The sea whispered with unease.
For the first ti in centuries, Poseidon left the water willingly, striding across scorched earth that no tide could soothe. His trident pulsed in his grip, an echo of his forr glory, but even the mighty weapon felt... incomplete. The battles with the gods had taken their toll—his victories were costly, his power stretched thin. If Olympus truly rallied against him, he knew he would need sothing greater. Sothing eternal.
The answer lay in the hands of one god alone.
Hephaestus.
---
The Journey to the Forge
Poseidon’s path wound through jagged mountains, peaks blackened by centuries of ash and molten rivers that hissed like serpents. The Forge of Hephaestus was hidden deep in the heart of a volcano older than Olympus itself. Legends claid that even gods avoided this place—the air burned, the stones bled molten fire, and the forge’s guardian beasts tore apart intruders.
But Poseidon walked unshaken. The ground cracked beneath his steps, and every plu of smoke parted for him as if the world recognized the weight of his na.
Yet even as he pressed forward, he felt the presence of watchers. Olympus had learned of his quest. The gods would not let him arm himself so easily.
From the shadows of the ridge, wingbeats echoed. A golden blur shot past him, landing with a crash of sparks.
Apollo.
The sun god stood tall, his bow already drawn, light burning against the volcanic gloom. "Brother," Apollo’s voice rang, clear and sharp. "Turn back. Hephaestus will not forge for you. You bring only ruin."
Poseidon’s eyes narrowed. "You speak of ruin, yet your light blinds mortals with false promises. Do you think afraid of your bow?"
Apollo smiled grimly. "No. I think you should be afraid of Olympus."
Before Poseidon could answer, the mountain trembled again—this ti not from volcanic fury, but from sothing older. The forge was close. And Hephaestus had sensed them.
---
The Forge Awakens
The great mountain split with a roar, lava spilling in rivers of fire that cut across the earth. The air thickened with smoke until it was nearly solid. From within the chasm ca the sound of hamr against anvil, each strike like thunder that cracked the bones of the world.
Poseidon strode forward. Apollo kept pace, unwilling to lower his bow.
At last, they reached it.
The Forge of Hephaestus.
It was not a place—it was a realm carved into the mountain’s heart. Colossal gears turned endlessly, powered by rivers of magma that fell like waterfalls of fire. Chains as thick as ships stretched across caverns, pulling anvils the size of palaces into place. And at its center stood the god-smith himself.
Hephaestus lood over them, a giant hunched with scars, muscles like iron slabs, eyes glowing as though twin furnaces burned within. His hamr rested across his shoulders, every breath he exhaled spilling smoke and sparks.
"Poseidon," he rumbled, voice shaking the forge. "And Apollo. I wondered which of you would crawl here first."
Poseidon planted his trident into the molten stone, the sea hissing in defiance against fire. "I co not to crawl, but to claim. Forge a weapon. The ultimate weapon—the only one that can end Olympus itself."
Apollo’s bow glead, and his voice hardened. "Don’t listen to him, Hephaestus. He would turn your craft into a curse. Olympus needs you. Stand with us."
Hephaestus’s laugh was a low quake. "Olympus has never stood with . They mocked the crippled smith, used my hands but spat on my na. You think I am loyal to the council?" He turned his burning gaze toward Poseidon. "And you, sea-king... why should I raise my hamr for you?"
---
Poseidon’s Plea
For a long mont, the forge was silent save for the groan of molten rivers. Poseidon’s eyes burned with storms, and his voice thundered like the tide.
"Because the balance is already broken. Olympus wages war not for justice, but for pride. You know it, Hephaestus. They use you, as they used , as they used mortals. I do not ask for loyalty. I ask for truth. Forge the weapon that will break the lies of Olympus—and I will see that your fire never dims."
Hephaestus’s hamr tightened in his grip. Sparks flew with his next breath, but his expression was unreadable.
Apollo raised his bow higher. "Do not be deceived! He will drag us all into the abyss!"
But Hephaestus raised one massive hand, silencing them both.
"The forge obeys only strength," he said at last. "If you would wield a weapon born of my fire, you must prove worthy. Not with words. With survival."
The mountain shuddered. The magma churned. And from the rivers of fire, creatures began to rise.
---
Trial of the Forge
First ca the Magma Beasts—hulking giants of molten stone, eyes glowing like embers, each step shaking the cavern floor. Then ca the Iron Serpents, chains twisting into living coils, their teeth snapping with the sound of grinding steel.
Hephaestus’s voice thundered over the chaos. "Survive my guardians. Only then shall I forge for you."
The first beast charged. Poseidon swung his trident, summoning a torrent of seawater that hissed as it clashed against molten flesh. Steam blinded the cavern, but the beast fell with a scream, its body cooling into brittle stone under Poseidon’s tide.
From the other side, Apollo loosed a shaft of light that pierced an Iron Serpent clean through, the chain snapping into molten fragnts.
For the first ti, the two gods fought side by side.
But Hephaestus did not relent. More creatures rose, each more furious than the last. The cavern beca a battlefield of fire and sea, light and molten iron. Poseidon roared, waves crashing from his trident, extinguishing beasts by the dozens. Apollo’s arrows cut through the smoke, striking with precision.
Yet it was endless.
Poseidon’s chest heaved, his body steaming from burns where molten claws had raked his flesh. Apollo’s arm trembled, his quiver nearly empty.
Still the forge sent more.
---
The Final Blow
At last, the greatest guardian erged—a colossus born of pure fla, towering higher than the cavern ceiling, wielding a blade of molten obsidian.
Hephaestus leaned on his hamr, watching silently. This was the true trial.
Poseidon lifted his trident, his eyes storm-bright. Apollo raised his bow one final ti. But Poseidon spoke first, voice rumbling like thunder:
"This is my battle."
He surged forward. Waves burst from beneath his feet, carrying him upward into the air. The fla colossus swung its blade, carving a molten arc that could have split mountains. Poseidon t it head-on, his trident clashing against the sword in an explosion of steam and fire.
The cavern shook. Chains snapped. Lava rained like burning rain.
With a roar that split the mountain itself, Poseidon drove his trident through the colossus’s heart. Water and fire collided, exploding outward in a storm that drowned fla itself. When the smoke cleared, the beast was gone—shattered into molten fragnts that hissed into nothing.
Poseidon stood scarred, burned, but unbroken.
For the first ti, Hephaestus’s grim face softened. He stepped forward, his hamr sparking as he struck the anvil.
"You have proven your will," he said. "The forge shall answer you."
The anvil blazed, brighter than suns. Chains groaned as molten rivers bent toward it, pooling into shape. Every strike of Hephaestus’s hamr echoed across realms, forging not rely tal but divine essence itself.
At last, he held up the weapon.
A spear of midnight steel, its edge gleaming with liquid fla, its shaft bound with chains of the deep. It radiated not only destruction but inevitability—the power to unmake gods.
Hephaestus’s voice bood as he placed it before Poseidon.
"Behold... the Abyssal Spear. Born of fire and sea. A weapon not of Olympus, not of the Rift, but of truth. Wield it, and either rule... or end everything."
Poseidon grasped the weapon. The sea trembled. The mountain groaned. Even Apollo lowered his bow, eyes wide with awe and dread.
The war for Olympus had just shifted.
Reviews
All reviews (0)