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Now reading: Chapter 329: The Funeral of a Soul from I Am Zeus, a Fantasy novel by Chaosgod24.

The camp had never been quiet like this.

Not the silence of exhaustion. Not the hush of fear. Sothing else. Sothing heavier. The gods moved slowly, speaking in low voices, avoiding each other’s eyes. The angels kept to themselves, wings folded, heads bowed. Even the healers had stopped their endless rushing. There was nothing left to heal. Only losses to count.

Athena had insisted on the ceremony.

Not everyone agreed. Ares called it a waste of ti. "They’re souls," he said. "Mortals. They die. That’s what they do." Athena didn’t argue with him. She just looked at him until he looked away.

Odin supported her. That surprised so. The All-Father had never been sentintal. But he had seen enough death to know the difference between a body and a life. "They were no one to us before," he said quietly. "They were everyone to themselves."

The words spread through the camp. Gods repeated them to each other, testing the weight. Angels listened in silence, rembering the souls they had guided, the prayers they had carried, the lives they had watched end.

Athena chose the eastern ridge for the ceremony. Not the fracture—too close to the wound. A flat stretch of white stone, cracked but stable, where the light from the broken sky fell in pale streams. Soone had cleared the debris. Soone else had placed a broken pillar at the center, its surface smoothed by ti and weather.

There would be no bodies. No graves. Just nas.

The gods gathered first. Hera stood near the front, arms crossed, face unreadable. Ares lingered at the back, arms crossed, jaw tight. Odin leaned on Gungnir, his one eye scanning the crowd. Thor stood beside him, silent for once, Mjolnir resting on his shoulder.

The angels ca next. Michael led them, his sword sheathed, his wings folded. Gabriel walked at his side, his light dimd to a soft glow. Raphael followed behind, his hands clasped, his eyes on the ground. The others spread out behind them, forming a loose half-circle around the pillar.

Athena stepped forward.

She didn’t raise her voice. Didn’t need to. The silence was already absolute.

"We are here because we lost sothing," she said. "Not a battle. Not a realm. Souls. Mortals who lived and died and trusted us to guide them ho."

She paused.

"We failed."

The words landed like stones. No one argued. No one defended. No one looked away.

"We cannot bring them back. We cannot undo what was done. But we can rember them. We can na them. We can stand here, together, and承认 that they mattered."

She turned to the pillar. Nas were already carved into its surface—the ones the runners had recovered, the ones the healers had known, the ones the guards had died trying to protect.

Athena read them aloud.

"Elena. Not the Elena who woke Zeus. A different Elena. A mother of two. She died in a flood, three days before the war ended."

She paused.

"Marcus. A soldier. He survived the battle only to be lost when the soul stream broke."

She read another. And another. The nas were few—less than a dozen—but each one landed like a weight.

"Priya. A child. She saw lights in the sky and thought they were stars."

"Akin. A fisherman. He dread of water and woke to find himself already gone."

"Yuki. An artist. She drew pictures of a cracked sky before anyone else saw it."

The list ended.

Athena stepped back.

"These are the ones we know. There are others. Hundreds, maybe. We may never find their nas. But they are not forgotten. Not here. Not today."

---

Odin stepped forward.

He didn’t speak at first. Just stood beside the pillar, his hand resting on the carved stone. His one eye moved across the nas, reading them one by one.

"I have guided souls for longer than most of you have existed," he said. "I have seen them co and go. I have watched them fade. I have never held a ceremony like this."

He paused.

"I should have."

The words hung in the air.

"These were not warriors. Not kings. Not prophets. They were people. Mortals who lived and died and trusted us to carry them ho. And we failed."

He looked at the gods. At the angels. At the broken sky.

"But we are here now. And that ans sothing."

He stepped back.

---

The silence returned.

Gods and angels stood together, shoulder to shoulder, looking at the nas carved into stone. No one spoke. No one moved. Even Ares had lowered his head.

At the edge of the gathering, Zeus watched.

He had not spoken. Had not stepped forward. Had not touched the pillar or read the nas. He just stood there, arms at his sides, face unreadable.

Hera stood beside him.

"You should say sothing," she whispered.

"No."

"They need to see you."

"They need to see this. Not ."

Hera didn’t argue.

---

The ceremony ended without fanfare.

Athena stepped back from the pillar. The gods began to disperse, slowly, reluctantly. The angels followed, their wings folded, their heads still bowed.

Ares was the last to leave.

He stood at the edge of the gathering, staring at the nas. His hand rested on his sword hilt, but he didn’t draw it. He just stood there, jaw tight, eyes hard.

Athena approached him.

"Thank you for coming."

Ares didn’t look at her.

"I didn’t co for them."

"I know."

He was silent for a mont.

"They were no one to us."

"And now?"

Ares’s jaw tightened.

"Now they’re nas on a stone."

He walked away.

---

As the last of the gods disappeared into the camp, a light flickered in the distance.

Not the pale light of the fractures. Sothing warr. Sothing softer. It drifted at the edge of the eastern sector, small and uncertain, like a candle in the wind.

Athena saw it first.

She didn’t speak. Didn’t point. Just watched.

The light grew brighter. Closer.

It was a soul.

One of the lost ones. The runners had missed it. The fractures had swallowed it. But sothing had guided it back.

The soul drifted toward the pillar, toward the nas carved into stone. It hovered there for a mont, pulsing gently, as if reading.

Then it moved on.

Toward the underworld. Toward ho.

Athena exhaled.

"One," she said quietly.

Odin nodded.

"One."

It wasn’t enough.

But it was sothing.

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