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I Am Zeus Chapter 25: Final Moment 2

Novel: I Am Zeus Author: Chaosgod24 Updated:
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Now reading: Chapter 25: Final Moment 2 from I Am Zeus, a Fantasy novel by Chaosgod24.

After Cronus Fell

The storm didn’t stop.

It scread louder.

Because the King of the Titans was down... but his army wasn’t.

From the broken hills, from the cracks in the earth, from the black clouds above—Titan beasts and loyalists rose like an ocean of wrath. The ones too stubborn to kneel. The ones too proud to stop. They marched now, screaming in old tongues, led by surviving Titans whose nas hadn’t yet fallen to silence.

But Zeus didn’t wait.

He stood above the crater, chest bare, blood running from his side, sparks still hissing around his arms. The broken sky mirrored his eyes—burning, flashing, raging.

He raised one hand.

The clouds split wide.

A hundred bolts fell at once—like rain if rain was made of judgnt.

Titan soldiers evaporated in mid-charge, their bones turned to ash before they could scream. But Zeus wasn’t done.

He stepped forward.

The ground cracked.

[Skill: Heavenbreaker]

Each step was a blow. Not on the land. On the sky itself. With every movent, the air behind him shattered like glass. Lightning arced across the field, dancing like wild beasts toward the enemy lines.

A Titan beast—a thing with a hundred arms and one single burning eye—leapt at him from the side.

Zeus turned his palm.

[Skill: Storm Lock]

The monster froze midair—its body suspended in thunder-stilled ti.

Then Zeus clenched his fist.

And the beast exploded in every direction.

Thunder echoed for miles.

The Titan army faltered for the first ti. But still they ca.

And now they sward.

Zeus didn’t retreat.

He moved forward, into the thick of them.

A group of giant warriors surrounded him, armored in obsidian and wielding blades forged from the first mountain’s teeth.

Zeus crouched low.

[Skill: Sky Rend Barrage]

He vanished.

Reappeared behind one—his fist through its back.

Reappeared above another—kicked its skull clean off.

Reappeared between the last two—drove his hands into the ground.

Lightning erupted upward like geysers. They didn’t just kill. They erased.

Nothing but ash.

Zeus stood again. Chest heaving. Arms crackling.

Still not done.

A new wave charged—this one led by Klynos, a minor Titan of warlust, screaming with madness, his dual axes drenched in divine blood.

"I’ll mount your heart on my chest!" Klynos roared.

Zeus didn’t answer.

[Skill: Wrath Conduction]

He pointed a single finger.

A bolt snapped through the clouds and into Klynos’s chest before he blinked.

The Titan dropped to one knee, smoking—but roared again, rising.

Zeus walked toward him.

The ground dimd beneath each footfall. Thunder responded like drums.

Klynos charged.

Their weapons t—axes against raw lightning wrapped in fists.

A shockwave flattened half the field.

But Zeus twisted, ducked under the second swing, and—

[Skill: Chain Flash]

One punch.

Then five more in the sa second.

Each hit struck with thunder so loud, Titans across the ridge covered their ears and fell.

Klynos reeled. His mouth opened to scream—

Zeus grabbed his throat.

Lifted him high.

[Skill: Storm Crown Execution]

A crown of lightning ford above Klynos’s head—then ca down like a guillotine.

The Titan exploded midair.

Zeus let the ash fall.

All across the battlefield, his siblings saw it.

Poseidon grinned.

Hades tilted his head.

Hera, bloodied and breathless, leaned on Neia and smirked, whispering, "He’s pissed now..."

Even Deter paused, vines pulsing at her fingertips.

But the Titan army didn’t stop.

So were too far gone.

One last commander stepped forward—Ophion, a Titan who had once ruled the heavens before Cronus. A skeletal figure with wings of black marble and a voice like crushed stone.

"You are not fit to lead the cosmos," Ophion hissed.

Zeus looked at him.

"I don’t want to lead the cosmos."

He stepped forward again.

"I just want you all gone."

Ophion’s wings spread.

[Skill: Gravity Severance]

The world around him twisted—gravity flipped. Mountains folded into air. Bodies lifted and fell.

Zeus was caught mid-air.

Ophion raised his hand.

Threw a spear of condensed gravity.

Zeus twisted his body midair and—

[Skill: Thunder Deflect]

He slapped it aside.

Landed hard.

Sank a knee into the earth—and the thunder responded like a god.

The storm above dimd for a breath.

Then it roared louder than ever.

Zeus stood.

His chest glowed now. Not with lightning.

With divine will.

[Skill: Olympian Surge]

The storm crashed downward.

Onto him.

Not burning him.

Becoming him.

For a mont, he beca light.

Not taphor.

Actual light.

A column of golden storm that walked like a man.

He flew forward.

His fist t Ophion’s wing. The wing cracked—then shattered.

