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Now reading: Chapter 10 10: Beyond Olympus from Percy Jackson: The Firstborn, a Action novel by Brotatopotato.

Morning did not co gently.

The camp had barely begun to stir when Zeus demanded a gathering.

His voice didn't need to be loud; the crackle of lightning that danced around his fingers did enough speaking for him.

They ford a loose circle near the dying embers of last night's fire, Hera with her arms crossed and a sharp patience in her eyes, Hestia quiet as ever, Poseidon restless, Hades unreadable, and Damon seated closer to Rhea than anyone else.

Zeus stood at the center like a king who hadn't yet been crowned.

"We have weapons," Zeus said, chin raised. "We have montum. And we have a war to win. So tell , Mother—what else is there to know?"

Rhea studied him for a long mont. Not with admiration. With the tired clarity of soone who had watched power rot a heart before. "I can only hope Zeus doesn't turn out like his Father," Rhea thought.

"There is sothing," she said. "Sothing your father never told you. Sothing the Titans feared you would learn."

Zeus smirked. "Then speak."

Rhea inhaled, and when she spoke again, her voice carried the weight of old truths.

"This world is not ruled by Olympus alone."

Silence followed.

Poseidon's brow furrowed. "What do you an, not alone? Our sky reaches everywhere."

"And our seas touch many shores," Rhea replied calmly, "but that doesn't an we own everything."

Hestia's eyes widened slightly. Hera's expression tightened. Hades didn't move, but Damon felt him listening the way shadows listen, without blinking.

"There are other thrones," Rhea continued. "Other dominions. Other gods. So are older than Titans. So younger. So… not like us at all."

Zeus scoffed. "You're saying there are more gods out there? Fine. Let them kneel when we win.

Rhea's gaze snapped to him, sharp enough to cut.

"No."

The single word landed harder than any shout.

"They will not kneel," she said. "And if you approach them with that arrogance, they will not even give you the honor of calling it a war. They will erase you as if you were a mistake."

For the first ti, Zeus's smile faltered.

Damon leaned forward. "Other pantheons," he murmured, tasting the phrase like it was a key. "Other divine families."

Rhea nodded once, grateful soone understood.

"Listen carefully," she said, and her tone shifted from mother to teacher to historian.

"In the far North, there are gods who do not pretend eternity is guaranteed. They live with the knowledge of an ending, Ragnarök. They call their rulers the Aesir and the Vanir, and their power is woven into fate itself. Their storms are not your storms, Zeus. Their death is not your death."

Zeus's eyes narrowed as if he disliked the idea of a god who accepted limits.

Rhea turned her gaze eastward, as if she could see across continents.

"Before many nas you know were ever spoken, there were gods in the lands of rivers—Sur, Akkad, Babylon. Their authority is written in tablets and laws older than crowns. They do not simply rule… they define what it ans to be allowed to rule."

Hera finally spoke, voice cold and practical. "So they have structure. Hierarchy."

"They have legitimacy," Rhea corrected. "And legitimacy is a weapon sharper than steel."

"There is also Egypt, bound to Ma'at, the balance of the world. Their gods are not rely people with power; they are roles. Principles. The dead travel a realm called the Duat, and their judgnt is not decided by brute force."

Hades's gaze lifted slightly at that. Only slightly.

"And in the lands of India," Rhea continued, "the divine does not walk in straight lines. Their gods are vast. They speak of cycles—creation, preservation, destruction—repeating like breath. So appear as avatars, wearing mortal forms without being diminished. Do not assu you understand them because they use the word 'god."

"In the islands of the rising sun, divinity is everywhere. Not only in rulers, but in rivers, stones, trees, and the wind between branches. They call them kami. Purity matters there; pollution is not only dirt but also a spiritual imbalance. A careless act can turn a blessing into a curse."

Zeus opened his mouth, but Hera cut him off before he could speak.

"If you speak of other pantheons, speak with respect. Their lands have laws older than ours. Their divinity is not a curiosity; it's a sovereign order. Especially with Pantheons like the Shintos, Egyptians, Hindus, and Norse, as they are just as vast as us."

"That doesn't an they're the only ones around, but they're definitely the main ones."

Rhea's expression darkened.

"In the lands of the sun-hungry temples… the Aztecs feed their gods. Not with prayer alone. With blood, with hearts, with war offered like currency. Their sun does not rise without paynt."

Poseidon let out a low breath. "Savage."

"Devoted," Rhea corrected again. "And devotion can be more terrifying than cruelty."

The circle felt smaller now, like the world had expanded while their certainty shrank.

Then Rhea hesitated—just for a heartbeat.

"And then," she said quietly, "there is the God of faiths."

The air changed. Just a pressure that made even Zeus's arrogance pause.

"One God," Rhea continued, choosing her words with care. "Not a family. Not a court. Not a throne among others. A singular authority. And beneath that authority… beings you might call angels. They call themselves the Biblical Faction."

"They do not call themselves that," Rhea replied. "And they do not negotiate as gods do. Their power is not traded. It is commanded. That doesn't an they're not powerful. So Angels can kill gods like you easily, so be careful when dealing with them."

Zeus laughed, "A single god," he repeated, lifting his chin again. "Then he can bleed like any other. Wont be an issue."

Rhea stared at him.

"You still don't understand," she said, voice colder than the morning air. "So powers are not part of our gas. They do not fight for territory. They fight for order. For law. For obedience."

"Outside our realm, there are gods and beings that are way more powerful than you think. When you go outside our territory, keep that in mind when you walk alongside humans. You never know if that one person you offend is a being more powerful than you."

"So are as powerful as a primordial or close to it. So would make Kronos look like a child."

"Do not test them."

Hera's eyes flicked to Damon. "So what are you telling us, Mother?"

Rhea let the silence stretch until they were all trapped inside it.

"I am telling you," she said, "that if you win this war, the world will feel the shift. And when the world feels it… Others will notice."

Damon's fingers tightened slightly on his knee. Not fear—anticipation. Curiosity sharpening into purpose.

"So we stay in our realm," Poseidon muttered. "We don't trespass. We don't provoke."

"We don't insult," Hera added, glaring at Zeus.

Zeus looked away, jaw tense.

Rhea nodded. "And we don't assu the universe belongs to us."

"The world is vast," Rhea finished. "And it is filled with beings who are not gods—yet can still kill one."

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