Zeus stepped forward.
Should’ve been simple. One foot, then the other. He’d done it a million tis. Walked battlefields, walked thrones, walked into wars he had no business walking out of.
But this ti—sothing pushed back.
Not hard. Not enough to stop him. Just... resistance. Like the space in front of him wasn’t fully sold on the idea that he should be there.
His foot touched the ground anyway. The white plain dipped slightly under him. Not cracking. Just lowering a fraction, like it had to think about it first.
Zeus paused.
"...You feel that?" he muttered.
tis took her ti answering. She was watching his foot. Then his shadow. Then the way the light around him bent just a little too late.
"...Yes," she said.
Zeus shifted his weight. The ground responded again. A slow, subtle adjustnt. Like it was correcting itself after he moved.
He let out a quiet breath through his nose.
"...That’s new."
"It’s not just the ground," tis said.
He glanced at her. She pointed up.
The sky wasn’t still. It never was anymore. The cracks had widened—thin lines at first, now thicker, deeper. So curved in ways that didn’t make sense. Others just hung there, like cuts that refused to close.
Lightning flickered through one of them. Not his lightning. Sothing else.
He didn’t like that.
"...Everything feels off," he said.
tis looked at him. "Not everything."
He already knew what she ant. He looked down at his hand again. Black lightning curled around his fingers like it belonged there. Not wild. Not loud. Just steady. Too steady.
It moved when he didn’t tell it to. Slid between his knuckles. Wrapped around his wrist. Then settled.
Waiting.
Zeus clenched his fist. The air around it tightened. Not visibly. But he felt it. Like reality itself held its breath for a second. Then let go.
"...Yeah," he said quietly. "I noticed."
tis didn’t look away. "You didn’t let it go."
He gave a short laugh. "Didn’t feel like sothing I could drop on the floor."
"That’s not what I an."
He turned to her. She held his gaze this ti.
"You didn’t co back the sa."
Zeus didn’t answer right away. Because she wasn’t wrong. He could feel it. Sothing under his skin. Not moving. Not restless. Just there. Like a second presence. Not separate. Not fully. But not him either.
He exhaled slowly. "...I’m still ."
tis didn’t nod. Didn’t argue. She just watched.
That was worse.
Zeus looked away first. Bad habit.
He took another step. Sa resistance. Stronger this ti. Not enough to stop him. Enough to notice.
He frowned. "...Okay."
He pushed forward harder. Not physically. With will. The space in front of him twisted. For a split second, the ground didn’t exist where his foot was about to land. Then it snapped back.
Zeus stopped walking.
"...Yeah," he muttered. "That’s definitely not good."
A faint sound brushed past his ear. So light he almost missed it. Almost.
It wasn’t wind. Wasn’t a voice. It was sothing. A thought that didn’t belong to him. Not clear. Not words. Just a feeling. Old. Endless. Watching.
Zeus tilted his head slightly. "...You hear that?" he asked.
tis went still. "No."
He stayed quiet. Listened. There it was again. Faint. Distant. Like sothing speaking from underwater. He couldn’t make out what it was saying. But it wasn’t random. It was patient.
Zeus clicked his tongue. "...Not dealing with that right now."
The feeling didn’t leave. But it pulled back. Like it understood.
That annoyed him more than anything.
Behind them, the battlefield was still moving. Not fighting. Working.
Athena stood a short distance away, her eyes moving constantly. She wasn’t looking at people. She was watching everything else. The ground. The air. The edges of the sky. Patterns. Failures.
She crouched slightly, touching the surface of the plain. For a mont, nothing happened. Then the space around her hand flickered. Like a reflection glitching.
She pulled back instantly. "...No," she said under her breath.
Hers appeared beside her. "Please tell that was nothing."
"It wasn’t nothing."
"Great."
Athena stood, turning slightly as her gaze swept the horizon. "...This structure is failing faster than I thought."
Hers frowned. "Define ’faster.’"
She didn’t look at him. "Faster than we can fix."
That shut him up.
Thor dragged a massive piece of broken Heaven into place with a grunt, muscles straining. "Where d’you want this?" he called.
"Not there," Athena snapped.
Thor froze mid-step. "...Then where?"
Athena pointed. "Three degrees left. If you put it there, it’ll overlap a fault line."
Thor blinked. "...I don’t know what that ans."
"Just move it left."
"...That I can do."
He shifted. The mont he placed it down—the air around it warped. Just slightly. But enough.
The structure held. For now.
Athena exhaled slowly. "...Temporary," she said.
Hers crossed his arms. "You keep saying that."
"Because it keeps being true."
Another flicker. Higher this ti. A crack in the sky pulsed. Once. Twice. Then spread. Not fast. Not slow. Just inevitable.
Athena’s jaw tightened. "This isn’t over." Not loud. Not dramatic. Just certain.
Hers followed her gaze. "...Yeah," he muttered. "I figured."
Zeus heard it. Of course he did. He always did.
He looked up again. The cracks were getting worse. Not just wider. Deeper. Like sothing behind them was pushing outward.
He flexed his hand. Black lightning answered instantly. No hesitation. No delay. It coiled tighter this ti. More responsive. More aware.
Zeus frowned slightly. "...You getting comfortable?" he murmured.
No answer. Not directly. But the faint whisper brushed past his mind again. Closer now. Not louder. Clearer.
He caught a fragnt this ti. Not words. aning. Shape. Sothing like—
more
Zeus’s expression hardened. "...Yeah," he said quietly. "Not today."
He pushed it down. Not suppressed. Just ignored. It didn’t fight him.
That bothered him more than if it had.
tis saw the shift. "Sothing’s wrong."
Zeus shook his head. "Later problem."
"Zeus—"
"Later."
She held his gaze a second longer. Then let it go. For now.
A deep sound rolled across the field. Low. Heavy. Wrong.
Everyone felt it. Not heard. Felt.
Athena’s head snapped up. "Wait—"
Too late.
Far in the distance—a section of Heaven gave way. Not cracked. Not shifted. Collapsed. A massive stretch of the white plain folded in on itself like sothing had reached down and pressed it flat. Light bent inward. Space twisted. Then the whole thing dropped. Not down. Sideways. Into nothing.
The edge tore open, revealing a depth with no bottom. Angels near it scread as they stumbled back. So didn’t make it. They slipped. Vanished. Gone. No light. No return. Just absence.
Wukong stared. "...Yeah," he said slowly. "That’s worse than the last one."
Thor tightened his grip on Mjolnir. "...What happens if more of that goes?"
Athena didn’t answer imdiately. When she did, her voice was steady. "Then we don’t have a battlefield anymore."
Hers looked at the hole. "...What do we have?"
Athena’s eyes didn’t leave it. "Nothing stable."
Silence stretched.
Then—Zeus stepped forward again. This ti, he didn’t test the ground. He forced it. The space under his feet bent. Adjusted. Accepted him. Barely.
He looked at the collapsing horizon. Then at his hand. Then back at the sky.
"...Yeah," he said. Quiet. But it carried. "This is gonna get worse."
No one argued. They could feel it too.
And far above—the cracks spread again. Slower this ti. But deeper.
Like sothing was starting to rember how to break.
User Comments
0 comments from readers