Ophion scread.

Zeus landed behind him. Turned.

[Skill: Thunder King’s Fall]

His heel slamd into the back of Ophion’s neck.

The Titan hit the ground so hard it cracked in ten directions.

He didn’t move again.

Zeus stood over him.

Breathing like a man on fire.

Around him—the battlefield shifted.

The Titans saw.

And they ran.

Not all.

But most.

The younger ones.

The ones who hadn’t yet tasted wrath from a god of sky and storm.

Zeus didn’t chase them.

He turned to the last remaining soldiers—beasts, creatures, giants, corrupted demigods.

He raised his hand again.

The sky parted.

This ti—

There were no single bolts.

Just one.

Massive.

Endless.

[Skill: Heaven’s Final Verdict]

It fell like judgnt.

Not just light.

Weight.

Everything that didn’t kneel—vanished.

The battlefield fell silent.

Only the rain whispered now.

Zeus exhaled. Dropped to one knee.

His siblings began to walk toward him.

One by one.

Deter. Poseidon. Hera. Hades. Hestia.

All scarred. All bloodied. All alive.

The war was over.

The sky above them wasn’t broken anymore.

It was open. Ready for a new age.

Zeus stood slowly.

Looked at them all.

He didn’t speak.

But the lightning in his eyes had softened.

Not gone.

Just waiting.

Because they had won.

But ruling?

That was another battle entirely.

The lightning faded, but the sll of ozone still clung to the air.

Ash drifted down like black snow.

Zeus stood in the silence, knees bent, one hand still pressed to the cracked earth. His breath was deep. Controlled. But tired—like his body had given everything it had.

Then—

A soft crunch behind him.

Zeus didn’t flinch.

Protheus stepped forward first, shirt torn, hands still glowing faint with leftover fla. His brother, Epitheus, followed—blood running down one temple, but smiling like a man who had finally seen the sun after years of storms.

tis ca last. Calm. Elegant. But there was mud on her knees. Ash on her cloak. Her golden eyes watched him like only she could.

"You finally won," Protheus said with a half-smile, offering a hand.

Zeus didn’t answer at first.

He took it.

Protheus pulled him up slow.

Epitheus clapped his shoulder. "That was insane. I thought the sky was going to fall with how much power you pumped through it."

"It nearly did," Zeus muttered.

tis stepped closer.

She didn’t touch him.

Just looked at him, steady and quiet.

"What about him?" she asked.

Zeus followed her gaze.

To the middle of the crater.

Where Cronus still lay, barely breathing. Covered in rubble. His scythe snapped in two. Ti itself no longer listened to him. The world had moved on.

Zeus stared at him for a long mont.

No words.

No rage.

No pity.

Just... silence.

Then he looked up—past the mountain ridges. All the way to the far peak of Mount Dikti.

There, in the gray light of dawn, stood two silhouettes.

Gaia.

And Rhea.

Gaia’s eyes glowed faint with ancient sorrow. Her vines curled gently around Rhea’s shoulder. Rhea, for once, didn’t look like the wounded queen or grieving mother. She looked like soone who had waited a long, long ti for a storm to pass.

Zeus exhaled through his nose.

"I’ll let Granny decide," he said simply.

tis raised a brow. "Just like that?"

Zeus nodded.

"I fought the war. I ended him. I’m not going to judge him too. I just want to... rest."

He sat down again—not collapsed, just lowered. Like the storm had finally left his bones.

Protheus looked back at Cronus. "You sure Gaia will show rcy?"

"I’m not," Zeus said.

"But it’s not my choice. I’m done choosing who lives and who doesn’t."

The wind shifted. Rain finally stopped.

For the first ti in what felt like forever, the sky was blue.

Hera walked past them, bruised but standing tall. She didn’t say anything—just nodded once at tis, then sat beside Zeus, shoulder to shoulder.

Poseidon dragged Triena behind him and flopped down on the other side.

Hades stood at the crater’s edge, helm off, watching Cronus like he was seeing the ghost of a future he’d never wanted. Then he turned, and slowly sat near his siblings.

Deter arrived next, wiping blood from her cheek. Hestia followed, wrapping her fla-cloak tighter around herself.

One by one.

They all sat.

Nothing grand.

No throne. No anthem. No divine lightshow.

Just siblings.

Sitting together after surviving hell.

tis crossed her arms and smirked. "You know you’ve got to rebuild the world now, right?"

Zeus leaned his head back and groaned. "Later."

Protheus chuckled. "Want to write the speech?"

"Burn it instead."

Epitheus grinned. "We could just make a big dinner and call that a win."

Hestia finally smiled.

A small one.

But real.

Zeus let his eyes drift closed.

And for the first ti—

He rested.

Not as a god.

Not as a warrior.

Not as the storm.

Just as himself.

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