The halls of Olympus were not built to tremble, and yet tonight, even their marble pillars quivered with the weight of the storm swelling beneath the heavens. Mortals in the drowned cities wailed Poseidon’s na as both curse and prayer, and their cries rose like smoke into the divine realm.
Athena sat alone in the chamber of strategy, her owl perched silently on the bronze map table. Around her lay carved tokens of mortal cities, fleets, and temples. Half of them were already pushed into the "lost" pile. The sea had swallowed them.
Her grey eyes reflected the lantern flas, unblinking, sharp, calculating. Unlike the others, she did not rage at Poseidon’s awakening. She did not strike walls with thunderbolts like Zeus, nor cry out with fire like Hera. She observed. She thought.
And she planned.
---
The Goddess of Strategy’s Doubt
Poseidon.
The na itself was enough to summon a storm of mories. Rivalries that stretched into myth. The contest for Athens, when mortals chose her olive tree over his salt spring. Wars where their domains clashed, his floods against her spears. She had outwitted him before, yes—but this was no longer the Poseidon she rembered.
This new incarnation, reborn through mortal flesh, carried sothing older. Thalorin. The abyss incarnate. The hunger that even gods feared to na.
She tapped her fingers against the table, one by one, as if each touch were a hamr stroke forging a thought.
"Intellect against tide... can intellect hold?" she murmured to herself.
The owl hooted softly, shifting on its talons.
Athena’s lips curled faintly. "Wisdom is not about holding. It is about striking where the tide cannot reach."
---
The Council Fractures
The doors burst open, and Hers slipped inside, his winged sandals leaving faint glimrs on the floor.
"They’re shouting themselves hoarse in the grand hall," he said, almost amused. "Zeus demands war at once. Ares wants to lead it. Apollo hesitates. And Hera—well, Hera wants him chained before his power roots too deeply."
Athena didn’t look up. She placed a token—representing a drowned city—onto the eastern edge of the bronze map.
"And what do you want, Hers?" she asked evenly.
He smirked, but the humor didn’t reach his eyes. "I want Olympus not to sink. I’ve flown above the mortal seas, Athena. This isn’t just Poseidon reclaiming worship. The ocean itself bends differently. Like... like it listens to him, not us."
Finally, she turned, her gaze piercing. "Then Olympus must change how it listens."
---
Seeds of Strategy
When Hers left, Athena remained still, staring at the carved map. Her thoughts layered themselves like shields.
Zeus would demand brute force.
Ares would charge without thought.
Apollo would hesitate until the sun itself burned.
But Athena... Athena understood that war was not won by force alone. It was won by minds. By plans within plans.
She rembered the boy—Dominic, they had called him—before he shed the na. A mortal shell that had sohow borne Poseidon’s resurgence.
If there was even a fragnt of humanity left in him, a thread of mortal thought woven with godhood... then that was a thread she could tug.
Athena did not underestimate Poseidon’s fury. But fury could be redirected.
And so could gods.
---
The Secret eting
That night, Athena cloaked herself not in her usual shining armor, but in shadow. She descended past Olympus’s radiant halls into the lower archives—the place where whispers of forbidden lore slept in sealed amphorae and cracked scrolls.
There, she found Nyra—the goddess of shadows—already waiting.
"You called ," Nyra said, her voice like smoke.
Athena nodded. "You’ve seen it too. The tide rises not against mortals alone, but against us. If we answer only with thunder and fire, we will lose."
Nyra’s eyes glimred. "So you wish for shadows instead?"
Athena leaned forward, her grey gaze steely. "I wish for leverage. Poseidon does not rise alone. He carries sothing deeper—Thalorin’s abyss. If I can separate them... or bend that abyss against him... we may yet tip the scales."
Nyra tilted her head. "Or unleash sothing worse."
Athena smiled, thin and cold. "That is why I am the goddess of wisdom, and not you."
---
The Whispering Threads
In the days that followed, while Zeus rallied armies of gods and Ares sharpened his bloodlust, Athena worked silently.
She sent her owl to scour the mortal world for fragnts of Dominic’s life—the friends he had left, the places he had walked, the prayers he had once whispered before the ocean swallowed him whole.
If there was a mory that remained human within him, she would find it.
And she studied the abyss—old records, half-burned scrolls that dared na Thalorin. Hunger, yes. Madness, yes. But also... longing. A longing for recognition. For dominion.
Athena’s lips curved. "Even abysses crave acknowledgnt."
If Thalorin wanted to be more than shadow, then perhaps she could give him shape. Not as Poseidon’s weapon... but as her own.
One evening, as twilight bled gold across Olympus, Athena stood at the balcony of her temple.
Below, the mortal world churned with storm after storm. She could feel Poseidon’s power stretching further each day, seeping into rivers, lakes, even wells. Mortals dread of him now—not in myth, but in waking dread.
And Athena... she felt the coming clash tightening around her like a noose.
Zeus would demand open war soon. She could see it in the storm clouds he hoarded above Olympus, lightning restless in his veins.
But Athena would not let this battle be his to dictate.
She whispered softly, almost to herself, almost to the mortal sea below:
"Brother... Rival... God of the deep. When the armies of Olympus crash against your waves, rember this: I will not co to crush you. I will co to unravel you."
Her owl screeched once, sharp and eerie in the wind.
And far below, in the depths of the drowned world, Poseidon stirred. For though no mortal could hear her words... the sea always listened.
The high gardens of Olympus were never ant for storms.
Each stalk of barley and wheat grew under the purest sunlight, tended by divine hands, blessed with eternal fertility. Flowers never wilted here, vines never tangled, and the orchards bore fruit all year. Yet tonight, under a moonless sky, the sacred gardens stirred uneasily.
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