the barnacled stones at the base stead in the moonlight.

Children woke crying without knowing why. Dogs barked at the shore until their throats went raw. The air slled of salt even in the high streets.

From the cliff path, the Watcher of Tides watched the spiral storm, its arms stretching farther with each hour. The sea between here and there seed to glow faintly, as though moonlight had been poured beneath its surface.

---

In the trench far below, Poseidon waited.

He did not strain against his chains. He did not roar or rage. He simply breathed, each breath a shift in the currents, each shift tugging at the world above.

Already, he could feel the harbor’s floor tilting.

Already, he could hear the hearts of those who lived there beating faster when they looked out to sea.

Already, the fish swam to his rhythm.

He smiled in the dark.

Not long now.

The day began with no clouds in the sky.

That, more than anything, should have been the first warning.

Sailors knew that a sky without wind was never truly calm. The flags hung limp over the harbor towers, gulls wheeled low and silent, and the sea shimred like molten glass.

And then the lean began.

It was not a wave. Not a tide. Not even a surge. The water simply shifted in its entirety, as though so colossal bowl had been tilted toward the land.

Ships moored at the piers groaned and scraped as their keels touched silt they had no business touching at high tide. The water that should have been beneath them was sliding inward, flowing with slow, unstoppable grace toward the seawall.

Dockhands shouted. Carts were overturned as teams of laborers scrambled to move crates of spice, barrels of oil, and stacks of timber away from the edge.

The harbor master rang the brass alarm bell, but the sound was swallowed by sothing heavier — a deep, resonant hum that seed to co from beneath the very stones.

---

In the cliffside manor above the docks, the Watcher of Tides stood at her balcony.

From here, she could see the sea’s lean clearly. It was no trick of the light — the horizon itself seed slightly skewed, as though her world had been knocked off its axis.

And then, she felt it.

Not wind. Not magic. Him.

Poseidon’s will poured upward through the water like heat through iron. Not violent. Not frenzied. Just... claiming.

This was no wave ant to smash ships. This was an arm curling around the city’s waist.

---

By midmorning, the water had climbed the seawall.

Not over it. Just... against it, higher than it had any right to be. The dry stones that usually towered over the high tide now glistened wet in the sun. Barnacles shifted in the light like blinking eyes.

Children ran to the edges to stare, only to be yanked back by panicked mothers.

Fishern tied their boats higher and higher, muttering prayers.

The priests of the Seven Currents began ringing their shell-bells in frantic patterns ant to repel deep spirits. The sound clashed horribly with the constant low hum that rolled beneath the city.

---

In the Vault of Currents, Veyrus leaned over the scrying pool.

The silver strands had thickened, curling into a single helix that reached toward the surface of the black water. At its core, a deep blue light pulsed in ti with the hum above.

"He’s not testing us anymore," Veyrus whispered. "He’s setting his foundation."

The Watcher’s voice drifted in from the doorway. "You can’t fight a foundation once it’s set."

Veyrus looked up sharply. "Then we stop it before—"

She shook her head. "You don’t stop the sea. You only choose whether to stand, to flee... or to kneel."

---

The market streets began to flood before noon.

It started in the low gutters by the quay — a thin sheet of saltwater creeping up between the cobblestones. It was so slow that at first, rchants thought a barrel had burst sowhere upriver. But when they followed the flow, they found no source... only the seawall, weeping water as though the stone itself had grown porous.

The water did not co in waves. It did not splash. It simply rose, pooling outward in perfect silence.

By the ti the first rchants realized it, their stalls were already surrounded.

---

Down in the drowned alleys, dockhands tried to push the water back with brooms, as though sweeping away rain. But for every stroke, more slid in to replace it — not from the direction they pushed, but from everywhere.

From drains. From cracks in the stones. From the air itself, as condensation thickened into droplets and fell upward from barrels to rejoin the pool.

One dockhand stopped, wide-eyed. "It’s breathing."

---

And in the trench far below, Poseidon did exactly that.

Every inhale drew more water toward him, pulling the sea from the edges of the world. Every exhale pressed it against the city, filling its streets, testing its walls.

He did not roar. He did not break the surface.

He simply filled the shape of himself into the mortal world, a hand sliding into water-worn gloves.

And as he did, he listened.

The creak of old wood in the piers.

The crack of stone where the seawall began to bow.

The pounding of mortal hearts.

---

By evening, the city’s lower quarter was a shallow lagoon.

Children floated on broken doors. Cats perched on rooftop chimneys. rchants carried their goods in bundles above their heads as they waded knee-deep through streets that had never seen the tide.

And still — the sky was clear.

No rain. No storm. No wind.

Just the sea, standing where it had decided to stand.

---

When night fell, the spiral storm far offshore glowed faintly, its arms reaching farther across the horizon than before. But here, in the harbor, the water was perfectly still.

It reflected the moon and lanterns so clearly that it was like walking through a dream.

And in that stillness, the hum beca a whisper. Not words. Not yet. But close enough to make the hair on the Watcher’s arms rise.

Poseidon was speaking.

Not to their ears.

To the water in their blood.

---

By dawn, the city awoke to a new shoreline.

The seawall no longer kept the sea out. The sea had chosen to be in.

And sowhere deep below, Poseidon smiled.

He had not yet taken the city.

He had simply leaned it toward him.

The rest would co.

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