I Am Zeus
Chapter 310: Hades Breaking
The Underworld
Hades had been holding for too long. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝙬𝙚𝓫𝒏𝓸𝓿𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝙤𝓶
Hours. Days. Maybe longer. Time had stopped behaving properly in the underworld. It stretched, folded, snapped, then returned in ugly pieces. A minute could last long enough for a soul to relive an entire life. An hour could vanish before Hades finished drawing a breath.
He sat on his throne because standing had become too dangerous.
Not for him. For everyone else.
His hands gripped the arms of the throne so tightly the black stone had cracked beneath his fingers. His head was lowered. His hair hung over his face. Every breath came slow, controlled, forced.
In. Hold. Out. Again.
That was all he had left now. Breathing. Holding. Not breaking.
The dead moved around him in endless rivers. Light after light. Soul after soul. Some passed into the old halls. Some drifted toward the fields. Some gathered at the edges, confused, frightened, whispering to one another in languages Hades understood before they were even spoken.
He heard all of them. Every single one.
A man praying for his brother. A woman calling for her child. A king demanding an audience. A thief begging not to be punished. A girl asking if she was still sick. A boy laughing because he thought the lights were stars.
Hades clenched his jaw.
"Quiet," he whispered.
The dead did not quiet. They never did. They couldn’t. They were not trying to hurt him. That almost made it worse. They were only afraid. Only lost. Only dead. And he was their king. He was supposed to know what to do with them.
He pressed one hand to his temple and closed his eyes.
Bad idea.
The moment darkness covered his sight, the memories came clearer.
An old woman’s last breath. She was in a bed that smelled like lavender. Her daughter was holding her hand. She wanted one more morning. Not for anything grand—just to see the sunlight through her window again.
Gone.
A child’s first word. Not death. Life. A small voice, bright with wonder, saying "mama" in a sunlit room that no longer existed. Joy burst through Hades’s chest so suddenly it almost broke him worse than grief.
Then mud. Rain. A soldier falling face-first into a trench, blood mixing with dirty water, fingers digging into the earth because dying men always tried to hold onto something.
Hades gasped. His eyes opened. The throne room tilted.
"No," he said, but the word came out weak.
The souls surged.
It started far away, near the outer gates. A pressure change. A shift in the river. Then it rolled inward, gathering weight, carrying countless voices with it.
Hades felt it coming. He pushed himself up from the throne. His knees almost gave immediately. He forced them straight.
"Not now," he growled. "Not now."
The wave hit. Every soul in the realm pressed into him at once. Not physically. Deeper. They pushed through the bond he had made when he consumed them. Through the wound he had cut into himself for power. Through the door he had never fully managed to close.
Hades staggered forward. One step. Then another. Then the pressure folded him.
He dropped to one knee.
The impact cracked the ancient floor beneath him.
The underworld answered.
The ceiling groaned. The rivers trembled. Shadows pulled back from the walls like frightened animals. Across the realm, souls stopped moving for a heartbeat, sensing their king stumble.
Hades planted one hand on the ground. The stone under his palm split.
Voices poured through him. Too many. Too close.
A mother screaming for her child. A sailor drowning in cold water. A child giggling in a sunlit room that no longer existed. A priest dying with doubt in his mouth. A warrior begging for death. A lover whispering a name into darkness. A murderer laughing at nothing. A saint weeping for forgiveness. A farmer smelling rain on his last morning. A queen choking on poison meant for someone else. A baby crying. A baby crying. A baby crying.
Hades squeezed his eyes shut.
"Stop," he whispered.
The pressure grew.
He tried to stand. Couldn’t. He tried again. His arm shook so badly the cracks in the floor spread outward in jagged lines.
The dead were not attacking him. That was the horror. They were simply there. Too many lives. Too many endings. Too much love, pain, regret, fear, hunger, rage, and hope crammed into one god who had thought he could carry it all because someone had to.
A whisper slipped through the flood. Soft. Almost kind.
"Hades."
His whole body went still. No. Not that voice. Not again.
"Hades."
He lifted his head slowly, eyes wide, breath caught in his throat.
"Persephone?"
The flood answered with a thousand voices. Some sounded like her. Some almost did. Some only carried the shape of her name because they knew it would hurt him.
His face twisted.
"Don’t," he said. "Don’t use her voice."
The souls surged again. Harder.
His other knee hit the ground.
The throne room split. A long crack tore from the base of his throne across the floor, through the old stone, through the bones of the realm itself. It spread like lightning made of darkness.
The underworld shook. Not trembled. Shook.
In the fields, souls cried out. In the rivers, ancient waters rose against their banks. In the halls, pillars cracked and dust fell like grey snow.
Hades grabbed his head with both hands. His fingers dug into his scalp. He could feel himself losing shape. Not body. Self. His thoughts were no longer only his. His memories tangled with theirs.
His first sight of Persephone mixed with a soldier’s last sight of the sky. His cold throne mixed with a child’s warm bed. His brother’s face mixed with a dying man’s father. His name became too many names.
Hades. King. Monster. Guide. Thief. Lord. Husband. Grave.
He opened his mouth. And screamed.
It was not rage. Rage would have been cleaner. This was pain. Pure pain. The scream tore through the underworld from its deepest pit to its highest gate. It rolled over the dead and struck every soul silent. Rivers froze mid-current. Shadows stopped crawling. Every whisper died at once.
For one breath, the realm was quiet. Truly quiet.
Hades stayed on his knees, chest heaving, hands still locked around his head.
The silence was beautiful. Merciful.
Then the pressure doubled.
His eyes went white. His arms dropped. The floor beneath him collapsed in a ring of broken stone, but he did not fall with it. He remained kneeling at the center, head bowed, body shaking under something no god was ever meant to bear.
A thousand voices became a million. A million became billions.
The underworld groaned around him like an old beast dying in its sleep.
Far above, in the broken remains of Heaven, Zeus stopped walking. His hand clenched, and the chaos around his wrist flickered.
"Hades."
His voice was quiet. But the name carried.
Back below, the Lord of the Dead tried to lift his head. Tried to breathe. Tried to stand.
He couldn’t.
The souls pressed down again.
And this time—Hades did not get back up.