Underworld
The throne room had beco a cage.
Not the kind with bars. The kind where the walls pressed closer every day, where the shadows whispered in voices that weren’t quite voices, where the air itself felt heavy with things unsaid. Hades had been sitting in the sa spot for hours. Maybe days. He couldn’t tell anymore.
The souls had been quieter after the attack on the western sector.
Not calr. Quieter. There was a difference. Calm ant peace. Quiet ant waiting. They were waiting for sothing. He didn’t know what. He was afraid to find out.
Persephone’s voice had been clearer since the ceremony. Since Athena read the nas. Since the lost soul returned to the stream. Sothing had shifted. The barriers between them were thinner now. He could almost feel her. Almost touch her. Almost—
The pressure built without warning.
Not from outside. From inside. The souls surged against his consciousness like waves against a seawall. Not angry. Not desperate. Just present. Demanding. A billion voices speaking at once, each one asking for sothing he couldn’t give.
Hades gripped the arms of his throne.
The stone was cold. It was always cold. But now it felt like the only solid thing in the world.
"Quiet," he muttered.
They didn’t quiet.
A soldier’s voice cut through the noise. "Where is my wife?"
A child’s voice followed. "I want my mother."
A woman’s voice, older, worn. "I was supposed to see my grandson born."
More. Faster. Harder.
Hades pressed his palms against his temples.
"I said quiet."
The voices didn’t stop. They never stopped.
He stood. The movent was too fast. His vision blurred. The throne room tilted. He caught himself on the arm of the chair, fingers digging into the cracked stone.
The souls pressed harder.
Not attacking. Just... asking. Begging. Pleading for answers he didn’t have.
Persephone’s voice broke through the noise.
"Hades."
He gasped.
Not from pain. From relief. Her voice was warr than the others. Clearer. Closer.
"Hades, I’m here."
"I know," he whispered. "I know."
"The others—they’re afraid."
"I know that too."
"They need you to—"
The pressure doubled.
Not from Persephone. From the others. They had heard her. Had felt her presence. And they wanted more. Wanted answers. Wanted release. Wanted to be heard the way she was heard.
Hades stumbled.
His knee hit the floor. The impact cracked the stone beneath him. His hands shot out to catch himself, but there was nothing to grab.
The voices swelled.
A billion endings. A billion regrets. A billion prayers that had never been answered.
Hades’s eyes went white.
Not the white of light. The white of absence. The white of a god who had stopped being just a god and started being sothing else. Sothing that held too much. Sothing that had forgotten where it ended and they began.
For a mont—just one—he wasn’t Hades.
He was the flood. The chorus. The scream.
He felt every death. Every birth. Every mont of joy and terror and longing that had ever been compressed into a soul. He felt the soldier who died alone. The mother who left too soon. The child who never grew up.
He felt all of it.
And for a mont—just one—he didn’t want to co back.
Then Persephone spoke again.
"Hades."
Her voice was soft. Calm. The kind of calm that ca from knowing soone would catch you if you fell.
"Hades, co back."
He tried.
His hands found the floor. His knees straightened. His back arched.
The voices pushed back.
Harder.
He scread.
Not the scream of a warrior. The scream of a man who had been asked to carry too much and was finally breaking under the weight.
The throne room shook. The cracks in the floor spread. The shadows retreated to the corners, afraid of what was happening in the center.
Hades’s hands gripped his head.
"GET OUT."
The words tore through the hall.
For a mont—just one—the voices stopped.
Not quiet. Stopped.
The silence was deafening.
Hades knelt on the cracked floor, chest heaving, hands trembling. His eyes were dark again. His own eyes.
The voices returned.
Not all at once. Slowly. Tentatively. As if they were afraid of him now.
He didn’t bla them.
He was afraid of himself too.
---
He stayed on the floor for a long ti.
The shadows crept back. The cracks stopped spreading. The throne room settled into its familiar broken stillness.
Hades didn’t move.
He was tired. Not the tired of a long battle. The tired of a god who had been fighting himself and losing.
Persephone’s voice ca again. Softer this ti.
"You’re still here."
"Barely."
"That’s enough."
He almost laughed. Almost.
"Not for them."
"They’ll wait."
"How do you know?"
She was quiet for a mont.
"Because I waited."
Hades closed his eyes.
He thought about the ceremony. About Athena reading the nas. About the lost soul that found its way ho. About the gods and angels standing together, shoulder to shoulder, mourning mortals they had never known.
The world was changing.
He was changing too.
He didn’t know if it was for the better.
---
He pushed himself up.
His legs ached. His head throbbed. The voices whispered at the edges of his consciousness, waiting, watching, hoping.
He walked to the edge of the throne room.
A shard of broken stone lay on the floor—a piece of the pillar that had fallen during the war. The surface was smooth, polished by ti and weather.
Hades looked at his reflection.
Dark eyes. Pale skin. The face of a king who had ruled the dead for eons.
Then the reflection shifted.
For a second—just one—Persephone’s eyes stared back at him.
Not his eyes. Hers. Warm. Alive. Full of everything he had been missing.
Hades reached out. Touched the stone.
The reflection changed back.
His eyes. His face. His grief.
But he had seen her.
She was still in there. Still fighting. Still waiting.
He turned away from the shard.
Walked back to his throne.
Sat down.
The voices settled. Not quiet. Not calm. Just... waiting.
Hades closed his eyes.
"I’m coming," he said.
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