The sea was never ant to be silent.
It was ant to roar, to crash, to sing of freedom. Yet now, the waters bent only to his breath. The ocean itself waited—not for wind, not for the moon, but for him.
Poseidon stood upon a drowned city, its once-proud towers half-buried in shifting foam. The ruins stretched beneath the tide like skeletal fingers, and every wave that lapped the broken stones carried whispers of the dead. Mortals had drowned, their prayers scattered into the depths, but Poseidon heard them all. He had claid them.
The silence was not absence. It was possession.
He exhaled, and the tide pulled back. He inhaled, and it surged forward, dragging fragnts of houses, shattered altars, and corpses into the dark. His will was no longer a ripple through the sea—it was the sea.
And yet, above the endless chorus of water, another sound reached him.
Chains.
The divine decree had been cast in Olympus. Poseidon felt it—not as words, but as a tightening around the horizon, a leash fastened by trembling gods who had once called him brother.
"They believe they can bind again," Poseidon muttered, his voice a growl that shook the drowned streets. His reflection rippled in the black water, but it was not the boy he once was. It was sothing vast, crowned by shadows of coral and kelp, with eyes as deep as the abyss itself.
He clenched his trident, a weapon not forged but reborn from the marrow of the sea. "They forget—the sea bows to no council. Not Olympus. Not the Azure Seat. Not even fate."
The waves surged outward, answering his rage.
---
The Mortal Witnesses
Far on the edge of the drowned coast, survivors huddled on cliffs that had not yet sunk. They stared down at the ruins where their city had once stood, now claid by water. Among them was a little girl, clutching a broken shell to her chest. Her eyes reflected the sea below, not in fear—but in reverence.
"Mother," she whispered, tugging at the sleeve of the woman beside her. "He’s not a monster. The sea didn’t eat us. It spared us."
Her mother, pale and shivering, hushed her. "Don’t speak. Don’t call its na. The drowned god hears."
But Poseidon already had. The child’s voice carried across the water like a drop of ink through stillness. He did not smite her. He did not drown her. He only let the tide whisper back, curling foam at the base of the cliff.
For though he was wrath, though he was vengeance, Poseidon was not blind. Mortals who looked at him without fear... reminded him of the boy he once had been.
The one who died in a bed of sickness.
The one who whispered prayers no god had answered.
The tide humd in answer, a lullaby only the girl could hear. She clutched the shell tighter, smiling faintly through the tears.
The survivors shuddered. So began to kneel. Others spat curses. But all understood one truth: their city was gone, and in its place stood a god reborn.
---
Olympus in Upheaval
High above the mortal world, Olympus roared with fury.
The council chamber of the Twelve was no longer still. Thunder bled from Zeus’s throne, lightning crawling like veins across the marble do. His voice split the air:
"He has drowned an entire city. He dares raise his na again in my world. Poseidon is no longer brother—he is a scourge. A threat to divine order."
Athena’s eyes, sharp as honed bronze, glead beneath her helm. "We should not delude ourselves. This is no half-born echo. Poseidon walks fully in the world again. His power is not contained to the ocean. He is the ocean."
Ares slamd his spear on the floor, snarling. "Then let us march! Call the armies, the demigods, the hunters. Let us crush him before the tide rises further."
"Fool," Hades said coldly, shadows leaking from his cloak. His voice was quieter than the storm, but heavier. "You would march an army into the sea itself? Mortals drown, brother. Soldiers rot. You would give Poseidon more corpses to claim."
The chamber erupted in shouts, divine power clashing like sparks in a storm. Hera’s voice cut through them all, sharp as a dagger.
"There is no unity here. Half of us call for his death, half for his binding. Zeus, you must decide—will you kill your brother or chain him again?"
Zeus’s lightning flared, thunder rolling over the council. "If he will not bow, then he dies."
But even as the words left his lips, the floor trembled. Not from Zeus. From below. The echo of a tide striking the roots of Olympus itself.
Poseidon had heard their decree. And he laughed.
---
Poseidon’s Reckoning
The drowned city groaned beneath him, a graveyard made throne. Poseidon raised his trident, and the water ford around it, coiling into a spiral that stretched toward the sky. Lightning forked from Olympus above, but the sea did not yield. It swallowed the lightning whole, crackling through waves like veins of silver.
"Once, I was bound," Poseidon said to the sky, voice rolling with storms. "Once, I bent knee. No longer."
He pointed the trident toward the heavens. "Co then, brothers and sisters. Strike down if you dare. But rember this—every drop of blood you spill will return to in tide."
The ocean surged in answer. Waves rose not as accidents of wind, but as titans themselves, towering and staring toward Olympus. Storm clouds gathered, but they circled around him like a crown, refusing to rain without his command.
He was not rely waiting for war. He was declaring it.
---
A New Legion
From the deep trenches, movent stirred. Not mortals. Not gods. Sothing older.
Creatures long shackled by divine wards felt the sea’s command and rose. Leviathans that had slept in chains of coral cracked their bonds. Serpents with scales black as midnight coiled through canyons of reef. Even the drowned—souls of sailors and priests, kings and beggars—began to rise from the depths, water filling their lungs until they moved again, eyes glowing with the abyss.
Poseidon raised his hand, and the legion bowed. Not with words. Not with oaths. With silence—the silence of the sea that obeyed its lord.
"This world forgot ," Poseidon said. "But it will rember the tide. It will rember the god they tried to bury."
And in the stillness, the drowned bell that had once tolled in warning rang again—not by mortal hand, but by the sea itself. Its sound rolled across coasts, carrying his na into every harbor, every river, every cup of water.
Mortals woke choking in their beds, hearing it in their veins.
Priests collapsed mid-prayer, salt water dripping from their mouths.
And Olympus shook.
---
The God Who Refuses Chains
Zeus’s voice thundered again across the clouds. "Enough!" His lightning split the sky, striking the ocean with blinding force.
But the sea only hissed, then stilled. Poseidon stepped forward, untouched.
He tilted his head, eyes glowing like abyssal fires. "Do you rember, brother?" he asked the thunder. "When we cast lots for the world? You took the sky. Hades, the underworld. I, the sea. But the sea is more than water. It is life. It is death. It is mory. And it is mine."
He slamd the trident into the drowned stones. The sea roared—not with storm, not with violence, but with inevitability.
"Co with chains if you wish. But know this—chains rust in salt. And no god binds the tide forever."
The horizon tilted. Oceans leaned toward Olympus. Rivers reversed their flow. Even the smallest cups of water in mortal hos trembled, tilting toward the sa point—the god who had risen.
Poseidon stood upon the drowned city, crowned by waves, the drowned and the leviathans gathering at his back.
The sea had chosen its master.
And Olympus had chosen its war.
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