I Am Zeus
Chapter 303: The Soul Flood
The Underworld
The first soul came through like a tear.
Just one. Faint. Hesitant. A flicker of light at the edge of the Underworld’s broken gate.
Hades felt it before he saw it. A small warmth in the cold. A whisper that wasn’t words. Just presence. Just memory.
Then another came.
And another.
And then the gate didn’t open—it shattered.
The souls poured through like water through a cracked dam. Not a stream. A flood. Endless waves of light, tangled and screaming, slamming into the Underworld’s dark plains with force that made the ground shudder. They came from everywhere. From the fractures in Heaven, from the collapsing Citadel, from places that had held them for centuries—now bursting open, now letting go.
Hades stood at the center of it all.
His arms were outstretched. Not commanding. Not reaching. Just... holding. Trying to hold. The souls slammed into him like waves against a sea wall, and he took every hit. No sorting. No judgment. No ancient rituals to guide them where they belonged. Just him. Just now.
A soul brushed past his consciousness—a farmer from some forgotten age, confused, asking if this was the afterlife. Hades didn’t answer. He couldn’t. Another followed—a child, no older than seven, asking for its mother in a voice that had no mouth.
Hades’s jaw tightened.
"Keep moving," he muttered. Not to them. To himself.
They didn’t stop.
More poured through. Hundreds. Thousands. The gate wasn’t a gate anymore—it was a wound, and the dead were bleeding through faster than he could catch them. Some slipped past him entirely, veering into the cracks between realms, disappearing into spaces that weren’t meant to hold anything. Gone. Not dead. Not alive. Just... lost.
Others didn’t slip. They crashed. Two souls collided mid-flight, their lights flickering, merging, becoming something that was neither one nor the other. A soldier and a poet, sharing one shape. A mother and a thief, their voices overlapping into a single, wrong note. Hades felt them twist together, felt the wrongness of it lodge in his chest like a splinter.
He tried to pull them apart. His power reached out—and stopped.
He couldn’t.
The souls were too tangled. Too fast. Too many.
A third merged with the first two. Then a fourth. The shape grew, pulsed, became something that didn’t belong anywhere. Hades watched it drift toward the裂缝—and let it go. He had no choice. There were too many.
Another wave hit.
This time, he felt them. Not as a group. As individuals. Each one pressed against his consciousness like a hand on his skin. A woman who died giving birth, still searching for the child she never held. A man who drowned, lungs still burning with water that wasn’t there. A king who fell to his own son, still tasting the blade.
Hades staggered.
Not from force. From weight. The weight of a million endings pressing down on a single pair of shoulders.
"Stop," he muttered.
They didn’t.
A child’s voice cut through the chaos. Small. Clear. Terrifyingly real.
"Is this heaven?"
Hades’s breath caught. He looked for the source—a flicker of light near his left hand, no bigger than his palm. A soul so young it barely knew its own name.
"No," he said quietly. "Not heaven."
"Where’s my mama?"
The question hung in the air like a blade.
Hades didn’t answer. He couldn’t. He didn’t know where her mother was. Lost in the flood. Merged with someone else. Gone into the cracks.
He turned away.
The child’s light dimmed.
Another voice cut through—a soldier, rough, desperate.
"My wife. I need to see my wife. Tell me she made it. Tell me—"
"I can’t," Hades said. His voice was flat. Tired. "I can’t tell you anything."
The soldier’s soul flared with anger, then faded into the mass, swallowed by the endless current.
More came. Faster. Harder. Hades planted his feet, arms still outstretched, trying to create some kind of channel, some kind of order. The souls pushed against him, and he pushed back.
For a moment—just a moment—it worked. The flood parted around him, splitting into two streams, flowing into the deeper plains where they could at least exist without crushing each other.
Then a soul screamed.
Not out loud. Inside. Directly into Hades’s mind. A lifetime of pain compressed into a single, jagged sound. A woman. A war. A fire. Children she couldn’t save. A body that burned while she still breathed. Every second of it hit him at once—not as memory, as experience. He felt the heat. Smelled the smoke. Heard the screams of children who weren’t his but felt like they were.
Hades’s eyes went white.
Not the white of light. The white of absence. Of everything being wiped clean in a single, terrible instant.
The Underworld shook.
The ground cracked beneath his feet. The shadows that had held for eons splintered, pulling back from him like they didn’t recognize their own master. The souls nearest to him flickered, some dimming, some flaring too bright, some simply... freezing. Suspended in place, caught between his will and theirs.
For one heartbeat—just one—Hades wasn’t there.
Not gone. Not dead. Just... empty. The scream had taken everything. His thoughts. His control. His sense of where he ended and they began.
Then he caught himself.
His hands dropped to his sides. His eyes flickered back to dark—not calm, but present. His breathing came hard, ragged, wrong.
The scream faded.
But it didn’t disappear.
It echoed. Lingered at the edges of his mind like a fly that wouldn’t land. He could still feel her. The woman. The fire. The children.
He pressed a hand to his temple.
"...okay," he muttered. "Okay."
The Underworld steadied. The cracks stopped spreading. The frozen souls began to move again, flowing past him, around him, through him.
Hades straightened. 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖
His hands were shaking.
He looked at them for a long moment. Then he looked at the flood still pouring through the broken gate. Still endless. Still screaming.
He didn’t sit. Didn’t rest. He just stood there, arms at his sides, and let them hit him.
One by one.
All of them.
The child’s voice came again, smaller now, fading into the current.
"Is this heaven?"
Hades closed his eyes.
"No," he whispered. "But I’ll get you there."
The flood didn’t stop.
Neither did he.