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Now reading: Chapter 318 318: Michael's Burden from I Am Zeus, a Fantasy novel by Chaosgod24.

The angels gathered at the edge of the broken plain.

Not in formation. Not in ranks. Just... there. Clusters of white and gold against the grey stone, wings folded, heads bowed. So knelt. So stood with their arms crossed. So sat on shattered pillars, staring at nothing.

Fewer than half had returned.

Michael walked among them. Not at the front. Not on a dais. Just through the clusters, stepping carefully, not eting eyes. He had nothing to offer them yet. No plan. No promise. Just presence.

They watched him pass.

So looked away.

So held his gaze.

So simply stared through him, like he was already a ghost.

He stopped at the center of the gathering. Turned. Looked at what remained of Heaven's army. The numbers were worse than he had expected. The Seraphim had been cut in half. The Cherubim were scattered. The Thrones—the great wheels of fire and eyes—had been reduced to a handful, their light dim, their rotations slow and painful.

Michael raised his hand.

The murmurs died.

"We are broken," he said.

His voice was calm. Too calm. The kind of calm that ca from exhaustion, not peace.

"But we are not dead."

No one moved.

"No one expected this. No one prepared for this. The Father is gone. The Tribunal is silent. Heaven is cracked in ways we cannot yet asure."

He paused.

"And we are still here."

A young angel near the front shifted his weight. His wings were scorched, the feathers uneven. He had been in the second wave. Had seen the Tribunal fall. Had watched the gods turn from enemies to... sothing else.

"What do we do now?" the young angel asked.

Michael looked at him.

"We rebuild."

"With what?"

The question landed like a stone.

Michael didn't flinch.

"With each other."

The young angel's face twisted. Not anger. Frustration. The kind that ca from wanting answers and receiving words.

"And the ones who left?" he pressed. "The ones who followed Azrael? What about them?"

Michael's jaw tightened.

He had no answer.

The silence stretched. Angels looked at each other. So nodded. So shook their heads. A few simply stared at the ground, unwilling to witness whatever ca next.

"They are lost," Michael said finally. "For now."

"For now," the young angel repeated. The words tasted bitter.

Michael didn't correct him.

---

The gathering ended without ceremony.

Angels drifted away, so toward the healers, so toward the fractures, so toward the empty spaces where they could be alone. Michael stood at the center of the empty plain, watching them go.

Gabriel appeared beside him.

He didn't speak. Didn't offer comfort. Just stood there, his light dimd, his wings folded.

Michael looked at him.

"You think I handled that badly."

Gabriel was quiet for a mont.

"I think you handled it."

"That's not an answer."

"It's the only one I have."

Michael turned away. Walked toward the edge of the plain, where a crack in the sky split the white light into jagged pieces. He stopped at the edge. Stared up at the wound that wouldn't close.

Gabriel followed. Stopped a few feet behind him.

"You don't believe what you're telling them," Gabriel said.

It wasn't a question.

Michael didn't deny it.

"I don't know what I believe anymore."

Gabriel nodded slowly. As if he had expected the answer.

"The Father is gone. The Son is gone. The Spirit is gone. And we are standing in the ruins of everything they built." Michael's voice was low, almost lost in the silence. "I tell them we will rebuild. But I don't know how."

"Then figure it out."

Michael looked at him.

"You sound like Athena."

"Perhaps she's right."

Michael almost laughed. Almost.

"The gods are not our enemies anymore," Gabriel continued. "The war is over. We have to find a way to exist beside them. Or we will fade."

"Fading would be easier."

Gabriel's gaze sharpened.

"Easier isn't the sa as right."

Michael turned back to the crack in the sky. The light bled through in thin streams, pale and cold.

"I never wanted to lead," he said quietly. "I wanted to serve. To protect. To fight for sothing I believed in."

"And now?"

"Now I don't know what I believe in."

Gabriel was silent for a long mont.

"Then believe in them," he said finally, gesturing toward the scattered angels. "They are still here. Still watching. Still hoping you will give them sothing to hold onto."

Michael didn't answer.

The crack in the sky pulsed once—a thin line of light—then settled.

---

At the edge of the gathering, a group of angels stood apart.

They had not approached Michael. Had not asked questions. Had simply watched from a distance, their faces unreadable.

One of them—a seraph with scars across his chest—spoke in a low whisper.

"He's not the Father."

The others nodded.

"He never will be."

The words hung in the air. Not malicious. Not vengeful. Just true.

One of the younger angels looked toward Michael, standing alone at the edge of the plain, his back to them.

"What do we do?" the young angel asked.

The scarred seraph didn't answer.

He just watched.

And waited.

---

Michael stood at the fracture for a long ti.

Gabriel had left. The healers had moved to new sections. The camp was quiet now—not peaceful, just tired.

He thought about the Father. About the way He had stood at the center of everything, absolute and unchallenged. About the way He had spoken, and reality had bent to His will.

Michael had never been able to do that.

He had never wanted to.

But now the angels were looking at him the way they had once looked at the Father. With hope. With fear. With the desperate need for soone to tell them what ca next.

Michael closed his eyes.

"Help ," he whispered.

No one answered.

The sky cracked a little wider.

And sowhere in the distance, a group of angels who had once followed him stood in silence, wondering if they had chosen the wrong side.

Michael opened his eyes.

Straightened his shoulders.

And walked back toward the camp.

He didn't have answers.

But he had sothing else.

He had a duty. A responsibility. A weight he hadn't asked for and couldn't put down.

He would carry it.

For as long as he could.

And when he couldn't anymore—he would find soone who could.

That was what the Father had never learned.

That was what Michael was trying to beco.

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