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Now reading: Chapter 313: The Citadel Cracking from I Am Zeus, a Fantasy novel by Chaosgod24.

tis stood at the edge of nothing and watched a prison die.

She had been here before. Not in body—her body was in Heaven, standing on cracked white stone, breathing air that tasted of ozone and endings. But her awareness had never fully left this place. The Citadel had held her essence for centuries. Had labeled her, filed her, stored her like a book on a shelf. She knew its rhythms. Its breaths. Its silences.

Now it was failing.

The structure had never been beautiful. Beautiful was for temples, for palaces, for places ant to inspire. The Citadel was functional. A machine built to sort souls, to categorize them, to contain them. Every surface was smooth white stone, seamless and cold. Every corridor led sowhere specific. There were no windows, no doors, no entrances or exits except the ones the system allowed.

But tis didn’t need doors. She had slipped through cracks the first ti. Now she simply watched.

The walls were weeping.

Not water. Light. Thin streams of pale gold leaked from the seams between stones, dripping down the smooth surfaces and fading into nothing before they hit the floor. The light was warm. Almost alive. It pulsed with a rhythm that didn’t match any heartbeat tis had ever felt.

The Citadel was bleeding.

She walked through its corridors without moving. Her body was elsewhere, but her mind traced every fracture, every weakness, every place where the structure had begun to give. The cracks were everywhere now, not just on the surface. They ran through the foundation, through the core, through the very logic that held the machine together.

The souls felt it.

They shifted in their containers, restless, uncertain. For centuries, they had been dormant—labeled, filed, asleep. Now they stirred. Not awake, not yet. But aware. Sothing was wrong. Sothing had changed.

tis stopped at the center of the Citadel, where the sorting chanism had once operated. The column of light that had processed millions of souls was dim. Flickering. Its edges were no longer sharp—they blurred, bled into the surrounding air like smoke.

The chaos had done this.

Zeus’s shard, planted in the heart of the machine, had spread. Not quickly. Not violently. Slowly. Inevitably. Like water through stone, like roots through soil. The labels were dissolving. The categories were blurring. A soul marked ’saint’ looked no different from a soul marked ’sinner.’ A soul waiting for judgnt found itself suddenly free.

But freedom ca with a cost.

The Citadel was not designed for chaos. It was designed for order. For stability. For control. Every crack that spread through its walls weakened the structure further. Every label that dissolved made the machine work harder to reapply them. And the machine was tired.

tis felt it give.

Not all at once. A single stone, sowhere deep in the foundation, shifted. The sound—if it could be called sound—reverberated through her awareness like a bell struck in a cathedral.

She opened her eyes.

In Heaven, her body turned from the edge of the camp. Her face was calm, but sothing behind her eyes was not.

Athena was standing nearby, reviewing the fracture map with Hers. She looked up when tis approached.

"What is it?"

tis didn’t answer imdiately. She was choosing words. Not because she didn’t know what to say. Because she wasn’t sure how to say it without causing panic.

"The Citadel," she said. "It’s failing."

Athena’s hands stopped moving. The silver lines of the map flickered once, then held.

"How long?"

tis didn’t answer.

Athena waited. The silence stretched. Hers shifted his weight, looking between them, reading what wasn’t being said.

"How long?" Athena repeated.

tis t her eyes.

"There’s no answer," she said. "Because I don’t know. The structure is degrading faster than I can asure. The cracks are spreading. The souls are shifting. If the Citadel breaks completely—"

"Every soul still inside dissolves," Athena finished.

"Yes."

The word hung in the air like a blade.

Hers’s wings twitched. "How many souls are still inside?"

tis looked at him. "Enough."

"That’s not a number."

"It’s the only one I have."

Athena turned away, her hands pressing against the edge of the map table. Her breathing was steady, controlled, but her shoulders were tight.

"We need more ti," she said.

"Ti is what we don’t have."

"The fractures in Heaven—"

"Are connected to this." tis stepped closer. "The Citadel isn’t separate from the rest of reality. It’s woven into it. Every crack in Heaven puts pressure on the Citadel. Every shift in the underworld makes the foundation weaker."

Athena was silent for a long mont.

"Then we need to stabilize everything at once."

"Yes."

"That’s impossible."

"Then we need to choose."

Athena turned back to her. "Choose what?"

tis’s voice was quiet. "What we’re willing to lose."

The words landed like stones. Hers looked away. Athena’s jaw tightened. Neither of them had an answer.

Behind them, the camp continued its work. Healers healed. Gods argued. Angels drifted. No one knew what was happening inside the Citadel. No one knew how close they were to losing everything.

tis watched them.

She had been imprisoned in that place for centuries. Had felt its cold. Its order. Its absolute certainty. She had hated it.

But she had never wished it destroyed.

Because destroying the Citadel ant destroying the souls inside it. And those souls—the ones still trapped, still labeled, still waiting—were not her enemies. They were just people. Mortals who had lived and died and been sorted like grains of wheat.

They deserved better than to dissolve into nothing.

"We need to tell Zeus," Athena said.

"He knows," tis replied.

"He hasn’t said anything."

"He’s waiting."

"For what?"

tis looked toward the edge of the camp, where Zeus sat with Hades, both of them silent, both of them watching the cracked sky.

"For a miracle," she said. "Or an ending."

Athena followed her gaze.

The chaos around Zeus’s wrist pulsed once—slow, deliberate—and the cracks in the sky spread a little wider.

"How long?" Athena asked again.

tis didn’t answer.

She didn’t need to.

The silence was answer enough.

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