I Am Zeus-Chapter 255: “Show me.”

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Chapter 255: “Show me.”

The silence in the lab was thick enough to taste, a metallic flavor of fear and ozone. Dr. Arne Larsen’s warning hung in the air, a specter at their feast of discovery. Annihilation. Other. A prison for the Storm-Bringer.

But for Elena Petros, the warning was not a stop sign; it was a dare. 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖

"He’s an academic," she said, her voice too loud in the hush. She paced in front of the obsidian disc, which sat on its reinforced table like a slumbering king. "A linguist. He deals in dead words and theories. We deal in facts. In what we can see and measure."

"Elena," Maria said softly, her geologist’s instincts screaming. "He was terrified. I’ve never seen a man that scared. He packed his bags and left for the airport without even collecting his fee."

"Superstition," Elena dismissed with a wave of her hand. Her eyes were locked on the pulsating runes. This was her find. Her legacy. She wouldn’t let it be locked away again because of a thousand-year-old ghost story. "This is a physical object. It obeys physical laws. We just haven’t found the right one yet."

Leo watched her, his initial excitement curdled into a deep unease. "Doc, maybe... maybe we should listen. We could put it in a secure facility. Study it for years. Decades."

"We don’t have years!" Elena snapped, turning on him. "The university board is already asking for results. The funding will dry up. This will be taken from us, buried in some government warehouse, and we’ll never know what it is." She approached the disc, her reflection a pale, distorted smudge in its impossible blackness. "It’s a puzzle. And I’m going to solve it."

The following days were a descent into a peculiar kind of madness. Elena became obsessed. She slept in the lab, surviving on coffee and a frantic, burning energy. She tried everything. Sonic resonance at frequencies meant to shatter diamond. A concentrated EMP burst that fried half the building’s electronics but left the disc untouched. She even procured a sample of C-4 from a disreputable source in the military, a desperate act that made Maria quit the project in protest.

The small, controlled explosion in the shielded testing chamber did nothing. No scratch, no scorch mark. The disc drank the sound and the light and the force, and asked for more.

"It’s not working," Leo pleaded after the failed explosion, his ears still ringing. "Elena, it’s not a lock. It’s a statement. It is what it is. We can’t change it."

"We’re not trying to change it!" she yelled, her hair a wild mess, her lab coat smudged with grease and dust. "We’re trying to understand it! All energy has a signature. A frequency. This thing... it’s giving one off. We just need to match it. To sympathize with it."

Her breakthrough came not from force, but from a moment of exhausted despair. She was slumped at her terminal, watching the live feed of the disc on a monitor. The runes pulsed. Silver. Dark. Silver. Dark. A slow, steady rhythm.

Like a heartbeat.

It was a leap of intuition that defied all her scientific training. What if the key wasn’t a physical force, but a metaphysical one? What if the runes weren’t just describing a condition, but were the condition itself?

She called Leo over, her voice hoarse. "The phrase Larsen translated. ’Until the Storm-Bringer returns to claim his own.’ What if that’s not a prophecy? What if it’s a password?"

Leo looked skeptical. "How do we speak a password to a rock?"

"Not speak," Elena said, her eyes gleaming. "We emulate. We recreate the ’storm.’" She pointed to the university’s main power conduit that ran near the lab. "We channel a massive, raw electrical surge into the room. We don’t direct it at the disc. We just... fill the space with its energy. We make a storm in a bottle."

It was the most dangerous, reckless idea she’d had yet. It could electrocute them, burn down the building, plunge half of Athens into a blackout.

Leo tried to refuse, but the same obsession that had consumed Elena now had its hooks in him too. The need to know was a fever.

They worked through the night, illegally rerouting power lines, setting up monstrous capacitors, insulating the room with stolen firefighter blankets. It was a mad scientist’s tableau, a far cry from careful archaeology.

At 3:17 AM, they were ready. Elena stood at the control console, her finger hovering over a large, red switch. Leo stood by the door, ready to throw the main breaker.

"This is it," she whispered, not to Leo, but to the disc. "Show me."

She threw the switch.

For a second, nothing happened. Then a deafening hum filled the room, so powerful it vibrated in their bones. The lights in the lab flared to blinding incandescence, then exploded in a shower of glass and sparks. Arcs of raw electricity, blue-white and furious, leaped from the capacitors, earthing themselves on metal tables, scorching the walls. The air crackled, smelling of burnt silicon and ozone. It was a storm. A tiny, contained, artificial hurricane.

And the disc... reacted.

The slow, steady pulse of the runes quickened. Silver. Dark. Silver-dark-silver. They began to swirl, moving across the surface of the obsidian like living things. The deep black of the disc itself began to lighten, turning a murky, swirling grey.

"It’s working!" Elena screamed over the roar of the electricity.

A hairline fracture appeared in the center of the disc. Not a crack in the material, but a tear in reality itself. A light that was no light poured out, illuminating the room in stark, monochrome shades. The chaotic lightning in the room was drawn to it, sucked into the tear like water down a drain.

The hum of their machines died, the stolen power utterly consumed. The silence that followed was absolute and profound.

The disc was no longer a solid object. It was a window. A window into a swirling, grey infinity. And in the center of that infinity, they saw him.

A figure, floating in a lotus position. His hair was not just white; it was the white of the heart of a lightning bolt, of frozen light, moving in a slow, corona-like drift. His skin held the hue of a gathering storm at twilight. Across it, faint patterns shifted—the ghost of galaxies, the echo of thunderheads. Around him, quiet tendrils of lightning, tinged with a deep, chaotic black, curled and uncurled like sleeping serpents.

He was majesty and terror given form.

He opened his eyes.

They were the blue of a perfect, pre-dawn sky, but deep within them swirled the untamed grey of the void. There was no malice in that gaze, no kindness either. It was a perception so fundamental it felt like being X-rayed, soul and all.

The window—the domain—dissolved. It didn’t shatter or vanish. It simply ceased to be, and the being that was Zeus was now simply in the room with them, his feet resting lightly on the scorched floor.

He looked... confused. His gaze swept over the strange, sterile environment—the shattered lights, the scorch marks, the strange glass and metal devices. He saw the two small, terrified humans staring at him, their mouths agape. He flexed the fingers of one hand, and a wisp of chaotic energy, dark and light intertwined, danced between them. The air in the lab grew still and heavy, as if the world itself was holding its breath.

His cultivation was complete. The primordial chaos was no longer a force he wielded; it was the essence of his being. He had mastered it in the endless, silent years. He was whole. He was power.

And he was disoriented.

The last memory he had, the last coherent thought before the long, long silence, was of Olympus. Of his throne. Of his family. He had gone to Hades and his son to forge a domain to train. He had succeeded.

He assumed he was home.

He looked at the two mortals, his voice, when it came, was calm, but it resonated in their chests, a low peal of thunder from a clear sky. It was the sound of mountains deciding to move.

"Where is my court?" he asked, his storm-blue eyes settling on Elena. "Why is my throne room... so small?"

He took a single, soft step forward. The reinforced concrete floor beneath his foot didn’t crack. It silently transformed, a three-meter circle around him becoming smooth, polished marble veined with silver lightning.

"And who," he said, his head tilting with an ancient, terrifying curiosity, "are you?"

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