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The sea was silent after its violence.

Not the silence of peace, but the kind that cos when predators circle in the deep, the pause before teeth strike again. Broken ships bobbed in the tide like driftwood. The air reeked of salt, blood, and old timbers.

Poseidon stood at the edge of what had once been the city’s market square. It was no longer a square. It was a lagoon, lanterns still flickering beneath the surface as though the drowned fire refused to go out. His reflection stretched long and strange across the water, rippling as if his body was too vast to be contained in the mortal fra.

The vessel—Dominic—was gone. Or perhaps, more accurately, he was entirely absorbed. There was no divide anymore. Poseidon’s thoughts did not need to fight for control. They were the control.

But when he inhaled, he could still feel lungs breathing salt air. When he flexed his fingers, he could still feel mortal blood pushing through veins. And when he closed his eyes, mories not his own bled upward—laughter, illness, loneliness, betrayal. Dominic lingered like sedint on the seafloor.

"Do you regret ?" Poseidon asked aloud, not to anyone around him—for none had survived close enough to hear—but to the boy’s spirit buried inside.

The answer was faint. You were always ant to rise. I was only your excuse.

Poseidon’s lips curled. "Then sink quietly."

And the boy’s voice was gone.

---

The Gathering Tide

He turned his gaze outward, toward the vast sea. It churned differently now—obediently. The waves did not crash against the shore. They bowed to it, waiting for his will. He could feel them listening, stretching as far as the horizon. Every current, every trench, every drop of saltwater carried him.

And more than that—every living thing within it.

Distantly, he felt schools of fish darting, their silver scales flashing like thoughts. He felt leviathans turning in the deep, creatures that had not surfaced in centuries, responding to his call. Whales sang hymns older than the city he had drowned, songs of recognition.

They rembered him.

The ocean itself rembered.

Poseidon raised his hand slowly, and from the water rose not just waves but shapes—half-ford bodies of liquid, like drowned n pulling themselves up from the abyss. Their eyes glowed blue. They knelt. Not illusions. Not spirits. But fragnts of his will given shape.

"Rise, my tideborn," he commanded. "Carry my na into every harbor. Let mortals rember that the sea is not theirs to ta."

The tideborn hissed like waves on stone, then lted back into the flood, dispersing in every direction.

---

The Mortal Remnant

From the ruins behind him ca a cough.

Poseidon turned. A man, barely alive, clung to a broken beam. His hair plastered to his face, his lips cracked with salt. Yet sohow, he had survived the drowning. His eyes were wide with terror, but also sothing else—desperate reverence.

"God..." the man rasped. "You... you are him... You are the Sea Lord returned..."

Poseidon stepped closer, water parting for his feet. "And what would you do with that truth, mortal?"

The man fell to his knees in the shallow water, trembling. "I would serve. I would kneel before the tide rather than drown beneath it. Spare , and I will carry your word inland."

For a long mont, Poseidon studied him. His aura pressed down like the weight of the entire ocean, testing the man’s spine. Most would have broken instantly, their lungs filling with water in his presence. Yet this one clung to life stubbornly.

Poseidon touched the man’s forehead. The water rose with his fingers, seeping into the man’s eyes, ears, mouth. The mortal convulsed, then stilled. When his eyes reopened, they glowed faintly blue.

"Go," Poseidon said. "Tell them the drowned god walks again. Tell them their gods cannot keep chained."

The man bowed, stumbling away through the ruins with unnatural strength. One spark was enough. A single ripple to spread his na like a storm current.

---

Olympus Watches

Yet Poseidon knew. He was not alone in this awakening. The drowned bell had not only warned mortals—it had stirred Olympus itself.

He could feel their eyes above, like a net spread across the sky. Zeus’s judgnt, Hera’s suspicion, Aegirion’s conflicted loyalty. Even Nyra’s shadows stretched longer in the mortal realm tonight, as though sniffing at his presence.

The pantheon would not let him rise uncontested.

Poseidon smiled grimly. "Let them co."

He knelt at the edge of the lagoon, pressing his palm flat against the water. His reflection shifted—his form widening, scales rippling across skin, a crown of coral glimring faintly in the moonlight.

For a heartbeat, he was not a man. He was the ocean given flesh.

The power thrumd through him like a heartbeat too large for one body. Mortal stone cracked beneath his knees. The sea hissed eagerly.

"They banished once," he murmured. "They chained the tides and thought the world theirs. But chains rust. And tides return."

---

The Voice of the Abyss

Then, deeper still, sothing stirred.

Not Dominic.

Not Poseidon.

But Thalorin.

A whisper rolled through his veins, like currents dragging bones across the seafloor. You borrow my abyss. Do not forget who carved it.

Poseidon’s jaw tightened. He had always known this would co—the drowned king’s essence, lingering, hungry, patient.

"I am not your heir," Poseidon growled inwardly. "I am your replacent."

Replacent? The voice laughed, hollow and endless. Even now, every breath you take is mine. Every surge you command is fed by my hunger. Without , you are only a storm. With ... you are the ocean entire.

Poseidon clenched his fists. He would not be consud. Not by gods above, and not by ghosts below.

But the whisper did not fade. It coiled deeper into his blood, into his marrow.

The drowned king was not gone. He was patient. Waiting.

---

The Coming Reckoning

The horizon flickered with lightning, far too distant for any storm. That was no weather. That was Olympus readying itself.

Poseidon rose from the lagoon, water streaming from his shoulders, his crown forming fully at last—a jagged helm of coral, barnacle, and abyssal pearl. His aura stretched across the entire harbor, pressing into the mortal world like a tide that refused to recede.

The drowned city at his feet would not be the last.

He raised his hand once more, sending out a surge that traveled not just through water, but through blood, dreams, and mory. Mortals across the coasts would wake that night choking on saltwater, gasping his na. Sailors would hear phantom waves in their sleep. Priests would find their idols sweating brine.

The sea was claiming them.

Poseidon’s voice bood low across the waves, rolling outward like thunder.

"Rember . Fear . The sea is mine, and I am the sea."

---

And above, in Olympus, the council bells began to toll.

War was no longer a question.

It was certain.

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