Reincarnated As Poseidon Chapter 267

The story of Zeus did not begin with thunder. It began with fear.

Before Olympus stood as the seat of divine power, the world was ruled by the Titans—beings vast as mountains, eternal as stone. At their head stood Kronos, the Titan King, father of time, devourer of his own bloodline. For Kronos had been cursed: a prophecy foretold that one of his children would overthrow him, just as he had overthrown his father, Uranus.

And so, with every birth, Kronos opened his jaws wide and swallowed his offspring whole. Hestia, Demeter, Hera, Hades, Poseidon—one by one, they were devoured, trapped in the cavernous dark of their father’s gut, their cries echoing in silence. Newest update provided by novelFɪre.net

But when the sixth child was born, their mother Rhea could no longer bear it. She wrapped a stone in swaddling cloth, gave it to Kronos, and fled with the infant to the island of Crete.

Zeus did not grow in palaces. He grew in shadow, hidden in caves and mountains, nourished by goat’s milk and honey. The nymph Amalthea raised him, and the Kouretes—armored warriors—danced with spears clashing to drown out the sound of the baby’s cries so Kronos would not hear.

Even as a boy, Zeus’s eyes carried stormlight. He learned quickly: that fear could rule, that strength alone was not enough, and that survival often meant silence until the right moment.

From his hidden mountain, he watched the world of mortals and immortals. He saw the cruelty of the Titans, how they ground humanity beneath their heels. He saw how his siblings languished in Kronos’s belly, their voices reaching him in his dreams.

And slowly, he began to plan.

When Zeus came of age, he sought allies. First the earth-mother Gaia, who whispered to him of old weapons buried deep. Then Metis, the Titaness of wisdom, who gave him the cunning to strike at his father.

Disguised as a cupbearer, Zeus entered Kronos’s hall. With charm and careful hands, he poured his father’s wine laced with a draught from Metis. The potion churned within the Titan King, and Kronos heaved—vomiting up the children he had swallowed long ago.

One by one, they tumbled forth, full-grown and furious: Hestia, Hera, Demeter, Hades, Poseidon.

They had been swallowed, but not broken.

Reunited, the siblings stood together for the first time. In their eyes burned a new fire—the fire of rebellion.

Thus began the Titanomachy.

The war lasted ten years, and the world itself was torn apart. Titans hurled mountains like stones; gods wielded the raw elements as weapons. Oceans boiled, skies split, and the earth shook with every clash.

Zeus fought not just with strength, but with strategy. He freed the Cyclopes, imprisoned in Tartarus, who in gratitude forged for him the master weapon: the thunderbolt. With a single strike, he could shatter mountains, burn armies, and blind even the Titans with divine lightning.

Poseidon claimed the trident, shaking the seas. Hades took the helm of darkness, cloaking himself in invisibility. Together, the three brothers turned the tide of battle.

It was Zeus, however, who commanded. His voice rallied the gods, his fury broke the Titans’ lines, and his vision united Olympus into something the scattered younger gods had never been before: an army.

And when the final battle came, it was Zeus who struck down Kronos himself, hurling his father into the abyss of Tartarus, chains of unbreakable adamant binding him for eternity.

Victory did not come without price. The land was scarred, the rivers poisoned with ash, the sky torn with wounds that would take centuries to heal. But from the ashes of the Titan age, the gods rose, stronger and unchallenged.

The siblings drew lots for their dominions:

Zeus claimed the sky, throne of storms.

Poseidon took the seas, vast and endless.

Hades received the underworld, kingdom of the dead.

The others took their places as guardians of hearth, harvest, and law.

But it was Zeus who ruled over them all. His throne atop Olympus stood highest, not by chance but by will. He had not only defeated the Titans—he had taught the gods how to rule.

Where others commanded by fear, Zeus commanded by balance. He rewarded loyalty, punished betrayal, and reminded mortals and immortals alike that thunder answered only to him.

Yet Zeus’s rule was not uncontested. Giants rose from the blood of the earth, seeking to tear him down. Typhon, the monster of monsters, stormed Olympus with heads of fire and wings of shadow.

Each time, Zeus’s thunderbolts split the sky, burning his enemies into ash. Each time, his siblings rallied behind him. Each time, Olympus endured.

But Zeus also faced battles of cunning. He bound oaths in the River Styx, ensuring gods could never break their word. He placed kings among mortals, making them accountable to Olympus. And when gods themselves rebelled, he struck with fury—hurling them into chains or exile.

It was not love that made Zeus strong. It was fear. And respect.

He became the arbiter, the final voice, the storm no one could ignore.

And yet, for all his power, Zeus carried the weight of prophecy. For just as his father had feared him, so too did whispers speak of his downfall. The same cycle that felled Uranus, that devoured Kronos, might one day claim him as well.

Perhaps that is why Zeus grasped so tightly at power. Why he bred countless children across the mortal and divine worlds, spreading his lineage like seeds in the wind. Each child a potential ally... or a potential heir to his throne.

And perhaps that is why he feared most not his enemies, but his brothers.

For Poseidon, his equal in strength, wielded the seas that could swallow storms whole. And Hades, silent and brooding, commanded not the living but the endless dead.

They had fought together to topple their father. But alliances forged in war are not eternal.

By the time Olympus stood as the unshakable heart of the divine, Zeus was no longer just king. He was law. His thunderbolts became the symbol of divine judgment. His name, invoked in oaths and curses, was the anchor of order.

Mortals prayed for rain? Zeus sent it.

Mortals angered the gods? Zeus struck them down.

Even gods themselves bowed, for to defy Zeus was to invite annihilation.

Thus, he became not only one of the strongest gods, but the embodiment of what it meant to rule.

And yet, behind his storm-gilded throne, Zeus remembered the cave where he had once hidden, a child feared by his father. He remembered the taste of secrecy, of rebellion, of prophecy’s shadow.

Zeus had risen from nothing to king of gods. But deep down, he knew this: every reign ends. Every storm passes.

And somewhere, in the deep, Poseidon was stirring.

As Olympus shimmered with eternal daylight, Zeus sat alone upon his throne, thunderbolts crackling faintly at his side. His gaze pierced the skies, toward the rolling seas below.

The council of gods had declared war on Poseidon. But Zeus?

He remembered the boy he once freed from Kronos’s gut. He remembered the brother who stood by him in the Titanomachy.

And for the first time in centuries, Zeus wondered:

Would his greatest storm come not from enemies... but from his own blood?

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